The Financial Stability Oversight Council issued a warning this week regarding the prolonged period of low interest rates, singling out real estate investment trusts that invest in agency mortgage-backed securities. Agency REITs, a sector that how grown considerably in recent years, are highly exposed to a rise in interest rates, said Trent Reasons, a senior policy advisor at the Treasury Department. An analysis of 16 REITs by Inside MBS & ABS, an affiliated publication, determined...
The non-distressed property market is strong and being driven by borrowers in need of mortgage financing, according to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey results. Thomas Popik, research director for Campbell Surveys, said time-on-market trends, number of offers and sales-to-list price ratios all indicate an exceptionally strong market for non-distressed properties. The metrics for this segment are not affected by policy decisions at mortgage servicers to release or not release distressed properties onto the market, he noted. The average number of offers for non-distressed properties, based on a three-month moving average, hit...
Owner-occupants are driving increases in home prices and purchase activity, not institutional investors, according to Oliver Chang. The somewhat surprising conclusions from the founder and managing director of Sylvan Road Capital suggest that institutional investors are along for the ride, not propelling the current housing recovery. The housing recovery appears to be broad-based and here to stay, although not because of the entrance of institutional investors into the space, Chang said. He completed...
National MI, a new entrant in the private mortgage insurance market, began issuing its first commitments this month, although company officials acknowledge that a lot of the companys operations are still being put together. In fact, building a new MI from scratch with state-of-the-art technology and no hangover from the housing collapse is one of National MIs key advantages, officials said. 2013 is...
Fannie Mae is making it easier for small and medium-sized lenders to deliver electronic mortgages to the government-sponsored enterprise. Currently, lenders are required to obtain a variance to their master agreement in order to deliver electronic mortgage loans (eMortgages) to Fannie Mae, the GSE said in a recent selling guide announcement. Fannie Mae would like to expand...
Private mortgage insurers provided coverage on some $8.2 billion of mortgages securitized by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac during the first quarter of 2013 that had loan-to-value ratios exceeding 105 percent, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of loan-level data. Private MIs had little choice in the matter since the Home Affordable Refinance Program allows underwater borrowers to refinance without getting additional MI, or any mortgage insurance if the original loan wasnt insured. In fact, Fannie and Freddie securitized a total of $27.1 billion of mortgages with LTV ratios over 105 percent, most of which did not have insurance. But most private MI coverage was placed...[Includes one data chart]
The five servicers participating in the $25 billion national servicing settlement will face increased scrutiny due to complaints regarding their compliance with the settlement. In addition to requiring a certain amount of loss mitigation actions on non-agency loans, the settlement set standards to be followed by the servicers. Joseph Smith, the settlements monitor, said he is establishing additional metrics for the settlement to address complaints about actions by Ally Financial, Bank of America ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development this week issued guidance that spells out procedures for demanding indemnification from lenders participating in the agencys Lenders Insurance (LI) program for loans deemed ineligible for FHA insurance. The guidance (Mortgagee Letter 2013-10) implements regulation that HUD finalized in January 2012. Indemnification for defective LI loans became even more important for the FHA after an independent actuarial audit in November revealed a negative capital reserve ratio and that a taxpayer bailout seemed imminent. Compliance experts warned that, with the policy changes, the more than ...
Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan this week reiterated his agencys request for additional legislative authority to regulate the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program by mortgagee letter so that much-needed changes can be implemented immediately. Rather than go through the tedious legislative process of amending HECM legislation to improve the program and reduce HECM losses, expanding HUDs authority would enable the department to undertake immediate reforms, such as restricting lump sum payments, requiring financial assessments of HECM applicants and requiring borrowers to ...