Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems has been at the center of two significant developments recently that bring more legal clarity to the mortgage industrys foreclosure practices and could portend a quicker resolution of an enormous number of cases currently tied up in foreclosure. Early this week, the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari in Gomes v. Countrywide, declining to reconsider lower court rulings in the case, essentially affirming MERS authority to foreclose in California in the process. The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied, the high court said in its certiorari summary dispositions. The chief justice [John Roberts] took...
Negotiations among major banks and state attorneys general to settle problems in foreclosure servicing practices reached a one-year anniversary this week with little apparent progress over the key issue of how much litigation relief the lenders will gain from the deal. We worked out a tremendous amount of the settlement and gotten a lot done, said a spokesman for Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who has been spearheading the negotiation on behalf of the states. However, he disputed applying the word imminent, which some bankers had used, to describe when the settlement might be finalized. Lets not jump...
The U.S. Attorneys office in Manhattan has entered into an agreement with the law firm of Steven J. Baum, one of the largest volume mortgage foreclosure firms in New York state, that requires the firm to pay $2 million to Uncle Sam and to extensively change its mortgage foreclosure practices. The agreement resolves an investigation into Baums mortgage foreclosure-related practices, specifically whether the firm, on behalf of its lender clients, filed misleading pleadings, affidavits and mortgage assignments in state and federal courts in New York.
The strategic default problem is not going away, keeping pressure on servicers and MBS investors to find ways to dis-incentivize these actions. House prices continue to fall, and more underwater homeowners are willing to batter their credit rating and default on their mortgage to get out of an uneconomic deal. In a recent report, analysts at Deutsche Bank said the threat of legal action and risks to assets other than the mortgaged property play a large role in a homeowners decision to strategically default. Eleven states are considered non-recourse states, either because they explicitly forbid deficiency judgments or...
The servicing compensation structure for non-agency mortgages must be reformed, according to Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin. The Federal Housing Finance Agency noted that the options it proposed for agency mortgages last week could also serve as a model for non-agency mortgages and could help revive the sector. It is imperative to reconsider the compensation structure so that servicers have adequate incentives to perform payment processing efficiently on performing mortgages, and to perform effective loss mitigation on delinquent loans, Raskin said in a speech this week. ...
Holdings of home-equity loans by banks and thrifts fell by 1.9 percent in the second quarter of 2011 compared with the previous quarter, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Bank Mortgage Database. Delinquencies on the loans remain low but banks are being subject to greater regulatory scrutiny regarding their treatment of HELs. Banks and thrifts held $1.23 trillion in HELs at the end of the second quarter of 2011. The serious delinquency rate on the loans was 2.04 percent, down from 2.09 percent the previous quarter. ... [Includes one data chart]
High-quality endorsements and lower-than-expected prepayment speeds have given a slight boost to the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund in the second quarter of 2011 even as agency officials remained cautiously optimistic about the recent book of business. In its quarterly report, the Department of Housing and Urban Development said that the MMI funds total capital improved by $100 million to $31.7 billion from the previous quarter as revenues from premiums and property sales exceeded higher claims payments. Endorsements in the second quarter alone added $1.7 billion to the capital reserve account, which stood at $2.8 billion at the end of June, the report noted. The FHA capital reserve account, which absorbs ...
Ginnie Mae is following its own path in exploring potential changes to servicer compensation, a project that parallels the Federal Housing Finance Agencys Joint Initiative on Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac servicing compensation. As part of the FHAs effort to improve default servicing, Ginnie Mae and other government housing agencies will be working separately to develop better claims mechanisms and pooling services as well as clearer risk and warranty delineations to improve the value of securitizations, the FHFA said. In a discussion paper, the FHFA, which oversees Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, said ...
Expanding approved lenders reach in originating FHA-insured single-family mortgage loans is a positive step in improving their ability to compete with non-approved and sponsored FHA originators, according to industry participants. The recently revised FHA policy eliminates the geographical restrictions imposed upon direct endorsement lenders, which limited their FHA originations to designated lending areas. Under the new policy, loan origination and servicing may be conducted from an approved lenders home office, branch office or direct lending branch office. HUD no longer has to approve a lenders branch office facilities. However, all office facilities, regardless of type, must ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is testing an alternative method for keeping extremely distressed FHA borrowers in their home until a suitable resolution is found. Dubbed the Mortgage Acquisition and Disposition Initiative, or 601 Note Sales Program, the strategy is being implemented on a pilot basis to help stabilize communities while bringing value to the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, said Acting Assistant Secretary for Housing/FHA Commissioner Carol Galante. Testifying before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Insurance, Housing and Community Opportunity this week, Galante said ...