The likelihood of new loans exceeding the statutory high-priced mortgage loan (HPML) threshold due to a recent policy change relating to FHA mortgage insurance premium payments is causing uneasiness among some lenders, said an industry trade group. This week, the Consumer Mortgage Coalition warned that lenders might not originate FHA-insured loans if they thought the new MIP policy would cause the mortgages to turn into HPMLs and subject them to increased liability. Specifically, the new MIP policy might prevent ...
Some experts are predicting that the new ability-to-repay rule issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which sets the boundaries of qualified mortgages, will also lead some lenders to focus on so-called non-QM loans that will become the new subprime market. At the American Bankers Associations regulatory compliance conference, held this week in Chicago, ABA Senior Regulatory Counsel Rodrigo Alba said publicly what many mortgage bankers have been thinking privately. Responding to a comment from one banker who said her institution might opt to do only non-QM lending, just for simplicitys sake, Alba said, Wanted or not, this may start leaning into being the new subprime. He added...
At least 170 non-agency MBS serviced by Ocwen Financial took combined losses of more than $1.0 billion in May due to accounting for principal forbearance that occurred before July 2012. The reporting issue allowed mezzanine bonds to continue receiving interest payments, and industry participants are concerned that the accounting could be an issue on other non-agency MBS. Moodys Investors Service said the newly realized losses relate to loss mitigation by Homeward Residential. Ocwen acquired Homeward at the end of 2012. The servicing transfer prompted a disclosure by Ocwen to Wells Fargo, the trustee on the deals previously serviced by Homeward, in the May remittance reports on the deals. Wells said...
The long-awaited boom in nonperforming loan sales may finally be here, as megabanks such as Wells Fargo, Citigroup and HSBC have begun testing investor appetites by offering large packages in the open market. According to investors and advisors who play in the space, Wells recently auctioned off an $800 million NPL package and HSBC sold a $750 million portfolio. Recently, Popular Bank said that it entered...
FHA loans saw an improvement in delinquencies even as the mortgage industry reported an increase in the overall delinquency rate for single-family mortgages at the end of the first quarter of 2013, according to the Mortgage Bankers Associations latest national delinquency survey. Among loan types, the FHA saw the largest improvement on a seasonally adjusted basis as its delinquency rate dropped to 10.97 percent in the first quarter, down 20 basis points from the previous quarter. This was good news for an agency that has been battling to reduce losses and stabilize its Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. However, the refreshing change was ...
The amount of subprime mortgages outstanding continues to fall, although performance leveled off in 2012 after significant declines in delinquencies beginning in 2010. Some $475.0 billion in subprime mortgages were outstanding at the end of 2012, according to estimates by Inside Nonconforming Markets, down 12.8 percent from the end of 2011. Only two major subprime servicers increased their subprime mortgage holdings in 2012 compared with the end of 2011: Ocwen Financial and ... [Includes one data chart]
Potential violations to a servicing agreement Ocwen Financial signed in 2011 with the New York State Department of Financial Services have stalled Ocwens efforts to close its acquisition of Homeward Residential and servicing from Residential Capital. Benjamin Lawsky, superintendent of the DFS, said he would not approve Ocwens latest acquisitions until a monitor was established to oversee Ocwens compliance with the September 2011 agreement. This week, Ronald Faris, president and CEO of Ocwen ...
According to the latest subprime servicer ranking from Inside Nonconforming Markets, only two major servicers increased their subprime portfolios at the end of the third quarter of 2012 compared with either the previous quarter or the third quarter of 2011: Ocwen Financial and Homeward Residential, which Ocwen intends to acquire in December. Both of the servicers and eight of the top 15 subprime servicers are nonbanks. Nonbank special servicers have increased their ... [Includes one data chart]
After winning multiple bids to acquire mortgage servicing rights and subservicing on nonprime loans and agency mortgages, nonbank servicers were outbid last week for the latest major agency MSR acquisition. Industry analysts suggest that the somewhat unexpected competition from banks could hinder planned expansion by Ocwen Financial, Nationstar Mortgage and Walter Investment Management. JPMorgan Chase Bank is set to acquire $70.0 billion in agency MSRs from MetLife. The acquisition of this ...
With the planned acquisition of Homeward Residential, Ocwen Financial fired the latest shot as nonbank special servicers compete to grow their portfolios. While officials at Ocwen noted the synergistic benefits of the planned purchase, industry analysts warned that the move puts Ocwen in a shaky financial position. The company announced last week that it plans to acquire Homeward for $588 million in cash and $162 million in Ocwen stock. The acquisition will strengthen Ocwens position as the largest ...