Rep. Barney Frank, co-author of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, will not run for office when his term expires in 2012. The Massachusetts Democrat also served as the ranking minority member on the House Financial Services Committee. Frank said during a press conference this week that his decision not to run again was precipitated, but not caused by, redistricting. A member of Congress since 1980, the 71-year-old lawmaker pledged to remain an advocate for the two causes he views as most important: the protection of financial reform and the...
Documenting mortgage lender and broker compliance with the Federal Reserves loan originator compensation rule will be just as important as actually complying with it, according to top industry attorneys and state regulators. Compliance policies and procedures are really not enough to satisfy the LO comp rule, Richard Andreano, a partner in the Washington, DC, office of the Patton Boggs law firm, told participants in a webinar sponsored this week by Inside Mortgage Finance. The ability to document compliance will be very important, and people will need to maintain very...
Housing finance and real estate groups are hailing the enactment this week of legislation raising the size of mortgage loans insured by FHA to $729,750 or 125 percent of area median home prices over objections by conservatives and most Republicans. The reinstated loan limit formula and maximum cap for FHA-insured home loans are good through 2013. The loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will remain at 115 percent of local area median home price, up to $625,500. The FHA floor will remain at $271,050 while the floor for loans purchased by the government-sponsored enterprises will still be $417,000. Last month...
ABS issuers are scrambling to get a handle on complex new rules to mitigate conflicts of interest in the structured finance market that are being developed by the Securities and Exchange Commission and federal banking regulators. At the end of the day, well spend lots of time figuring out how to comply, said Bianca Russo, managing director and associate general counsel at JPMorgan Chase, during a seminar sponsored last week by the American Securitization Forum. Its going to be a challenge to comply, however the rules turn out. Complexity and consistency are...
Legislative proposals for a TBA market backed by non-agency MBS as an alternative to a market driven by government-sponsored enterprises lack precedence and are full of unknowns, according to analysts. While this is a laudable effort and a necessary one in order to remove the governments sup-port from the housing finance market the extent to which private enterprise will be able to pick up the slack the GSEs leave behind is unknown, said Benjamin Feldman, a housing policy analyst and advocate. Peter Wallison, an Arthur F. Burns fellow in financial...
For an all too brief moment last week there was bipartisanship on Capitol Hill as exasperated Democrats and Republicans took turns questioning and berating the CEOs of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and their regulator surrounding the issue of executive compensation at the two GSEs.Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco was called before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee and the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform to explain some $13 million in performance bonuses to Fannie CEO Michael Williams and Freddie CEO Charles Haldeman and eight other senior executives at the taxpayer-subsidized firms.
Unless Congress tackles the future of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the government’s role, if any, in housing finance, expect the Federal Housing Finance Agency to continue to resolutely employ an increasingly imperfect and outdated conservatorship model to the GSEs, say industry observers. Several times while appearing last week before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee and the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco pointedly urged lawmakers
House Financial Services Financial Institutions Subcommittee Chairwoman Shelley Moore Capito, R-WV, and ranking member Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-NY, last week introduced H.R. 3461, the Financial Institutions Examination Fairness and Reform Act, to address widespread industry concerns with bank examinations. Some bankers say the reasons for certain decisions made by regulators during the examination process have not been clear. Bankers have also reported that some examiner decisions have effectively and unnecessarily reduced the amount of capital available for increased lending.
The Government Accountability Office recently confirmed the view widely held in the mortgage finance industry that federal regulators are not doing enough to analyze the cost and other effects of implementing the Dodd-Frank Act. Little is known about the actual impact of the final Dodd-Frank Act rules, given the short amount of time the rules have been in effect, the GAO said. The government watchdog noted that federal financial regulators are required to perform a variety of analyses, but the requirements vary and none of the regulators are...
A proposed Senate bill to steadily wind down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over the course of a decade appears to have some support at the Federal Housing Finance Agency, where the acting director is eager for Congress to move toward resolving the three-year-old conservatorships of the two government-sponsored enterprises. S. 1834, the Residential Mortgage Market Privatization and Standardization Act of 2011 would gradually reduce the two GSEs over 10 years through an unusual mechanism. Instead of guaranteeing the entire MBS trust as they...