Whether or not President Obamas pick to become the new permanent director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency overcomes the long odds and expected Republican opposition to win Senate confirmation, its a win-win for the White House, say industry observers. Last week, Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC, a 20-year House veteran, all of it spent serving on the Financial Services Committee, was selected by Obama to become the new FHFA director, replacing FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco, who has served as the agencys acting head since September 2009. Although Watt had been on the short list of FHFA nominees, it was widely believed that Moodys Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi would be the presidents pick, largely because Zandi was seen as confirmable by both Democrats and Republicans.
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Fannie Mae is working on what it calls an out-of-region data center with IBM, which will make the GSEs business more resilient, a spokesman for the secondary market giant told Inside The GSEs. The official noted that eventually IBM will assume some data center activities but provided little in the way of details on the matter. The comments about the data center came after weeks of rumors that IBM had landed a huge outsourcing contract with Fannie. The GSE acknowledged the data center work.
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will no longer purchase loans that are interest-only, loans with 40-year terms or loans with points and fees exceeding the thresholds of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus ability to repay rule, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced this week. The FHFA said it is directing the GSEs to limit their future mortgage acquisitions to loans that meet the requirements for a qualified mortgage, including those that meet the special or temporary qualified mortgage definition, and loans that are exempt from the CFPBs ability to repay requirements under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
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Fannie Mae and its former auditor KPMG LLP have agreed to pay $153 million to resolve a long-simmering class action lawsuit brought by investors seeking to recover damages, according to an announcement Tuesday by Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine. Two Ohio pension funds the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System and the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio filed suit in 2004 related to a $6.3 billion overstatement of earnings against Fannie and three former GSE executives, including then-CEO Franklin Raines.
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Fannie Mae hit an earnings home run in the first quarter while revealing that it has released $50.6 billion in deferred tax assets, an allowance that sets up a massive cash payment to the U.S. Treasury by the end of June. Fannie estimates that based on a net worth of $62.4 billion at March 31, it will have a dividend obligation to Treasury of $59.4 billion, a cash payment that appears all but certain. Following an edict from Treasury last summer, the GSEs cannot build retained earnings and can only maintain a small buffer of net worth. The rest of their earnings must be given to Treasury, which controls their preferred stock.
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Preliminary combined net income for the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks fell 12.3 percent to $580 million in the first quarter of 2013, down from $661 million at the end of the fourth quarter and a 20.9 percent decrease from the same period last year, according to the Federal Home Loan Bank Office of Finance. The FHLBank systems $153 million year-over-year decrease was driven primarily by lower net interest income, partially offset by lower assessments and non-interest expense. Total FHLBank assets were $738.7 billion on March 31, 2013, down 3.1 percent from $762.5 billion on Dec. 31, 2012, due to declines in investments, advances, mortgage loans and other assets.
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are on track in their conservator-mandated effort to create a common mortgage-backed security securitization platform even as the GSEs also draft standard contracts and disclosures for the MBS market of the future, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The progress report that the FHFA issued last week was more of an outline of public comments it has received so far on what the agency and the GSEs have already proposed on the scope, design and construction of a common securitization platform and the progress of a CSP prototype. The design is deliberately flexible so that the long-term ownership structure may be adjusted to meet the goals and direction that policymakers set forth for housing finance reform, the report said. Importantly, FHFA plans on instituting a formal structure to allow for ongoing input from industry participants.
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The Federal Housing Finance Agency is calling for public comments to weigh in on its planned survey of borrowers as part of a joint effort with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to build and maintain a database of government mortgage information. The planned National Survey of Mortgage Borrowers will be a quarterly survey of recent first-time borrowers of single-family mortgages. The survey questionnaire will be sent to approximately 7,000 new mortgage borrowers each calendar quarter and will consist of approximately 80-85 multiple choice and short-answer questions designed to obtain information about individual residential mortgage borrowers that is not available elsewhere, explained the FHFA in its recent Federal Register notice.
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GSE principal reduction could end up saving the government money but its reach to additional distressed borrowers would be limited, according to a report by the Congressional Budget Office. Expanding Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs loan modification policy to include principal forgiveness under the current Home Affordable Modification Program would probably generate fewer than 60,000 additional modifications, concluded the CBO report published last week.
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Democrats are happy, but not quite content, with President Obamas long-awaited action last week to send the name of Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC, to the Senate as the White Houses nominee for director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Prominent progressives are doubling down by demanding that Edward DeMarco, the FHFAs long-standing but embattled acting director, be dispatched out of office by the president forthwith. Freshman Senator and one-time Consumer Financial Protection Bureau architect Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, D, lauded Watts nomination, then immediately demanded that Obama appoint a new FHFA acting director in the interim.
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