Credit card giant Discover Financial Services is adding mortgages to its menu of financial products and services with the acquisition of Home Loan Center, a subsidiary of Tree.com. The sale price for Home Loan Center, which operates as LendingTree Loans, is up to $56.0 million. LendingTree, a correspondent lender, originates and processes home loans in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The acquisition includes substantially all of HLCs operating and related assets as well as LendingTrees lead-generation system, adding a residential mortgage origination component to Discovers direct lending system. Discover, a direct banking and...
Lenders clamoring for a hand hold around the slippery issue of strategic defaulters do have options in the form of technology and legal leverage to tackle the issue even as the problem may not be as pronounced as first thought, say experts. The problem of borrowers who otherwise have the capacity to make their mortgage payments but instead opt to walk away from the loan was once a fringe issue in the industry. But strategic default became a bigger concern as more and more borrowers found they owed more on their home than the house was worth, according to Brent Taggart, senior vice president at Green River Capital, a Utah-based real estate owned management and...
Mortgage lenders that are anxious about complying with the call report requirements of the National Mortgage Licensing System might want to consider a new automated solution developed by LendingSpace, a Fulton, MD-based technology firm. Lenders who find themselves using a patchwork of their existing technologies to meet these requirements will spend a great deal of time and resources to ensure impeccable compliance, said Ravi Varma, CEO of LendingSpace. With a click of a mouse, the Automated Mortgage Call Report function in our ComplianceOne suite gathers the information from the loan origination system, and formats it so that its ready for...
Mortgage servicers have made little headway trying to de-bunk the widespread belief that foreclosures are profitable transactions for lenders, but a new Mortgage Bankers Association report tries to explain the impact of defaults on servicing income. Servicing advances are reimbursed when a modification is completed within 45 days, the study notes. Because they occur earlier than a foreclosure, mods limit the amount of money the servicer has to advance to investors on delinquent accounts, the trade group said. The servicers reimbursement is at the top of the waterfall, meaning the servicers advances, which may have been from...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage-backed securities remained a preferred investment for the Federal Home Loan Banks during the first quarter of 2011 with only a negligible decrease from the previous quarter, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside The GSEs based on data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency.Meanwhile, Ginnie Mae securities continued to grow in popularity within the FHLBank system during the first three months of this year. GSE MBS still accounted for 66.7 percent of combined FHLBank MBS portfolios. The Finance Agencys data do not separately break out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac volume or share. Ginnie MBS grew by... [Includes one data chart]
A proposed bipartisan House bill that would dissolve Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac but retain an explicit government guarantee for certain mortgage-backed securities appears poised to go nowhere fast, despite vocal trade group support. Earlier this month, H.R. 1859, the Housing Finance Reform Act of 2011, was filed amid a splash of headlines by Rep. John Campbell, R-CA, and co-sponsor Rep. Gary Peters, D-MI. The bill would empower the Federal Housing Finance Agency to issue charters establishing privately held and funded housing finance guarantee associations. The associations would be empowered to deal in conventional mortgages only for the purpose of...
Testifying before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and GSEs this week, the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency took issue with some of the proposed bills in the legislative package intended to wind down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. I appreciate the effort in these and other bills to begin moving towards a final resolution of the enterprises in conservatorship, but I also recognize the critical and contemporaneous need to provide market participants with greater clarity and assurance about the ultimate role of the government in housing finance beyond the issues surrounding the enterprises, said...
Recruitment and retention of executives and staff at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac remain a principal risk management challenge to the two GSEs, a problem that is likely only to worsen with time, according to Fannie and Freddies regulator. During a speech last week, Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco cited several recent key executive departures from both GSEs as a concern for both companies. How does one preserve and conserve the value of a companys human capital in the face of an uncertain future? asked DeMarco. For the duration of the conservatorships, I believe the best way to protect taxpayer interests in...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has gone to court in order to deal itself into a wrongful termination suit filed last year by a former Fannie Mae executive against the GSE. According to papers filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the FHFA sought a temporary stay of the lawsuit, citing its authority as Fannies conservator under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. The conservators participation will aid the parties and the court in resolving the issues presented in this action, including the issue of Fannie Maes status vis-à-vis the federal government as it relates to the plaintiffs claims, said the Finance Agency in...
While federal agencies gather comments on a proposed rule to establish margin and capital requirements for various swap entities, experts say its not altogether clear how the proposed rule would apply to the GSEs. Final comments are due June 24 on a rule proposed by five federal agencies that would require swap entities regulated by the agencies to collect minimum amounts of initial margin and variation margin from counterparties to non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps. The five agencies that issued the proposed rule last month are the Federal Reserve, the Farm Credit Administration, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp...