The states, in an amended complaint, challenged only the portion of Dodd-Frank that empowers the Treasury secretary to order a liquidation of a financial company whose collapse may threaten the stability of the banking system. U.S. District Judge, Ellen Segal Huvelle recently dismissed a lawsuit brought by 11 states and a Texas-based bank, challenging Dodd-Frank’s financial regulations, specifically those that create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. According to Bloomberg, the plaintiffs claimed that establishing such an agency violated the U.S. Constitution because Congress does not appropriate its budget, the president has limited powers to remove its director and the courts are restricted…
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Tighter Regulations Leave Less Room for Error When Computing and Disclosing How Much Mortgages Cost. John Adams at American Banker reports that Ernst Publishing, not related to the accounting company, sells technology and closing cost data to mortgage market players. Its clients include nine of the largest ten originators and servicers and the largest five title insurance companies. And it has now received a U.S. patent for its recording fee and tax calculator, called “System and Method for Generating and Tracking Field Values of Mortgage Forms.” Read the whole thing here. More:
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Rule Will Require a Second Appraisal in Situations Where a Home is Being Flipped for a Quick, Higher Resale A new rule passed Jan. 15 gives mortgage lenders an additional year to institute appraisal standards for higher-risk loans, Bloomberg reported, and Appraiser News Online highlighted. The extension is one of the revisions that regulators made to the Dodd-Frank Act to address concerns from financial firms. Appraiser News Online explains that: