The group of institutional investors that negotiated a potential $8.5 billion settlement with Bank of America has recently targeted other non-agency mortgage-backed security issuers. The move is the latest development in a number of ongoing claims regarding non-agency MBS. This week, the group led by the law firm of Gibbs & Bruns asked trustees to open investigations on more than $19.0 billion of non-agency MBS issued by Wells Fargo. The investors said they hold more than 25 percent of the voting rights in 48 trusts that issued the non-agency securities between 2005 and 2007. ...
In 2011, high-touch subprime servicer Carrington Mortgage Services significantly decreased its delinquency processing timelines and had its servicer rating confirmed at the end of the year. The servicer also made adjustments after facing criticism from non-agency mortgage-backed security investors who claimed that Carringtons practices improperly favored investments made by the hedge fund that also owns the servicer. Carrington serviced $11.73 billion in subprime mortgages as of the end of the third quarter of 2011, according to estimates by Inside Nonconforming Markets. The servicer received a mid-range rating for subprime and special servicing from Fitch Ratings, with the rating service recently confirming that Carrington demonstrates proficiency in overall servicing ability. ...
Loan modifications with principal reduction have significantly increased in the past year, with servicers seeing improved performance compared with other types of mods. The mods remain concentrated on securitized non-agency mortgages as well as portfolio loans, but performance varies considerably. After falling to a 2.7 percent share in the fourth quarter of 2010, principal reduction mods have accounted for a growing share of bank and thrift mod activity, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Principal reduction was used in 7.8 percent of the mods completed by nine major bank and thrift servicers in the third quarter of 2011. ...
Bank and thrift holdings of home-equity loans declined by 1.8 percent from the second quarter of 2011 to the third, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Bank Database. HELs continue to demonstrate strong performance as the serious delinquency rate on the $1.20 trillion in holdings was 2.05 percent in the third quarter of 2011. Closed-end second liens accounted for 10.6 percent of bank and thrift total HEL business which includes unused home-equity loan-of-credit commitments. The $127.2 billion in outstanding CES was down by 4.2 percent from the previous quarter. ... [Includes one data chart]
Wells Fargo this week agreed to a $940,056 settlement with Marylands attorney general regarding option ARMs. According to the AG, Wachovia and Golden West the lenders that offered the loans, which Wells purchased did not fully explain the loans negative amortization option to borrowers. Wells agreed to modify Maryland borrowers with the loans via the Home Affordable Modification Program if possible or via the servicers proprietary mod program. ... [Includes three briefs]
Congress has approved legislation directing the Department of Housing and Urban Development to raise FHA mortgage insurance premiums by 10 basis points within the next two years. The FHA premium increase provision was a late addition to the contentious payroll tax cut extension bill, corresponding to an intensely debated 10 bps increase in guarantee fees charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on single-family mortgage-backed securities. H.R. 3765, the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011, was approved by unanimous consent in the House and was previously cleared by the Senate. It extends...
The FHA has extended for one more year a temporary waiver of a regulation prohibiting property flipping in order to facilitate faster sale of its bulging real estate-owned inventory. The agency hopes that having the waiver in place until Dec. 31 will stimulate the rehabilitation of foreclosed and abandoned homes for another year, including properties being resold within 90 days of acquisition. The waiver is not limited to the resale of foreclosed properties. Property flipping occurs when a property acquired at a discounted price is resold for a considerable profit with an...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has entered into a partnership agreement with the National Community Stabilization Trust to facilitate the implementation of a first look program that will give preference to certain purchasers to acquire FHA real estate-owned properties. In a notice published in the Federal Register, HUD announced the issuance of a universal Name and Address Identification Number (NAID) to the NCST to assist eligible buyers in purchasing REO properties under the National Stabilization Programs First Look Sales Method. The NAID requirement for purchasers is...
While Congress debated the payroll tax cut extension, a tax provision allowing homeowners to deduct private mortgage insurance premiums from their annual federal tax bill quietly expired on Dec. 31. Consequently, mortgage loans with private MI that closed on or after Jan. 1, 2012, will no longer be able to use the deduction, unless Congress passes a bill that extends the deduction through next year retroactive to the beginning of 2012. It is a lapse that occurs almost every year, according to MI industry participants. Tax deductibility of MI premiums is part of a huge legislative package...
The Department of Veterans Affairs has liberalized the requirements for modification of VA-guaranteed loans and has provided servicers with more options to help veterans avoid foreclosure. Final rules published recently in the Federal Register show changes to requirements related to the calculation of interest rates on modified loans as well as foreclosure costs that may be rolled into the modified loan balance. The rules also give mortgage servicers the flexibility to modify VA loans without seeking prior approval from the VA, thus speeding up assistance to veteran borrowers facing...