The Department of Housing and Urban Development has announced a 3 percent cap on the actual financial and closing costs it would pay on behalf of purchasers of HUD-owned single-family properties. The gross purchase price is the bid price, before the subtraction of the brokers sales commission and financing and closing costs. Upon closing of a competitive bid sale of a HUD foreclosed property, the department allows the deduction of buyer financing and closing costs from the proceeds. While the total amount of HUDs payment will be indicated on HUD Form 9548 (Sales Contract, Property Disposition Program), the actual amount credited by HUD will be ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has announced a sealed bid sale of uninsured, nonperforming residential mortgages, the first of three bid loan sales scheduled in FY 2012. The sealed bid sale offering, SFLS 2012-1, is scheduled for Dec. 7, 2011. It consists of unsubsidized, nonperforming single-family mortgage loans that will be sold without FHA insurance and with servicing released. A listing of the mortgage loans is included in the due diligence materials provided to qualified bidders. Prospective bidders should first check HUDs guidelines for bidder ineligibility. HUD made the sale information package available ...
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency last week reported that 12 bank and thrift mortgage servicers are pressing ahead to comply with the foreclosure practices consent orders issued in April, but it will take all of next year to complete the necessary steps. Work is well under way on the actions necessary to comply with the consent orders, the OCC said in a report. Efforts to correct deficiencies in foreclosure processes, management oversight and internal audit are furthest advanced. To forward the process of identifying and providing remediation to...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has reportedly offered to release major servicers from some liability related to FHA mortgages as part of a pending settlement related to foreclosure problems. While the offer may sweeten the deal for banks to settle with state attorneys general and federal regulators, observers say its not a total game changer. The complex negotiations have lasted more than a year, stemming from servicing practices that include robo-signing of foreclosure documents and poor communication with borrowers. A key sticking point has been...
Californias Attorney General has reportedly issued subpoenas to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac seeking details of the government-sponsored enterprises mortgage lending and foreclosure practices, possibly as a way to cajole the Federal Housing Finance Agency to overcome its resistance to principal reductions for GSE loans. The subpoenas seek information about how Fannie and Freddie are handling thousands of foreclosed properties, as well as details about the GSEs mortgage-servicing and home-repossession practices. According to published reports, State AG Kamala Harris, a Democrat, also is looking into how...
Most major mortgage servicers reported slight increases in the number of loans in distress during the third quarter of 2011, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index. Servicers handling over $7 trillion in mortgage loans reported a combined 10.70 percent delinquency/foreclosure rate as of the end of September. That was up 12 basis points from the previous quarter. Of the 17 servicers included in the index, only six reported improved mortgage performance data compared to June. The problem was focused squarely on more...(Includes two data charts)
Major mortgage servicers are widely expected to agree to principal reduction for some struggling homeowners as part of the price of settling complaints over foreclosure practices brought by state attorneys general. That idea doesnt sit well with some MBS investors, who are concerned that they will end up paying some of the cost of reducing principal as a way to keep distressed borrowers in their homes. The Association of Mortgage Investors warns that principal reduction of securitized loans would be akin to forcing the middle class to bear the settlements burden. In a statement, the AMI warned that principal reductions could...
With the severe housing recession having created a more than abundant supply of poorly performing mortgages that will likely linger for years, step servicing, or varying compensation based on the amount of servicing work performed, may well be the wave of the future. Currently, many in the industry are proposing step servicing fees for transactions including newly originated prime jumbo product, said Kathleen Tillwitz, senior vice president of U.S. and European structured finance for DBRS, in a recent analysis. As a result, the servicing fees we are seeing for prime jumbo loans are currently ranging anywhere from...
Despite low mortgage rates, the outlook for the purchase-mortgage market remains gloomy. And you can blame it mostly on current housing market conditions. One of the biggest problems plaguing the housing market, according to the Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey, is the large share of distressed properties that make up home sales in most areas of the country. Nationally, foreclosed properties and short sales accounted for a whopping 48.4 percent of home purchase transactions tracked in the HousingPulse Distressed Property Index during...
Total single-family originations could drop another 20 percent or more in 2012, following a similar decline this year, according to mortgage industry economists. The consensus forecast from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Mortgage Bankers Association is that $1.28 trillion in home loans will be originated in 2011, a decline of 22 percent from last years estimated volume. But 2011 will prove to be just a prelude to another sharp decline in production next year. Despite the fact that mortgage rates are expected to stay at...