“People would learn more from their mistakes if they weren’t so busy denying them.” Here’s a little trivia for the compliance folks in the coffee room: The CFPB handles 20,000 consumer complaints per week, and given that financing a home, and then servicing the loan, is the largest financial transaction most individuals go through, you gotta figure a chunk of the 20,000 involve mortgages. While we’re on the CFPB, Director Chopra addressed issues related to refinancing in a hearing on Capitol Hill last Thursday. But the headlines have been grabbed by interest rate improvements in our free market economy, and the economics calendar this week will be highlighted by the U.S. jobs report on Friday, arriving just five days before the Federal Reserve's December 13 meeting. (Expect payrolls growth will rise to 200K in November from 150k job additions in October, and the unemployment rate to stay steady at 3.9 percent.) Today’s podcast can be found here, and this week’s is sponsored by nCino, makers of the nCino Mortgage Suite for the modern mortgage lender. nCino Mortgage Suite's three core products, nCino Mortgage, nCino Incentive Compensation, and nCino Mortgage Analytics, unite the people, systems, and stages of the mortgage process. Today’s has a wide-ranging interview with economist Elliot Eisenberg on government spending, the Fed’s balance sheet, and “Eisenbergian Economics.” Lender and Broker Products, and Services Servicing transfers are complicated, so it is critically important that you nail down the prep work beforehand. If you don’t, and the servicing transfer goes awry, it’s not only servicers who suffer, their customers do, too. The professional services team at ICE Mortgage Technology break down exactly what’s on the line, and what happens when poorly handled servicing transfers leave customers in a lurch. Read its new blog here to learn just how “high stakes” loan transfers can be, and the steps servicers can take to avoid borrower confusion, retention concerns, and even reputational risk, before they become a problem.