Digital Mortgage Refinance Comparison - All Overview

Mortgage Refinance Comparison

We are a large mortgage lender that puts its listing on a website aggregator. We are one of many lenders that are on their website. They even put themselves on their website, which competes with our listing. The aggregator generates leads for us. We compensate this online lead generator for advertising our rates and loan products.

Digital Mortgage Refinance Comparison

Although the online aggregator provides information about our company and other companies, it does not do any business with us other than advertise our rates and products – although it does provide a page about how customers rate our services – and it’s not involved in making loans, loan approvals, credit screening, or making loans.


Essentially, their role just involves collecting information about potential customers and passing it on to us. We then contact the customer. We’ve been with them for a while; however, now we’re getting complaints. And recently, the CFPB seems to be looking into these types of aggregators. We are concerned that we may get caught up in the CFPB’s investigation.

Maybe you can shed some light on the CFPB’s investigation into online lead-generating platforms like the one we’re on. Apparently, the guests can compare rates and products and choose a lender.

What is the CFPB’s position on these online platforms that generate leads by online aggregators?

Overview:

From time to time, we are contacted by these types of lead generators. We’ve provided quite a bit of regulatory guidance in this area. We worked with one such company recently. Early on, we noted RESPA violations. Instead of wanting to fix the compliance challenges, they decided not to change anything, thereby exposing themselves to excessively high legal and regulatory risk. At that point, we terminated the relationship.


Listen, those who know me know I do not tolerate companies that want to mess with legal and regulatory compliance. Our motto is Creating a Culture of Compliance, and we take our mission seriously. We work with the smallest of the small and the largest of the large, and our goal is to ensure that a client stays compliant. Don’t expect to retain us if you’re looking for ways to skirt regulatory compliance.

Technically, the term for the online lead generator that aggregates lenders’ products, services, and rates is Digital Mortgage Comparison-Shopping Platforms.  


The CFPB issued an Advisory Opinion on February 7th detailing the counteraccusations for companies that operate online mortgage and agreement service comparison platforms and the lenders and service providers who pay to be featured on similar platforms. Further about that shortly.

( i) The CFPB is using HUD’s 1996 Policy Statement, which is concentrated on digital platforms that allowed consumers to comparison shop for agreement services.


( ii) HUD called these platforms “ computer loan fabrication systems ” or “ CLOs. ” The CLO Policy Statement was issued back when HUD had substantial authority over RESPA before that authority was transferred to CFPB in Dodd- Frank.

 

It is probably best to view the Advisory Opinion as a warning to market participants of specific conduct that the CFPB believes may violate RESPA. It may be that the Advisory Opinion will manifest in the form of enforcement activities.

 

The main subject of the Advisory Opinion is the conduct in the operations of online comparison platforms that it refers to as “non-neutral. ” That term harks back to the CLO Policy Statement. By “non-neutral, ” the CFPB means listing provider names or information in a way that mates out or prefers one lender over another for reasons other than neutral criteria, similar as an interest rate for a potentially available loan. The legal segue is that the CFPB is stating that such non-neutral presentations can affirmatively influence the selection of the favored provider. An example of such preference could be the preference in rankings of positioning of a lender on the first page of selection results.


The CFPB states[iii] its position regarding RESPA violations involving online mortgage comparison platforms in these two descriptions:


1) Presenting one or more service providers in a non-neutral way:

The platform’s driver presents lenders grounded on uprooted referral payments rather than the paperback’s particular data or preferences or other objective criteria. For illustration, the driver presents a lender as the stylish option because that lender pays the loftiest referral figure. still, the paperback is led to believe the lender was named grounded on their participated particular data or preferences. In one variation, digital mortgage comparison-shopping platforms may receive payments from lenders to rotate them as the top presented option regardless of whether the highlighted lender is the best fit for the shopper.


