The Department of Housing and Urban Development is seeking comment on a proposed rule requiring appraisers to be certified, rather than licensed, by a state appraisal licensing board in order to be placed on the FHA appraiser roster. Mandated by the Housing and Economy Recovery Act of 2008, the proposed requirement would supersede HUDs current practice of listing only state-licensed appraisers on the FHA roster. Although the practice complies with the statutory mandate, HUD believes the policy is outdated. There are approximately 55,000 state-certified appraisers on the FHA roster who would be ...
With the days winding down to the effective date for permanent lower loan limits set by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act, the mortgage industry is strongly urging Congress to extend the current temporary higher loan limits to enable the FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to continue providing liquidity until the housing market recovers sufficiently. If the temporary limits are allowed to expire on Oct. 1, getting financing for home purchases or refinancing will become more difficult and expensive for many borrowers, which may result in ...
The impact of lower loan limits on the supply of Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities and other agency MBS would be very modest and that such loan limit changes should not affect Ginnie Mae prepayments, according to a recent analysis by Barclays Capital. With respect to agency MBS supply, the permanent lower loan limit established by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 should cut the combined issuance of both conventional and Ginnie Mae pools by about 5 percent, the report said. The report, among other things ...
As FHA tightens its underwriting further to give more room for private capital in the mortgage market, the federal single-family mortgage insurance program may no longer provide mortgage alternatives for as many non-qualified residential mortgage borrowers as it would have in the past, according to a new report issued by the Government Accountability Office. Analyzing the impact of the Dodd-Frank Act on homeowners and the mortgage market, the GAO report concludes that potential changes in the FHAs role could influence ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Affairs Office of the Inspector General recommended that HUD obtain complete documentation to close Ginnie Mae contracts after an audit uncovered flawed procedures at the Office of the Chief Procurement Officer. The OIG called for tighter procedures after finding that the procurement office did not get documentation from Ginnie Mae to close out completed and expired Ginnie Mae contracts in a timely manner. That was a violation of HUDs guidelines for contract closeout procedures, the internal watchdog unit said. In addition, Ginnie Mae did not follow department guidelines ...
A California mortgage lender that recently reached a settlement agreement with the Department of Housing and Urban Development over branch issues could land before HUDs Mortgagee Review Board for branch-related loan quality issues. HUDs Office of the Inspector General said an audit of Prospect Mortgages branches uncovered high default rates due to numerous violations of HUD underwriting and quality control requirements. The OIG recommended requiring Prospect to reimburse HUD $344,326 for ...
Some federally supervised depository institutions with FHA businesses are in danger of missing the July 29 deadline for registering with the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System and Registry and could be sanctioned. The delay in registration is apparently due to confusion and uncertainty as to whether certain employees meet the definition of a mortgage loan originator (MLO) and should be registered as required by the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act, said compliance experts. The mortgage-related activities of such employees do not clearly meet the MLO definition and they include ...
The Federal Reserve fined Wells Fargo $85 million last week over high-pressure compensation policies in the firms finance company that allegedly led to steering of prime borrowers to more lucrative non-prime mortgages. The $85 million fine is the largest ever levied by the Federal Reserve in a consumer enforcement case. Wells has since shut down Wells Fargo Financial, its subprime subsidiary that was the focus of the Feds charges. CEO John Stump said in a statement the alleged actions were committed by a relatively small group of team members. The Fed said Wells Fargo Financials incentive compensation and sales quota programs fostered ... [includes one data chart]
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau may have taken the field before its franchise quarterback has suited up, but thats unlikely to slow agency examiners in making their appointed supervisory rounds. Theyve already introduced themselves to their largest bank charges and are fine-tuning their internal examination guidelines so that when they get the final authority to supervise non-banks, they will come calling without delay, according to industry presenters at the latest webinar sponsored by In-side Mortgage Finance. When the CFPB officially ...
Consumers could be setting themselves up for problems in the credit market if they are getting credit information about themselves that differs from what lenders are looking at, according to a new report released by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. In a report to Congress, the agency said it plans to study the variations between credit scores sold to lenders and those sold to consumers to shed light on potential harm to the consumer. The most substantial harm would likely result if, after purchasing a score, a consumer has a different impression of his or her ...