Fannie Maes plan to unload, potentially, billions of dollars of non-performing residential loans has been delayed and may be killed, according to industry officials whove been tracking the project. Its going nowhere, but its not like theres a requirement for them to say so publicly, said one advisor who is a vendor to Fannie. The GSE, to date, has declined to discuss the issue along with its regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Fannie has been working on an NPL sale for close to a year, and even hired an investment banker, Milestone Advisors LLC, to guide it through the auction process. Initially, it had hoped to offer a package of $250 million of delinquent home mortgages for sale to the highest bidder.
Look for Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs regulator to press forward with its policy proposal to develop a set of aligned standards for force-placed insurance, the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency told lawmakers last week. Testifying before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco said the agency plans to pursue a broader approach to force-placed insurance. Our goal is to establish a set of standards that could be adopted by a broader set of mortgage market participants, similar to what was done with the Servicing Alignment Initiative, said DeMarco. This broadened approach will also enable greater regulatory coordination in an effort to consider the various issues associated with lender-placed insurance.
The Federal Housing Finance Agencys recent extension of the Home Affordable Refinance Program has significantly lessened the already slim prospects of any so-called HARP 3.0 legislation advancing through Congress, say analysts. The Responsible Homeowner Refinancing Act of 2013, by Sens. Robert Menendez, D-NJ, and Barbara Boxer, D-CA, had already been struggling to gain traction in Congress amid the steady volume of HARP refis in recent months and Republican resistance to expanding current HARP eligibility requirements. HARP had been scheduled to expire at the end of this year before the FHFAs directive to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earlier this month to extend the refi program through Dec. 31, 2015.
One week after UBS Americas failed in its bid to shutter a lawsuit brought by the Federal Housing Finance Agency in connection with non-agency mortgage-backed securities purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the federal judge overseeing the case has ordered UBS to hand over internal documents to the FHFA the company argued were privileged. U.S. District Court Judge Denise Cote ruled last week that parts of memoranda from UBS outside counsel to the company which contained factual summaries of meetings held with third-party mortgage originators are not protected by attorney-client privilege and must be disclosed to the FHFA. Even if it is true, as UBS argues, that the memoranda at issue were created for the predominant purpose of rendering legal advice, that does not relieve UBS of the obligation to show that the entirety of each document is privileged, wrote Judge Cote in her ruling.
Freddie Mac is getting the word out early that it is phasing out its software for managing delinquent home loans with plans to discontinue the service altogether next year. The company has already stopped registering new customers for EarlyIndicator, Freddies Windows-based program used to predict loan delinquency. "To provide users with time to transition, we are letting them know we are retiring EarlyIndicator one year in advance, Freddie said in its announcement earlier this month.
Most companies reported declining earnings from their mortgage banking businesses during the first quarter of 2013, according to a new analysis by Inside Mortgage Trends. As a group, however, the 23 diverse businesses included in the round-up posted a surprising 34.2 percent increase in aggregate mortgage banking earnings compared to the fourth quarter. The aggregate mortgage banking income was $6.74 billion for the group, a $1.72 billion increase over the previous quarter. Virtually all of that increase could be attributed to one company, Bank of America, which bounced back from a $540 million net loss during the fourth quarter to a $1.26 billion profit in early 2013 a $1.80 billion turnaround. BofA took...[Includes one data chart]
For years, Union Bank of San Francisco has made a name for itself as a top-ranked portfolio lender of jumbo mortgages but all that could soon change. No, Union Bank isnt leaving the space not by a long shot but the $94 billion asset commercial bank is in the midst of making a major push into conventional lending where its footprint has been quite small. Its...
Almost one in five mortgage lenders in the country is still actively considering switching to a new loan origination platform, driven largely by the need to keep up with increasing regulation and, to a lesser extent, the desire for new features to gain or keep a competitive edge in the marketplace. According to the seventh annual compliance survey by QuestSoft, a provider of mortgage compliance software based in Laguna Hills, CA, 18.6 percent of lenders are reevaluating their current LOS platform, up from 0.1 percent in last years survey. Historically, the percentage of lenders considering an LOS change hovered...
National MI, a new entrant in the private mortgage insurance market, began issuing its first commitments this month, although company officials acknowledge that a lot of the companys operations are still being put together. In fact, building a new MI from scratch with state-of-the-art technology and no hangover from the housing collapse is one of National MIs key advantages, officials said. 2013 is...
Fannie Mae is making it easier for small and medium-sized lenders to deliver electronic mortgages to the government-sponsored enterprise. Currently, lenders are required to obtain a variance to their master agreement in order to deliver electronic mortgage loans (eMortgages) to Fannie Mae, the GSE said in a recent selling guide announcement. Fannie Mae would like to expand...