2) Biasing the platform’s internal formula to favor preferred providers:

The platform’s inputs or formula are manipulated to induce comparison options favoring advanced- paying or preferred providers. For illustration, a platform’s formula is designed to steer shoppers to use providers in which the driver has a fiscal stake. In this case, the paperback is ignorant that the platform’s formula was potentially designed to steer them down fromnon-preferred providers.

The summary section of the Advisory Opinion asserts an outline that infers that online comparison platforms receive an illegal referral payment in violation of Section 8 of RESPA when the following three factors are all present:


1. The platform-non-neutrally uses or presents information about one or further agreement service providers sharing on the platform;


2.   That non-neutral use or presentation of information has the effect of steering the consumer to use, or otherwise affirmatively influences the selection of, those settlement service providers, thus constituting referral activity; and


3. The platform receives a payment or other thing of value that is, at least in part, for that referral exertion.


The CFPB discusses numerous different exemplifications of types of conduct that would constitute either a shaft Gym violation or implicit substantiation of one( at least in the CFPB’s view).

It’s worth noting that the CFPB’s Director Chopra issued an coexisting statement that advised the Advisory Opinion is “ part of a broader all- of- government trouble to end the illegal biasing of presumably neutral platforms. ” I suppose we can interpret that enforcement counteraccusations are current.


With respect to the CFPB’s investigations reaching you, as a lender that puts its listing on a digital platform, there are two types of entities directly affected by the Advisory Opinion: ( 1) The drivers of online comparison platforms and( 2) the mortgage lenders who use them to announce and induce consumer leads.


In my view, there are at least three essential concerns:

1.       What information is being presented to consumers?

2.       How is it being presented?

3. What payments are flowing from lenders to the platform driver?

The Advisory Opinion extensively discusses how a RESPA violation may occur in these arrangements, and determining a RESPA violation will depend on the facts and case-by-case analyses. That said, some of the examples of RESPA violations mentioned in the Advisory Opinion are views seemingly fashioned without the benefits of notice-and-comment rulemaking. For instance, it may be putting the cart before the horse to opine on what customers of online comparison platforms want from the lead generator service or whether they expect that information will be “non-neutral” in all instances.

 

This gets us to the potential problem of a lender paying compensation to be listed as a “sponsored” or “featured” provider. The CFPB appears to suggests that RESPA may be violated even where every lender pays the same compensation to the platform operator, if the information provided has the effect of steering a consumer to a particular lender.


The HUD 1996 Policy Statement mentions that the presentation of only a single lender as a lender option may be problematic. Still, the Advisory Opinion doesn't offer guidance on how this could be affected by scripts where only one available provider meets the consumer’s requirements or stated preferences. Yet, there is theory, and there is practice, and in practice, there is the existing mortgage market, where, absent guidance, uncertainty ensues.


Then there is the matter of “warm handoffs.” That is the term describing the sequence wherein a platform operator facilitates direct contact between a consumer and a particular lender. Warm handoffs can be problematic if the identification of the lender isn't grounded on non-neutral criteria.  Yet again, there is not much guidance in the Advisory Opinion on what is a “non-neutral” selection in this context and when and how a handoff becomes a “warm handoff.” Is it non-neutral for the lender’s selection to be based on its speed of response? Is it non-neutral to be based on the available loan product meeting all of the consumer’s identified criteria? We need substantive guidance to know what is a warm handoff and, from the view of regulatory risk, what response could cause a RESPA violation.


Some mortgage comparison platforms do not disclose their arrangements in a way that the customer can easily read them. Sometimes, the disclosures are found by clicking on a site map or footer link to find them. This is a marketing ploy, a workaround, where disclosure is provided but not readily seen. But an online comparison platform should provide clear and conspicuous disclosure of how it uses and presents participating lenders’ information. Whatever the case, however, these disclosures by themselves do not prevent a RESPA section 8 violation.


Therefore, indeed if an online comparison platform easily discloses to a consumer exactly how lenders are ranked or presented, the CFPB may still view it as a RESPA violation if the donation or ranking methodology isn't conducted in a sufficiently “ neutral ” manner.

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