More than two years after the CFPB first released its loan originator compensation rule, plenty of unanswered questions and ambiguity remain for lenders struggling to maximize their compliance. Meanwhile, the implementation date of CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule looms at the beginning of August, threatening to compound the complexity of the situation. During a recent webinar sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter, lender representatives were anxious to resolve a host of concerns and uncertainties. One webinar participant had some questions about borrower-paid compensation to the loan broker. “To what extent can the applicant and the broker negotiate the compensation, and at what point is that compensation set, such that the broker can no longer concede any of it back ...
JPMorgan Chase is shifting its mortgage production focus away from agency loans toward the jumbo market. “Our focus is on maximizing our share of high-quality originations,” Kevin Watters, CEO of mortgage banking at Chase, said last week during the bank’s annual investor presentation. He provided a slide showing Chase’s market share in terms of total originations, conventional mortgages, government mortgages and jumbo loans. As measured from ...
FHA launched into the new year with a slight dip in forward mortgage loan originations in January from December with nonbanks leading the charge, according to Inside FHA Lending’s analysis of agency data. Lenders originated $11.8 billion in FHA-insured loans in January, a 0.7 percent decrease from December and down 3.5 percent from the prior year. FHA was charging a higher annual mortgage insurance premium of 1.35 percent for most of the month until a 50 basis point reduction, effective Jan. 26, lowered the MIP to 0.85 percent for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage with a five percent downpayment, and down to 0.80 percent for a similar FHA loan with more than five percent downpayment. The impact of the reduced MIP on February originations is still unclear, but most FHA lenders are expecting a boost in volume because many consumers ... [1 chart]
Nationstar Mortgage has filed a $1 billion shelf registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission, signaling its intention to sell debt securities and other instruments to the general public. But whether the lender/servicer actually uses the shelf is another matter entirely. “The mixed shelf is the company’s first amendment or filing of a new registration statement since May 2013,” noted analyst Kevin Barker of Compass Point Research & Trading. A mixed shelf means Nationstar could issue debt, preferred and common stock, as well as depository shares and warrants. Interestingly, the filing came...
What started as an alternative to investing in certificates of deposit has attracted interest from institutional investors and even some ABS issuance. Marketplace lending, also known as peer-to-peer lending, has strong growth prospects, according to industry analysts. Eric Rapp, a senior vice president at DBRS, estimated that $9.0 billion in marketplace loans were originated in 2014, including personal loans and financing for small business, students and real estate. “It’s still relatively small, but it’s got a fast growth trend,” he said late last week during a teleconference hosted by DBRS. Rapp said...
Issuers and other participants in future structured-finance deals will face a higher hurdle of data quality expectations from Moody’s Investors Service, according to a new credit rating methodology the company put out this week. An important part of the initial rating analysis that Moody’s will perform of a structured security is an evaluation of the attributes of the assets that underlie it, the document said. “In assessing those characteristics, we typically use...
If Fannie and/or Freddie have a negative net worth, investors wouldn’t buy their MBS and if investors don’t buy their MBS we would have financial Armageddon…