Mortgage market watchers should expect “business as usual” from a second Obama administration as the White House and Congressional Democrats are poised to preserve gains under the Dodd-Frank Act, including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Both parties say they want to resolve the conservatorships of the government-sponsored enterprises, but experts say the necessity of addressing budget and tax issues will trump all other considerations next year. “Clearly a second term for the Obama administration would be business as usual as best they can,” explained Timothy McTaggart, partner at the Pepper Hamilton law firm during a pre-election webinar. “I don’t think Dodd-Frank will remain sacrosanct for all time. I think during a second term the [regulatory] agencies will get past the point of having to put the rules out, they will get some feedback and they will start making it known where they see gaps or deficiencies.” Karen Shaw Petrou, managing partner of Federal Financial Analytics, said...
No matter who sits in the Oval Office or which party controls Congress following next week’s election, expect GSE reform to remain a secondary priority in 2013, despite the best efforts of select lawmakers who want to get the legislative ball rolling, experts say. A functioning non-agency mortgage-backed securities market is necessary before members of Congress can be convinced to move forward with GSE reform, according to Rep. David Schweikert, R-AZ. Schweikert told attendees of the ABS East conference in Miami last week that’s why he plans to introduce legislation during the 113th Congress to establish a non-agency MBS framework.
Legislation that would delay foreclosures on mortgages of certain military servicemembers, retirees and surviving spouses of soldiers and sailors who died on active duty would cost taxpayers more to enact and implement rather than as a revenue raiser, according to Congressional Budget Office. The CBO estimates that enacting S. 3322, the Servicemembers’ Protection Act of 2012, would increase direct spending by $16 million over the 2013-2022 period. Implementing it would hike discretionary costs by ...
Rep. David Schweikert, R-AZ, said this week that in the coming months he will introduce bipartisan legislation to establish a regulatory framework for prime non-agency MBS. “I’ve spent the last two years trying to figure out what the box will look like,” he said. Non-agency MBS participants continue to debate whether reform of the government-sponsored enterprises is necessary before the non-agency MBS market can return in a meaningful manner. At the ABS East conference sponsored by Information Management Network this week in Miami, Schweikert said a functioning non-agency MBS market is necessary before members of Congress can be convinced to move forward with GSE reform. “I need to have...
Congress will act on a bipartisan basis after the November elections to approve legislative changes to the Home Affordable Refinance Program, a well-connected industry participant predicted, although some Republicans in Congress remain opposed to a bill crafted by Senate Democrats Robert Menendez, NJ, and Barbara Boxer, CA. Lewis Ranieri, chairman and founding partner of Ranieri Partners, said this week that he fully expects Congress to approve S. 3522, the “Responsible Homeowner Refinancing Act,” after the upcoming elections. He suggested that Republicans have been unwilling to pass the bill due to fears that approving an Obama administration proposal could hurt their re-election efforts. Ranieri made...
Both supporters and opponents of the mortgage interest deduction are laying the groundwork in anticipation of a renewed post-election effort to significantly revise or even outright repeal a staple of middle-class homeownership as Washington is forced to grapple with tax reform and the looming “fiscal cliff.” A number of industry trade groups were reluctant to go on record but industry insiders say they are getting their facts and research together in anticipation of the first serious attempt to repeal the MID in two decades. The most critical factors that will dictate...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency says its proposed new securitization platform could be used now by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as by private issuers, but it’s also intended to serve a post government-sponsored enterprise marketplace. Last week, the FHFA issued a call for public comment on a white paper outlining its proposed common securitization platform and a model pooling and servicing agreement. Those plans are also included in the agency’s updated strategic plan issued this week. The 31-page strategic plan – which updates a draft issued by the FHFA in February – sets...
There is a clear need to reform the government-sponsored enterprise structure but how aggressively Congress will move on it and whether the next administration can provide much-needed leadership is unclear, according to housing and mortgage industry experts. Panelists in a forum hosted this week by the Progressive Policy Institute and the American Action Forum said they doubt Congress will be able to deal with the complex issue of GSE reform in 2013. Some among the panel of top economists and housing market experts said it may take a while before Congress can act on any reform legislation, much less in a bipartisan manner. Congress will not be...
House Financial Services Committee member John Campbell, R-CA, last week introduced H.R. 6397, the Defending American Taxpayers From Abusive Government Takings Act, legislation that would prohibit the origination of taxpayer-guaranteed mortgages in jurisdictions of the country where the power of eminent domain would be used to seize mortgages. If Campbell’s legislation is enacted – which is unlikely in the few days remaining in the legislative calendar of the 112th Congress, but probably will be resurrected in the 113th – it could prove fatal to a controversial eminent domain mortgage seizure plan proposed in recent months by Mortgage Resolution Partners. MRP’s plan would involve...
House Republicans this week made a surprise effort to advance a forgotten GSE reform bill with nominal bipartisan support directly to the House floor. It’s unclear whether the effort will succeed but an industry lobbyist says the move was an exercise in futility nonetheless. H.R. 2440, the Market Transparency and Taxpayer Protection Act, from Rep. Robert Hurt, R-VA, was one of more than two dozen “suspension” bills added to the lineup of expected quick and easy votes. In the House, suspension of the rules is a procedure generally used to quickly pass non-controversial bills. H.R. 2440 had not been advanced for a vote as Inside The GSEs went to press.
Moves by the Trump administration are disrupting the economy and the federal agencies that deal with the housing market. Bob Broeksmit, president and CEO of the MBA, isn’t sure how it’s all going to play out.
House Republicans called for the Department of Housing and Urban Development to roll back the FHA payment supplement program.
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