Approximately 19 percent of mortgage-related complaints filed by senior citizens with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau over the last two years involved FHA forward and reverse mortgages and VA loans, according to the CFPB complaints database. The bureau received 8,323 complaints from the elderly between 2016 and 2017 regarding their experiences with FHA, VA, and Home Equity Conversion Mortgages, home-equity loans or lines of credit, conventional mortgages and other home-loan products. Over the two-year period, seniors reported 1,562 problems with their FHA mortgages (702 complaints), reverse mortgages/HECMs (488) and VA-guaranteed loans (372). Conventional mortgages received the highest number of senior citizen complaints (4,240) during the period, while home-equity loan products and other mortgages garnered 780 and 1,741 complaints, respectively. Total complaints overall began trending downward in the first quarter of 2017, from 1,241 to 508 in the ... [Chart]
A greater focus on reverse-mortgage servicing and loss mitigation would be effective in addressing property-charge foreclosures while also preserving the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program’s core mission of helping cash-strapped senior citizens, says a new study from the National Consumer Law Center. The study by staff attorney Odette Williamson and Sarah Mancini, of counsel to the NCLC, said the government’s mistaken response to surging insurance claims and increasing defaults on property tax and insurance obligations was to change origination policies. Specifically, the Department of Housing and Urban Development reduced the proceeds available through a reverse mortgage and imposed new underwriting guidelines to curb rising reverse-mortgage foreclosures and stem increased losses to the FHA insurance fund. Although the repercussions of the two distinct problems related to ...
A number of lenders are trying to grow the expanded-credit mortgage market, but top producers in the sector saw an overall decline in originations last year, according to a new ranking by Inside Nonconforming Markets. The 15 top lenders originated $40.96 billion of expanded-credit mortgages last year, down 16.3 percent from 2016. The ECM category consists mostly of non-qualified mortgages and nonprime/Alt A loans that aren’t eligible for sale to the agencies ... [Includes one data chart]
Prices for jumbo mortgages softened near the end of 2017 and then markedly improved in the first two months of this year, according to officials at Redwood Trust. “As they often do, market conditions rebounded in January and we took full advantage,” Dashiell Robinson, an executive vice president at Redwood, said this week during the real estate investment trust’s earnings call. The company priced five non-agency mortgage-backed securities in January and February at much better execution ...
Servicers of jumbo mortgages posted significant increases to their portfolios in 2017, according to a new ranking by Inside Nonconforming Markets. Among a group of 30 servicers, the combined jumbo portfolio increased by 9.5 percent on an annual basis to $984.28 billion as of the end of 2017. The growth in jumbo servicing outpaced the increase in total mortgages outstanding. The total unpaid principal balance of outstanding residential mortgages ... [Includes one data chart]
Plans at Wells Fargo to issue non-agency mortgage-backed securities in 2017 didn’t come to fruition. But growth limitations recently placed on the bank by the Federal Reserve have prompted speculation that Wells could issue non-agency MBS this year. This month, the Fed issued a cease and desist order that temporarily limits the firm’s maximum total consolidated assets to the level they were as of the end of 2017. The order was one of the last acts of former Fed Chair Janet Yellen, who ...
The difference in interest rates for non-agency jumbo mortgages compared with conforming mortgages is often reported based on average interest rates. According to an analysis by researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, looking at average rates obscures some major differences in pricing for jumbos and mortgages eligible for sale to the government-sponsored enterprises. The researchers used data from Optimal Blue, a mortgage processor that allows lenders to ...
Ellington Financial is looking to ramp up activity involving non-qualified mortgages after a positive reception for its first mortgage-backed security. In November, Ellington issued a $141.2 million MBS predominantly backed by non-QMs. The deal closed with “excellent execution and strong investor demand,” according to Laurence Penn, president and CEO of Ellington. Investors included Putnam Investments, Janus Henderson Investors and JPMorgan Asset Management. “We had a ...
The nonprime mortgages held in portfolio by the government-sponsored enterprises continued to decline in 2017, according to an analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. And while the GSEs sold vintage non-agency mortgage-backed securities during the year, pre-crisis Alt A mortgages guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are largely running off instead of being sold. Fannie and Freddie had a total of $108.23 billion in nonprime mortgage holdings ... [Includes one data chart]
S&P Global Ratings released a revised methodology and assumptions this week for non-agency mortgage-backed securities issued in 2009 and later. The revision included slightly more favorable treatment of mortgages to multiple borrowers and recalibrated loss severity assumptions, including an over/undervaluation framework that incorporates property values in markets compared with price-to-income ratios. New Penn Financial loosened ... [Includes two briefs]