The Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Inspector General has slammed Ginnie Mae for understating the severity of misstatements in prior year financials. In a memorandum, the HUD IG said Ginnie Mae’s inadequate disclosures in a restatement notification did not help users of financial statements understand the full impact of the material misstatements. The reporting errors were identified in an IG audit of Ginnie’s fiscal year 2014 financial statements. According to the IG, the misstatements in the 2014 audit were due to improper accounting for FHA’s reimbursable costs and the flawed accounting treatment and inadequate disclosure of borrowers’ mortgage escrow funds held in trust by Ginnie in its defaulted issuers’ portfolio. These errors may have affected Ginnie Mae’s prior year financial statements as far back as FY 2011, the IG concluded. In its audit report, the IG ...
Given the fairly wide range in origination volume trends among the group, it’s difficult to forecast how the overall market fared based on just their activity.
Five large commercial banks reported a combined 7.1 percent decline in mortgage originations during the third quarter of 2015, accompanied by an even bigger drop in mortgage-banking income, according to an Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of earnings releases. Two of the five – JPMorgan Chase and U.S. Bank – reported slight increases in mortgage production from the second quarter. Given the fairly wide range in origination volume trends among the group, it’s difficult to forecast how the overall market fared based on their activity. At the midway point in 2015, these five banks accounted for 26.8 percent of total first-lien mortgage originations. Wells Fargo remained...[Includes one data table]
In the past year and a half, banks have started holding an increasing share of conventional conforming mortgages in portfolio instead of securitizing them through the government-sponsored enterprises. Industry analysts suggest GSE guaranty fees are the reason. In the first half of 2015, 91.6 percent of the estimated $442 billion in originations of conventional conforming mortgages were included in mortgage-backed securities. In 2013, 97.0 percent of the estimated $1.17 trillion in conventional conforming originations were securitized, according to an Inside Mortgage Finance analysis. “Securitizing conforming mortgages in agency MBS has become...
In the wake of large losses and insurance claim discrepancies stemming from the financial crisis, the government-sponsored enterprises and mortgage lenders are set to reap the benefits of new private mortgage insurer standards that formally take effect Jan. 1, 2016. Much tighter MI underwriting, coupled with improved insurer due diligence and stringent capital requirements, will improve claim payouts on defaulted loans, according to a recent report by Moody’s Investors Service, adding that policies written under updated GSE requirements will result in lower losses on the GSEs’ risk-sharing transactions and master insurance policies. The updated requirements for master policies give...
Private investors in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stock are raising concerns about the expansion of risk-transfer activity at the two government-sponsored enterprises, warning that it should not be viewed as the answer to housing reform. The credit-risk transfer programs are often cited as a path to housing finance reform because they bring new private capital to the mortgage business, laying off some of the risk held by the GSEs and, ultimately, by taxpayers. “Some have suggested...