Senate Democrats are drafting legislation to force Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to expand the Home Affordable Refinance Program for underwater borrowers even farther beyond the newly unveiled HARP 2.0. The draft legislation by Sens. Robert Menendez, D-NJ, and Barbara Boxer, D-CA, unveiled last week during a subcommittee hearing would force the GSEs to waive representations and warranties on new HARP loans regardless of whether the refi lender serviced the previous mortgage.
Implementing proposed legislation aimed at improving the safety and soundness of the FHA single-family program would cost taxpayers $11 million over a four-year period if the bill is enacted in late 2012 and the necessary amounts are appropriated each year, according to the Congressional Budget Office. In an analysis of H.R. 4264, the FHA Emergency Fiscal Solvency Act of 2012, the CBO estimated that $9 million would be spent on mandatory actuarial studies on the health of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund and $2 million for other costs over the 2013-2017 period. The legislation would not affect direct spending or revenues and, therefore ...
After months of hearing Congressional Democrats and White House allies suck up the public debate oxygen in favor of GSE principal reduction, mortgage writedown opponents are speaking up as the Federal Housing Finance Agency looks to be reconsidering its stand against loan forgiveness. Industry groups are expressing with greater volume their concern that principal forgiveness on loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would ultimately hurt the housing market.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has revised and consolidated its categories for safety and soundness and Affordable Housing Program examination findings pertaining to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, the FHFA announced in a recent advisory bulletin. Examination findings are deficiencies related to risk management, risk exposure, or violations of laws, regulations or orders that affect the performance or condition of a regulated entity, according to the FHFA.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s mortgage servicers will soon be required to review and respond to short sale requests within 30 days of an offer on the property and to provide weekly status updates if the offer is still under review after that, under new standards issued this week by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Under the new guidance, effective June 15, servicers will have to make a final decision within 60 days of receiving an offer on a short sale property. The FHFA said the change is an attempt to hasten the traditionally time-consuming and difficult primary alternative to foreclosure.
MBS Business Surges in 1Q 2012 Due to RefiGSE single-family securitizations leapt 16.2 percent during the first three months of 2012 compared to the previous quarter as mortgage lenders delivered some $303.9 billion in home loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s securitization programs, according to an Inside The GSEs analysis. The first quarter’s flood of new business marked the fourth straight quarterly increase in production of GSE mortgage-backed securities after the market tanked in the second quarter of 2011.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s combined cash infusion from taxpayers during the latter half of 2011 came in significantly below estimates forecast by the GSEs’ conservator, according to a new report. The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s fourth-quarter conservatorship report noted that Fannie and Freddie’s actual combined draw during the second half of last year was $19 billion, some $10 billion below the Finance Agency’s most optimistic projections issued last fall. In October, the FHFA circulated its updated projections of the financial performance of the GSEs, including potential draws under the Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements with the Treasury Department.
Lenders should expect at least a short-term boost in profits from the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s recent tweaks to the Home Affordable Refinance Program, analysts say as the industry’s largest lenders have seen a big increase in new refinance applications for HARP 2.0. In its first-quarter earnings report issued last week, Chase cited the impact of HARP in part for generating $1.6 billion in mortgage production revenue, an 80 percent increase from a year earlier. Likewise, Wells reported first-quarter mortgage originations to be up $9 billion from the fourth quarter of 2011, with 15 percent of originations credited to HARP, while application volumes rose 20 percent during the same period.
The front-of-the-line priority status granted to participants of the Property Assessed Clean Energy home loan programs under the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s proposed rule could have wide-ranging and unintended consequences for the Federal Home Loan Banks, according to Bank officials. The FHFA received more than 400 comment letters late last month – including two from the FHLBanks of Indianapolis and New York – roughly split for and against implementation of the proposed “green” lending program.
The Mortgage Bankers Association has asked Fannie Mae to push back its June 1 implementation deadline of the GSE’s new requirements for lender “force-placed” insurance policies to allow time for the creation of a “workable timeline” for compliance. Last month, Fannie announced it would implement changes to its Lender-Placed Insurance requirements by overseeing the force-placed polices itself instead of allowing banks and other financial institutions to do so.
Is Onity Group eyeing a sale? Perhaps. And why not? Servicing values are approaching a 25-year high.
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