California continued to be the leading source of new single-family Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages during 2012, according to a new Inside The GSEs analysis. A total of $296.1 billion of home loans in the Golden State were securitized by the two GSEs during the 12 months ending on Dec. 31, 2012, accounting for 23.1 percent of their total business for the year. That was up 51.9 percent from total California Fannie/Freddie production back in 2011, while the overall GSE market rose 50.1 percent from a year ago. Although fixed-rate mortgages continued to dominate the GSE market throughout 2012, California produced $11.0 billion in adjustable-rate mortgages 26.5 percent of the national total. ARMs accounted for just 3.2 percent of total GSE volume.
Although the GSEs ended 2012 with $20.11 billion of pending and disputed buybacks on their books, the halcyon days of loan repurchase disputes may be behind the two, causing both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to reconsider their employment of outside due diligence vendors. According to executives who work for these vendors and serve as consultants to the GSEs, over the past several months Fannie Mae has slashed contracts with at least two outside firms
The mortgage industry remains on guard and is fully prepared to rebuff further attempts by lawmakers to squeeze Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guaranty fee revenue to fund non-government-sponsored enterprise related pet projects, experts say. Congress passage in early 2012 of a payroll tax cut extension bill set a dangerous precedent and emboldened lawmakers to look to the GSEs as a piggy-bank by mandating an increase and using the funds to offset the costs of other programs, according to Robert Zimmer, head of external affairs at the Community Mortgage Lenders of America. Im shocked that Im not hearing anything right now on diverting g-fees to other parts of the federal budget, said Zimmer. I think there has been some hardening in town that this is a bad idea but when [Congress is] desperate for money, anything can happen.
Many mortgage bankers are bracing for a slowdown in originations this year, but they have an even larger concern on their hands: whether Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will hike their net worth minimum currently set at $2.5 million. The GSEs and their regulator have said little on the subject, but there is rampant speculation that it’s only a matter of time before higher net worth minimums are introduced – it’s just a matter of when,
The top Democrat of the House Financial Services Committee has concerns and wants answers from Fannie Maes regulator as to why it pulled the plug on the GSEs plans to lower the cost of force-placed insurance. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-CA, the committees ranking member, dispatched a letter this week to Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco seeking an explanation as to why the Finance Agency abruptly shut down a plan pushed by Fannie
Although JPMorgan Chase plans to chop 15,000 mortgage-related positions by the end of 2014 and Wells Fargo has closed roughly 90 residential lending joint ventures in the past 12 months, the immediate future for employment is actually decent. Keep in mind that hiring trends are specific to industry niches. Vendors that work on due diligence and foreclosure reviews such as Allonhill LLC, The Clayton Group and Promontory Financial have been cutting contract workers for months as ...
During the height of the housing boom, 80-10-10 loan structures became very popular and caused headaches for mortgage insurance firms that lost business to these arrangements, which dodged the need for traditional MI coverage. As the mortgage and housing markets continued on a downward spiral, a new variant emerged that allowed borrowers to take out a conforming first mortgage for 80 percent of the house value and finance the rest with a 20 percent home equity loan. Both versions went the way of the dinosaur ...
It shouldnt be a surprise if mortgage lenders are suffering from loan originator compensation regulation fatigue. The industry has been in a constant state of implementation regarding LO comp and LO qualification since 2009, said Amy Thoreson Long, senior counsel in the consumer lending division of Wells Fargos law department, during a webinar hosted yesterday by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter. The bad news is, things will get much worse in that regard before they get better, thanks to ...