The rising delinquency rates for FHA-insured mortgage loans could spell trouble down the road for the FHA as it struggles to shore up its dwindling loss reserves, according to a new Fitch Ratings analysis. But the chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association has a slightly different take on that issue. Fitch analyst Brian Bertsch said a growing gap between seriously delinquent (90-day past due) guaranteed and non-guaranteed loans could presage future losses that could prompt the FHA to restrict loss claims and force banks to buy back defaulted loans. This could be the scenario ...
Ocwen Financial Corp. and joint venture partner Altisource will soon be buying FHA-insured loans from lenders through a special vehicle, Correspondent One, for future securitization. In its second quarter filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Ocwen said it expects Correspondent One will be able to use its relationship with Lenders One to grow its volume substantially. Correspondent One has seen significant, positive environmental changes in the correspondent lending market, [and] there has been a contraction in correspondent lending, Ocwen said, alluding to ...
The Federal Housing Finance Agencys public expression of concern last week about proposals to use the eminent domain powers of local governments to seize performing underwater mortgages might be enough to significantly delay or even derail the effort outright, say experts. The conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and regulator of the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks warned that unspecified action might be necessary on its part to avoid a risk to safe and sound operations at the government-sponsored enterprises. FHFA has significant concerns about the use of eminent domain to revise...
A federal judge in New York last week rejected the motion by a trio of former Fannie Mae executives to dismiss a securities fraud civil lawsuit brought late last year against the top GSE officers by the Securities and Exchange Commission. In December 2011, the SEC filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York alleging that former Fannie executives made material misrepresentations to the public, investors and the media about the government-sponsored enterprises exposure to subprime mortgage loans in 2007 and 2008. The SEC filed an identical parallel civil suit against Freddie Mac the same day. The SECs complaint against former Fannie executives Daniel Mudd (CEO), Enrico Dallavecchia (chief risk officer) and Thomas Lund (EVP for single family) alleges...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency this week joined a growing chorus raising warnings about proposals to use the eminent domain powers of local government to seize performing underwater mortgages out of non-agency MBS pools. In an unusual move, the agency said it has significant concerns about the use of eminent domain to revise existing financial contracts and the alteration of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Federal Home Loan Bank securities holdings. The FHFA formally invited public comment on the concept and warned that action may be necessary on its part [as conservator and regulator of the government-sponsored enterprises] to avoid a risk to safe and sound operations and to avoid taxpayer expense. The issue drew attention this week because both Fannie and Freddie managed...[Includes one data chart]
Single-family MBS issuance in the agency market dropped 4.8 percent from June to July, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS market analysis and ranking. A total of $133.23 billion of agency single-family MBS were issued last month, a huge 82.9 percent increase of the amount produced in July of last year. That brought year-to-date issuance in 2012 to $893.92 billion, an increase of 40.5 percent from the same period last year. Fannie Mae was the only agency to see...[Includes one data chart]
Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac emerged from the second quarter of 2012 firmly in the black with each company posting a free-and-clear profit only the second time for each GSE since being drafted into government conservatorship nearly four years ago. The period ending June 30, 2012, marks the second consecutive quarter that Fannie will not require taxpayer assistance to keep the company going. Freddie will also not require an additional draw from the U.S. Treasury, the first time since the first quarter of 2011 which was the first time ever either GSE posted a profit since before conservatorship.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency captured the industrys attention this week by formally citing significant concerns about proposals to use local government eminent domain powers, a paradigm shift the agency sees as potentially costly to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks. In a request for public comment, published in the Aug. 8 Federal Register, the Finance Agency warned that action might be necessary on its part to avoid a risk to safe and sound operations at the GSEs and to avoid taxpayer expense.
Fannie Mae will soon require all of its servicers and any subservicer or third-party originator the servicer uses to be in full compliance with the requirements of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, the GSE announced this week. On or before Nov. 1, 2012, the servicer is required to complete a Fannie Mae supplier registration profile that accurately reflects its ownership status, regardless of whether it is HERA-Inclusive, and its team composition report, explained Fannie.
Disappointed partisan opponents of the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s decision to rebuff White House efforts to forgive the principal on delinquent mortgages guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are blaming the agency head for the administration’s failure to rescue underwater homeowners, particularly in politically valuable states. Last week, FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco formally announced the agency would not allow the GSEs to implement the Treasury Department’s Home Affordable Modification Principal Reduction Alternative.