The FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund appears poised for another potential settlement infusion following this weeks announcement of a federal lawsuit against Wells Fargo Bank for alleged reckless underwriting and fraudulent loan certifications on thousands of FHA-insured loans that ultimately defaulted. Filed by the U.S. Attorneys Office in Manhattan, the lawsuit accuses Wells Fargo of engaging in a long standing and reckless trifecta of deficient training, deficient underwriting and deficient disclosure, while relying on the convenient backstop of government insurance. Ten years of Wells Fargos alleged misconduct ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Developments Office of the Inspector General is seeking indemnification from a sponsored third-party originator (TPO) for potential losses of more than $1.5 million due to poor loan documentation. The IG also ordered the TPO, Bankers Mortgage Group of Woodland Hills, CA, to reimburse the FHA insurance fund $58,704 for the actual loss on one FHA-insured mortgage loan. The IG also recommended that HUD impose fines on Bankers Mortgage for allegedly signing off on false loan information. IG auditors targeted BMG after internal investigators found significant ...
Endorsements of new loans under the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program continued to slide as production fell significantly during first half of 2012. HECM production declined by 25.0 percent from the same period last year to $7.1 billion and fell 4.9 percent from the first to the second quarter. In-house originations accounted for almost all originations reported by top HECM lenders. Initial principal amount at loan origination totaled $4.7 billion. MetLife Bank led all lenders with $2.03 billion, an estimated 63 percent originated in house, and captured a 28.5 percent market share. Production rose 21.6 percent ... [One chart]
Portfolio lenders held to a cautious strategy for home-equity lending during the first half of 2012, with most companies not doing enough new business to offset runoff in their retained holdings, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. But several large lenders reported significant increases in HEL originations during the second quarter, and some institutions managed to originate enough new business to increase their retained portfolios. The credit union sector continued to show more enthusiasm for the business than commercial banks and savings institutions. As of the end of June, banks, thrifts and credit unions held...[Includes three data charts]
Rules proposed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in August to revamp servicing practices prompted widely varied reactions from servicers, individual consumers and community banks. Servicers largely sought to keep current servicing rules unchanged while borrowers asked for greater protections and community banks requested an exemption from the proposal. The CFPB said the proposed rules are aimed at ending surprises and runarounds for borrowers. The proposed rules incorporated a number of provisions included in the national servicing settlement and consent orders between servicers and federal regulators. Some of those provisions were required by the Dodd-Frank Act. Servicers largely suggested that the CFPB should not implement servicing rules beyond those specifically required by the DFA. However, the Consumer Mortgage Coalition, whose members include the servicers complying with the settlement and consent orders, called...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency this week announced a second winning bidder of its pilot program to move GSE real estate-owned properties from money-losing foreclosures to money-making rentals and eventually off the books entirely. The FHFA announced that New York-based Cogsville Group LLC was the winning bidder of 94 Fannie Mae-owned properties as part of the FHFAs REO pilot initiative. The firm paid $2.1 million for a share in a joint venture with Fannie, resulting in an estimated transaction value to the GSE of $11.8 million or 86.2 percent of the properties estimated value, according to the transaction summary.
Freddie Mac last week cut some slack in the form of a lifeline to MGIC Investment Corp. which will allow the mortgage insurer to write additional policies even as the MI and the GSE work through a simmering dispute over pool insurance. On Sept. 28, MGIC announced that Freddie has reduced the amount of capital contribution MGIC Investment must pay its principal subsidiary MGIC to $100 million from $200 million. The GSE also extended the deadline for this contribution from Sept. 30 to Dec. 1.
A proposal by the Financial Accounting Standards Board to require disclosure of liquidity and interest rate risk is unnecessary, costly and will cause confusion, according to industry participants. FASB proposed the Accounting Standards Update in June in an effort to increase disclosure of risks that led to problems in the mortgage market and beyond in 2008. FASB noted that liquidity risk and interest rate risk were prominent during the recent financial crisis and continue to be relevant to ...
Declining interest rates forced mortgage bankers to lower the fair market value of their mortgage servicing rights during the second quarter, according to a new analysis of bank call-report data by Inside Mortgage Trends. Banks reported a total of $5.607 trillion of mortgage servicing for others as of the end of June, a 3.1 percent decline from the previous quarter. That represented about 81.8 percent of the total mortgage servicing outstanding that was tied to agency and non-agency ... [Includes one data chart]
The Federal Reserves decision to keep interest rates low until the U.S. economy creates a significant increase in employment will help banks continue to enjoy solid earnings from their mortgage banking activities, according to analysts at Credit Suisse. The Fed is increasing its already huge portfolio of agency mortgage-backed securities by $40 billion a month. Along with the $25 billion a month the central bank has been buying to replace principal paydown, the Feds total MBS acquisitions ...