Reforms seen in the new era of non-agency jumbo MBS issuance arent enough to prompt significant investor participation, according to John Gidman, president of the Association of Institutional Investors. At a hearing this week by the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, Gidman and others called for a number of changes to the non-agency market. The fundamental structural and process weaknesses for non-agency residential MBS securitization have not been fixed in the current private-label securities market, Gidman said. The issuance process itself is very opaque. Ratings continue to be shopped, issuers are still incentivized to water down representations and warranties, and continued variability in structures and documentation make the market more challenging for investors and raise the costs of funding. He acknowledged...
Non-agency MBS investors are still unhappy with how negotiations for the $25 billion national servicing settlement were handled and are concerned that the federal government will pull a similar move in settlement negotiations with JPMorgan Chase. John Gidman, president of the Association of Institutional Investors, said non-agency MBS investors werent involved in negotiations for the national servicing settlement and havent been involved in ongoing discussions regarding Chase. He said using funds from non-agency MBS to remedy allegations of inappropriate, unlawful or illegal behavior on behalf of an issuer or servicer makes it harder for investors to price risk. This consequently makes...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development this week proposed its own qualified mortgage rule for FHA-insured mortgage loans that builds off the existing QM rule finalized by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau earlier this year. The proposed rule aligns with the ability-to-repay criteria in the Truth in Lending Act as required by the Dodd-Frank Act. Once the proposal becomes final and takes effect, it would replace the CFPBs rule for FHA loans. The DFA has set a seven-year timetable for FHA, the VA and the Rural Housing Service to promulgate their own QM rules. HUDs proposed QM rule would ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Developments Mortgagee Review Board has collected $1.9 million from Oct. 1, 2012, through June 30, 2013, from actions taken against FHA lenders. The MRB actions involved 30 lenders, of whom 15 agreed to settle and seven agreed to indemnify HUD for its losses, according to the boards latest data. The indemnification agreement covered 166 FHA-insured loans, and 11 lenders lost their authority to participate in the FHA single-family mortgage program. Cases heard by the MRB involved infractions, such as failure to implement and maintain a quality control plan and to review early payment default loans, which resulted in ...
The FHA has clarified the meaning of continuous income and announced other updates to its loss mitigation home-retention options to help distressed borrowers retain their homes and, thus, reduce the number of claims against the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. FHA lenders are required to implement the updated policies in Mortgagee Letter 2013-32 by Dec. 1, 2013. Continuous income is one of the criteria a defaulting borrower must meet in order to qualify for a loan modification. While it generally refers to employment income (e.g., wages, salary or self-employed earnings), it may also include ...
Wells Fargo claimed partial victory after a Manhattan federal district court judge dismissed certain claims against it in a government lawsuit alleging the bank lied about the quality of defaulted mortgages insured by the FHA. District Court Judge Jesse Furman ruled that legal injury claims based on events that happened prior to June 2009 were time-barred and that the government had waited too long to file a lawsuit. He also threw out claims of negligence and unjust enrichment. On the other hand, Furman let stand claims under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989, which the ...
HUD Delays Implementation of Short-Sale Participation Requirement. The implementation of the PFS Participation Requirement, which is found in Mortgagee Letter 2013-23, Updated Pre-Foreclosure Sale and Deed-in-Lieu-of-Foreclosure Requirements, has been delayed indefinitely. All other provisions included in the mortgagee letter remain in effect. Previous guidance on short-sale participation requirements also remain in effect until further notice. FHA to Consolidate Lender ID Numbers. The FHA will consolidate the lender identification numbers of those participating in both the FHA Title I and Title II programs, provided ...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has yet to show its hand on 2014 conforming loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but that isnt stopping elected officials from sticking their noses in the issue. In particular, a recent letter sent by 13 senators 11 Democrats and two Republicans addressed to FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco puts pressure on the agency to show what legal authority it has to declare new loan limits and requests a quantitative analysis on what impact it will have on the economy and national and regional housing markets. The 13 senators want...
The FHA raised red flags late last week when it announced it will need to draw $1.7 billion from the Treasury, not because the agencys claims-paying ability is at risk, but rather to comply with federal law requiring it to have reserves to cover anticipated future losses and mandatory capital reserves. The mandatory appropriation is an accounting transfer and does not reflect an up-to-date view of the FHAs Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, its long-term fiscal health or its current cash position, said FHA Commissioner Carol Galante in a letter to Sen. Tim Johnson, D-SD, chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, and Sen. Mike Crapo, R-ID, ranking minority member. The calculation used...
Top officials in the Federal Reserve System were making the rounds of the financial and economic intelligentsia this week, shedding some light on the central banks decision to prolong its support of the financial and housing markets through its admittedly unconventional means of massive asset purchases, accommodative monetary policy and explicit forward guidance. Several questions have emerged following the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, said FOMC member William Dudley, president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, during a speech this week in New York City. Most noteworthy was given that market expectations were skewed towards anticipating the beginning of a taper at this meeting why the committee did not begin to reduce the pace of asset purchases. Although he was not presuming to speak for the committee, Dudley did provide...