By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) – The U.S. Shopper Monetary Safety Bureau sued a lender owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:) on Monday, accusing it of pushing debtors into unaffordable mortgages to purchase properties from Clayton Houses, Berkshire’s manufactured housing enterprise.
Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance, a unit of Clayton, allegedly ignored “clear and obvious red flags” that debtors couldn’t afford their loans, and did not correctly assess debtors’ capability to pay different money owed and preserve meals on the desk.
The CFPB mentioned this violated guidelines imposed after the 2008 world monetary disaster that required mortgage lenders to confirm debtors’ incomes and make good-faith determinations about debtors’ capability to repay.
In accordance with the regulator, many Vanderbilt debtors incurred late charges and penalties once they fell behind on funds, and had their properties repossessed or filed for chapter after their loans went into default.
In a single occasion, Vanderbilt authorized a house mortgage for a pair with three youngsters that left them with simply $57.78 a month for discretionary spending. The couple ultimately defaulted, the CFPB mentioned.
“Vanderbilt knowingly traps people in risky loans in order to close the deal on selling a manufactured home,” CFPB Director Rohit Chopra mentioned in an announcement.
A spokeswoman for Vanderbilt and Clayton mentioned they had been reviewing the grievance.
The CFPB accused Vanderbilt of violating the federal Reality in Lending Act, and is in search of civil fines and restitution for harmed debtors.
It filed its grievance within the Knoxville, Tennessee, federal courtroom. Vanderbilt and Clayton are primarily based in Maryville, Tennessee, a Knoxville suburb.
Clayton is the biggest U.S. builder of manufactured properties, together with cell properties, which are sometimes purchased by individuals who have low credit score scores and incomes or reside in rural areas.
It has been a part of Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire since 2003, and had income of $9.1 billion within the first 9 months of 2024.
In 2015, Clayton was accused in experiences by the Seattle Occasions of predatory lending for driving Black, Hispanic and Native American debtors into subprime loans they may not afford.
Buffett defended Clayton on the time, saying at Berkshire’s 2015 annual shareholder assembly that he had “no apologies whatsoever about Clayton’s lending terms.”
The case is CFPB v Vanderbilt Mortgage & Finance Inc, U.S. District Courtroom, Japanese District of Tennessee, No. 25-00004.