Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac CEOs may not see a sizable pay hike after the Senate approved by unanimous consent a bill to reverse the raises for the GSE executives. The “Equity in Government Compensation Act” approved last week would suspend the $4 million compensation packages for Fannie’s Tim Mayopoulos and Freddie’s Don Layton that were approved early this year after the Federal Housing Finance Agency said the CEOs could be paid as much as $7.26 million. Their salary would now each be capped at the $600,000 they earned prior to the pay hike. That’s a lot less than many individuals in upper management at the GSEs. “Giving massive taxpayer-funded pay raises to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac isn’t just out of touch, it’s...
Fannie Mae completed its latest credit risk-sharing transaction with reinsurers this week. In CIRT-2015-3, Fannie retains risk for the first 50 basis points of loss on a $7 billion pool of loans. If this $35.2 million retention layer were exhausted, reinsurers would cover the next 250 basis points of loss on the pool, up to a maximum coverage of approximately $176.2 million. Coverage is provided based upon actual losses for a term of 10 years. Depending upon the paydown of the insured pool and the amount of insured loans that become seriously delinquent, the aggregate coverage amount may be reduced at the three-year anniversary and each anniversary of the effective date thereafter.
It has been a full year since the Federal Housing Finance Agency proposed sweeping changes to the Federal Home Loan Bank membership rules and the agency said as recently as this week that the proposal remains under review. With the membership rules up in the air, last week the American Bankers Association penned a letter to the Senate urging that it adopt legislation requiring the FHFA to withdraw the proposal. In September 2014, the FHFA proposed changes that would require members to hold 10 percent of their assets in residential mortgages on an “ongoing” basis and ban captive entities from the definition of insurance companies. The revised asset test was especially controversial among community banks.
Freddie Mac will be the first to use the Common Securitization Platform but the implementation date won’t be released until sometime in 2016, said the Federal Housing Finance Agency in a recent announcement. David Applegate, CEO of Common Securitization Solutions, the joint venture owned by Freddie and Fannie Mae, recently revealed that a large portion of the work has been completed to reach a major milestone in its progress. Applegate said at last week’s ABS East conference in Miami that CSS has completed about 90 percent of the work required for single-class security issuance by Freddie on the CSP. However, in an update detailing the progress in developing the CSP software, the FHFA stopped short of pinpointing a definite timeline and said...
About 30 industry trade groups recently called for Congress to refrain from using GSE guaranty fees as a source of funding for highway programs or any other purposes beyond supporting Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The letter, addressed to House Speaker John Boehner, R-OH, as well as leaders Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, Mitch McConnell, R-KY, and Harry Reid, D-NV, aims to prevent the government from tapping g-fees to pay for pet projects. G-fees, used by Fannie and Freddie to protect against losses from loans that default, are a “critical risk management tool,” according to the trade groups who say that increasing g-fees for other purposes imposes an unjustified burden on the housing finance system.
Mortgage banking income rose substantially in the second quarter of 2015 mostly because lenders sold more loans in the secondary market, but the outlook for the second half of the year is murkier. Commercial banks and thrifts sold $198.64 billion of home loans during the second quarter, according to an Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of call-report data. That was up 19.9 percent from the first three months of the year, and it represented the busiest ... [Includes one data chart]
Officials in the mortgage industry continue to obsess about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s pending integrated disclosure rule, but perhaps they should be paying closer attention to complying with the CFPB’s existing mortgage origination and servicing rules, a top bureau official suggested this week. Speaking at the Mortgage Bankers Association’s 2015 regulatory compliance conference in Washington, DC, Peggy Twohig, assistant director for supervision policy ...
It’s not every day – or every year, for that matter – that a nonbank purchases a federally insured depository. But it happened this month in Arizona. Well, sort of. This month, Kent Wiechert, owner and president of Westar Mortgage, Albuquerque, NM, closed on his purchase of Goldwater Bank, NA, a full-service bank with roughly $100 million in assets. The investment – no purchase price was disclosed – was a personal transaction entered into by Wiechert, but since he controls both ...
Credit standards appear to be easing more than they have in the past few years in both the government-sponsored enterprise market and non-GSE lending, according to Fannie Mae’s most recent lender survey. Medium and large-sized lenders both reported a notable easing of credit standards for the first time in seven quarters. The gap between lenders reporting easing as opposed to tightening over the second quarter increased to 20 percentage points for ...