Most of the mortgage industrys modest increase in origination volume during the second quarter came through lenders retail production programs, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. Retail loan originations rose 9.2 percent to an estimated $250.0 billion during the second quarter, That represented a record 61.7 percent of the markets total output for the period, the highest retail share since Inside Mortgage Finance began analyzing origination channel trends. Most of the top lenders reported increased retail production at a time when many but certainly not all were scaling down their wholesale operations. Total wholesale originations declined...[Includes four data charts]
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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau late last week issued its long-awaited proposal to establish national mortgage servicing standards for banks and nonbanks alike, extending a number of key aspects of the big national servicing settlement to the entire industry in the process. The proposed rule covers nine major topics and would implement changes made by the Dodd-Frank Act to the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. The proposed rule generally requires servicers of closed-end residential mortgage loans (other than reverse mortgages) to send a periodic statement for each billing cycle, and the CFPBs proposal spells out the timing, form and content requirements of such statements, and includes sample forms that servicers can use. Special rules will apply...
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Mortgage delinquency rates trended higher in the second quarter of 2012, although the foreclosure picture appeared to be improving. The Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index showed a 22 basis point increase in overall defaults, including loans just one month late and those in foreclosure. After dipping below the 10.00 percent level in March for the first time since late 2009, the overall past-due rate bounced back up to 10.10 percent as of the end of June. Most servicers reported...[Includes two data charts]
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The Federal Housing Finance Agencys public expression of concern last week about proposals to use the eminent domain powers of local governments to seize performing underwater mortgages might be enough to significantly delay or even derail the effort outright, say experts. The conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and regulator of the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks warned that unspecified action might be necessary on its part to avoid a risk to safe and sound operations at the government-sponsored enterprises. FHFA has significant concerns about the use of eminent domain to revise...
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A federal judge in New York last week rejected the motion by a trio of former Fannie Mae executives to dismiss a securities fraud civil lawsuit brought late last year against the top GSE officers by the Securities and Exchange Commission. In December 2011, the SEC filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York alleging that former Fannie executives made material misrepresentations to the public, investors and the media about the government-sponsored enterprises exposure to subprime mortgage loans in 2007 and 2008. The SEC filed an identical parallel civil suit against Freddie Mac the same day. The SECs complaint against former Fannie executives Daniel Mudd (CEO), Enrico Dallavecchia (chief risk officer) and Thomas Lund (EVP for single family) alleges...
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An interagency proposed rule issued this week would set requirements for appraisals on higher-risk mortgages while a separate proposal by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would require lenders to provide loan applicants with copies of written appraisals. Both requirements were mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act. Higher-risk mortgages are first-lien loans with an annual percentage rate that exceeds the average prime offer rate by 1.5 percentage points or more, jumbo loans with a spread of 2.5 or more and second mortgages with a spread of 3.5 percentage points or more. Any appraisal for such loans would require...
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The Senate Finance Committee recently approved legislation by a bipartisan vote of 19-5 to extend tax relief for principal forgiven on a mortgage, which is set to expire at the end of this year, and restore the mortgage insurance deduction that expired at the end of 2011. The Family and Business Tax Cut Certainty Act of 2012 approved by the Senate Finance Committee would extend both tax breaks through 2013. Prospects for the legislation are murky, according to industry analysts, as Republicans are working to limit the extension of certain tax breaks. This markup is not...
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