A Fannie Mae proposal to reduce the cost of lender-placed homeowner insurance might be great news for borrowers but not for insurance companies that underwrite the product, warned Moodys Investors Service. While Fannie has not disclosed the full details of its cost-reduction proposal, the government-sponsored enterprise plans to place policies directly with insurance companies, rather than accept policies put in place by the mortgage lender. Last week, the GSE issued a request for proposals inviting insurance companies to compete for the GSEs lender-placed business. The request is...
Fannie Mae has updated its premium recapture policy by establishing standards for remediation in cases where a lender exhibits a peculiar prepayment behavior. Under the current guide, Fannie Mae has the right to analyze MBS that have high levels of prepayments, including a review of the lenders origination and refinancing activities to ensure compliance with the government-sponsored enterprises requirements. If a lender shows an unusually high level of prepayments, Fannie may restrict any refinancing practice that might inappropriately affect the prepayment pattern for Fannie mortgages...
The two sibling GSEs experienced a divergent earnings period during the fourth quarter of 2011, as Freddie Mac posted a quarterly gain, on paper anyway, while Fannie Mae announced losses, albeit at a slower pace, in a year that drove both companies even deeper into the red.Freddie posted net income of $619 million during the three month period ending Dec. 31, 2011, compared to a net loss of $4.4 billion during the third quarter. For the full year, the company reported a net loss of $5.3 billion, compared to a net loss of $14.0 billion for the full-year 2010.
A legislative effort to extend Fannie Mae and Freddie Macs guarantee fee hike beyond 2021 to pay for the Gulf Coast cleanup was averted this week following some behind-the-scenes lobbying, but industry insiders remain wary of future attempts by lawmakers to milk the GSEs for cash. An amendment to the Restore the Gulf Coast Act of 2011 would have used revenue generated from GSE g-fees to help pay for the continued clean up from the BP Gulf Coast oil spill. Sponsored by Sens. Mary Landrieu, D-LA, and Richard Shelby, R-AL, the bill would establish a trust fund paid for partly by fines levied against the oil company.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is proceeding with its initiative to dispose of GSE and government-held real estate-owned properties even as some within the industry question whether such a wide-spread REO program is necessary. Last week, the FHFA announced the first pilot transaction under its REO initiative, which is targeted to the countrys hardest-hit metropolitan areas, including Atlanta, Chicago, Las Vegas, Phoenix and parts of Florida.
Fannie Mae announced this week it will soon implement changes to its Lender-Placed Insurance requirements by overseeing the forced-placed policies itself instead of allowing banks and other financial institutions to do so. In a departure from current practices, Fannie said it would solicit proposals from insurance companies for its LPI business in an effort to significantly reduce costs to homeowners, taxpayers and to the GSE itself.
Fannie Mae said last week that it acted first to end its existing mortgage loan delivery contract with Bank of America because of delays in resolving repurchase issues. The GSEs account in its quarterly filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission is at odds with BofAs announcement two weeks ago where the bank announced in its own SEC filing that it has stopped selling to Fannie due to increasingly inconsistent repurchase requests by the enterprise compared to past practice.
A month after Congress voted to curtail bonus payments conferred to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives, lawmakers have yet to close the deal and send a final bill to the presidents desk for signature. In early February, both the House and Senate overwhelmingly approved the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act of 2012, which would bar members of Congress and congressional staff from using non-public, inside information for private gain. While the House version of the STOCK Act is weaker than the Senates, both versions retained an amendment sponsored by Sens. John McCain, R-AZ and Jay Rockefeller, D-WV, to prohibit Fannie and Freddie executives from receiving multi-million dollar bonuses while the GSEs remain in federal conservatorship.
Compensation for top executives at both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be cut by nearly three-fourths with no bonuses paid out in 2012 under a new plan rolled out by the Federal Housing Finance Agency late this week. The FHFA’s 2012 Executive Compensation Program reduces top executive pay by nearly 75 percent since conservatorship, eliminates bonuses and sets a target for new CEO pay at $500,000.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency Office of Inspector General took the FHFA to task this week for what the OIG considers the agencys lax supervision of Freddie Macs relationship with its servicers. Specifically, the FHFA has not clearly defined its role regarding servicers, sufficiently coordinated with other federal banking agencies about risks and supervisory concerns with individual servicers, or timely addressed emerging risks presented by mortgage servicing contractors.