The conforming mortgage market continued to dominate new loan originations during the third quarter of 2012, accounting for a whopping 85.7 percent of the periods robust $475 billion in new originations, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis and ranking. The conforming market which includes loans with government insurance and conventional mortgages up to the eligible loan limit for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac represented 84.5 percent of new originations in 2011. During 2010, the conforming market accounted for a record 90.1 percent of new loan production. The jumbo sector made...[Includes two data charts]
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The mortgage banking industry will support reasonable efforts to protect the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund as long as the changes dont expose FHA lenders to onerous liability risk and treble damage claims, which could force them to limit or curtail their FHA lending, said the Mortgage Bankers Association. MBA President and CEO Dave Stevens said appropriate protections for the FHA are clearly needed, but they should not go so far as to shut down or restrict access to affordable credit and sustainable homeownership, particularly for first-time homebuyers. He said the industry is most concerned with FHA proposals to seek authority from Congress to extend indemnification requirements to all direct endorsement (DE) lenders and for an amendment to eliminate the knew or should have known standard with regard to fraud or misrepresentation. Both proposals are...
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Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke late last week reiterated his view that tight underwriting standards set by lenders are hindering a broader recovery of the housing market. Lenders, meanwhile, cite concerns with repurchases and regulatory uncertainty. Bernanke noted that low home prices and historically low interest rates have not prompted the powerful housing recovery that has typically occurred in the past after housing problems. Unfortunately, while some tightening of the terms of mortgage credit was certainly an appropriate response to the earlier excesses, the pendulum appears to have swung too far, restraining the pace of recovery in the housing sector, he said. More than half of the lenders that responded to the Feds senior loan officer opinion survey earlier this year said...
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The first-time homebuyer share of home-purchase activity and the FHA share of home-purchase financing have each fallen significantly since peaking in 2010, according to results from the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey. The trends appear to be tied to lender underwriting requirements and the cost of FHA loans. In May 2010, first-time homebuyers accounted for 45.8 percent of home purchases, based on the three-month moving average. In October 2012, the share fell to 34.7 percent. Similarly, the FHA share of home-purchase financing fell during that time from 36.7 percent to 26.3 percent. Financing of first-time homebuyers with low downpayments threatens...
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The recent actuarial report that showed the FHAs insurance fund is underwater to the tune of $16.3 billion ought to sound an alarm for policymakers to refocus the agency on its original public mission, some leading policy experts say, and perhaps even motivate them to resolve Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac while theyre at it. I think FHAs financial condition is extremely precarious much worse than FHA and HUD are making it out to be, said long-time critic Edward Pinto, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington, DC, and a former official at Fannie Mae. As he sees it, todays very low interest rate environment means the economic value of FHAs forward mortgage fund really is a far worse at a negative $31 billion. And when you throw in the negative on the reverse [mortgage] program, you get close to $35 billion. Compounding the problem is...
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The Federal Housing Finance Agency is feeling some serious pushback from lawmakers, industry groups and even homeowners over its plan to impose a guaranty fee hike on several slow foreclosure states. The FHFA proposed to target five states Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey and New York for an additional, one-shot g-fee of between 15 and 30 basis points in 2013. The fees, the FHFA contends, are intended to allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to recover costs associated with foreclosures. The five states singled out are all judicial states where it is necessary to obtain court approval before foreclosure is completed. The National Association of Federal Credit Unions urged...
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The Department of Housing and Urban Development warned that an extraordinarily high percentage of loans in claim status can trigger a lender monitoring review to ensure the lenders capacity to meet indemnification requirements. A high loan defect rate may be one of several factors used to target FHA lenders for a special review to determine the amount of risk a lender might pose to the safety and soundness of the FHAs single-family mortgage insurance program, according to Justin Burch, director of the Quality Assurance Division at FHA during a webinar hosted this week by Inside Mortgage Finance. If you are a lender that is...
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