State Mortgage Regulators Bring $10.2 Million Enforcement Action Against Prospect Mortgage. The Multi-State Mortgage Committee recently announced a $10.2 million settlement agreement and consent order between 50 state mortgage regulators and Prospect Mortgage over allegedly inappropriately assessed third-party settlement fees charged by an affiliate. According to the Conference of State Bank Supervisors and the American Association of Residential Mortgage Regulators, a multi-state examination performed by eight states revealed a pattern of charging improperly disclosed and unsupported fees paid to the company’s affiliate, C2C Appraisal Services. Under the terms of the agreement, Prospect is to pay restitution to every borrower in all participating states that was assessed a C2C Settlement Service Fee in the amount of $40 with interest of 10 ...
CFPB, Fed, OCC Announce Threshold for Smaller Loan Exemption from Appraisal Requirements for Higher-Priced Mortgage Loans. Last week, the CFPB, the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency announced that the threshold for exempting loans from special appraisal requirements under the Dodd-Frank Act for higher-priced mortgage loans during 2016 will remain $25,500.The threshold amount will be effective January 1, 2016, and is the same threshold that applied in 2015 – based on the annual percentage decrease in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) as of June 1, 2015. ...
A handful of publicly traded real estate investment trusts have been quietly making inquiries about buying residential loans that do not meet the qualified mortgage standard, including subprime credits and even unsecured consumer loans, according to players on both sides of the equation. One executive who manages a REIT that plays in the jumbo market admitted as much in an interview with Inside MBS & ABS, but pointed to one major deterrent: the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. “We’ve tried to get clarifications from them on such things as the ability-to-pay rule, but they haven’t been very helpful,” he said. The source noted that his REIT has so far avoided buying any nonprime, non-QM loans, saying he fears the regulator will ...
Residential mortgages serviced by banks in top foreclosure states are getting hit with higher loss severities than those serviced by nonbanks, largely because banks have so far dealt with more repercussions from regulatory settlements, according to Moody’s Investors Services. Moody’s compared major servicers’ subprime loss severities for loans in the top three foreclo-sure states of Florida, New York and New Jersey, which collectively make up about 42 percent of all subprime mortgages in foreclosure in non-agency RMBS. The rating service found that loss severities on bank-serviced mortgages in Florida averaged 95 percent, versus 81 percent for nonbank-serviced mortgages. Drilling down in the data a bit to review the extremes, on one end of the continuum for banks was CitiMortgage, which ...
Borrowers are increasingly changing the terms for loans backing recently issued commercial MBS shortly after the deal closes, said Fitch Ratings. The rating service said it has received about 15 requests this year for rating confirmations pertaining to loans from 2014 or 2015 vintage deals. While the majority of requests have been loan assumptions by new borrowing entities or ownership structures, a handful have contemplated more fundamental changes to other loan terms. But Fitch said the problem arises when some of the proposed changes would have required that the loan be modeled differently or more conservatively, had it known about the changes prior to issuance. The rating agency is especially concerned about borrowers trying to add more debt. “Additional debt, ...
The correspondent channel during the third quarter of 2015 took its biggest share of total mortgage originations in years, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis and ranking. Mortgage lenders acquired $165 billion of home loans from correspondent originators during the third quarter, a 1.9 percent increase at a time when overall production fell 7.1 percent. The surge pushed the correspondent share of new originations to 36.3 percent ... [Includes four data charts]
A number of factors could prompt the Federal Housing Finance Agency to reduce the guaranty fees charged by the government-sponsored enterprises in 2016, according to Barclays Capital analysts. “There is an economic argument as well as a policy argument to be made for reducing g-fees, especially given a greater focus on credit availability and less focus on shrinking the GSEs’ footprint,” Barclays said in a recent report. “A g-fee cut could be one of the policy developments ...
Fannie Mae has announced the winning bids for its third nonperforming loan sale while Freddie Mac has begun accepting bids for its eighth NPL transaction for 2015. Up for sale in the Fannie Mae deal were approximately 7,000 NPLs totaling $1.24 billion in unpaid principal balance, divided among three pools. The winning bidders in the transaction are Fortress, through its New Residential Investment Corp., for the first and third pools and Goldman Sachs for the second pool. The government-sponsored enterprise announced the sale in October to lighten its inventory of NPLs and manage credit losses on its delinquent loan portfolio. The GSE gave up on the severely delinquent loans after attempts to cure them through loss mitigation failed. Investors and ...
Stonegate Mortgage – which holds the distinction of being the last nonbank mortgage firm to go public – is in the process of disposing of a large swath of its retail branch network in favor of a third-party originator strategy that relies heavily on brokers and correspondents. In total, it expects to close 47 branches outright by yearend or allow the offices to be taken over by a competitor. Although the company declined to discuss its strategy, recent press statements indicate it will maintain