The Federal Housing Finance Agencys proposal to shift the handling of nonperforming loans to special servicers would not benefit most servicers and borrowers, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The proposal could also hinder efforts to shift activity to the non-agency market. In September, the FHFA proposed a fee-for-service compensation model for the government-sponsored enterprises and suggested it could also be applied to the non-agency market. According to the FHFAs discussion paper, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac would pay a set dollar fee per performing loan $10 was cited as an example. For non-performing loans ...
United Wholesale Mortgage last week announced its The Big and Easy wholesale jumbo program, claiming it can close loans in two weeks. Gone are the days when an originator has to tell a borrower how difficult it is to close a jumbo loan, said Jaime Hunt, an account executive at UWM. The loans are available for amounts up to $2.5 million for principal residences as well as second homes, for purchase or refinance. UWM is looking for borrowers with credit scores of at least 720 and loan-to-value ratios of no more than 80 percent ...
American Home Mortgage Servicing agreed this week to settle a lawsuit brought by the Ohio attorney general in 2009. The subprime servicer did not agree to pay any penalties or complete principal-reduction loan modifications but did agree to specific servicing guidelines in the state. In 2009, Ohios attorney general filed a lawsuit claiming American Home violated consumer law by providing inadequate services to consumers seeking loan modifications. ... [Includes one brief]
The recent change in the FHAs maximum loan limits would have relatively limited impact for current borrowers trying to refinance, according to analysts. FHA loans insured prior to Oct. 1, 2011, were already grandfathered in for streamlined refinancing regardless of loan size, said analysts with J.P. Morgan Securities. In addition, the analysts said they do not expect many conventional jumbo-to-FHA refinances in this market segment because the mortgage insurance premiums make FHA loans less attractive. Last month, President Obama signed an appropriations bill into law, reinstating the pre-Oct. 1 formula for calculating the temporary loan limits for high-cost areas, which is ... [With one chart]
Total FHA endorsements declined 4.2 percent in October from the previous month and 29.7 percent from a year ago even as FHA refinances continued to slow, according to an Inside FHA Lending analysis of FHA data. A total of 88,060 mortgages were endorsed for FHA insurance in October, down from 91,963 loans in September. Of the October endorsements, 60,596 were purchase loans, down 9.0 percent from the previous month and 7.9 percent from the same reporting period last year. FHA refinancing increased 15.4 percent on a month-to-month basis but declined a whopping 57.9 percent from last year. Streamlined FHA refis were ... (Comes with one chart)
Banks significantly increased their non-agency jumbo originations even before the high-cost conforming loan limit was lowered in October, with jumbo originations outpacing overall originations during the period. A number of lenders large and small continue to see opportunities in the jumbo space, though securitization is likely to remain limited in the near-term. Some $27.0 billion in non-agency jumbos were originated in the third quarter of 2011, according to estimates by affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance ... [Includes one data chart]
Non-agency participants maintain that the reinstatement of emergency high-cost loan limits for FHA loans but not Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will not impede originations of non-agency jumbo mortgages. Meanwhile, some housing trade groups and congressmen representing high-cost districts continue to push for a reinstatement of the government-sponsored enterprises high-cost loan limits. In November, President Obama signed legislation that restored the maximum $729,750 loan limit for the highest-cost FHA markets ...
Fannie Mae recently started to transfer higher-risk mortgages to special servicers in an effort to improve performance, typically on non-prime loans. In its earnings filing for the third quarter of 2011, Fannie said it is transferring servicing on loan populations that include loans with higher-risk characteristics to special servicers with whom we have worked to develop high-touch protocols. The protocols include ... [Includes one data chart]
Springleaf Finance continues to consider an initial public offering for its real estate investment trust as a way to refinance a portion of its business to pay off debts. The Springleaf REIT filed for an IPO in May and while investor demand has not been overwhelming, the company maintains that it is still considering going public. The REIT will be primarily engaged in the business of sourcing, screening and acquiring performing whole loans secured by mortgages on residential real estate, Springleaf Finance said ...
Officials with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau once again stressed the need for regulation of alternative mortgages this week. However, the performance of such risky loans continues to be debated among consumer advocates and economists. In the lead up to the crisis, when a competitor began to steal market share or to earn outsize profits by introducing products like option ARMs or no-doc loans, the pressure to follow suit was intense, Raj Date, special advisor to the Treasury on the CFPB, said ...