Although the home foreclosure inventory is falling compared to a year ago, some metropolitan areas are seeing an increase in new filings, including Atlantic City.
Thanks to declining interest rates and higher prepayment speeds in the third quarter – especially on Ginnie Mae receivables – several publicly traded nonbanks were forced to write down the asset value of their mortgage servicing rights, causing millions of dollars in red ink. According to a review by Inside Mortgage Finance of the earnings statements of six nonbanks, the combined servicing markdown was an ugly $448 million. The group includes Nationstar Mortgage, Ocwen Financial, PennyMac Financial Services, PHH Corp., Stonegate Mortgage and Walter Investment Management Corp., the parent of Ditech Financial. Walter took...
loanDepot Inc. this week priced its much anticipated initial public offering, valuing its soon-to-be-listed shares – 34.5 million units in total – at $18 each or roughly $621 million, a lofty valuation for a company that owns just over $20.9 billion in mortgage servicing rights. Few in the industry are questioning loanDepot’s explosive growth since its inception five years ago, but eyebrows have been raised about the anticipated size of the deal. “It’s...
Seemingly small differences in monthly mortgage payments for borrowers in bankruptcy helped prompt an $81.6 million settlement between Wells Fargo and the Department of Justice late last week. The DOJ’s U.S. Trustee Program said Wells repeatedly violated federal bankruptcy rules that took effect in December 2011 and imposed more detailed disclosure requirements to ensure proper accounting of fees and charges for borrowers in bankruptcy. The main instance cited in the settlement agreement was...
Promoting affordable housing by recapitalizing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is the premise of a new study released this week by the Brookings Institution arguing that their conservatorship should come to an end. Obama administration officials have previously rejected such proposals. The paper noted that the Treasury Department’s sweep policy, which takes the bulk of Fannie’s and Freddie’s profits, limits the government-sponsored enterprises’ ability to promote homeownership and expand access to affordable home ownership, especially among low-income households. Robert Shapiro, former Brookings fellow, and chairman of Sonecon, LLC, along with Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow at Brookings, said...
The goal of the program is to help stabilize neighborhoods that were hardest hit by the real estate downturn by letting local community organizations review and purchase foreclosed properties first.