This years prolonged and bitter political fight to install Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC, as the new director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency may turn out to have been the easy part, say industry observers, as he prepares to assume his place as arguably the most powerful mortgage regulator in the U.S. Last weeks 57-41 vote was the second successful confirmation under new Senate rules that essentially eliminated the filibuster for presidential appointments. In November, Senate Democrats muscled through a procedural change that replaced the 60-vote supermajority on nominations with a simple majority vote, shutting down GOP efforts to block Watts advance to the Finance Agencys corner office.
Incredulous mortgage industry trade groups are pushing back against a controversial increase this week in loan-level price adjustments for loans purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The two GSEs under the direction of the Federal Housing Finance Agency rolled out their LLPA revisions Freddie calls them post-settlement delivery fees through bulletins to seller/servicers. The LLPA adjustments follow the announcement last week by outgoing FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco of another 10 basis point increase of guaranty fees Fannie and Freddie charge lenders.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will drop the 25 basis point adverse-market fee that had been applied to all mortgages since 2008 as part of the Federal Housing Finance Agencys three-pronged adjustment in the guaranty fee the GSEs charge lenders. The FHFA announced changes to GSE g-fees that will amount to an average increase of approximately 11 bps, to be implemented in March and April. Analysts at Barclays Capital said the effective g-fee on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages will be about 62 bps.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency proposed this week to establish loan-purchase limits for the GSEs which wont occur until next October at the earliest. The regulator and conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is seeking comments regarding loan-purchase limits 4.0 percent below the statutory GSE loan limits. The FHFA said it is considering a $600,000 purchase limit in the highest-cost markets and a purchase limit of $400,000 in non high-cost markets.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has issued guidance to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stating that it would like to review any transfer of mortgage servicing rights where 25,000 or more in loans are being sold, investment-banking officials told Inside The GSEs. Sales that entail MSR portfolios of under that amount will avoid FHFA scrutiny. Fannie and Freddie, as a technical matter, have control of the servicing rights to the loans they guarantee and contract out with mortgage firms to process the payments on a monthly basis.
The American Civil Liberties Union and a Brooklyn-based advocacy group, the Center for Popular Democracy, have filed a Freedom of Information Act claim against the Federal Housing Finance Agency demanding that the regulator produce all agency records pertaining to the use of eminent domain to purchase mortgages. Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, the lawsuit seeks information regarding the FHFAs relationship with big banks and mortgage-backed securities investors and whether such interests influenced the agencys opposition. The suit was filed earlier this month on behalf of community housing advocates in California, New Jersey and New York.
A nearly decade-long class-action fraud lawsuit on behalf of Fannie Mae investors and the GSEs accountant KPMG LLP has been put to rest following the approval of a federal court judge earlier this month. In papers filed with the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, Judge Richard Leon said he found the $153 million settlement and plan for distributing it among the more than one million class members was fair, reasonable and adequate. Two Ohio pension funds the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System and the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio filed suit in 2004 related to a $6.3 billion overstatement of earnings against Fannie and three former GSE executives, including then-CEO Franklin Raines.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has taken a number of positive steps to enhance and improve its deficient examination capacity of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but the agency is still falling short of an optimal solution, according a new report by the Finance Agencys official watchdog. This weeks evaluation report by the FHFAs Office of Inspector General updates a September 2011 OIG audit that dinged the Finance Agency for shortfalls in its examination program, in particular its shortage of qualified examiners. The FHFAs examination program targeted examinations, continuous supervision, supervisory analysis and remediation activities is the primary means by which the agency supervises and regulates Fannie and Freddie.
The top Democrat and Republican of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee admitted last week they will not make their ambitious deadline of clearing a housing finance reform bill by the end of this year, but the senior lawmakers said they remain bullish on moving legislation to the Senate floor sooner rather than later in 2014. Speaking at a Bipartisan Policy Center event, Committee Chairman Sen. Tim Johnson, D-SD, blamed a couple of curveballs, including the 16-day government shutdown, for falling short of his and Idaho Republican Mike Crapos self-imposed deadline announced in September. He also noted his panel held 12 hearings on housing reform this year, including the final one last week.
In between the Federal Housing Finance Agencys announcement of a new guaranty fee increase and the Senates confirmation of a new FHFA director, a Manhattan federal judge last week quietly issued a ruling that permits the agency to proceed with its residential mortgage-backed securites lawsuits. In the summer of 2011, the FHFA filed suit against 18 big banks in connection with flawed mortgage securities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased between 2005 and 2007. A number of defendants in the case, including a host of individuals, argued in an appeal filed in August that due to a 2005 change in Rule 430B of the Securities Act of 1933, they should not be held liable in the case.