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Mortgage Servicing
Position Summary
The CSBS Board of Directors approved model prudential standards addressing capital, liquidity, and corporate governance (including audit, risk management, and board oversight). The financial condition provisions align with the Federal Housing Finance Agency's Minimum Financial Eligibility Requirements for Seller/Servicers, providing state supervision and enforcement of these common requirements.

As nonbank servicers became responsible for a larger share of consumer mortgages after the financial crisis, state regulators grew concerned about the absence of a common set of state standards addressing servicers’ capital and liquidity requirements. State examinations of nonbank servicers also identified inadequate corporate governance and board oversight.   

These concerns led state regulators to pursue – and subsequently approve – new standards that will require nonbank mortgage servicers to maintain the financial capacity, governance, and risk management practices to adequately serve consumers and investors and simultaneously enhance market stability.   

The requirements contained in the standards are only effective through state implementation. State agencies may use the standards to formulate law, rule, guidance, or procedure under their individual jurisdictional authority or legislative process. The standards specify the importance of consistent adoption to regulate multistate entities and to minimize regulatory burden. To that end, CSBS is working with states to achieve consistent nationwide implementation.  

Key highlights of the standards include:   

  • The standards focus on two main areas: financial condition, i.e., capital and liquidity, and corporate governance, i.e., board of directors, internal and external audits. 
  • The standards align with existing federal minimum eligibility requirements, wherever practical, to minimize regulatory burden for servicers.  
  • The standards apply to servicers that service at least 2,000 loans and operate in two or more states and cover both agency and non-agency servicing.  
  • The standards do not apply to:
    • small servicers that meet a de minimis cutoff
    • not-for-profit mortgage servicers
    • housing agencies 
  • The standards provide state regulators with flexibility to increase requirements for high-risk servicers or even suspend the requirements in times of economic, societal, or environmental volatility. 

Mortgage Servicing News

Policy
The CSBS model state regulatory prudential standards for nonbank mortgage servicers establish common financial capacity, governance, and risk management requirements for nonbank mortgage servicers.
February 27, 2024