The five banks that are parties to the $25 billion national mortgage settlement have extended more than $26.11 billion in gross relief to more than 300,000 borrowers, or roughly $84,385 per homeowner, according to a new report from the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight. At that pace, the five participating servicers will satisfy their obligations under the settlement two years ahead of the 2015 deadline. The report discloses that the banks have completed $21.92 billion in consumer relief to borrowers...
Many top mortgage servicers reported increases in mortgage delinquency rates during the third quarter of 2012, although data from the Mortgage Bankers Association suggest that seasonally adjusted rates improved in most categories. The Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index rose 7 basis points, to 10.17 percent, during the third quarter. The index was still significantly below the 10.70 percent level recorded at the same point in 2011, but it was up 29 bps from March 2012, when it dipped to 9.88 percent. The increase was driven...[Includes one data chart]
Servicers are on their way to completing required loss mitigation as part of the national servicing settlement well before the 2015 deadline, according to a report this week from Joseph Smith, monitor of the settlement. State attorneys general and federal regulators that helped reach the settlement said they are largely satisfied with servicers initial efforts. With servicers on track to fulfill much of their consumer relief commitments in the first year of this agreement, homeowners are finally beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel, said Shaun Donovan, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The settlement requires...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development will raise the annual insurance premium on new FHA originations, reverse the agencys current policy on mortgage insurance premium cancellation and institute other policy changes to improve the health of the FHA insurance fund. The new measures aim to offset significant losses from FHAs legacy loans, which have caused significant stress to the agencys Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. Results of a new FHA actuarial audit showed that the stress has plunged the MMI Fund into a deep hole, revealing negative capital of $16.3 billion (negative $13.5 billion excluding Home Equity Conversion Mortgages) on a $1.13 trillion FHA portfolio. The capital reserve ratio fell ...
According to the latest subprime servicer ranking from Inside Nonconforming Markets, only two major servicers increased their subprime portfolios at the end of the third quarter of 2012 compared with either the previous quarter or the third quarter of 2011: Ocwen Financial and Homeward Residential, which Ocwen intends to acquire in December. Both of the servicers and eight of the top 15 subprime servicers are nonbanks. Nonbank special servicers have increased their ... [Includes one data chart]
Mortgage lenders will be facing tougher enforcement if Congress decides to act on a series of proposals to hold lenders accountable for noncompliance with FHA policies and regulations. In the wake of an adverse actuarial report regarding the health of the FHAs Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, Acting FHA Commissioner Carol Galante announced that the agency will seek new powers to recoup losses from lenders that originate bad FHA loans. The proposals are designed to provide the FHA with greater flexibility to revise policies and procedures to avoid unnecessary losses before they occur. They will also improve the agencys ...
JPMorgan Securities and Credit Suisse Securities have agreed to pay more than $400 million combined to settle government charges that they misled investors in offerings of non-agency MBS from 2005 to 2010, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC, working with the federal-state Residential MBS Working Group, reached separate settlement agreements with the two financial institutions after filing a complaint and issuing a cease-and-desist order. Neither JPMorgan nor Credit Suisse admitted to or denied the findings against them or any of their affiliates. The SEC alleged...
A whopping 75.0 percent of eligible non-agency borrowers entering the Home Affordable Modification Program in September received principal reduction with their loan modification, according to the Treasury Department. The increased activity was prompted by higher incentive payments along with the $25.0 billion national servicing settlement, according to Treasury officials. Borrowers who meet general HAMP requirements and have a loan-to-value ratio greater than 115 percent are eligible for principal reduction ...
The five banks participating in the $25.0 billion national servicing settlement are on track to meet their obligations under the settlement some two years ahead of the 2015 deadline according to a report this week from the settlements monitor. Loss mitigation activity is focused on portfolio loans, though Bank of America has completed significant principal forgiveness on mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities. The settlement requires $19.11 billion in consumer relief, and the participating servicers ...
Ocwen Financials agreement in October to purchase reverse mortgage lender Genworth Financial Home Equity Access was the latest in an effort by special servicers to diversify their portfolios with reverse mortgages. Nationstar Mortgage burst onto the scene at the beginning of the year to become the largest reverse mortgage servicer and Walter Investment Management recently purchased Reverse Mortgage Solutions. Servicing reverse mortgages is much different than dealing with the ...