Lenders One, the nations largest mortgage cooperative, is telling its members they need to get their Fannie Mae servicing approvals by the end of January to be eligible for discounts under an affinity deal it has with the GSE.
Despite the bad press and the elimination of the standard fixed-rate reverse mortgage product from the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program, reverse mortgages will continue to thrive simply because people grow old, former Ginnie Mae chief Joe Murin told Inside FHA Lending.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency said it has settled one of its numerous lawsuits against non-agency mortgage-backed securities issuers for misrepresenting deals that were sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the mortgage market collapse.
The government-sponsored enterprises are working several different risk-transfer pilots and will soon issue the securities, according to officials at the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Non-agency MBS investors appear eager for the securities, though a number of regulatory concerns remain, including complications with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Patrick Lawler, chief economist at the FHFA, said a risk-sharing transaction will hopefully be issued in the not too distant future. Speaking at the American Securitization Forums ASF 2013 conference this week in Las Vegas, Lawler and other officials with the FHFA and GSEs said risk-sharing transactions are a high priority this year. The commitment is...
Although mortgage profits reported for the fourth quarter, so far, have been strong, trouble may lie ahead for the sector with lower gain-on-sale margins and moderately contracting spreads, according to analysts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.
Inside Mortgage Finance shortly will publish its final 4Q ranking of FHA lenders, but it appears that the October-December period was one of the strongest in terms of loan production in quite some time ...plus other mortgage briefs.
Relatively new players to the world of Fannie Mae approvals are starting to gripe a little more about the volume curbs that the GSE is placing on its newbie customers. One mortgage banker, who spoke under the condition his name not be used, told Inside Mortgage Finance ...
Nationstar Mortgage this week priced $300 million of asset-backed notes in what the company called the first ever securitization of collateral backed by agency servicing advances, a sign that nonbanks are beginning to see more liquidity for mortgage servicing rights. The yield on the Nationstar paper is an attractive 1.46 percent. The term is three years. And in another development in the same market, Home Loan Servicing Solutions, which is affiliated with Ocwen Financial, has signaled...
Wall Streets ability to hide and disguise significant risk through the abuse of derivatives and other novel financial products would be greatly reduced under a proposed modernization of tax rules issued last week by the Republican head of a top House committee. The discussion draft released by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Dave Camp, R-MI, would revamp, among other things, the tax treatment of bonds traded at a discount or premium on the secondary market, increase the accuracy of determining gains and losses on securities sales and prevent harvesting of tax losses on securities. Updating these tax rules to reflect modern developments in financial products will make...
Secondary market investors interested in branching out beyond plain vanilla mortgage products are not going to have much to get excited about once the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus new ability-to-repay rule kicks in next year, top legal experts suggested this week. Will lenders make rebuttable presumption qualified mortgages? Remember, [lenders] are free to make loans that generally satisfy the ATR standard. We dont think those are going to be very common. We dont think they are going to be saleable in the secondary market at this point in time from what we know today, Donald Lampe, leader of the financial services regulatory and compliance practice with the Dykema law firm, told participants in a webinar hosted by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter. As he sees it, the real issue boils down...