The Federal Housing Finance Agency is not backing away from its plan to overhaul servicing compensation on government-sponsored enterprise mortgages, but an official has acknowledged that the change will come more slowly than first expected. FHFA Special Advisor Mario Ugoletti told attendees at the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Mortgage Servicing Conference & Expo in Orlando two weeks ago that “servicing compensation reform [is] not dead or on the back burner,” contrary to the industry’s hopeful expectations. Ugoletti said any revisions to servicing compensation practices ought to result in enhanced...
The extension of the Home Affordable Modification Program announced in late January was coupled with changes, including the new eligibility of investor-owned properties. While the expansion of the program could allow for a half million more participants, there are complaints that it is no more than a taxpayer bailout of speculators. Timothy Massad, the assistant secretary for financial stability at the Department of Treasury, said the inclusion of investor-owned properties will help low- to moderate-income renters, because the foreclosure of investor-owned properties disproportionately affects them. An advocate for...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s hands-off approach to regulating Freddie Mac’s relationship with servicers is a problem, according to a new report from the regulator’s inspector general. While the FHFA has taken some steps, like its Servicing Alignment Initiative, the IG said that the regulator should be looking directly at the books of servicers and other counterparties, instead of taking the government-sponsored enterprises’ versions of events. The regulator’s ability to keep track of the GSE servicer risk might be “impaired by its lack of direct access to servicer books and records relating to the...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has provided some potentially significant insight into some of the positions it may end up taking on the rules that will govern the final integrated mortgage disclosure it’s developing. The disclosures were released as part of the CFPB’s announcement that it is putting together a Small Business Review Panel under the provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. The panel is part of the broader initiative to integrate the mortgage disclosure forms that borrowers receive when applying for and closing on a loan...
Last week, the Federal Reserve Board released action plans that Bank of America, Citigroup, EverBank, JPMorgan Chase, MetLife, PNC, SunTrust, US Bancorp and Wells Fargo developed and will have to implement per the consent orders issued last April in order to correct alleged deficiencies in residential mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure procedures. The Fed also released engagement letters between the institutions and the independent consultants they retained to review foreclosures that were in process in 2009 and 2010...
Bank of America may be prepared to pony up $8.5 billion to settle litigation with residential mortgage-backed securities investors, but it’s not conceding a point in the face of government accusations that it discriminated against mortgage borrowers with disabilities. Last week, the Department of Housing and Urban Development accused the bank of imposing unnecessary and burdensome requirements on borrowers who depended on disability income to qualify for their mortgages in violation of the Fair Lending Act. The bank also allegedly required some disabled borrowers to provide physician...
Citigroup, Inc. was recently stung with a $158.3 million settlement and compelled to admit culpability to settle with the Justice Department and the Department of Housing and Urban Development after a former CitiMortgage employee raised concerns about the lender’s allegedly reckless mortgage lending practices. The former employee, Sherry Hunt, filed a private whistleblower lawsuit last August under the False Claims Act, alleging that Citi subverted FHA to push through poorly underwritten mortgages for a higher profit margin. Two weeks ago, the U.S. government joined the suit, seeking...
The Supreme Court of the United States heard oral arguments last month in Freeman v. Quicken Loans (Case 10-1042), an important fee-splitting case under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, and the initial consensus of leading industry attorneys following the case is that the high court appears to be favorably inclined towards Quicken’s side. “If questions raised by the justices are any indication of where the court is headed, I’d say the scales are tipped in the direction of a favorable decision for Quicken Loans,” said attorney Phillip Schulman, in the Washington, DC, office...
Consumer advocates may be railing against the $25 billion settlement the five largest mortgage servicers struck recently with 49 state attorneys general, but the participating banks are still vulnerable on a number of fronts, according to a top analyst at Moody’s Investors Service. On the one hand, “The settlement will have little to no financial effect on the banks and will remove some of the uncertainty surrounding mortgage servicing,” said Joseph Pucella, vice president and senior…
Federal Housing Finance Agency Special Advisor Mario Ugoletti told attendees at the Mortgage Bankers Association’s National Mortgage Servicing Conference & Expo in Orlando that changes to servicing compensation practices have not been pushed to the backburner. However, he did concede that, in light of uncertainties in the marketplace and the legislative and regulatory environment, changes would not be promulgated in the next quarter or two. Any revisions to compensation practices ought to result in enhanced competition in mortgage servicing and be capable of replication ...
Some SWFs in other countries have extensive ownership interests in major corporations and sweep much of their profits into state coffers.
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