Although Fannie Mae has set purchase limits on how much production newly approved seller/servicers can sell to the GSE, Freddie Mac has shied away from such caps.
Nationstar Mortgage is telling potential investors in the company that it plans to be a significant player in settlement services, REO management, processing and other areas.
At least one top-five ranked residential servicer is planning to offer for sale a decent-sized package of mostly nonperforming servicing rights over the next month.
Mortgage production volume increased modestly during the fourth quarter of 2012, thanks largely to continuing gains by a number of mid-sized lenders, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. An estimated $495.0 billion in new single-family mortgages were originated during the final three months of 2012, up 2.1 percent from the previous quarter. Including a slightly revised estimate for the third quarter, total mortgage originations hit $1.835 trillion during 2012 a solid 24.8 percent gain over the previous year. That made 2012 the second-strongest year since the housing market began to come unglued back in 2007. Its no surprise that agency programs continued...[Includes two data charts]
Residential lenders that are relatively new to the seller/servicer ranks of Fannie Mae continue to gripe about the purchase limits the GSE has placed on them, causing the agency to spell out its reasoning in an online commentary. According to a recent message posted to Fannies website by Executive Vice President and Chief Risk Officer John Nichols, the caps the GSE placed on new customers nonbanks primarily were caused by what the company calls a significant shift in the composition of our customer base and the emergence of many new originating institutions with whom we have done little or no business. He adds: This rapid change in the marketplace prompted...
A number of mortgage industry experts share the view that a dark cloud has been cast over President Obamas recess appointment of Richard Cordray as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, after an appeals court ruled late last week that other recess appointments the president made at the same time were unconstitutional. The significance of this decision cannot be overstated as it raises a host of questions about the potential impact of a judicial ruling that Mr. Cordrays recess appointment was similarly invalid, said Barbara Mishkin, of counsel with the law firm of Ballard Spahr. Edward Mills, a financial policy analyst at FBR Capital Markets, said...