Over the past month, Ocwen Financial has unveiled agreements to sell roughly $89.4 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac servicing rights – transactions that require approval from not only the GSEs, but their regulator/conservator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency.To date, the FHFA has made no public statements regarding Ocwen’s sales and isn’t likely to until it actually makes an approval or denial.Based on the transactions that have been announced since Feb. 23, there is little to indicate that the deals won’t pass regulatory muster. The receivables being off-loaded by the troubled servicer are considered to be pristine in nature and with little in the way of delinquencies.
Mortgage servicers participating in a recent servicing conference sponsored by Information Management Network described how they use a variety of business strategies and often change gears to adjust to evolving market conditions. Jorge Carvallo, a vice president at Banesco USA, characterized mortgage servicing rights as a “necessary evil” that his community bank generally tries to avoid. “We sell most of it because it’s economically difficult for us to ...
A House bill with bipartisan support would delay Basel III capital requirements relating to mortgage servicing rights for all but the largest banks. The House Financial Services Committee this week approved, 49-9, H.R. 1408, the Mortgage Servicing Asset Capital Requirements Act. Introduced by Rep. Ed Perlmutter, D-CO, the bill would require federal banking regulators to study the appropriate capital requirements for mortgage servicing assets for ...
In 2014, real estate owned vendor Altisource Portfolio Solutions grew its service revenue by a handsome 42 percent to $938 million while earnings crept up 3 percent to $134.5 million. So why is its stock price down 88 percent over the past year with both investors and stock analysts heading for the exits? To understand the plight of the publicly traded REO vendor, you first have to understand where it came from. ASPS is one of four spin-off companies of ...
After years of steady declines, the negative equity rate leveled off in the fourth quarter of 2014, according to industry analysts. The end to the trend was seen as a major turning point, with implications for loss mitigation efforts as increases to home prices aren’t enough to help many underwater borrowers. Some 16.9 percent of mortgage borrowers were in a negative equity position as of the end of the fourth quarter, according to Zillow. That was down from a peak of ...
Freddie Mac is offering another bulk sale of delinquent loans but is not releasing the details just yet. Thomas Fitzgerald, company spokesman, confirmed on Monday that there are nonperforming loans for sale, making this Freddie’s second offering this year so far. “We are sharing details about the sale solely with prospective bidders,” he said, adding that Freddie anticipates on providing more specifics on the results after the auction. Fitzgerald did confirm that the loans in the transaction are “deeply delinquent,” at least two years old, and said “the sales process is a round-one competitive auction.” Bloomberg reported that the three pools amount to $1 billion in nonperforming loans...
The U.S. Supreme Court this week heard oral arguments on whether a second-lien lender is secured when a borrower with an underwater first lien declares Chapter 7 bankruptcy. SCOTUS in 1992 ruled that a creditor is protected when a partially underwater mortgage goes into bankruptcy. In most cases, the courts have said second-lien creditors are secured as well, even if there isn’t enough value to pay off the first lien.
The headline might sound promising, but keep in mind that during the housing boom of 2003 to 2007, the industry averaged nearly $340 billion a year in home-equity originations.