Advocates for FHA condominium rule changes may have to wait a bit longer for a proposed rule currently in development, according to Acting FHA Commissioner Carol Galante. Galante said the Department of Housing and Urban Development is reviewing the current FHA condo rules for future revisions that would remove the roadblock to buyers, sellers and lenders. A proposed rule is in the works but it could take considerably more time to finish and finalize it, she said without providing a timetable. In the meantime, new guidance is on the way to ...
FHA lenders and servicers commencing foreclosure on FHA-insured mortgage loans in the Commonwealth of Virginia must first meet with the borrower personally before proceeding or risk voidance of the foreclosure sale, the state supreme court ruled recently. Because of the decision by the Supreme Court of Virginia, the state has joined a growing list of states that require a face-to-face meeting between a mortgage lender and a borrower before initiating foreclosure proceedings on an FHA-insured mortgage loan. In Mathews v. PHH Mortgage Corp., the court upheld ...
While Nationstar Mortgage was named by the bankruptcy court as the stalking horse for Residential Capitals mortgage servicing rights and origination platform, Berkshire Hathaway ousted parent company Ally Financial as the lead bidder for ResCaps loan portfolio. Nationstar outbid Berkshire Hathaway for the mortgage banking business with a revised $2.45 billion bid that was $125 million higher than it originally offered when the bankruptcy plan was announced, and it also lowered its breakup fee to $24 million. In the initial bankruptcy plan with Ally and ResCap, Nationstar would have collected a $72...
As New York announced a $60 million program to help struggling homeowners, winning accolades from the Department of Housing and Urban Development for its use of the foreclosure settlement money, other states continue to plug budget holes with their settlement gains. The Empire States Homeowner Protection Program will fund housing counseling and legal services using some of the $107.6 million allotted the state through the multistate servicing and foreclosure settlement. HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan called it a national model for how states should use their settlement money. NY Attorney...
Berkshire Hathaway and other new bidders are circling around the assets of Residential Capital, setting the stage for a showdown at the Southern District of New York Bankruptcy Court after the court approved the current way the mortgage unit is operating in bankruptcy. In a turn of events that has shaken the stability of ResCaps initial bankruptcy plan that includes $8.7 billion to settle MBS investor lawsuits, Berkshire Hathaway objected to the current sale procedures in place, which have yet to be approved in court, in lieu of its own offer. The Nebraska-based conglomerate set the wheels in motion...
Mortgage companies reported strong gains in income from loan production and secondary marketing activity during the first quarter of 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of earnings reports filed by nine major lenders. Although the servicing business remained profitable during early 2012, income was down slightly from the fourth quarter of last year. All nine companies reported increased earnings on loan production and secondary marketing. As a group, they generated $4.84 billion in income from these activities, up 76.9 percent from...(Includes one data chart)
Banks reported higher fair market values on their mortgage servicing rights assets during the first quarter of 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of call report data. Financial institutions filing bank call reports said they serviced $5.786 trillion of single-family mortgages for other investors mostly through mortgage securitization activities as of the end of March. They put a fair market value on these MSR assets of $48.69 billion, or 0.841 percent of the unpaid principal balance. At the end of December, the ratio of MSR fair value to mortgages...(Includes one data chart)
The three federal banking agencies over the past week released proposed rules to implement the Basel III regulatory capital reforms and changes required by the Dodd-Frank Act that many observers predict will influence bank participation in the mortgage market. The proposed changes would increase bank capital requirements and re-calibrate risk-based capital charges. One of the key changes stemming from the Basel III accord reached by international bank regulators would limit the amount of mortgage servicing rights, along with investments in certain non-consolidated entities and deferred taxes, to no more...
The agency mortgage servicing market continued to grow during the first three months of 2012, although there is some evidence that banks are beginning to pull back from the sector. The Federal Reserve late last week reported that the total supply of home mortgage debt outstanding fell by 0.9 percent during the first quarter. It marked the 16th consecutive quarterly decline since the first quarter of 2008, when the housing market began to crater. The agency estimated that $10.179 trillion of home loans were outstanding at the end of March, the lowest level since...(Includes three data charts)
Mortgage industry officials are anxious about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus upcoming rulemaking on mortgage servicing and have provided some empirical data and a number of principles they think the bureau ought to follow. The American Bankers Association recently provided the CFPB with excerpts from its annual real estate survey to influence the CFPBs determination as to whether it should exempt, in whole or in part, certain categories of servicers or servicing arrangements from the bureaus upcoming servicing requirements. Of the 186 banks that participated, roughly 86 percent had assets of...