A bill proposed by a ranking Senate Democrat would permit underwater borrowers, including those with Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-backed loans, to reduce their loan principal through a federal shared mortgage-appreciation program. The Preserving American Homeownership Act, S. 2093, would establish a program through which the banks would write down the principal balance of a mortgage to 95 percent of the re-assessed value of the home.
A bill filed in the Senate earlier this month would authorize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. member banks, to enter into long-term leases to permit families to stay in their homes while also easing the pressure of unsold foreclosure inventory on the housing market. The Home Act, S. 2080, sponsored by Sen. Dean Heller, R-NV, would afford banks and the GSEs the option of leasing their real estate-owned (REO) properties for up to five years, with the additional prospect of selling the house to the renter once the rental lease runs out.
Wells Fargo sucked up more than half of the correspondent business Bank of America left on the table after deciding to get out of the business of aggregating closed loans from correspondent lenders, according to an Inside Mortgage Trends analysis. Wells Fargo increased its sales of correspondent loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by $14.1 billion during the fourth quarter, slightly more than half of the total increase in correspondent deliveries to the government-sponsored enterprises. Wells increased its correspondent mortgage sales to the GSEs by 87.4 percent during the fourth quarter, while...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have made far fewer repurchase demands on loans sold to the GSEs over the past three years, but their regulator says the enterprises will continue to push lenders to buy back defective loans. A new Inside the GSEs analysis of repurchase activity by the GSEs reveals that the share of loans subject to buyback demands slowed to a trickle in 2009, when just 0.25 percent of mortgages purchased or securitized by Fannie and Freddie were subject to such requests.
The departure of MetLife from the residential mortgage market in early January has been a boon for Caliber Funding, a national wholesale and retail mortgage lender looking to expand its presence in existing markets across the country and entering new markets. As MetLife exited, Caliber Funding quickly scooped up approximately 300 former retail loan officers in MetLifes Home Loan division and announced the addition of four new regional markets. Combining MetLifes former LOs with newly hired wholesale producers and support staff, the Dallas-based lender is set to enhance its presence in California, Arizona...
Santa Ana, CA-based CoreLogic this week unveiled DefaultView, a new, cloud-based, end-to-end servicing product thats designed to streamline the way mortgage servicers handle loans through every stage of the default lifecycle. The new product utilizes nine modules that interconnect within its architecture to help provide a more efficient and transparent default servicing operation. DefaultView employs a master-loan architecture that provides the client with a singular view of a loan. This design enables end users across a default enterprise to easily see a complete transaction history including workflow...
Of the $25 billion in penalties agreed upon for the multistate servicing settlement, approximately $2.66 billion in cash is going to individual states to provide relief for funds lost through servicer wrongdoing, though states are spending their cash differently. Without the settlement terms, which have yet to be released, it is impossible to know the parameters for which the 49 states in the agreement and the federal government can use their money from Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Ally Financial. Through announcements by public officials, however, a picture of...
Many homeowners are still being moved to foreclosure while loan modifications are pending, a survey shows. A survey of 260 attorneys by the National Association of Consumer Advocates, the National Consumer Law Center and the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys found that at least 3,700 homeowners were placed in foreclosure last year while waiting for a loan modification. Moreover, more than 78 percent of respondents said they had homeowner clients who had had been placed in foreclosure in the last year because the servicer did not properly accept the homeowner payments...
A Federal Home Loan Bank may base its calculation of tangible capital for an insurance company member on financial statements prepared using statutory accounting principles for purposes of applying regulatory limits to members access to advances, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The FHFAs regulatory interpretation, issued earlier this month, would permit the use of SAP-based financial statements under certain conditions if the Banks insurance company member does not otherwise prepare financial statements based on generally accepted accounting principles.
In a mortgage market still dominated by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and government-insured lending, the non-agency jumbo sector stood out as the only one to show year-over-year growth in 2011, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. Jumbo mortgage originations rose 13.5 percent from 2010 to 2011, while overall production was down 17.2 percent from the year before. The $118 billion of non-agency jumbo originations in 2011 represented the biggest annual output since the market collapsed in 2008 and agency loan limits were jacked dramatically...(Includes two data charts)