The Federal Housing Finance Agency should “expeditiously finalize” its long-awaited analysis as to whether Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be allowed to offer principal forgiveness modifications under the Treasury Department’s Home Affordable Modification Program, according to the Government Accountability Office. In a report issued late this week, the GAO reminded the FHFA that the Obama administration’s loan modification program, which would be used to implement any principal reductions, expires at the end of December 2013.
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s conservator is pushing back in court against local government efforts to squeeze the GSEs for payments of real estate transfer taxes – taxes that are contrary to the companies’ Congressional charter and to federal law, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Last week, the FHFA filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois against the Illinois Department of Revenue and six counties led by DeKalb County that are trying to collect transfer taxes from Fannie and Freddie. The counties initiated litigation earlier in the week by filing a class-action lawsuit to compel the GSEs to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in uncollected real estate transfer taxes from the past five years.
A federal judge earlier this month had ruled that the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s case against UBS Americas will serve as the “test case” in a series of lawsuits that FHFA has filed concerning failed residential mortgage-backed securities. However, in another ruling a week later, Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted a motion by UBS to appeal her May 4 denial of the bank’s motion to dismiss on statute of limitation grounds. Judge Cote’s June 13 decision denied UBS’ request that it should not be the first of 17 cases to proceed because it was not a loan originator and it was not accused of fraud.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s Office of Inspector General said it wants to ensure that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and their regulator are making the most of their real estate-owned policies given the expected increase in REO activities in the years to come. The FHFA-OIG’s audit report issued earlier this month noted that between 2007 and the end of 2011, the two GSEs have nearly tripled their REO inventories to nearly 180,000 units and their related expenses to $8.5 billion. “Given the ongoing delays in the foreclosure process and the financial distress in which millions of American homeowners continue to find themselves, the enterprises are likely to face elevated REO inventories and costs for years to come,” said the OIG.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency would employ a new, more comprehensive examination rating system which would be used to inspect Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks and the Banks’ Office of Finance under a proposed rule issued last week. The proposed new system, published in the June 19 Federal Register, seeks to implement a single risk-focused examination system for all three entities that would be similar to the “CAMELS” rating system used by federal prudential regulators for depository institutions.
Military homeowners holding Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac loans with Permanent Change of Station Orders will be eligible to sell their homes in short sale even if they are current on their mortgage under a new policy announced by the GSEs’ regulator late last week. The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s short-sale policy change is intended to make it easier for military homeowners with GSE loans to honor their financial commitments when they are required to move…
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would be excluded from purchasing loans subject to Property Assessed Clean Energy liens under a rule formally issued by the Federal Housing Finance Agency regulator two weeks ago. The FHFA’s notice of proposed rulemaking, was published in the June 15 Federal Register for public comment in compliance with a federal court order. The proposed rule directs Fannie and Freddie “not to purchase any mortgage where PACE financing with a priority lien was placed on the underlying property. Such financing moves ahead of the pre-existing first mortgage in lien priority, and thereby subordinates Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac security interests in the property.”
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s home retention activity declined for the most part during the first quarter of 2012, according to a new analysis of Federal Housing Finance Agency data by Inside The GSEs. Total loss mitigation activity – total home retention efforts and foreclosure alternatives combined – declined 5.0 percent during the first quarter of the year to 214,812 and was down 14.3 percent from year-ago levels. Our analysis was based on the FHFA’s First Quarter 2012 Foreclosure Prevention Report. Total home retention efforts came to 111,739 at the end of the first quarter, a decrease of 7.4 percent from the fourth quarter 2011 and down 22.4 percent from the same period a year before.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency last week finalized a rule which establishes prudential standards relating to the management and operations of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks. The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 requires the FHFA director to establish standards that address 10 separate areas relating to the management and operation of the GSEs and FHLBanks and authorizes the director to establish the standards by regulation or by guideline.
For the second time in less than a year, Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s conservator has gone to court in Illinois to assert that the two federally chartered government-sponsored enterprises are exempt from certain local and state property assessments. Last week, the Federal Housing Finance Agency filed suit in the U.S. District Court Northern District of Illinois, Western Division, against the Illinois Department of Revenue and county clerks to block local government efforts to collect real estate transfer taxes from Fannie and Freddie. The FHFA suit was in response to litigation filed by DeKalb County and five other counties to compel...
Is Onity Group eyeing a sale? Perhaps. And why not? Servicing values are approaching a 25-year high.
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