The Senate voted this week to reinstate the higher conforming loan limit that expired at the end of September, heeding calls by the real estate and mortgage industries. On a vote of 60-38, lawmakers passed an amendment to the FY2012 funding bill, S. 1596, for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which, among other things, would raise the maximum loan amount that can be guaranteed by FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Introduced by Sen. Robert Menendez, D-NJ, the amendment restores the 125 percent median home price formula used to calculate the temporary higher loan limits in effect prior to Oct. 1, which was up to $729,750 in certain high-cost areas of the country and lower in other jurisdictions. After Oct. 1, the new loan limit calculation was ...
Buyback risk is raising costs throughout the mortgage industry and causing lenders to boost cred-it standards beyond the levels required by investors, according to several experts at last weeks annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers Association. The industry is spending hundreds of millions of dollars in repurchases and defending repurchases, said David Stevens, chairman and CEO of the MBA. At a time when lenders are being pushed to keep skin in the game, a 5 percent risk-retention requirement for securitization might almost seem like a better deal than the costly repurchase process, he added. Brian Chappelle said...
Flood insurance reform legislation in the Senate would result in higher net income to the National Flood Insurance Program and more federal revenues than the House version, according to a cost estimate by the Congressional Budget Office. The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs approved the bill, the Flood Insurance Reform and Modernization Act, on Sept. 8 by unanimous voice vote. The bill is awaiting Senate floor action. The House passed its bill, H.R. 1309, the Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2011, before the August recess by a vote of 406-22. Like its House counterpart, the Senate bill would reauthorize...
Despite the sound and fury from publicly peeved House Democrats directed at Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco, including calls for him to step aside, the consensus among industry insiders and those in the know on Capitol Hill is good luck finding anyone else willing or able to jumpstart the underperforming GSE refinance plan while obeying the FHFAs restrictive regulatory mandate.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency needs to explain why it hired expensive outside counsel instead of dispatching government lawyers in its massive litigation against the nations big financial institutions, as well as just how much the agency expects to recoup from the effort, according to a senior Republican congressman.
As the Federal Housing Finance Agency ponders possible improvements to the governments Home Affordable Refinance Program, calls from different corners of the industry are growing louder for the FHFA to end fees charged to borrowers who refinance Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issued $177.19 billion in single-family mortgage-backed securities during the third quarter of 2011, a modest 14.3 percent improvement following two straight quarterly declines during the first six months of this year.The recent July-September cycle represented one of the weakest quarters historically for GSE MBS production since the financial markets crashed at the end of 2008.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency knew or should have known about improper foreclosure practices involving Fannie Mae affiliated law firms long before the Finance Agency began a review, according to the regulators official watchdog.The FHFA Office of Inspector Generals latest audit found that the FHFA did not investigate complaints about Fannies Retained Attorney Network until August 2010 in the wake of negative news reports alleging that RAN attorneys had engaged in inappropriate foreclosure practices, such as routinely filing false documents in court proceedings and robo-signing.
The ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is calling on the Federal Housing Finance Agency to give serious consideration to shuttering Fannie Maes Retained Attorney Network, but not before answering questions and providing documents about the FHFAs oversight of the program.
In five years, the mortgage servicing business will likely be dramatically different than it is now or has been in the past, experts say, and getting there wont be easy. Homeowners think servicing is about them, that the industry should be trying to solve their problems, said Peter Swire, a law professor at Ohio State, during a panel at this weeks Mortgage Bankers Association annual convention. But the servicer is working primarily for the investor, he said, adding that the legal structure of servicing makes the homeowner extraneous. Although there is widespread acknowledgement that change is necessary, the significant...