The nomination of Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC, by President Obama to be the new director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency is considered a long shot on Capitol Hill, but the distinct lack of enthusiasm by both supporters and detractors of the nominee means anything could happen, say industry observers. Despite the vocal support of progressives, especially advocates of principal reduction of GSE-held loans, Watts nomination to replace FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco is far from a sure thing, according to analysts at Compass Point Research & Trading. We remain pessimistic regarding Rep. Watts nomination, said Compass Point.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency last week directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to extend both the Home Affordable Modification Program and their streamlined modification initiative until 2015. The move was in concert with actions by the Treasury Department and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Both agencies said they would extend HAMP for non-Fannie and Freddie loans, but the FHFAs directive makes the extension applicable to loans owned or guaranteed by the GSEs.These extensions keep two valuable foreclosure prevention programs available to those who need them, said FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco. The extensions also align the end date for three key assistance programs that were developed in response to the housing crisis.
Seller/servicers doing business with Freddie Mac will be charged a so-called low-activity fee for not meeting new quotas for loan deliveries and mortgage servicing beginning next year, according to a recent policy change announced by the GSE. Freddie said it will assess lenders a fee of $7,500 if they fail to deliver mortgage loans with an aggregate principal balance of more than $5 million or service mortgages for the GSE with an aggregate balance of at least $25 million. Freddie will begin monitoring loan sales and servicing beginning this year and imposing the low-activity fee on slackers beginning January of next year.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has settled its second mortgage-backed securities lawsuit in its massive litigation effort against non-agency MBS issuers and underwriters that sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Citigroup last week agreed to pay damages to settle allegations that the investment bank sold $3.5 billion of faulty MBS to the two GSEs in the years leading up to the financial crisis. The FHFA filed suit during the summer of 2011 against 18 financial institutions, including Citi, alleging violations of the federal Securities Act of 1933.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency would see the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks come up with their own internal credit rating system under a proposed rule issued by the FHFA two weeks ago. Published in the May 23 Federal Register, the Finance Agency proposal would remove a number of credit rating references and requirements in certain safety and soundness regulations affecting the FHLBanks. FHFA regulations require the FHLBanks to assess the credit-worthiness of a security or money market instrument that either the Bank is considering investing in or the Bank is helping another financial institution invest in.
The draft includes numerous provisions designed to ensure access to the revamped secondary market for credit unions and community banks with less than $10 billion in assets.
In its 10-Q filing for the first quarter, Fannie Mae reported $3.74 billion of gross unrealized gains on a host of different securities in its available for sale account.
Raj Date's new mortgage firm bills itself as a consumer finance company and is stacked with former high-level employees of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
The bipartisan Senate legislation being drafted to finally resolve the conservatorships of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac attempts to meet the needs of a lot of interests in the mortgage finance industry, including small lenders, Wall Street, the multifamily business and even, potentially, current owners of common stock issued by the two government-sponsored enterprises. A discussion draft of the bill, the Secondary Mortgage Market Reform and Taxpayer Protection Act of 2013, outlines a broad plan for shutting down Fannie and Freddie and replacing them with a new entity the Federal Mortgage Insurance Corp. that is intended as a transition to a fully private mortgage market. A copy of the draft legislation, which is primarily the work of Sens. Bob Corker, R-TN, and Mark Warner, D-VA, was provided to Inside Mortgage Finance. The draft bill includes...