Thursday, September 6, 2007

Watch out for net branching

Many mortgage brokers consider the benefits of net branching when licensing and compliance issues arise. A net branch is an office at which a lender or mortgage broker allows a separate company that does not hold a valid lender or broker license in a particular state to originate loans under the lender’s or mortgage broker’s license. The net branch arrangement usually is set up so that a branch office rents its own space, hires its own employees, contracts with its own vendors and gets a part of the profits from that branch office. It uses the licensee’s name so that it has the appearance of being a branch but is typically a separate company.

The Federal Housing Administration prohibits net branching. The states that specifically prohibit this practice include Arizona, New York, Rhode Island, Georgia, and Florida. But remember all states prohibit unlicensed entities from brokering or lending. If your branch payments for closed loans are made to your corporation or limited liability company you have just violated the law.

Penalties for violating the laws against net branching or unlicensed lending or brokering can include fines, license suspension or revocation for the licensee and fines and possible criminal charges filed against the unlicensed entity. Even if you are not discovered by a state’s banking department or FHA, mortgage brokers can be left without their promised payments from the licensee if the licensee closes its doors or files bankruptcy before your company has been paid. There are also many licensees that are slow to pay even if they are still open for business.

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