Originations of adjustable-rate mortgages have not kept pace with overall mortgage production this year, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. An estimated $152 billion in ARMs were originated through the first three quarters of 2015, down 10.1 percent from the same period last year. In that span, total first-lien production has increased by 42.9 percent, according to estimates by affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance ... [Includes one data chart]
Less than 1.0 percent of the dollar volume of jumbo mortgages originated in 2014 would have been eligible for sale to the government-sponsored enterprises based on higher GSE loan limits that are set to take effect next year in nine metro markets, according to an Inside Nonconforming Markets analysis of data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act. The Federal Housing Finance Agency recently announced that high-cost loan limits will increase in 39 counties next year, with limits ...
The highway funding bill signed into law last week included a provision that expanded exemptions to standards for qualified mortgages. QMs generally cannot have balloon-payment features, though some small lenders in rural areas have been allowed to originate balloon mortgages that can be classified as QMs. Previously, the QM balloon exemption applied to small lenders that operate predominantly in rural or underserved areas. H.R. 22, the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation Act ...
The volume of home-equity loans held in portfolio at banks and thrifts declined in the third quarter of 2015, according to a new ranking from the Inside Mortgage Finance Bank Mortgage Database.Banks and thrifts held a total of $952.10 million in home-equity lines of credit, HELOC commitments and closed-end second liens at the end of the third quarter, down 1.1 percent compared with the previous quarter. Wells Fargo remained the top bank ... [Includes one data chart]
Compliance issues involving disclosure requirements that took effect in October could be delaying the issuance of jumbo mortgage-backed securities, according to a report this week from Moody’s Investors Service. The rating service said several third-party review firms found compliance violations on more than 90 percent of a sample of 300 mortgages reviewed for compliance with the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure rule. Many of the TRID violations were ... [Includes three briefs]
Approximately $191.8 billion in FHA-insured mortgage loans were securitized during the first nine months of 2015, surpassing the $158.1 billion of FHA loans that were placed in Ginnie Mae pools last year, agency loan-level data show. Securitized FHA purchase loans accounted for $111.7 billion of Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities issued over the same period. FHA refinance securitization totaled $66.8 billion. Modified FHA loans were also included in Ginnie MBS totals. The FHA loans in Ginnie MBS had an average loan-to-value ratio of 92.9 percent and an average FICO score of 677.5 percent, reflecting the single-family program’s traditional borrower base. The loans had an average debt-to-income ratio of 39.8 percent. FHA loans accounted for 19.8 percent of loans that underlie Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae MBS. On the other hand, the same loans accounted for 41.2 percent of insured loans in ... [ 1 chart ]
Quicken Loans’ chief executive officer reiterated threats by company owner Dan Gilbert to exit the FHA business amid concerns about a forthcoming lender-certification rule and an ongoing court battle with the Department of Justice. A report by Reuters quoted Gilbert earlier this week as saying he is considering pulling Quicken Loans out of the FHA market. In an interview with IMFnews, Quicken CEO Bill Emerson said top management would be remiss if it did not think about exiting the business. Quicken will decide whether to stay or go after the FHA releases its revised rule on lender certification later this month, he said. The revised proposal restores a provision initially removed from the original proposal, which would require lenders to certify that neither the firm nor its officers have been suspended, debarred or excluded from participation in any federal agency transactions. In addition, the revised proposed rule requires ...
An Urban Institute analysis echoed observations in the FY 2015 actuarial audit of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, calling for the separation of the highly volatile reverse mortgage portfolio from the fund. Assessing the performances of the larger forward mortgage portfolio and the smaller Home Equity Conversion Mortgage portfolio when determining FHA’s financial status results in an inaccurate picture, warned Laurie Goodman, director of the institute’s Housing Finance Policy Center. Including the highly unstable, unpredictable HECM business in FHA’s solvency calculation severely distorts the fund’s true financial condition, she said. Goodman’s dire warning puts a damper on the actuarial audit, which, for the first time since 2009, reported the fund’s capital ratio over the 2.0 percent statutory threshold, up from 0.41 percent in FY 2014 and a year earlier than projected in the ...
Some 66.5 percent of the loans to be included in the MBS are purchase mortgages. The mortgages have seasoned for four months, on average and none were delinquent at the time the deal was priced.
Mortgage securitization rates have been moving higher in 2015 as ongoing new issuance catches up with this year’s surge in primary market originations. A new Inside MBS & ABS analysis reveals that 69.2 percent of the loans originated through the first nine months of 2015 have been pooled in residential MBS, up from the 67.8 percent securitization rate for all of last year. The mortgage securitization rate had dropped...[Includes one data table]