With just a week to go, the petition drive by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac common shareholders asking the White House to restore fairness to the value of their lost investment looks like it will fall woefully short of the required number of signatures. Created on June 1, the petition posted on the White House website calls for Congress, the Treasury Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency to enact a method to provide fairness and protection to common shareholders of the two GSEs and enable shareholders to have participation in the recovery value of their stock.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has no interest in revisiting a program that Fannie Mae spent a year developing to directly purchase force-placed insurance even as it solicited input last week from stakeholders during a two-day, closed-door working group. The invitation-only meeting, closed to the public and press, drew some 80 attendees representing big banks, insurers, insurance brokers, other regulators and representatives of industry and consumer groups who weighed in as the Finance Agency decides its policy direction on force-placed or lender-placed insurance. According to those in attendance at the meeting, the FHFA officials were cordial but the agenda was strictly focused on concerns that force-placed premiums might be too high and that the industry lacks serious competition.
Aligning Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs underwriting standards and creating clear standards for representations and warranties is essential for a smooth transition to a sustainable secondary market operating with an explicit, limited government guaranty, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The MBAs new concept paper the fourth of a five-part plan suggests the Federal Housing Finance Agency set parameters for acceptable underwriting criteria by both GSEs, then allow them to offer credit terms within a clear outer boundary. If we are to have a fully functioning secondary market that provides sustainable access to credit for qualified borrowers, then the development of transparent and consistent credit underwriting standards are of the utmost importance, said the MBA.
Banks and thrifts continued to push a high volume of home mortgages into the secondary market during the first three months of 2013, but the pace was slowing, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of call report data. The industry reported $395.8 billion in single-family mortgage sales during the first quarter, down 5.1 percent from the previous period. It was a stronger sales volume than during the first quarter of 2012, however, and ranked as the fourth largest ... [Includes one data chart]
Although Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are reviewing recently originated mortgages more closely than they have in the past, the bulk of the whopping $13.21 billion in mortgage repurchases reported by the two government-sponsored enterprises during the first quarter came from loans originated years ago. A new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of repurchase activity reported by the two GSEs in Securities and Exchange Commission filings shows that 80.0 percent of the buybacks recorded in ... [Includes two data charts]
Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs home retention activity declined for the most part during the first quarter of 2013, according to a new analysis of Federal Housing Finance Agency data by Inside The GSEs. Total loss mitigation activity total home retention efforts and foreclosure alternatives combined declined 1.3 percent during the first quarter of the year to 183,689 and was down 14.5 percent from year-ago levels. Total home retention efforts came to 98,728 in the first quarter, an increase of 1.1 percent from the fourth quarter but down 11.6 percent from the same period a year before.
With the advent of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, consumer complaints have been elevated to an unprecedented level of prominence in the regulatory arena. How many of you have had a regulatory exam that focused on complaints? asked Lyn Farrell, managing director at Treliant Risk Advisors, at a discussion session during the recent American Bankers Associations compliance conference in Chicago. Seeing a number of hands rise from the audience in response, she continued: If not, you will. ...
In late May, in the time span of about 10 days, Bexil American Mortgage of San Diego saw its founder and national sales manager depart not a good sign for a relatively young company that has been originating loans for less than two years. About a week after the news broke about the two men, the parent company reported a $7.1 million loss for the year. John Robbins, the founder and CEO of Bexil American Mortgage, told Inside Mortgage Trends that, When you have a major shareholder disagree with ...
Short sales have become one of the most widely used lender strategies to reduce losses from distressed residential properties. Ironically, they also have triggered a wave of fraudulent activity. DataQuick, a provider of property information, products and solutions to the mortgage industry, says there are automated strategies and solutions lenders, servicers and investors can use to thwart short-sale fraud. However, one needs to know where to start. Just how bad is short-sale fraud? According to the ...
Mortgage performance has been boosted in recent years by home price appreciation, even with a move toward less borrower-friendly loan modifications. Industry analysts expect that mortgage performance will continue to improve and loan modification activity will decline significantly. National average home prices in the first quarter of 2013 were up by 6.7 percent compared with the first quarter of 2012, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agencys house price index. During that time ...