The Department of Housing and Urban Development said it would work with Congress to strengthen the FHA and Ginnie Mae in a way that protects taxpayers and facilitates the return of private capital despite its mixed views of a Republican draft bill to reform the two programs. Assistant Secretary for Housing and FHA Commissioner Carol Galante told members of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Insurance, Housing and Economic Opportunity last week that HUD is willing to work with lawmakers to increase access to credit and strengthen risk management and lender enforcement. But while the GOP draft bill contained elements similar to...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is seeking comment on a proposed rule that would expand FHA-insured lending in rural areas. Published in the Aug. 26 Federal Register, the proposed rule would allow direct lenders in the Farm Credit System to participate in the FHA mortgage insurance programs as approved mortgagees or lenders. Although participation in the mortgage insurance programs is voluntary, Farm Credit System financial institutions must comply with FHA approval requirements. The comment period ends Oct. 25. Recent difficulties in mortgage finance markets have reduced the availability of housing credit in rural areas, where the FHA currently does very limited business. Consequently, HUD proposes ...
Only about 18 of the 247 “high cost” metropolitan markets will avoid seeing their FHA loan limits lowered at the end of this month, when the emergency loan-limit adjustments for the FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are set to expire, according to a new analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. All 24 metro markets that now have loan limits of $729,750 (or higher in Hawaii) will see their limits dropped to at least $625,500, and some of these areas in California will see...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of the Inspector General called for improvements in the servicing of Home Equity Conversion Mortgage loans, particularly in detecting and reporting fraud, after auditors discovered certain advance payments that were made after the borrowers were reported to have died. Although most of the suspicious payments were due to posting errors, some transactions raised red flags, the IG report said. There was no evidence that servicers had sent those potentially fraudulent cases to HUD for further action, it added. The anomalies were found during a routine OIG audit of the HECM program, which insures ...
The creation of a U.S. sovereign wealth fund could grease the skids for an end to the conservatorships of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
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