After years of holding off, Homeward Residential last week launched a principal forgiveness program for proprietary loan modifications. The program follows a settlement with the Massachusetts attorney general and success with principal reduction by other nonprime servicers. We view this program as an additional safety net for borrowers who have limited options, said Javid Jaberi, an executive vice president of servicing operations at Homeward Residential, formerly known as American Home Mortgage Servicing ...
A California-based lender that had a $400,000 minimum loan amount policy agreed to a settlement with the Department of Justice this week regarding alleged discrimination. Luther Burbank Savings will spend $2.0 million as part of the settlement and is prohibited from implementing a $400,000 minimum loan amount policy. The lender denied the discrimination allegations, did not admit any wrongdoing as part of the settlement and claimed the loan amount policy was tied to its focus on nontraditional mortgages ...
Two Harbors Investment Corp. announced this week that it plans to contribute the real estate owned properties it started acquiring this year to a new affiliated company, Silver Bay Realty Trust. The new company is seeking up to $287.5 million from an initial public offering announced this week and plans to operate as a real estate investment trust. The move from Two Harbors, also a REIT, is somewhat abrupt as the company only started acquiring REO properties to offer for rent in the first quarter of 2012 ...
Performance of jumbo mortgages originated before 2005 is declining, bucking a trend among non-agency mortgages, according to Fitch Ratings. Most of the remaining pre-2005 jumbo borrowers have been unable to refinance. Many high-quality mortgage borrowers are refinancing to take advantage of record-low interest rates, leaving the remaining mortgage pools increasingly concentrated with borrowers unable to refinance, said Grant Bailey, a managing director at Fitch. More than 93.0 percent of the roughly ...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency and the National Credit Union Administration recently filed separate lawsuits seeking repurchases of mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities. The FHFA lawsuit filed in August against DB Structured Products relates to ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2006-FM1, which Freddie Mac purchased in August 2006. The FHFA did not disclose the size of Freddies investment. And last week the NCUA filed a lawsuit against UBS Securities ... [Includes three briefs]
The House of Representatives this week overwhelmingly approved legislation that would help the FHA remain solvent and avoid a potential taxpayer bailout. Lawmakers passed the FHA Fiscal Solvency Act of 2012 by a vote of 402-7 on the heels of a Department of Housing and Urban Development report to Congress showing a slight second-quarter decline in the single-family Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. The report, which provides a quarterly view of the composition and credit quality of new insurance, showed FHA capital decreasing slightly over the last quarter from $32.3 billion to $31.6 billion. FHAs total capital is ...
Cash flow from FHAs business operations funded almost 70 percent of net claims losses over the last year, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Developments quarterly report on the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund programs. HUD paid $5.4 billion in claims in the second quarter of 2012, more than twice the amount of premiums collected during the period. As a result, net cash flows from business operations were negative $1.7 billion during the quarter. Premium collections contributed $8.1 billion over the last four quarters even as paid claims totaled $17.2 billion over the same period. This indicates that ...
The reverse mortgage industry is at odds with consumer advocates and the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau over a recent CFPB study, which claimed that consumers find reverse mortgages too complex and difficult to understand and that the risk of fraud and other scams persist. The latest dispute flared as reverse mortgage lenders and consumer groups responded to the CFPBs request for information on abusive financial practices that affect elderly Americans. The comment period ended on Aug. 31. To assist its ongoing study of reverse mortgage transactions, the CFPB in July sought ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Developments disciplinary arm hit 14 FHA-approved lenders with civil money penalties totaling $2.31 million for various violations of FHA regulations. HUDs Mortgagee Review Board imposed the fines as a result of separate administrative actions against the lenders from Aug. 1, 2011, to Dec. 31, 2011. The MRB report, which was published in the Sept. 10 Federal Register, cited various offenses, including improper lending practices, failure to follow FHA origination guidelines, fraudulent reporting, failure to remit mortgage insurance premiums, failure to report ...
SunTrust Banks, Inc. is planning to shift $3 billion of loans, including an undetermined number of delinquent Ginnie Mae loans and other nonperforming loans, to its held-for-sale portfolio and record a $375 million provision for mortgage repurchases in the third quarter of 2012. The moves are expected to strengthen SunTrusts mortgage portfolio and put the company in a better position by improving its risk profile and balance sheet and stabilizing its capital ratios. The $3 billion transfer of loans to the held-for-sale (HFS) category will include ... (1 chart)