Several industry trade associations have asked the FHA to confirm whether the 203(k) property rehabilitation program can be used to mitigate future flood threats, particularly for undamaged homes in flood zones. Because of their properties' location in a designated floodplain, homeowners could be hit by rising flood insurance rates. The Mortgage Bankers Association, National Association of Realtors, National Association of Home Builders, National Association of Local Housing Finance Agencies and the Association of State Floodplain Managers said they believe the federal 203(k) program can be used to reduce or minimize the effect of future floodings on undamaged floodplain properties. Flood insurance rates can be reduced significantly by raising a home to a level at or above the 100-year flood elevation, or by ...
Genworth Mortgage Insurance is helping customers understand the benefits of the new master policy private mortgage insurers have helped develop with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to improve the MIs' operating and servicing processes. Genworth expects the new master policy to take effect in July. Customers will receive a copy of the document as well as information explaining its benefits and operation before the effective date. A "Master Policy Introduction Reference Notes" and other resources may be found at Genworth's website, including a downloadable sample of the master policy, sample endorsements, a summary of changes and frequently asked questions. In December 2013, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced the government-sponsored enterprises' completion of the first major overhaul of the MI master policy requirements in many years. As part of their conservatorship, Fannie and Freddie were required to ...
House Weighs Bill to Restore Grandfathered Flood Insurance Rates. There is a possibility that the House of Representatives will vote next week on the amended version of H.R. 3370, the Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act, as Republicans and Democrats continued to negotiate on proposed changes and further protection for homeowners who face hefty rate increases. H.R. 3370 builds on bipartisan legislation the Senate passed last month to delay flood insurance rate increases. Specifically, the substitute bill would make permanent the grandfathering of lower rates, which means catastrophic rate increases would no longer occur because of Federal Emergency Management Agency remapping. The Senate bill would only delay the changes for four years. In addition, the House bill would repeal the home sale/new policy triggers in the Biggert-Waters Act for all properties, including the ...
Walter Investment, the parent of Green Tree, said it anticipates meeting with the regulator in the near future to get a better understanding of its concerns and to see if the matter can be resolved.
The retail share of new residential originations declined slightly, to 60 percent, in the fourth quarter after climbing steadily during the first nine months of the year.
Lenders leaned more heavily on their own internal production capacity during 2013, but third-party originations staged a modest rebound during the fourth quarter, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. Retail loan production -- including consumer direct, refinance business through the servicing unit and old-fashioned marketing through real estate agents and brokers -- accounted for 62.1 percent of total originations last year. That was the highest retail market share since Inside Mortgage Finance began estimating channel production figures back in 1994. The retail share of new production declined...[Includes five data charts]
Mortgage industry investors and analysts are getting nervous about all the regulatory scrutiny being placed on servicing transfers and the rise of fast-growing nonbanks that have quickly amassed a large market share position. One analyst who tracks the market closely told Inside Mortgage Finance that some of these nonbank servicers are starting to "lawyer up" because of New York state's recent decision to block, at least temporarily, the sale of $39 billion in non-agency mortgage servicing rights by Wells Fargo to Ocwen Financial. Initially, servicing executives and their advisors believed...
Mortgage-delinquency rates continued to improve as 2013 came to a close, ending the year at the lowest level in over five years. The overall delinquency rate was 7.73 percent as of the end of December, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index, the lowest reading since the third quarter of 2008, when it was 7.42 percent and rocketing higher....