As some aggregators scale back or add overlays to their FHA Streamline Refinance mortgage loans, First Mortgage Corp. stands out because of its confident approach to the product. While other lenders impose overlays or charge more for the additional risk, FMC, an FHA-approved direct lender in Ontario, CA, imposes no restrictions on streamline refinancing other than those required by FHA guidelines. “First Mortgage prides itself in serving historically underserved borrowers and so we have a commitment to underwrite loans to FHA guidelines for the most part,” said FMC spokesperson Sharon Magnuson. The FHA streamline refi program allows certain borrowers ...
FHA jumbo activity kicked into high gear in the second quarter of 2012 as originations jumped more than 30 percent from the first quarter, Inside FHA Lending’s analysis of FHA data showed. The volume of FHA loans exceeding $417,000 totaled $6.33 billion in the second quarter, up from $4.78 billion during the first quarter. FHA jumbo production was robust during the first half of the year as the top lenders reported $11.1 billion in total originations, which was 9.1 percent more compared to the same period a year ago. Purchase jumbo loans accounted for ...
$7.5 Million FHA Mortgage Fraud Scheme. The Department of Justice has filed charges against top executives of a real estate brokerage for their participation in a mortgage fraud scheme that may cost the FHA $7.5 million in losses. Indictments were unsealed earlier this month in Manhattan federal court charging Mitchell Cohen and Erin Davis, the owner and sales manager, respectively, of Buy-A-Home, a real estate brokerage business in Queens, NY. The criminal charges follow a civil fraud lawsuit filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York last December against ...
The streamlined short sale programs announced last week by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could increase losses on bank holdings of second liens, according to industry analysts. The changes, directed by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, include the ability for the government-sponsored enterprises to offer up to $6,000 to second-lien holders to expedite a short sale. “Previously, second-lien holders could slow down the short sale process by negotiating for higher amounts,” the FHFA said. Overall ...
Ocwen Financial announced last week that its executive chairman has relocated to the U.S. Virgin Islands as part of the company’s efforts to reduce its tax rate. William Erbey, the executive chairman of Ocwen, said the company worked for nearly three years on the tax maneuver, which will reduce Ocwen’s effective tax rate by more than half. The strategy included the establishment of a new corporation, Ocwen Mortgage Servicing, in February. The wholly owned subsidiary of Ocwen was formed under the laws of ...
The Treasury Department’s surprise announcement late last week that it will now “sweep” up any and all future profits from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in lieu of the dividends the GSEs had been paying in return for taxpayer support solves some problems but creates new ones, industry observers say. Rather than continue to borrow from the Treasury to make dividend payments to the Treasury – as the GSEs have since they were placed in conservatorship in September 2008 – the revised preferred stock purchase agreements will replace the 10 percent quarterly dividend with a “full income sweep” of “every dollar of profit that each firm earns going forward,” according to Michael Stegman, counselor to the Treasury for Housing Finance Policy.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency this week announced that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will implement new short sale guidelines that expand eligibility criteria, as well as align and consolidate existing GSE short sales programs into one standard offering. The new guidelines, which go into effect Nov. 1, will permit homeowners with a Fannie or Freddie mortgage to sell their home in a short sale even if they are current on their mortgage, provided they have an eligible hardship.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s newly amended preferred stock purchase agreement with the U.S. Treasury requiring the companies to accelerate the rate at which they reduce their investment portfolios will have little immediate impact but will become more challenging to the GSEs as time goes on, analysts predict. The Treasury’s amended agreement calls for the GSE portfolios to be wound down at an annual rate of 15 percent, instead of the 10 percent annual reduction originally required of the two companies. The more aggressive 15 percent reductions will go into effect in 2013. Consequently, Fannie’s and Freddie’s portfolios must be reduced to the $250 billion target by 2018, four years earlier than initially scheduled.
Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac retained their dominant shares of mortgage-backed securities with something of a slide during the second quarter of 2012, according to an Inside The GSEs analysis. The two GSEs issued a combined $273.9 billion MBS during the second quarter, a 10.2 percent decrease from the first quarter. Compared to the second quarter of last year, however, Fannie and Freddie saw an ample 76.8 percent increase in MBS issuance.
A federal appeals court has agreed to hear a rare appeal by one of the non-agency mortgage-backed securities issuers and underwriters being sued by the Federal Housing Finance Agency for allegedly misrepresenting the deals that were sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. A three-judge panel of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals accepted UBS Americas’ appeal to re-argue and reverse a lower court’s denial of the bank’s motion to dismiss the FHFA’s suit as time-barred under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act.The FHFA sued UBS in July 2011 on behalf of Fannie and Freddie, seeking damages and civil penalties on behalf of the government-sponsored enterprises under the Securities Act of 1933.