Despite the findings of the Inspector General's office regarding appraisal reviews, the GSEs recent books of business are considered to be of pristine quality.
Mortgage executives are praying that even though eminent domain plans have been talked about and brought to a vote in a handful of cities, that it never gets used.
Nonbank mortgage servicers continued to grow their portfolios during the fourth quarter of 2013, as market stalwarts pulled aside and gave them room to accelerate, according to a new market analysis and ranking by Inside Mortgage Finance. Nine nonbank companies ranked in the top 30 mortgage servicers as of the end of last year, and they held an estimated $1.69 trillion in mortgage servicing. Several of the top nonbank lenders have not yet reported fourth-quarter earnings, and the groups total servicing could be higher as more data come to light. Moreover, most of the nonbanks have pipelines of pending bulk and flow acquisitions, meaning they will continue...[Includes one data chart]
Over the past two years, roughly a dozen investment vehicles have raised at least $500 million each to buy mortgage servicing rights, fueling a red-hot market that for now shows no sign of slowing. Some of these funds are headed by mortgage banking veterans such as Emanuel Friedman the former co-CEO of Friedman, Billings, Ramsey Group and Michael Lau, a former top deal maker at Phoenix Capital, one of the largest servicing brokerage firms in the nation. According to interviews conducted by Inside Mortgage Finance, Laus company, Pingora Loan Servicing, has amassed...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has decided to streamline its post-examination reporting, apparently in response to banker concerns about prompt feedback regarding lender compliance with federal consumer financial laws. In a new supervisory highlights report, the CFPB said it would stop using written recommendations opting for oral, on‐site guidance instead. The bureau also will combine all issues it expects a bank to address into a single section called matters requiring attention. The agency also decided...
Average credit scores and debt-to-income ratios on FHA mortgages loosened as 2013 progressed, according to an analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. Lenders have gotten particularly aggressive regarding credit score requirements, and recent changes to FHA guidelines could prompt further loosening on DTI ratios. According to an Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of Ginnie Mae loan-level mortgage-backed security data, the average credit score on FHA loans was 706.1 in January. However, as FHA originations declined during the year, average credit scores on FHA loans also fell, hitting 685.4 in December. Average credit scores on FHA originations could continue...[Includes one data chart]
The Treasury Departments surprise move in the summer of 2012 to rewrite the Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements it had with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was an unlawful action that could have a far-reaching impact well beyond the shareholders of the two government-sponsored enterprises, according to an attorney representing shareholders. Speaking Wednesday at a forum sponsored by Ralph Naders Shareholder Rights advocacy group, attorney Ted Olson of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher said Treasurys Third Amendment to the PSPA was a calculated effort by the Obama administration to ensure that GSE stockholders got nothing, according to internal Treasury documents they obtained. The amendment replaced the quarterly GSE dividend payment with a net-worth sweep of all company profits. Perry Capital, represented by Olson, is...