State attorneys general and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reached a long-pending settlement with Ocwen Financial in December. Regulators suggest that additional actions are planned, and they have focused on the largest servicers as well as servicers involved with large transfers. As part of the settlement, Ocwen must complete $2.0 billion in principal reduction for borrowers with negative equity and refund $125.0 million to the nearly 185,000 borrowers who went through improper foreclosures from ...
Servicing of subprime mortgages almost appears to be on autopilot as performance improves and the amount of mortgages outstanding dwindles. Servicers that once competed to handle subprime mortgages have focused their pursuits on other assets, including agency mortgages and other unspecified financial services sectors. An estimated $418.0 billion of subprime mortgages were outstanding as of the end of the third quarter of 2013, according to a ranking by Inside Nonconforming Markets ... [Includes one data chart]
Subprime originations remain subdued. The Federal Reserves senior loan officer opinion survey for the third quarter included 68 lenders that originate prime mortgages. However, less than four said they offer subprime mortgages. And nonprime borrowers accounted for 5.82 percent of mortgages originated in the second quarter of 2013, Transunion said this week. Ocwen Financial said a settlement with state attorneys general is still in the works. In light of the substantial ... [Includes three briefs]
Mortgage delinquency rates reached a five-year low during the third quarter of 2013, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index. A group of 19 lenders that serviced $5.33 trillion of home loans reported that just 6.78 percent of those loans were in some stage of delinquency or default. That figure, which is not seasonally adjusted, was the lowest rate in the index since the third quarter of 2008. The overall delinquency rate improved...[Includes one data chart]
Ocwen Financial posted record revenues in the third quarter of 2013 that could have been even higher if not for unexpected delays in boarding $42.0 billion in unpaid principal balance on non-agency mortgages from OneWest Bank. Officials at Ocwen wouldnt reveal the exact cause of the delay. The loans were in non-agency mortgage-backed securities issued by IndyMac, which was taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in 2008 and sold by the FDIC to OneWest in 2009. Ocwen officials said delays ...
Recent supervisory efforts by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau have focused on sloppy servicing transfers and other loss mitigation issues. In a supervisory highlights review published this week, the CFPB said that between November 2012 and June 2013, it discovered several issues with servicing transfers that can cause borrowers to miss payments, delay important processes or affect the good standing of a borrowers mortgage. The CFPB said its examiners found noncompliance with ...
FHA lenders have gradually stretched to originate loans for borrowers with more modest credit scores in recent quarters, although these borrowers typically are better positioned to keep up with their payments, according to an Inside FHA Lending analysis of data released by the agency. The average credit score for single-family loans endorsed in the second quarter of 2013 was 693 the lowest such average in nearly four years. This is partly the result of a shift toward more purchase-money mortgages, which generally have ... [1 chart]
Ocwen Financial has outpaced subprime servicers in terms of growth in the past year and hopes to more than double its portfolio within the next year. Ocwen handled $145.98 billion in subprime mortgages as of the end of the second quarter of 2013, a 54.8 percent increase compared with the same time last year. In the past year, no other servicer grew at a rate even close to that, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. An estimated $440 billion in ... [Includes one data chart]
Ocwen Financial is preparing to enter a settlement with state regulators similar to the $25 billion national servicing settlement. A person with knowledge of the negotiations said regulators are working on settlements with individual servicers as opposed to the multi-servicer agreement with five banks announced last year. We look forward to finalizing this process, which we expect will occur very soon, Ronald Faris, Ocwens president and CEO, said last week during an earnings call. The servicer said ...
The question of whether the FHA should allow the refinancing of underwater mortgages seized through eminent domain has reemerged as a key issue following a recent decision by the city of Richmond, CA, to use its authority to take over distressed mortgages for restructuring. There is a new twist to the question, however. Could FHAs refusal to refinance such mortgages be deemed discriminatory against cities and homeowners if eminent domain programs meet the requirements of the FHA Short Refinance program? Is that tantamount to redlining? A top executive of Mortgage Resolution Partners, which developed the eminent domain strategy to help underwater homeowners at risk of foreclosure, said ...