A proposal by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-OR, to help refinance non-agency borrowers with negative equity has support from the Obama administration and could begin tests without action from Congress. The proposed Rebuilding American Homeownership has been characterized as a Home Affordable Refinance Program for non-agency mortgages. I think the policy is very good; its very well designed, Treasury Department Secretary Timothy Geithner said in testimony last week before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs ...
A large-scale refinance program proposed by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-OR, would rely on a risk transfer fee for lenders and require participating lenders to consider all potential borrowers for the program. The Rebuilding American Homeownership program has support from the Obama administration, though analysts suggest approval from Congress is unlikely. Merkley recently proposed the RAH program to help virtually all non-delinquent borrowers with negative equity to refinance into a mortgage with a lower interest rate. The program could be based on a one-time federally-backed structure, similar to the Home Owners Loan Corp. established by the federal government during the Great Depression. The RAH trust would sell...
The American Securitization Forum opposes the notion of revising the federal bankruptcy code to enable overburdened student loan borrowers to lighten their debt loads, one of the suggestions in a new report on the state of private student loans that was released by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the U.S. Department of Education. The ASF continues to support strong underwriting standards and fully transparent disclosure to borrowers. At the same time, the ASF opposes reopening the bankruptcy code to allow borrowers to reduce or eliminate their student loan debt, said ASF Executive Director Tom Deutsch. Such action would eliminate educational opportunities for a broad swath of borrowers, as lenders would be less willing to offer loans, thereby curtailing credit availability. Currently, consumers generally cannot discharge...
A bill introduced in the House earlier this month would allow privately-insured credit unions access to the Federal Home Loan Bank system for the first time. H.R. 6105, introduced by Rep. Steve Stivers, R-OH, would amend the Federal Home Loan Bank Act to allow non-federally-insured credit unions to become members of one of the 12 FHLBanks. Currently, only federally insured credit unions can access the FHLBanks low-cost, secured funds, and certain requirements must be met.
The mortgage industry is facing mounting legal challenges to force-placed insurance practices as evidenced by two class-action lawsuits filed or advanced last week while state and federal policymakers look for ways to reduce homeowner costs on lender-placed insurance. A Florida homeowner filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court in Fort Lauderdale against Wells Fargo Bank, accusing the lender of engaging in a pattern of unlawful and unconscionable profiteering and self-dealing by charging inflated force-placed insurance premiums to homeowners who had allowed their coverage to lapse. Ira Fladell, a lawyer representing himself, claims the bank breached its contract with him and acted in bad faith and that the lender bought...
A federal judge in New York has given the go-ahead for a group of investors in an IndyMac Bank MBS offering to proceed as a class in a suit against Credit Suisse, the offerings underwriter. The June 29 ruling by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan granted a December 2010 request for class certification to investors as they allege Credit Suisse misled them about the quality of toxic loans underlying a $642 million MBS offering in 2006. The plaintiffs claim in their suit that the sale of the MBS, Residential Asset Securitization Trust 2006-A8, sponsored by IndyMac Bank, violated the Securities Act of 1933 because the offering falsely represented that the underlying mortgage loans were originated in accordance with IndyMacs underwriting standards.
There is little to no chance of GSE reform bills moving any further in Congress during the remainder of the legislative year, say industry insiders who warn that the political priority for next years Congress will shift from restructuring Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to scaling back the massive Dodd-Frank Act. For all the sound and fury surrounding Republican-led filing of 25 separate pieces of GSE legislation in the House and Senate during the 112th Congress, nearly all the bills, including six proposals considered comprehensive GSE reform, remain bottled up in committee.
After months of high-profile publicly and seemingly endless prototypes, consumer testing and discussions with industry stakeholders, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week issued a detailed proposed rule to integrate the mortgage disclosures consumers get under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act. The proposal features new loan estimate and closing disclosure forms to highlight the costs and risks of a mortgage in terms designed to be clearer to consumers and to facilitate shopping. According to the CFPB...
Consumers who take out mortgages that are considered high cost currently receive special pro-tections from fees and risky loan terms. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week came out with a proposed rule that would expand what is considered a high]cost mortgage and provide more protections to consumers who take out those loans. Loans that meet high-cost triggers under the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act are subject to special disclosure requirements and restrictions on loan terms, and borrowers in high-cost mortgages have enhanced remedies ...
Thousands of ineligible tax cheats received FHA-insured mortgage loans under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 even though federal tax regulations prohibited tax debtors from obtaining government-backed mortgages, the Government Accountability Office reported in a new study. The report found that 6,327 borrowers, who owed a total of $77.6 million in federal taxes, were able to obtain more than $1.44 billion in FHA-insured mortgages under the ARRA. Of these borrowers, 3,815 individuals claimed and received $27.4 million under the statutes temporary First-Time Homebuyer Credit program. The GAOs analysis included ...