Industry groups are lukewarm but supportive overall of the Federal Housing Finance Agencys efforts to modernize Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs securitization process but they remain concerned about changing servicing models, according to comment letters submitted to the agency. In September, the FHFA in a white paper proposed a framework for both a common securitization platform and a model pooling and servicing agreement with a request for public comment. The proposed infrastructure has two complementary goals to replace the outmoded proprietary infrastructures of the GSEs with a common, more efficient model and to establish a framework thats consistent with multiple states of housing finance reform, including greater participation of private capital in assuming credit risk.
The federal judge in charge of overseeing the multiple lawsuits filed by the Federal Housing Finance Agency against non-agency mortgage-backed securities issuers for allegedly misrepresenting deals that were sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rebuffed yet another motion by the banks to curtail the suits. Last week, Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Manhattan rejected a motion to exclude an expert report describing the Finance Agency’s proposed
MGIC Investment Corp. announced it has met all its obligations to Freddie Mac, formally putting an end to the mortgage insurers dispute with the GSE over pool MI coverage. MGIC Investment Corp. this week transferred $100 million to its subsidiary, Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation to maintain approval from Freddie to sell coverage as part of the overall $267.6 million settlement agreement. All other conditions by Freddie to continue the GSEs approval of MGIC Indemnity Corp. (MIC) as a limited mortgage insurer are satisfied through Dec. 31, 2013, according to MGIC Chairman and CEO Curt Culver.
The average mortgage banking firm reported a hefty $4.12 million net profit during the third quarter of 2012, up 40.4 percent from already high earnings in the previous quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Associations performance report. Although the MBA survey group 311 companies in the latest report varies somewhat from period to period, the third quarter earnings represent a windfall in profits that mirrors the results reported by large public companies and financial institutions ...
Lenders and servicers will benefit from improved borrower performance as home prices continue to climb, according to industry analysts. Home prices are expected to continue to improve through 2013, although there are some concerns about the impact of negotiations in Congress relating to the fiscal cliff. Home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased on a year-over-year basis by 6.3 percent in October 2012, according to CoreLogic. The firm noted that home prices have now increased ...
Upcoming changes from the Internal Revenue Service will allow for a completely paperless mortgage application process, according to industry participants. Beginning Jan. 7, the IRS will allow electronic signatures for IRS Form 4506-T, request for transcript of tax return. The electronic signatures will be allowed for tax transcripts ordered through the IRS Income Verification Express Services. The requirement of a manual signature on the IRS 4506-T was the last significant impediment to a truly ...
Panelists with opposing views of the FHA this week supported raising the single-family mortgage insurance programs minimum credit score to keep borrowers with questionable credit quality out and help preserve the high quality of FHAs newer books of business. Despite their disagreements over whether the FHA will ultimately need a taxpayer bailout, participants in a policy forum hosted by the Cato Institute called for reforms to reduce government presence in the mortgage market and help the FHA to avoid ...
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA financed a record $31.2 billion in so-called conforming jumbo mortgages during the third quarter of 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. Business in conforming jumbo loans defined as mortgages on one-unit properties that exceed $417,000 rose 29.6 percent from the second quarter and represented the highest quarterly volume for the agencies since emergency loan limits went into effect back in 2008. Since that time, an estimated $363.0 billion of conforming jumbo mortgages have been originated. Conforming jumbo originations for the first nine months of 2012 reached...[Includes three data charts]
As part of negotiations regarding the fiscal cliff, the Obama administration and Democrats in the House are seeking principal reduction loan modifications for borrowers with negative equity. The Treasury Department has reportedly proposed a program targeting borrowers with mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities while the debate about principal forgiveness for loans held by the government-sponsored enterprises has also been rekindled. The Obama administration would neither confirm nor deny the non-agency proposal, but details regarding the Market Rate Modification program have prompted talk among industry participants and a detailed analysis. In order to assist...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development announced FHA loan limits for calendar 2013 that include higher amounts for 19 counties, according to an Inside Mortgage Finance analysis. Of the 19 counties getting higher loan limits for FHA forward mortgages, 10 are part of the Houston metropolitan area, where the one-unit limit is going up just $1,500, to $272,550. The remainder are in various counties in Alaska. The emergency loan limits for high-cost markets still $729,750 for FHA and $625,500 for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were authorized...