Losses on re-performing FHA/VA mortgage pools are expected to rise as servicers cut back on the claims they submit to the Department of Housing and Urban Development and pass on to mortgage securitization trusts instead, according to a recent analysis by Moodys Investors Service. With FHA experiencing increasing losses in its portfolio, HUD is scrutinizing claims more vigorously for servicing or underwriting defects, which may serve as a basis for denying claims on re-performing FHA/VA pools. Servicers are also required to bring the property to an acceptable conveyance condition. Furthermore, HUD imposes very strict timeline guidelines that FHA servicers must follow. Given the recent servicing irregularities and staffing constraints due to rising defaults, servicers may not always ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is seeking comment on a proposed rule that would expand FHA-insured lending in rural areas. Published in the Aug. 26 Federal Register, the proposed rule would allow direct lenders in the Farm Credit System to participate in the FHA mortgage insurance programs as approved mortgagees or lenders. Although participation in the mortgage insurance programs is voluntary, Farm Credit System financial institutions must comply with FHA approval requirements. The comment period ends Oct. 25. Recent difficulties in mortgage finance markets have reduced the availability of housing credit in rural areas, where the FHA currently does very limited business. Consequently, HUD proposes ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development recently provided guidance to housing counselors and lenders regarding changes made to the layout and administration of HUDs Certificate of Home Equity Conversion Mortgage Counseling. HUDs Certificate of HECM Counseling, identified as Form HUD 92902, is provided by housing counselor as proof that a homeowner interested in pursuing a HECM product has received information about the implications of and alternatives to a reverse mortgage. The HECM counselor must adhere to all of FHAs guidelines regarding information that must be provided to the HECM borrower. With respect to the forms layout under Mortgagee Letter 2011-31, HUD has inserted ...
The reverse mortgage arena experienced another shake-up as SunTrust Bank, citing poor volume, quite the business even as J.G. Wentworth, the largest purchaser of future payment products, announced its entry into the market. Atlanta-based SunTrust stopped accepting new reverse mortgage applications as of Sept. 1, although it is continuing to process applications already in the pipeline. A statement from the bank indicated that low production volume was the reason for managements decision to leave the reverse mortgage business and to focus resources instead on mortgage origination and servicing. The market also lost ...
FHA lending continued its downward trend as total originations fell 9.5 percent in July from the previous month and a whopping 41.2 percent on a year-to-year basis, according to Inside FHA Lendings analysis of the latest data. The market saw production drop to $14.8 billion in July from $16.3 billion on a monthly basis and from $25.1 billion the same period last year. Fixed-rate mortgages comprised the bulk of originations at 93.7 percent, while purchase mortgages accounted for 78.5 percent of loans endorsed for FHA insurance for the month of July. In addition, 79.3 percent of FHA-insured loans were originated ... {includes one data chart]
Government-insured mortgage programs held up a little better than the overall market during the second quarter of 2011, edging back toward the higher market shares they recorded in late 2009 and early last year, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside Mortgage Finance. FHA and VA lending accounted for 27.2 percent of new loan originations in the second quarter, despite a 5.3 percent drop in volume. That represented the highest market penetration for the government programs since early 2010, when they accounted for 28.8 percent of new originations. The all-time high market share for FHA and VA was back in the fourth quarter of 2008, at... [Includes two data charts]
Experts agree that the federal government plays too big a role in the housing market, but panelists at a Federal Reserve conference last week said there is little consensus on how to fix it. FHA is not our silver bullet, observed Janis Bowdler, a director at the National Council of La Raza. Surely, its stepping in while we are in a tight credit market. But its no long-term solution. One problem with FHA is that lenders arent required to offer it, which means entire communities are left credit-starved, Bowdler said. This leaves them in the same vulnerable position to predatory lenders that they were in five or six or 10 years ago, she...
The average mortgage banking firm reported increased production earnings in the second quarter of 2011 and higher loan production compared to the first three months of the year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association quarterly performance report. The report, which collected data from 167 companies including many smaller mortgage bankers, found average pretax income fell 60.5 percent to $451,000 during the second quarter. That was the lowest level of profitability since the fourth quarter of 2008, when the average mortgage banking company lost $206,000. The MBA survey suggested that...
The sharp drop in mortgage origination activity during the second quarter had a bigger impact on retail loan production, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. But a much bigger change lies ahead as Bank of America this week announced plans to get out of the wholesale correspondent market. The company was the second largest correspondent lender in the industry during the first half of 2011, acquiring $49.23 billion in production. That represented a significant 8.3 percent of total home mortgage origination over the first six months of the year and nearly a quarter of industry-wide production in the correspondent channel. In a statement, BofA said...[Includes six data charts]
Only about 18 of the 247 high cost metropolitan markets will avoid seeing their FHA loan limits lowered at the end of this month, when the emergency loan-limit adjustments for the FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are set to expire, according to a new analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. All 24 metro markets that now have loan limits of $729,750 (or higher in Hawaii) will see their limits dropped to at least $625,500, and some of these areas in California will see...