Unless Congress takes legislative action by the end of the year, Fannie Mae and Freddie Macs unlimited pipeline of cash support from the U.S. Treasury will be significantly dialed back, a paper by Deutsche Bank cautions. Although agency mortgage market observers have assumed that the Treasury will extend the taxpayers unlimited line of credit to the GSEs before the Dec. 31 deadline, a close reading of the authorizing legislation suggests that the Treasury may not be able to extend unlimited support without the approval of Congress, noted Deutsche Bank.
Mortgage lenders, private mortgage insurers and the government-sponsored enterprises remained at loggerheads on the nagging problem of loan buybacks and MI cancellations as 2011 came to a close. Despite several global settlements by the GSEs and halting progress on legal wrangling over representation and warranty claims related to non-agency mortgage-backed securities, a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis reveals there were more unresolved buyback demands at the end of 2011 than there were at the beginning of the year. A clear sign of the persistent seriousness of...(Includes two data charts)
The expanded Home Affordable Refinance Program barely got off the launch pad in December, but more recent data and anecdotal reports suggest that the revamped mission to help underwater Fannie and Freddie borrowers is flying higher in early 2012. Even as the government-sponsored enterprises were reporting a 5.0 percent increase in refinance activity in December, the number of new HARP loans declined by a whopping 35.8 percent from the previous month. HARP activity increased by 3.3 percent from the third to the fourth quarter of last year, but that was significantly...(Includes two data charts)
The recent Servicing Resolution Agreements signed by the nations top five mortgage servicers with the federal government and state attorneys general may have been clear on the cost of their key provisions but it is the enormous hidden costs of compliance that could bite the financial institutions in the long run, according to compliance experts. Following the recent announcement of the national servicing settlement, it is impossible to put an accurate dollar amount on the myriad things servicers need to do in order to comply, but experts agree that staffing, training, technological upgrades...
Nationstar Mortgage Holdings says the deal it announced earlier this month to purchase $63 billion of mortgage servicing rights from Aurora Bank FSB, a subsidiary of Lehman Brothers Bancorp Inc., is part of the servicers long-term strategy to drive future growth. Texas-based Nationstar, the home finance unit of Fortress Investment Group, said the purchase represents all of Auroras servicing with 75 percent of the loans in non-agency mortgages, comprising approximately $45 billion of Aurora-serviced non-agency loans. Aurora serviced $34 billion of Alt A and negative amortization loans and about $10...
Ally Financial may be getting closer to ridding itself of its non-agency mortgage unit, ResCap, the residual of a business formerly known as Residential Capital that helped invent the jumbo securitization and Alt A markets. According to reports, Ally is weighing putting ResCap into bankruptcy as a prelude to selling the business to Fortress Investment Group or another suitor. Allys primary mortgage business, GMAC Mortgage, is a top seller-servicer in the agency market. ResCap and GMAC Mortgage are separate entities that are both subsidiaries of the holding company that also owns Ally...
Mobile devices have increasingly become tools that consumers use for banking, payments, budgeting and shopping, according to a new Federal Reserve report that offers useful business intelligence for mortgage lenders and technology vendors. The ubiquity of mobile phones is changing the way consumers access financial services, the Fed found. Twenty-one percent of mobile phone owners have used mobile banking in the past 12 months, and 11 percent of those not currently using mobile banking think that they will probably use it within the next 12 months. The most common use of mobile banking is to check account...
Buried in the fine print of the $25 billion nationwide servicing settlement is a small incentive for the five banks if they agree to waive their right to seek deficiency judgments against distressed borrowers. The five servicers agreed to make some $17 billion in loan modifications and refinances, but they meet those obligations by racking up credits for a long list of actions. For every dollar of principal reduction made on a portfolio mortgage with a loan-to-value ratio under 175 percent, for example, they get a dollar of credit toward their obligation. The agreement gives them credit for...
The residential shadow inventory has remained steady at 1.6 million units in January, CoreLogic said in a new report with numbers through January 2012. The firm notes that the flow of distressed sales out of the shadow inventory has been relatively even with the flow of new seriously delinquent loans into the inventory. The 1.6 million units are equal to a six-month supply, which is a year-over-year improvement from January 2011, when the 1.8 million units represented an eight-month supply. Of the units currently in shadow inventory, 800,000 are seriously delinquent, 410,000 are already in the foreclosure...
Many non-agency MBS investors are upset with the $25 billion servicing settlement involving 49 state attorneys general, eight federal agencies and the nations five largest servicers, the full terms of which were filed in U.S. District Court this week. Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Ally Financial will receive some credit for modifying loans they service but do not own, although several of these firms have indicated that they plan to focus their efforts on portfolio loans. The Association of Mortgage Investors said the settlement establishes a precedent under which the bad debts of...