The Department of Housing and Urban Development is investigating reports that a loan officer of an approved FHA lender had participated in a reverse mortgage borrowers counseling session, a practice HUD frowns upon but does not directly prohibit. A HUD representative declined to provide details but acknowledged that the report was part of informal discussions between department officials and stakeholders. That information has not been officially released in any form, he said. Once the details are finalized, we will be advising stakeholders. The National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association posted the ...
Some FHA lenders are seeing new opportunities in the distressed property market as they offer new or expand on existing 203(k) rehabilitation mortgage insurance products. Houston-based Envoy Mortgage, a full-service mortgage banker with retail branches across the country, has broadened its FHA 203(k) product line to include a full 203(k) option. The option allows borrowers to devote more funds for repair and renovation, which are rolled into the mortgage amount. The full 203(k) option is a step up from what Envoy is already offering a streamline 203(k) program designed for borrowers that have ...
Rule for Selling Government Mortgages to Fannie Mae Updated. Eligibility for delivery of mortgage loans backed by FHA, VA and the Department of Agriculture is now available on a negotiated basis only, Fannie Mae announced in a recent update to its Selling Guide (Announcement SEL-2013-01). The change is effective for all government loans, including whole loans sold to Fannie on or after May 1, 2013, and government loans in mortgage-backed securities with issue dates on or after May 1. Genworth to Delink Struggling Mortgage Insurance Operations from Holding Company. Genworth Financial plans to ...
The private mortgage insurance landscape is shifting in 2013 with the entry of a new MI provider, Genworth Financials announced plan to revamp its mortgage insurance business, and reports of a plan by Essent Guaranty to go public later this year. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac last week approved National Mortgage Insurance Corp. as an eligible insurer, clearing the companys entry into the U.S. mortgage insurance market with a scheduled launch in the first quarter of 2013. NMICs entry brings to seven the number of companies that are currently active in the MI market while three other companies are in a runoff mode. Earlier last year, NMIC parent NMI Holdings, Inc., raised...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency should review the concerns of industry trade groups about Fannie Maes plans to reduce the cost of lender force-placed insurance and then facilitate a collaborative resolution thats open and transparent, industry groups contend. In a letter to the FHFA earlier this month, the American Bankers Association warned that Fannies March 2012 request for proposal inviting insurance companies to compete for the GSEs lender-placed insurance business directly as a way to ensure a significant reduction in insurance costs is rife with unintended consequences to the industry. The proposal, if adopted, effectively would allow Fannie Mae to pick winners and losers among insurers, would be potentially inconsistent with state insurance requirements and would dramatically alter existing servicing operations, contracts and costs, noted the ABA. Such a proposed major reform of the mortgage servicing market should be considered in the sunshine.
During the final three months of 2012, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securitized some $52.72 billion of single-family home loans that were covered by private mortgage insurance, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis. That total represented 14.4 percent of the business done by the two government-sponsored enterprises during the fourth quarter although there was significant variation among the GSEs top sellers in terms of the share of their deliveries covered by PMI. Some $8.42 billion of PMI-insured mortgages were pooled...[Includes one data chart]
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week issued a long-awaited final rule that establishes ability-to-repay and qualified mortgage (QM) standards, as well as a second, temporary category of QMs for government-backed mortgages to avoid market disruption. At the same time, the CFPB sought comment on a proposed rule that would exclude new and existing FHA, VA and Rural Housing Service (U.S. Department of Agriculture) programs that facilitate refinancings for borrowers at risk of delinquency or default. The temporary QM category was spurred by CFPBs concern about the ...
Although Congress and the presidents just-in-time agreement to forestall the fiscal cliff crisis, at least for a while, provided some mortgage market-friendly results, MBS investors still face some challenges in 2013, analysts say. The American Taxpayer Relief Act, H.R. 8, includes a one-year extension through Dec. 31, 2013, of the Mortgage Debt Forgiveness Act that exempts loan amounts forgiven by lenders and foreclosures from taxable income. Deductions on mortgage insurance premiums for borrowers making below $110,000 were extended through 2013 and made retroactive to cover 2012, as well. The combination of tax relief on mortgage insurance premiums and debt forgiveness should have...
Although it is far from settled that the FHA will raise its downpayment threshold from the current 3.5 percent, there is a growing fear among some lenders that Republicans in Congress might push for a 10 percent downpayment. If that happens, said David Lykken, managing partner of Mortgage Banking Solutions, Austin, TX, it would bring HUD to its knees. Lykken and others fear that anything north of 5 percent would hammer the market, in particular first-time homebuyers who use the program heavily for purchases as opposed to refinancings. We need the FHA charter to help first-time buyers, he said. How much of a downpayment hike certain House GOP members might demand will be ...
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 ...