Three more FHA-approved lenders have found themselves under government scrutiny as the Department of Housing and Urban Developments Office of the Inspector General broadened its investigation of potential abuses of the FHA single-family program. The OIG reportedly issued subpoenas to three large financial institutions last month to submit information on their FHA operations to determine whether the lenders followed HUD requirements when originating and underwriting FHA loans. The inspector general also would look to see whether quality control programs are ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is seeking comment and information on mortgages not financed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, including those insured and guaranteed by the federal government, as it reopened the public discussion for the proposed ability to repay rule. New data the Federal Housing Finance Agency provided to the CFPB after the close of the rulemakings comment period spurred the bureau to reopen the comment period until July 9, 2012. The new FHFA data track the performance of loans purchased or guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from 1997 to 2011. The CFPB also has obtained data on ...
FHA servicers held approximately 7.5 million loans as of April 30, with the top 50 servicers accounting for 97.2 percent, an Inside FHA Lending analysis of agency data showed. Wells Fargo and Bank of America together held an estimated 4.0 million loans for a whopping 54.3 percent of the market. An estimated 2.0 percent of FHA loans serviced by Wells were delinquent, while BofA reported 19.2 percent of its FHA portfolio delinquent. Wells had a foreclosure rate of 2.17 percent while BofA had a 2.51 percent rate. JPMorgan Chase had 658,966 FHA loans, 18.8 percent in various stages of delinquency, and a market share of ... [1 Chart]
A proposal to replace the FHAs current Tier Ranking System with a Servicer Performance Scorecard as a basis for determining servicer incentive payment is expected to be published in the Federal Register by the end of this month. In the previous issue of Inside FHA Lending (Volume 5, Issue 11, May 25), it was reported that a coalition of industry groups asked the FHA to adopt a private transfer fee rule in harmony with the final rule recently adopted by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. In a recent seller/servicer bulletin, Freddie Mac announced that, effective July 16, it will not purchase mortgages that are ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has expressed concern over the lack of alignment between FHAs credit underwriting standards and credit overlays a probable explanation for the apparent increase in FHA lending to non-traditional FHA borrowers. Responding to an Inside FHA Lending inquiry, FHA Deputy Assistant Secretary Charles Coulter said HUD will look at lenders compare ratio as a potential driver for overlays and will work to improve clarity in FHA manual underwriting. In recent remarks at the Mortgage Bankers Associations National Secondary Market Conference in New York, Coulter said ...
Real estate industry groups are urging the FHA to align a forthcoming proposed rule for private transfer fees with a final rule recently adopted by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. In a joint letter to Acting FHA Commissioner Carol Galante, the National Association of Realtors and the Institute of Real Estate Management expressed support for the FHFA rule on transfer-fee covenants and asked that a mortgagees compliance with the FHFA rule be deemed as compliance with the FHAs own rule regarding such covenants. The two groups urged the FHA to ...
FHA-approved reverse mortgage lenders conducting any new financial assessments of elderly borrowers should not be overly restrictive to ensure that the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program remains a viable option for cash-poor seniors, according to the National Council on Aging. The NCA, an advocacy group for elderly Americans, noted that lender assessments of borrowers ability to repay a HECM loan may be tough seniors with modest income who could not qualify for a conventional home loan would be left with fewer alternatives to tap home equity. The FHA does not have specific income requirements for HECM borrowers. However, policymakers are ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has paid a total of $962,600 in incentive payments to servicers that used special forbearance for unemployed homeowners since changes to FHA forbearance rules were announced in July last year. The payments covered 6,116 claims filed with HUD under the FHAs revised special forbearance program from July 2011 through March 2012. The program helps unemployed FHA borrowers stay in their homes while seeking reemployment. Changes to the program require servicers to extend the forbearance period for qualified FHA borrowers from the minimum four months to 12 months. In addition, upfront hurdles were ...
Incentive payments to FHA servicers based on a compliance score will soon replace the current tier ranking-based inducements used by the Department of Housing and Urban Development to reward above par servicer performance. In an update to its servicer evaluation process, HUD said implementation of the National Servicing Centers Servicer Performance Scorecard (SPS) is underway and the transition from Tier Ranking System (TRS) incentive payment to an SPS payment scheme will be announced in a mortgagee letter as soon as the implementation is completed. In the future, the SPS may be used as ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is evaluating potential changes to its tough condominium requirements, some of which could be announced soon. A department spokesperson declined to comment on specific requirements that may be included in new guidelines but said the agency is working to respond to industry concerns. Industry observers say the rules, which HUD put in place in 2009, have left many condominium units ineligible for FHA-insured financing. Condominium association boards have been ...