Recent efforts by the government-sponsored enterprises and the Federal Housing Finance Agency to offer clarity and consistency about repurchase demands may or may not bear fruit as neither agency officials nor industry observers can speak confidently as to its ultimate effectiveness. According to participants at an Inside Mortgage Finance webinar this week, the GSE representation and warranty framework unveiled by the FHFA last month and the GSEs new quality control guidelines announced last week are steps in the right direction but there are a lot of moving parts to take into account. We tried the best we could to address...
Mortgage real estate investment trusts that invest in MBS are likely to see their profitability reduced in coming quarters, largely as a result of the competition theyre facing from the Federal Reserve for assets to buy. Since the Feds Sept. 13 announcement that it would snap up an additional $40 billion of agency MBS a month as part of its latest quantitative easing, yields have dropped and spreads have narrowed, and thats cutting into the earnings and dividends of mortgage REITs. Paul Miller, a securities analyst at FBR Capital Markets, agrees...
More than a year after the Federal Housing Finance Agency first announced its proposal to sell investors Fannie Mae foreclosed properties in bulk for rentals and two months into its second sale with less than 800 properties moved, market watchers are expressing skepticism about whether the program will ever advance beyond the pilot stage. Earlier this month, the FHFA announced that New York-based Cogsville Group LLC was the winning bidder of 94 Fannie-owned properties. The firm paid $2.1 million for a share in a joint venture with the GSE resulting in a transactional value to Fannie of $11.8 million or 86.2 percent of the properties estimated value.
The top mortgage lenders in the industry reported a record $8.35 billion in net income from their mortgage banking businesses during the third quarter of 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of early earnings reports. That represented a solid 9.1 percent increase over the second quarter and brought the group which includes Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and U.S. Bank to a whopping $23.36 billion in mortgage banking income for the first nine months of the year. During the same period in 2011, these five lenders reported...
Cyber warfare is heating up in the United States and throughout the world, with distributed denial of service attacks up significantly in the third quarter against mortgage lenders and other financial services providers and corporate entities, according to a report released this week by Prolexic Technologies, a vendor of DDoS protection services. During the third quarter, Prolexic mitigated seven DDoS attacks of more than 20 gigabits per second (Gbps) for different clients across multiple industries, the firm said. A number of these attacks leveraged a toolkit called itsoknoproblembro that has been used in some recent high-profile DDoS attacks. In a DDoS attack, one or more hackers deploy...
Major banks reported increased charge offs and nonperforming assets for home-equity loans in the third quarter of 2012 due to new guidance from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. However, bank officials and industry analysts suggest that banks have largely already reserved for the new reported losses and that overall trends point toward improvements in HEL performance. In June, the OCC updated its accounting guidance to require banks to classify mortgages and other loans discharged by troubled borrowers in bankruptcy as troubled debt restructurings. The agency said a bank should charge off the excess of the loans carrying amount over the fair value of the collateral with the remaining balance of the loan placed into non-accrual status. The bankruptcy court removed...
The Federal Housing Finance Agencys five-year strategic plan aims to develop a new system for recording mortgages electronically and assuming custodianship of mortgage documents but is curiously silent about the role the Mortgage Electronic Registration System would play in a future revamped secondary mortgage market. The new system is among many initiatives and strategies outlined in the FHFAs recently issued updated strategic plan for 2013-2017. The plan builds on an earlier plan for the conservatorships of the government-sponsored enterprises released in February. As part of building a new infrastructure to replace the GSE model, the FHFA said...
The mortgage industry does not appear to be making much headway when it comes to reducing the volume of complaints consumers lodge with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. In fact, according to the CFPBs latest consumer complaint report, mortgage-related issues are becoming more prevalent. As of the end of the third quarter, the CFPB had received approximately 79,200 consumer complaints, including approximately 36,300 related to mortgages (46 percent), 23,400 for credit cards (30 percent), 12,900 related to bank accounts and services complaints (16 percent), and 2,900 having to do with private student loans (4 percent). Three months earlier, mortgages accounted...
Both supporters and opponents of the mortgage interest deduction are laying the groundwork in anticipation of a renewed post-election effort to significantly revise or even outright repeal a staple of middle-class homeownership as Washington is forced to grapple with tax reform and the looming fiscal cliff. A number of industry trade groups were reluctant to go on record but industry insiders say they are getting their facts and research together in anticipation of the first serious attempt to repeal the MID in two decades. The most critical factors that will dictate...
A federal district court in Minnesota rejected a mortgage securitization trustees plea to compel a lender to repurchase defective home loans after finding that the loans no longer existed following the foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged properties. Ruling in MASTR Asset-Backed Securities Trust 2006-HE3 v. WMC Mortgage Corp., U.S. District Court Judge John Tunheim granted the lenders motion for partial summary judgment after determining that the loans had been extinguished when the trustee foreclosed on the properties and charged off the remaining principal balances. The dispute boiled down...