An $8.5 billion settlement this week between federal regulators and 10 servicers included a large portion of non-agency mortgages. Servicers with significant non-agency holdings were also left out of the settlement, though federal regulators said they are still working toward a deal with those companies. The settlement applies to foreclosures initiated in 2009 and 2010. Non-agency mortgages had much higher foreclosure rates than other mortgage types during that time. Aurora, Bank of America, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, MetLife Bank, PNC, Sovereign, SunTrust, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo agreed...
Servicers handling portfolio loans and non-agency mortgages continue to increase their use of principal reduction loan modifications, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Some 23,335 principal reduction mods were completed in the third quarter, up from 11,178 in the third quarter of 2011 and from 14,944 in the second quarter of 2012. The mods accounted...[Includes four briefs]
A federal appeals court in Washington, DC, has overturned a lower courts dismissal of a lawsuit accusing the Department of Housing and Urban Development of denying protection for surviving spouses of deceased principal borrowers of reverse mortgages against ejection due to foreclosure. The case, Robert Bennett, et al. v. Shaun Donovan, revealed an apparent inconsistency between HUD regulations and the federal statute that created the FHAs Home Equity Conversion Mortgage Program. This inconsistency was at the root of the district courts previous decision to dismiss plaintiffs claim for lack of standing, which the ...
Homeowners may seek to stop a non-judicial foreclosure if the lender fails to comply with the Department of Housing and Urban Developments servicing requirements, according to a California appeals court. In Pfeiffer v. Countrywide Home Loans, the plaintiffs sued to halt foreclosure proceedings that the lender initiated after the FHA mortgage went into defThe complaint alleged that Countrywide failed to provide the borrowers the 30-day advance notice required by the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act or to conduct a face-to-face interview, which HUD requires prior to initiating foreclosure proceedings. In addition to the injunction, the plaintiffs ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is implementing changes to FHA Connection to ensure FHA-approved lenders are providing accurate identification information about their loan officers for better monitoring and supervision. Effective Jan. 28, the FHA will not assign case numbers to lenders if the names and registration numbers of their loan officers under the National Mortgage Licensing System are entered incorrectly into the system. The same requirement applies to lenders registering a new third-party originator (TPO) in the ...
Competition in FHA lending may get a boost following the easing of reporting requirements for insured depository institutions with $500 million or less in total assets. The Department of Housing and Urban Development recently announced a policy change to eliminate a requirement for small supervised lenders and mortgagees to submit internal control and compliance reports under the FHAs interim financial reporting rules. Independent mortgage companies, regardless of their asset size, are not covered by the exemption. A supervised lender or mortgagee is a financial institution that is a member of ...
Now that Bank of America has inked a long-rumored deal to sell mortgage servicing rights on some $308 billion of distressed mortgages to Nationstar and Walter Investment Management, the question becomes how much more the bank may unload. The answer may be quite a lot. Paul Miller, an analyst with FBR Capital Markets, said that he anticipates the megabank will sell between $300 billion and $400 billion of MSRs by the time 2013 ends. According to Miller, the to be sold product includes $100 billion of Ginnie Mae servicing, $150 billion of Fannie Mae MSRs and $100 billion to $200 billion of Freddie Mac servicing. A BofA spokesman declined...[Includes one data chart]
Acknowledging problems with independent foreclosure reviews established in 2011, federal regulators this week agreed to a settlement with 10 bank servicers for $8.5 billion in borrower relief. The settlement applies to a portion of the 14 servicers under related consent orders from the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The OCC and the Federal Reserve accepted this agreement because it provides the greatest benefit to consumers subject to unsafe and unsound mortgage servicing and foreclosure practices during the relevant period in a more timely manner than would have occurred under the review process, the regulators said. The agreement in principle includes...
Fannie Mae is working on building an in-house unit to value mortgage servicing rights, according to industry officials whove been briefed on the GSEs plans. However, its unclear at this point how far along Fannie is. A spokesman for the company declined to comment to Inside The GSEs about the matter. Officials familiar with the effort, including one former GSE executive, said Fannie is looking to value MSRs for two main reasons: to better judge counter-party risk on mortgage bankers that sell residential loans to the company, and perhaps to better value the asset because it may have plans to buy or finance servicing rights in the future.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, at the direction of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, are moving forward together to develop industry-wide data standards, according to updates from both GSEs. A component of the FHFA-mandated Uniform Mortgage Data Program, the Uniform Mortgage Servicing Dataset will define a standard dataset that will facilitate data exchanges between servicers and investors with standardized definitions, formats and valid data values. The adoption of an industry standard data model will provide long-term benefits to servicers, GSEs and the mortgage industry, noted the GSEs update published Dec. 12.