The bloodbath in mortgage-production losses during the first quarter of 2014 did not occur uniformly across the industry and appears to be related to the failure of many companies to downsize quickly enough, new Mortgage Bankers Association data suggest. Average pretax income as a percentage of equity was -3.15 percent during the first quarter, the MBA said in its Quarterly Mortgage Bankers Performance report. That was the first negative profit margin since ...
Commercial banks and savings institutions continued to pare down their portfolios of mortgages serviced for other investors during the first quarter, according to a call-report analysis by Inside Mortgage Trends. Banks and thrifts serviced a total of $4.56 trillion of home loans for other investors, most of which was associated with mortgage-backed securities. That was down 3.2 percent from the fourth quarter and marked the eighth consecutive ... [Includes one data chart]
For the past year or so, the Millennial generation has been everyone’s favorite punching bag for why the housing market isn’t stronger. Depending on which study you read, this demographic group of 80 million strong just can’t manage to save enough money for a downpayment on a mortgage. Instead, they’ve been living in their parents’ basements or – gasp – renting in “group” homes. This in turn has stifled the housing recovery, or so the experts claim ...
Have you heard about “fair servicing” and “disparate maintenance?” Well, you’re going to. With servicing-related issues making up the lion’s share of consumer complaints about their mortgages, a new supervisory trend that has emerged in recent months is a move toward what could be called a “fair servicing” expectation, according to a pair of experts at the American Bankers Association’s 2014 regulatory compliance conference in New Orleans this week ...
Inventories and disposition times for commercial mortgage assets in special servicing as of year-end 2013 rose modestly compared to year-end 2012 as highly rated servicers moved real estate-owned inventories efficiently, according to a new Fitch Ratings analysis of the commercial mortgage-backed securities market. Analysts with Fitch’s CMBS Group found that REO assets as a percentage of specially serviced portfolios have grown for three of the largest ...
Specifically, the mortgages will be above the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac loan limit of $625,500. But before Redwood can buy its first jumbo loan, the Federal Housing Finance Agency must sign off on the effort.
It was also the lowest three-month volume since the fourth quarter of 2008, not long after dramatically higher “emergency” loan limits were put in place by the agencies.
Correspondent sellers fret that some of the largest players might shut the door on them for a different reason: they can’t deliver enough volume in an origination-challenged market.