CFPB examiners found numerous loss mitigation mistakes, including inconsistent communications with borrowers, spotty loss mitigation underwriting and long application review periods. All this could lead to new regulations for servicers.
Parties to trustee lawsuits challenging a citys use of eminent domain to deal with foreclosures are gearing up for a face-off at an injunction hearing Sept. 13 in federal district court in San Francisco. The city of Richmond, CA, the defendant in the lawsuit, has suffered setbacks in the last few days and has yet to make good on its threat to initiate eminent domain proceedings after investor trustees rejected its offer to purchase distressed mortgages for restructuring. Wells Fargo and Deutsche Bank, acting as trustees for a group of ...
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, is asking the Department of Justice to explain why it failed to get adequate compensation from major mortgage servicers for fraud committed against the FHA. In an Aug. 21 letter to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, Warren raised concerns about the $225 million paid by five servicers last year to obtain releases from False Claims Act liability stemming from fraudulent mortgage insurance claims the servicers submitted to FHA and other agencies from 2008 to 2010. The FHAs woeful financial condition led to legislative reform efforts, including the ...
The FHA is easing the waiting period and eligibility criteria for certain borrowers with previous bankruptcies, foreclosures, deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure and short sales who would like to purchase a home again. According to Mortgagee Letter 2013-26, borrowers who may be otherwise ineligible for an FHA-insured mortgage due to the agencys required waiting period may now be able to apply for a new purchase mortgage loan because of the shortened waiting period and if they meet the criteria. This latest initiative to help borrowers whose credit had been impaired by the financial crisis is called ...
A spokesman for Wells Fargo told Inside Mortgage Finance that most of the displacements were on the fulfillment/processing side of the business and did not include loan officers.
The $11.6 billion deal resolved Fannie's long-standing claims that BofA sold the GSE defective mortgages and mishandled various loans it serviced for Fannie between 2000 and 2008.
As feared by the residential finance industry, an increase in upfront mortgage insurance premiums is hurting participation in the FHA program by first-time buyers.