More Step One for Cook County Mortgages – Anti-Predatory Lending Database Goes Online Today
1st July 2008
Mortgage loans in Cook County just got a little more complicated. The new anti-predatory lending bill, SB1167, goes
into affect today, July 1st. One of the provisions of the bill was to set up a database to keep track of all loans originated in Cook County. Borrowers who fall into certain risk categories will need to get counseling before they can close on their mortgage.
According to SB1167, all loans recorded in Cook County after 7/1/2008 are going to require either a Certificate of Exemption, or a Certificate of Compliance attached to the mortgage. The certificates will be printed from the Anti Predatory Lending Database web site set up by Cook County. Mortgage brokers and mortgage bankers who handle mortgages in Chicago and throughout Cook County are now required to enter the loan in the data base at the start of the transaction. This only applies to owner-occupied 1-4 unit residential properties.
Not every borrower needs the counseling though. The conditions that will trigger the counseling requirement are:
- Any purchase transaction where all borrowers are first time home buyers OR Any primary residence refinance where the loan has one of the features below.
- The loan has an interest only feature
- The loan has a prepayment penalty
- The loan has a negative amortization feature
- Total points and fees exceed 5%.
- The loan is an ARM with an interest rate adjustment within the first 3 years. (We’ve been informed by the IAMP that 3/1 ARMs WILL require counseling, even though you may think that the rate adjustments are not “within the first 3 years, but occur after 3 years.)
The following loans are exempt from the counseling requirement: Reverse mortgages, Non-owner occupied (investment), Commercial and multi-family over 4 units.
Predatory lending has been the cause of a lot of foreclosures and a lot of ruined lives. Anything that can put a stop to it is worth doing. But like so many laws this solution isn’t going to have the impact that it is hoping for. For one thing, the real estate market has slowed down and mortgage guidelines have tightened. It’s not as easy to commit fraud when people are paying attention so a lot of the quick-buck sharks and sleazy operators have moved on. The other factor is that the market is ahead of the curve on a lot of these provisions. The loan features that trigger counseling are all features of sub-prime loans, mortgages for borrowers who couldn’t fit into the normal conventional guidelines. Sub-prime loans were the first casualty in the mortgage melt down last year, and no one is making those loans anymore. There will be some sophisticated borrowers who may be forced into counseling because they chose to refinance with an interest only mortgage for the cash-flow benefits, but if first time home buyers are taking on loans with these features they need to know exactly what they are getting into. The law will mean some loans will take a little longer, and it will add an extra step to the process. But who knows, maybe it will even help some people.
Illinois Mortgage Rates and News
Posted in First Time Home Buyers, Local issues, Mortgage Programs, Refinancing | Comments Off


