Historically low mortgages rates have fueled a prolonged refinancing wave that helped provide lenders with an important revenue source during the financial crisis. But as refinancing activity wanes and home prices begin to stabilize, lenders need to plan for the coming purchase market to stay competitive and continue growing revenue. In this regard, St. Louis-based Mortgage Returns helps mortgage companies, banks and independent mortgage banks prepare for the transition to a purchase-driven business ...
Lenders won a number of concessions from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau last week when the regulator proposed rules for loan originator compensation. However, the proposal also includes significant provisions that would impact lender profitability and originator compensation. For firms currently offering compensation arrangements that would be prohibited by the proposal, the CFPB said its proposed prohibition on compensation based on transaction terms may contribute to adverse selection ...
Nationstar Mortgage Holdings posted strong profits for the second quarter of 2012 due to the companys expanding servicing portfolio and refinances of loans in the portfolio. The nonbank had $36.3 million in net income for the quarter even after taking a $20.9 million decrease in the fair value of its mortgage servicing rights. The primary driver of profitability continues to be servicing performance, said Jay Bray, CEO of Nationstar, during a call with investors last week to announce the companys earnings ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau late last week released a proposed mortgage loan origination regulation, and perhaps most notable is whats not in it a required flat fee a decision likely to be embraced by mortgage lenders. In a conference call with reporters, bureau officials said that after consulting with industry representatives and community advocates, the CFPB concluded a flat fee proposal would not be in consumers best interests. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act places...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has come out with an extensive set of proposed rules addressing numerous mortgage servicing issues in the form of two related notices designed to protect homeowners from surprises and costly mistakes by their mortgage servicers. The first proposal aims to give borrowers clear and timely information about their mortgages so they can avoid costly surprises, and would bring greater transparency to the market, according to the bureau. The proposed rule would try to do this...
A three-judge federal panel this week agreed to hear a rare interlocutory appeal by one of the defendants in a series of lawsuits that the Federal Housing Finance Agency has filed in connection with non-agency MBS purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals accepted UBS Americas appeal, which had been certified by Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court of New York in late June. UBS seeks to re-argue and reverse Judge Cotes May 4 denial of the banks motion to dismiss on statute of limitation grounds. The FHFA sued...
Boosted by its acquisition of Saxon Mortgage Services, Ocwen Financial was the only major servicer to increase its subprime portfolio in the second quarter of 2012. And after three consecutive quarters of improvement, subprime performance deteriorated in the second quarter. An estimated $505.0 billion in subprime mortgages were outstanding as of the end of the second quarter of 2012, according to Inside Nonconforming Markets, down 3.4 percent from the previous quarter as subprime mortgage originations ... [Includes one chart]
Two servicing rules proposed last week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could shift more business to special servicers, according to industry analysts. While senior CFPB officials said that was not the intent of the proposals, special servicers appear to be better equipped than others to handle the complex new requirements. The inadequate performance of many mortgage servicers has helped widen the misery for many Americans, said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. He noted that the regulator ...
The interest rate environment is ripe for jumbo borrowers, but industry participants warn that underwriting standards for these loans are at least as stringent as standards for agency loans and much different than five years ago when many jumbo borrowers might have last bought a home or refinanced. Be prepared to expose everything to examination, said Bill Reiter, a senior loan officer at PNC Mortgage, speaking at a webinar last week hosted by Realtor Magazine. He noted that income, assets, tax returns and ...
Federal regulators this week proposed requiring a physical inspection of a propertys interior by a qualified appraiser for originations of higher-risk mortgages, the latest proxy for subprime loans. The requirement was included in the Dodd-Frank Act and could prompt more than 50,000 new appraisals per year. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau estimated that full-interior appraisals are conducted as part of current practice in higher-risk mortgage originations on 95.0 percent of purchase-money transactions ...