MGIC Investment Corp. announced it has met all its obligations to Freddie Mac, formally putting an end to the mortgage insurers dispute with the GSE over pool MI coverage. MGIC Investment Corp. this week transferred $100 million to its subsidiary, Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation to maintain approval from Freddie to sell coverage as part of the overall $267.6 million settlement agreement. All other conditions by Freddie to continue the GSEs approval of MGIC Indemnity Corp. (MIC) as a limited mortgage insurer are satisfied through Dec. 31, 2013, according to MGIC Chairman and CEO Curt Culver.
As part of negotiations regarding the fiscal cliff, the Obama administration and Democrats in the House are seeking principal reduction loan modifications for borrowers with negative equity. The Treasury Department has reportedly proposed a program targeting borrowers with mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities while the debate about principal forgiveness for loans held by the government-sponsored enterprises has also been rekindled. The Obama administration would neither confirm nor deny the non-agency proposal, but details regarding the Market Rate Modification program have prompted talk among industry participants and a detailed analysis. In order to assist...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac this month completed implementation of the latest round of guaranty fee hikes, this one mandated by their regulator as a move to reduce the footprint of the government-sponsored enterprises and draw more private capital into the mortgage market. Experts say the 10 basis point fee hike will have a slight positive impact in the near term, but future moves in the same direction could help close the gap between agency and non-agency mortgage-backed securities. The Federal Housing Finance Agency ordered the GSEs to raise g-fees by 10 bps for cash deliveries starting in November, and for MBS transactions beginning in December. At the time, the FHFA said...
In a development that might catch the attention of officials at the CFPB who are working on improving consumer disclosures under the Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act and the Truth In Lending Act, more evidence has emerged that consumers arent very big on using TILA forms to comparison shop for mortgages.A new study from Fannie Mae found that nearly half of lower‐income respondents and more than a third of higher‐income respondents get quotes from only one mortgage lender. The survey also confirms findings in other reports that a substantial portion of all consumers do not understand key mortgage elements.
MBS industry groups generally support the Federal Housing Finance Agencys plan to develop a single securitization platform and model pooling and servicing agreements for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But they question whether a standardized system will for the non-agency MBS market or risk-sharing arrangements envisioned for the government-sponsored enterprises. The FHFA has been pushing the two GSEs to standardize their securitization operations in recent years, including uniform data delivery requirements, consistent servicing rules and, most recently, a new framework for seller representations and warranties that will go into effect in January. The agency wants...
New issuance of agency MBS jumped dramatically in November, hitting its highest monthly production volume in over three years, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking and analysis. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae combined for a whopping $199.34 billion in new single-family MBS during November, a 46.4 percent jump from the previous month. It was the highest monthly agency MBS output since June 2009, when $232.13 billion of MBS were issued. The November surge may reflect...[Includes one data chart]
To effect the types of changes required in order to bring private capital back to the housing finance market, a collaborative effort among market participants, regulators and policymakers will be necessary, noted the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco told attendees of a Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association conference in New York City late this week that the existing secondary market infrastructure is broken and it will take agreement among market participants to decide the changes necessary in order to mend it better than ever. As we think about building a new infrastructure for the secondary mortgage market, we know...
Thanks to the Federal Reserves aggressive support for the agency mortgage market and continuing strength in the refinance program for underwater Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac borrowers, mortgage refi activity has accounted for 73.1 percent of 2012s surging production volume. But home-purchase lending started to regain some market share during the third quarter of 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. An estimated $143 billion of home-purchase mortgages were originated during the third quarter, up 10.9 percent from the previous three-month period. By comparison, refinance production was up just 2.8 percent from the second quarter. The purchase-mortgage sector still has...[Includes three data charts]
The state of emergency in the U.S. mortgage market lives on for another year, as the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced that conforming loan limits will remain as they are for 2013. The agency didnt have much say in the matter, since Congress in late 2011 extended the emergency loan limits for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA through the end of 2013. Lawmakers did lower the top Fannie/Freddie loan in high-cost markets of the lower 48 states to $625,500, while the top-end FHA loan is still $729,750. Although the FHA has not yet announced...
The mortgage finance industry is getting antsy because the much-anticipated ability-to-repay final rule still has yet to be released by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, even though it was widely expected to come out after the election, perhaps by Thanksgiving. The bureau does not have a specific release date yet, but officials still expect it to happen before the statutory deadline of Jan. 21, 2013. Lenders are pretty amped up...