The CFPBs much-anticipated integrated mortgage disclosure final rule and related forms could be issued as early as Wednesday, Nov. 20, when the bureau plans to conduct a public field hearing in Boston on the mortgage aspect of its broader know before you owe initiative. The event will feature remarks by CFPB Director Richard Cordray and testimony from consumer groups, industry representatives and members of the public. The purpose of the forthcoming rule and forms is to integrate and harmonize the mortgage disclosures consumers receive...
The CFPBs ability-to-repay rule and qualified mortgage standard will have wide-reaching implications for both the primary and secondary U.S. mortgage markets, according to a new report from Fitch Ratings. The ATR rule, which goes into effect Jan. 10, 2014, was drafted to protect borrowers by ensuring that lenders have adequately assessed a borrowers ability to repay a residential mortgage loan. As a result, creditors will need to adjust underwriting practices to conform to new QM guidelines and new practices will need to be created and...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has directed the two GSEs to accelerate their portfolio trimming by focusing on less-liquid assets other than their own MBS.
A Miami-based investment management firm, one of the largest junior preferred shareholders of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, this week offered to buy and operate the MBS guaranty businesses of the two government-sponsored enterprises with $52 billion of private capital and a business plan that is sustainable with or without a federal reinsurance plan. In a four-page letter to Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco, Bruce Berkowitz, chief investment officer of Fairholme Capital Management, proposed to form two new state-regulated insurance companies to own and operate the assets of Fannie and Freddie that are relevant to the continuing insurance business. Under the Fairholme plan, the new MBS guarantors would be capitalized...
It is unclear how much money is needed to recapitalize RMIC, which is currently in a run-off mode, but Old Republic plans to contribute up to $50 million and raise additional funds in the capital markets to resurrect its MI subsidiaries.
A reformed housing finance system should first and foremost put the risk and rewards of mortgage lending in the hands of private actors, with the government playing a key role to reduce the impact of the inevitable financial-market failures, especially when their failures are exacerbated in a cyclical downturn, an Obama administration official noted this week. Speaking at an Urban Institute event, James Stock, a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, outlined the administrations central theme of cyclical resilience or the need for the mortgage finance system to provide liquidity at reasonable rates during both good and bad times. A cyclically resilient housing finance system provides...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac picked the low-hanging fruit first and sold large chunks of their most liquid less-liquid assets during the third quarter of 2013 as the government-sponsored enterprises continued to shift their business away from retained investments. The GSEs reduced their combined holdings of commercial MBS by 32.1 percent during the third quarter, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis of their retained portfolios. The Federal Housing Finance Agency has directed the two companies to accelerate their portfolio trimming by focusing on less-liquid assets other than their own MBS. The commercial MBS market has been...[Includes one data chart]
The Center for American Progress called on FHFA to keep g-fees at current levels until there is reliable evidence to suggest that the government needs more revenue to cover the cost of the guaranty.
It was the now-senior Democrat senator from Massachusetts, Elizabeth Warren, who faulted the Fed for enabling the financial crisis that prompted such an unconventional accommodative response in the first place.
With qualified-mortgage underwriting requirements set to take effect Jan. 10, the rating services are beginning to detail the role QM status will play in ratings for non-agency mortgage-backed securities. Fitch Ratings appears to be the furthest along in adjusting its ratings process to account for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus ability-to-repay rule and QM standards. The rating service this week released its initial perspective for rating non-agency MBS with loans originated in a QM world ...