The mortgage credit-enhancement business has been no place to be the past few years, but many observers think the market has touched bottom and is starting to come back. After hemorrhaging losses since 2008, the two biggest mortgage credit-enhancement providers – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – reported positive net income on their single-family guaranty businesses during the second quarter. The private mortgage insurance industry hasn’t gotten there yet. Fannie and Freddie reported...[Includes two data charts]
A number of nonbanks have increased their correspondent originations recently with plans to take more market share as the big banks focus on retail lending. Redwood Trust, PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust, Homeward Residential and others have all touted their recent correspondent efforts, both for agency mortgages and non-agency originations. Since 2010, Redwood has used its conduit platform to supply...
A mortgage marketing program with a money-back guarantee sounds too good to be true, but participating lenders that reported more than 400 percent return-on-investment can probably attest it is no scam. Mortgage Returns, a provider of customer relationship management and marketing solutions, reported that 35 lenders in its Guaranteed Marketing program averaged a 426 percent ROI after using it. The program revolves around the company’s Five-Touch mortgage refinance campaign. Launched in May, the program generated...
The cost to close on a mortgage has dropped seven percent to an average $3,754 in the past year, according to the eighth annual closing costs survey from Bankrate.com. Title insurance and other third-party fees fell 12 percent from last year’s levels, while origination fees dipped a slight one percent. “This is the second year in which lenders are required...
Ocwen Financial is set to reduce its effective tax rate by more than half due to the recent formation of a subsidiary corporation in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The federal corporate income tax rate in the U.S. is 35.0 percent and Ocwen had an effective tax rate of 36.0 percent through two quarters in 2012. “We believe [Ocwen’s effective tax rate] will be mid-to-high single digits,” said Bill Erbey, executive chairman of the servicer, during an earnings presentation last week. He said the lower tax rate could take effect...
Mortgage insurance activity increased dramatically during the second quarter of 2012, with private MIs gaining ground on the government-insurance programs, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. A total of $133.22 billion of home mortgages were originated with some form of primary MI coverage during the second quarter, up 22.9 percent from the first three months of the year. It was the biggest quarterly output of primary MI since the middle of 2009, and it lifted insured mortgage originations to $241.64 billion in the first half of the year, up 36.1 percent. Despite a relentless assault on their financial health that has driven three companies into runoff mode, private MIs racked up...[Includes three data charts]
The private mortgage insurance industry is now officially under the microscope of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau over its captive mortgage reinsurance premium ceding practices for possible violations of key federal statutes, including the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. The CFPB is carrying forward a number of investigations it inherited from the Department of Housing and Urban Development after passage of the Dodd-Frank Act. Critics contend that captive reinsurance programs violate RESPA’s prohibition by collecting insurance premiums without providing any real service or value to the transaction. Civil investigative demands, or CIDs, sent to several private MIs “mean...[Includes one data chart]
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac this week both celebrated large second-quarter profits that easily exceeded their installment payments to the U.S. Treasury as the price of government conservatorship, but buried in their earnings report was the hard truth lenders know too well: contentious buyback demands showed no sign of letting up. “Our expectation [is] that the amount of our outstanding repurchase requests to seller/servicers will remain high and that we may be unable to recover on all outstanding loan repurchase obligations resulting from seller/servicers’ breaches of contractual obligations,” Fannie said. As of the end of June, the two government-sponsored enterprises had...[Includes one data chart]
Hardball conditions imposed by Freddie Mac in order to permit lenders to continue selling loans insured by Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp., over the objections of state regulators, has cast a cloud over MGIC’s already uncertain prospects. Fannie Mae has approved a new MGIC insurance entity that also has the backing of the insurance company’s home state regulator, the Office of the Commissioner of Wisconsin. But MGIC warned investors last week that Freddie’s Aug. 1 approval of the new unit is conditional and could be withdrawn at any time and ends Dec. 31, 2012. Freddie says it can and will pull...
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve are implementing third-party recommendations to improve borrower outreach and provide more opportunity for borrowers to request an independent foreclosure review (IFR), and giving consumers more time to ask for a review. Borrowers can request a review if they believe they have suffered financial injury from improper foreclosure actions in 2009 and 2010. The IFR process is being conducted by 14 mortgage servicers that are subject to the consent orders issued by the OCC and the Fed in April 2011. The orders required servicers to take steps to establish strong and comprehensive standards for mortgage servicing and foreclosure processing and to carry out...