Non-agency participants maintain that the reinstatement of emergency high-cost loan limits for FHA loans but not Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will not impede originations of non-agency jumbo mortgages. Meanwhile, some housing trade groups and congressmen representing high-cost districts continue to push for a reinstatement of the government-sponsored enterprises high-cost loan limits. In November, President Obama signed legislation that restored the maximum $729,750 loan limit for the highest-cost FHA markets ...
Fannie Mae recently started to transfer higher-risk mortgages to special servicers in an effort to improve performance, typically on non-prime loans. In its earnings filing for the third quarter of 2011, Fannie said it is transferring servicing on loan populations that include loans with higher-risk characteristics to special servicers with whom we have worked to develop high-touch protocols. The protocols include ... [Includes one data chart]
Springleaf Finance continues to consider an initial public offering for its real estate investment trust as a way to refinance a portion of its business to pay off debts. The Springleaf REIT filed for an IPO in May and while investor demand has not been overwhelming, the company maintains that it is still considering going public. The REIT will be primarily engaged in the business of sourcing, screening and acquiring performing whole loans secured by mortgages on residential real estate, Springleaf Finance said ...
Officials with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau once again stressed the need for regulation of alternative mortgages this week. However, the performance of such risky loans continues to be debated among consumer advocates and economists. In the lead up to the crisis, when a competitor began to steal market share or to earn outsize profits by introducing products like option ARMs or no-doc loans, the pressure to follow suit was intense, Raj Date, special advisor to the Treasury on the CFPB, said ...
Contrary to what critics claim about the recent increase in the FHAs loan limits, high-balance mortgage loans insured by FHA have shown historically lower delinquency rates and, therefore, pose no significant risk to taxpayers or the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, said Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan. Notwithstanding the agencys opposition to legislation reinstating the pre-Oct. 1 temporary maximum loan limits for FHA, Donovan said early evidence, so far, shows that high-balance loans perform better than other FHA-insured loans. Last month, Congress enacted legislation reinstating ...
Jumbo lenders do not expect the higher FHA loan limits to have any adverse impact on their GSE business. Anyone seeking a loan above $625,500 only has one choice, and that is FHA, but the real question is how much business the conventional market would lose to FHA, lenders said. In addition to the higher loan limit, the FHA insures loans of more than 80 percent loan-to-value ratio and requires a 3.5 percent downpayment. The GSEs require a 20 percent downpayment on their jumbos. On the other hand, the private market offers loans above the GSE limits but does not originate loans in excess of 80 percent LTV. For people seeking under-80 LTV loans, it is unlikely that ... [Includes one data chart]
The decision to restore emergency high-cost loan limits for the FHA, but not for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, will likely have a negligible impact on the government-sponsored enterprises, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of agency jumbo mortgage activity. During the first nine months of 2011, single-family loans exceeding $625,500 the top GSE loan amount for high-cost markets since Oct. 1 accounted for an infinitesimal 1.5 percent of Freddie Macs total single-family securitization. Although the FHA can resume insuring...(Includes three data charts)
The Federal Housing Finance Agencys recent proposal to revamp servicer compensation has received mixed reactions from non-agency participants. High-touch servicers approve of the landscape-shifting fee-for-service proposal but analysts suggest that the system would be much more difficult to establish for non-agency mortgages than for agency loans. Ocwen Financial and other servicers that predominantly handle delinquent mortgages favor the FHFAs proposal that would significantly increase the fees paid to service delinquent loans and lower the base servicing fee for performing loans, perhaps to...
Three more non-agency servicers agreed with New Yorks Department of Financial Services to revamp their servicing practices to address alleged improper servicing. American Home Mortgage Servicing, Saxon Mortgage and Vericrest Financial last week agreed to servicing practices previously agreed to by Goldman Sachs Bank, Litton Loan Servicing and Ocwen Financial. Among other provisions, the agreements require a single point of contact for borrowers and the end of dual-track foreclosures. The servicers also must withdraw any pending foreclosure in which affidavits were inaccurate and... (Includes one data chart)
President Obama this week signed into law a stop gap spending measure, which, among other things, reinstates temporary higher limits for loans insured by FHA. The minibus bill, which combines several appropriations bill, passed the house on a vote of 298-121. The Senate approved previously approved it 70-30. The measure raises the FHAs maximum loan limit back up to $729,750 after it had fallen to the permanent statutory level of $625,500 on Oct. 1, and extends it through the end of 2013. The new limit is effective immediately. After being extended three times in 2008, 2009 and 2010 the higher loan limits finally expired on Oct. 1 this year and were ...