Fannie Mae has changed the guidelines for loans with age-related resale restrictions in response to lenders’ requests about second homes and investment properties in these communities. Currently, Fannie limits occupancy on a loan with resale restrictions to a borrower’s one- and two-unit principal residence, but it has now expanded the eligibility to permit all occupancy types. The GSE said this will allow borrowers to purchase a property for the benefit of older family members or for future use. It said the criteria of the deed restriction must continue to be met and those requirements typically apply to the unit occupant and often requires just one resident to be 55 or older.
In late December, The Washington Post and Wall Street Journal took aim at the GSEs in their editorial sections, just 10 days apart. The Post’s editorial board noted that mixing politics and money makes for “unholy alliances,” referred to a push by both Wall Street hedge funds and low-income housing advocates to recapitalize and release Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from conservatorship. “These unlikely allies want to end government control of the two entities and put shareholders back in charge, as if their collapse and federal bailout in 2008 never happened,” stated the editorial. Investors Unite, a shareholders trade group, put out statements this week saying that both editorials were riddled with flawed facts and assumptions. “It was obvious...
Freddie Announces New Alliance with Lenders One. Freddie Mac has teamed up with Lenders One Mortgage Cooperative, based in St. Louis, to give Lenders One members who are Freddie seller/servicers pricing and execution benefits, enhanced access to mortgage products, and professional training and development opportunities. Freddie did not provide additional details on specific pricing benefits .Chris Boyle, senior vice president of single-family sales and relationship management at Freddie, said Freddie Mac is pleased to “help its members reach more eligible borrowers, achieve new efficiencies in the origination process and build strong, competitive businesses.” In related news, Lenders One is still...
New issuance of single-family mortgage-backed securities by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fell sharply in the fourth quarter of 2015 despite a December rebound in monthly volume, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis and ranking. The two government-sponsored enterprises issued $179.01 billion of single-family MBS during the final three months of 2015, a 19.9 percent drop from the third quarter. It was the weakest level of new business for the GSEs since the second quarter of 2014. A faltering purchase-mortgage market was...[Includes three data tables]