The bipartisan Senate blueprint for secondary mortgage market reform includes several key provisions designed to facilitate small-lender access when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are no longer around.
The mortgage slowdown will separate the men from the boys, the girls from the ladies. It's time to fire all underperforming loan officers, says mortgage consultant David Lykken.
The top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee said that she and other members on the panel are drafting an alternative approach to improve upon the existing housing-finance reform proposals currently circulating in both chambers of Congress. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-CA, noted during a speech at a Bipartisan Policy Center Housing Commission Policy Forum this week that the proposal in progress would encompass the set of principles House Democrats issued in July with a particular emphasis on preserving an affordable 30-year, fixed rate mortgage.
Congress is making an important start on GSE reform but a final, tangible product may not come to fruition for several more years, according to Capitol Hill insiders. Speaking at the Mortgage Bankers Associations annual convention in Washington, DC, last week, former House Financial Services Committee Senior Counsel Michael Borden and former Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee Staff Director Dwight Fettig agreed its a virtual certainty that a final reform bill will not materialize during the 113th Congress.
Servicers working for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now prohibited from being reimbursed altogether for expenses associated with lender-placed insurance practices, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced this week. The FHFAs action follows a notice the agency published in March calling for seller/servicers to be prohibited from accepting sales commissions or fees related to lender-placed or force-placed insurance where a conflict exists between them and the insurance providers and their affiliates.
Spencer Stuart, a search firm working for the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has talked to a top official at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau about being the CEO of the fledgling Common Securitization Solutions platform project, Inside The GSEs has learned. The candidate for the CEO job is Peter Carroll, who currently serves as assistant director for mortgage markets at the CFPB.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency spent the last two weeks racking up several legal settlements in its massive litigation action against some of the nations financial institutions. Look for more to come predict industry analysts. On Oct. 25, JPMorgan Chase agreed to pay $4.0 billon to settle claims on $33.8 billion of non-agency mortgage-backed securities purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Despite this years implementation of a new Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac representations-and-warranties framework that promises repurchase relief with a three-year sunset on liability, the GSEs still hold all the cards and a very big stick when it comes to lenders managing their buyback risks, according to an expert during an exclusive Inside Mortgage Finance webinar this week. Jonathan Jaffe, a partner at the law firm of K&L Gates, told webinar participants that Fannies and Freddies hyper-aggressive enforcement of their repurchase options and frequently updated rules creates a near constant state of uncertainty for lenders who have been made all too aware that too much buyback resistance could result in them being on the wrong end of a nuclear exchange.
Depending on how the Senates housing finance reform legislation comes out in the end, the Federal Home Loan Banks could play an even larger role in helping smaller lenders successfully access the secondary market, Richard Swanson, president and CEO of the Des Moines Bank, said this week. Testifying before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, Swanson said that the secondary mortgage market, as envisioned by S. 1217 by Sens. Bob Corker, R-TN, and Mark Warner, D-VA, would allow the 12 FHLBanks to serve in an expanded role as mortgage aggregators.
Freddie Macs account balance with the U.S. Treasury will go into the black by yearend thanks to stellar third-quarter earnings and Fannie Mae likely will accomplish the same by the end of March 2014. But mortgage bankers shouldnt pop any champagne. Thats the view of Dave Stevens, president of the Mortgage Bankers Association who worked at Freddie once and also served as FHA commissioner. Stevens believes that despite their strong performance in the third quarter and beyond, both are just insurance brokers that have benefitted from the Federal Reserve buying their mortgage-backed securities. [Includes one data chart.]