The Treasury Departments recent announcement on the next steps to wind down the government-sponsored enterprises will have little immediate impact on the non-agency market, according to industry analysts. The Treasury will require Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to contribute all future profits to the government, reduce their investment portfolios at a quicker pace and submit annual plans to reduce mortgage credit risk. [The changes] will help expedite the wind down of Fannie ... [Includes one chart]
$7.5 Million FHA Mortgage Fraud Scheme. The Department of Justice has filed charges against top executives of a real estate brokerage for their participation in a mortgage fraud scheme that may cost the FHA $7.5 million in losses. Indictments were unsealed earlier this month in Manhattan federal court charging Mitchell Cohen and Erin Davis, the owner and sales manager, respectively, of Buy-A-Home, a real estate brokerage business in Queens, NY. The criminal charges follow a civil fraud lawsuit filed by the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Southern District of New York last December against ...
The streamlined short sale programs announced last week by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could increase losses on bank holdings of second liens, according to industry analysts. The changes, directed by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, include the ability for the government-sponsored enterprises to offer up to $6,000 to second-lien holders to expedite a short sale. Previously, second-lien holders could slow down the short sale process by negotiating for higher amounts, the FHFA said. Overall ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus recent proposed rule regarding loan originator compensation would expand and clarify anti-steering rules established by the Federal Reserve, in effect since April 2011. Compensation structures frequently gave loan originators incentives to steer consumers into loans with higher rates or other unfavorable terms, according to the CFPB. The regulators proposed rule cited a consent order issued by the Fed in 2011 regarding subprime steering by Wells Fargo ...
M&T Bank announced this week that it will acquire Hudson City Bancorp for $3.7 billion. The jumbo lender will merge into a subsidiary of M&T. Hudson City was the 10th-ranked non-agency jumbo lender in 2011, according to Inside Nonconforming Markets, with an estimated $3.15 billion in such originations. Officials at M&T said they acquired Hudson which was having difficulties funding its jumbo originations to expand M&Ts retail branch network. Officials at Hudson City said M&T will help expand ... [Includes five briefs]
Standard & Poors announced late last week that it updated the criteria for ratings on non-agency MBS with mortgage collateral originated before 2009. The new standards are effective immediately and will result in significantly more downgrades than upgrades, according to S&P analysts. The standards update criteria for credit, cash flows and rating stability, and introduce new methods for analyzing transactions that have fewer than 100 loans remaining in the pool. Vandana Sharma, a managing director and lead analytic manager for U.S. residential MBS ratings at S&P, said the new standards reflect key market trends. In light of the stabilization of home prices and delinquencies in the U.S. mortgage market, these criteria seek...
Boosted by its acquisition of Saxon Mortgage Services, Ocwen Financial was the only major servicer to increase its subprime portfolio in the second quarter of 2012. And after three consecutive quarters of improvement, subprime performance deteriorated in the second quarter. An estimated $505.0 billion in subprime mortgages were outstanding as of the end of the second quarter of 2012, according to Inside Nonconforming Markets, down 3.4 percent from the previous quarter as subprime mortgage originations ... [Includes one chart]
The interest rate environment is ripe for jumbo borrowers, but industry participants warn that underwriting standards for these loans are at least as stringent as standards for agency loans and much different than five years ago when many jumbo borrowers might have last bought a home or refinanced. Be prepared to expose everything to examination, said Bill Reiter, a senior loan officer at PNC Mortgage, speaking at a webinar last week hosted by Realtor Magazine. He noted that income, assets, tax returns and ...
Federal regulators this week proposed requiring a physical inspection of a propertys interior by a qualified appraiser for originations of higher-risk mortgages, the latest proxy for subprime loans. The requirement was included in the Dodd-Frank Act and could prompt more than 50,000 new appraisals per year. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau estimated that full-interior appraisals are conducted as part of current practice in higher-risk mortgage originations on 95.0 percent of purchase-money transactions ...
Ginnie Mae is reportedly considering increasing its minimum net worth requirement in response to an onslaught of requests by smaller banks for new issuer approvals. Quoting agency officials, reports indicate that Ginnie Mae is being swamped with applications from smaller mortgage lenders seeking authority to issue agency-backed mortgage backed securities. With large aggregators like Bank of America, MetLife and Ally Financial opting out of the correspondent and reverse mortgage businesses, many smaller lenders lost access to the Ginnie Mae program. However, many of these lenders are stepping into the breach on their own or with partners to ...