Compensation for top executives at both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be cut by nearly three-fourths with no bonuses paid out in 2012 under a new plan rolled out by the Federal Housing Finance Agency late this week. The FHFA’s 2012 Executive Compensation Program reduces top executive pay by nearly 75 percent since conservatorship, eliminates bonuses and sets a target for new CEO pay at $500,000.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency Office of Inspector General took the FHFA to task this week for what the OIG considers the agencys lax supervision of Freddie Macs relationship with its servicers. Specifically, the FHFA has not clearly defined its role regarding servicers, sufficiently coordinated with other federal banking agencies about risks and supervisory concerns with individual servicers, or timely addressed emerging risks presented by mortgage servicing contractors.
The mortgage servicer American Home Mortgage Servicing Inc. recently announced a name change to Homeward Residential, reflecting its entrance into the correspondent and warehouse lending market in October 2011. AHMS ranked 18th on a list of top mortgage servicers in 2011 compiled by affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance. The company serviced $69.02 billion in residential mortgages at the end of 2011, down 9.7 percent from the year before, with most of its business in non-agency mortgages. The company plans to complete its rebranding as Homeward Residential by the second quarter of 2012. The business...
Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase will once again receive servicer incentives for modifying loans after more than seven months during which these payments were withheld by the Treasury Department for unsatisfactory performance in the Home Affordable Modification Program. The two banks will also get all the withheld incentives as part of the multistate foreclosure settlement. In June 2011, Bank of America, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo were all called to the carpet by the Treasury for their HAMP performance following a 10-month audit of participating servicers. The main issue was timeliness while mods...
The refinance wave that lifted mortgage origination volume in the fourth quarter of 2011 appears to be holding steady in early 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis. Average monthly securitization of refinance loans by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac increased by 3.6 percent from the fourth quarter of 2011 to the first two months of this year. Thats somewhat faster than the 1.2 percent increase in average total securitization volume by the two government-sponsored enterprises. The refi market may gain momentum in the coming months. The Mortgage Bankers...(Includes four data charts)
The Obama administration this week announced price cuts for refinancing loans already insured by the FHA in an effort to provide relief to underwater homeowners, estimating that as many as 3 million borrowers could take advantage of the program. Beginning June 11, the FHA will lower its upfront mortgage insurance premium from 1.0 percent to .01 percent for streamlined refinancing of FHA loans originated before June 1, 2009, and reduce the annual fee for such refis from 1.15 percent to .55 percent. To qualify for the streamline refinancing, borrowers must be current on their existing FHA...
Mortgage lenders have become so risk-averse and sensitive to potentially punitive judicial or regulatory overkill that theyre demanding near-pristine credit histories and imposing their own credit overlays on top of existing underwriting standards that are already considerably tougher than they were during the years of the mortgage boom. And thats unlikely to change and may in fact get worse unless federal policymakers make dramatic changes to the legislative and regulatory landscape. That was the main take-away that Paul Miller, managing director and group head of financial services research at...
The Justice Department and some members of Congress are unconvinced the mortgage industry is up to the task of fairly making and servicing mortgages in a tough housing market. Thats motivating them to use all of the tools at their disposal and considering new ones to combat discrimination and other abusive behavior. In the coming year, we will continue our efforts to provide justice to those families who were harmed by discriminatory conduct during the mortgage boom and to hold lenders responsible for their actions, U.S. Assistant Attorney General Thomas Perez said in testimony before the Senate Judiciary...
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 Associations Mortgage Servicing Conference & Expo in Orlando two weeks ago that servicing compensation reform [is] not dead or on the back burner, contrary to the industrys 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...