Despite continuing growth in purchase-mortgage production, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac saw a marked decline in their overall business during the third quarter of 2013, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. The two government-sponsored enterprises securitized $284.9 billion of single-family mortgages during the third quarter, a 15.6 percent drop from the previous three-month period. It marked the lowest quarterly production for the GSEs since the second quarter of last year and it was attributable to a sharp drop in refinance activity. Fannie and Freddie securitized...[Includes three data charts]
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Large lenders appear to be coping better with the partial federal government shutdown, but that doesnt mean the megabanks arent worried about the situation. According to interviews conducted by Inside Mortgage Finance, lenders big and small are adjusting the way they conduct business in the primary and secondary markets in the wake of the government shutdown, now in its second week. Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase, the largest correspondent buyers of mortgages, are waiving...
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Capitalizing on the uncertainty of a government shutdown, private mortgage insurers are stepping up to provide conventional mortgage insurance on any loan with FHA documentation that could not close on time due to delays at the undermanned agency. Private MIs say they are ready to help with FHA uncertainty, urging lenders to consider switching to conventional mortgage insurance if they have any government-insured or guaranteed loan that is at risk of not closing due to the shutdown. United Guaranty said...
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Residential lenders realize that eventually the industry will face lower loan limits for Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac mortgages, but they now hope the day of reckoning wont come until sometime in the second quarter of 2014. [The Federal Housing Finance Agency] is still trying to figure out what to do, said one industry lobbyist who spoke under condition his name not be published. They never thought theyd face this much resistance. Industry groups and members of Congress have been besieging the agency with challenges to its authority to lower the limits for the government-sponsored enterprises and pleas to defer any such changes. As reported in the Oct. 4 issue of Inside Mortgage Finance, 13 Senators including two Republicans recently wrote...
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The Obama administration is working to reform the government-sponsored enterprises but has said little publicly about its efforts for political reasons, according to a former advisor for the administration. As for when Congress might pass GSE reform, predictions range from as soon as next year to sometime after Obamas presidency, if at all. Speaking at the ABS East conference sponsored by Information Management Network this week in Miami, Jim Parrott, owner of Falling Creek Advisors and a senior advisor at the National Economic Council until earlier this year, said the Obama administration has largely avoided publicly pushing GSE reform since releasing a white paper on the issue in 2011 due to concerns about reactions from Republicans in Congress. The administration has been quite involved...
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac plan to test parts of a common securitization platform under development by year-end, according to an official at the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The FHFA separately announced this week what it deemed to be significant steps for the government-sponsored enterprises planned CSP. A year-and-a-half after the federal regulator announced the project, the platform remains a nebulous goal that GSE officials hope to make exceedingly encompassing and flexible. Speaking this week at the ABS East conference in Miami sponsored by Information Management Network, Wanda de Leo, deputy director of the FHFAs office of strategic initiatives, said...
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The Mortgage Bankers Association last week won affirmation of its July victory over the Department of Labor in the trade groups appeal of a government policy that declared mortgage loan officers did not qualify under the administrative exemption to overtime pay. On Oct. 2, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia refused to grant a full-court review of its decision exactly three months earlier that sided with the MBA on how the DOL imposed overtime compensation requirements under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The MBA filed...
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The Department of Justice recently announced settlements from three fair lending actions, all of which included allegations related to wholesale mortgage lending operations. In the first case, Southport Bank of Kenosha, WI, agreed to pay $687,000 to African-American and Hispanic wholesale mortgage borrowers as part of a settlement to resolve allegations that it engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination on the basis of race and national origin. The proceeds of the settlement will be used...
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