For the past two years, Bank of America has been the poster child of legacy servicing sales, but it may soon have some company. According to industry advisors who specialize in the mortgage servicing rights market, JPMorgan Chase and a few other large banks with seasoned portfolios are developing deal teams to explore their options. Chases name has surfaced from time to time as a select seller of legacy product. But it also has been a selective buyer of servicing, including the purchase last fall of $70 billion in rights from MetLife, which was closing out its interest in the mortgage business. A spokeswoman for Chase declined...
Its no secret that speculators wide and far are betting the common and preferred shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could rise significantly as their profits continue to stay robust. But according to James Lockhart, who once headed the Federal Housing Finance Agency, these speculators are likely throwing their money away. Speaking at a recent housing forum sponsored by the Bipartisan Policy Center, he noted that the Treasury Department owns the senior preferred of the GSEs and the senior stock sits above the junior shares. Lockhart said the government preferred will never be paid back, which means the junior holders are out of luck. Lockhart, who now serves as vice chairman of WL Ross & Co., said he does not own any stock in the two nor does he plan on buying any.
With just a week to go, the petition drive by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac common shareholders asking the White House to restore fairness to the value of their lost investment looks like it will fall woefully short of the required number of signatures. Created on June 1, the petition posted on the White House website calls for Congress, the Treasury Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency to enact a method to provide fairness and protection to common shareholders of the two GSEs and enable shareholders to have participation in the recovery value of their stock.
Banks and thrifts continued to push a high volume of home mortgages into the secondary market during the first three months of 2013, but the pace was slowing, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of call report data. The industry reported $395.8 billion in single-family mortgage sales during the first quarter, down 5.1 percent from the previous period. It was a stronger sales volume than during the first quarter of 2012, however, and ranked as the fourth largest ... [Includes one data chart]
In late May, in the time span of about 10 days, Bexil American Mortgage of San Diego saw its founder and national sales manager depart not a good sign for a relatively young company that has been originating loans for less than two years. About a week after the news broke about the two men, the parent company reported a $7.1 million loss for the year. John Robbins, the founder and CEO of Bexil American Mortgage, told Inside Mortgage Trends that, When you have a major shareholder disagree with ...
Things are looking up in the private mortgage insurance business as the market becomes more stable and the industry could turn a profit in the near future, according to a new analysis by Standard & Poors. Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp.s and Radian Guaranty Inc.s debt and equity increases in the first quarter, as well as the restructuring implemented by Genworth Mortgage Insurance Corp., have raised analysts hope and mitigated concerns about capital and the potential for any ...
Bank and thrift holdings of mortgages were higher in the first quarter of 2013 compared to a year ago, driven by originations of nonconforming loans. While two banks have started to securitize jumbo mortgages, the vast majority of jumbo originations remain in portfolio. Bank holdings of first-lien mortgages hit $1.78 trillion at the end of the first quarter of 2013, up 2.2 percent from the first quarter of 2012, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets ... [Includes one data chart]
The FHA and the Department of Justice have ramped up enforcement actions against more than a dozen mortgage lenders in recent weeks for alleged agency rule violations. At least two of the lenders have received notices from the DOJ that they are in violation of the False Claims Act. According to the Collingwood Group, a Washington-based business advisory firm, the agencies have sent notices of enforcement or administrative actions to as many as 15 FHA direct endorsement (DE) lenders, some of whom could lose their DE status if found to have engaged in improper lending practices that resulted in huge losses for the FHA. The latest enforcement actions have ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs is planning to raise the residual income limit requirement for home loan applicants by 15 percent a move that could shut out many veterans who have limited income. The proposal is one of several measures under consideration for the VAs Home Loan Program, said Carol Barnard, a loan production officer in the VA Regional Loan Center in Denver, during a recent webinar hosted by the Collingwood Group, a Washington-based advisory firm. Barnard is also a senior consultant with Collingwood. This change means that, for a family of four in the VAs Northeast region, the required income residual could jump to ... [1 chart]
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-CA, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, is planning to quiz top FHA officials about an apparently deliberate effort by the agency to withhold important information from Congress regarding the true financial health of the FHA insurance fund. In a recent letter to FHA Commissioner Carol Galante, Issa said that the stress test employed by Integrated Financial Engineering in its FY 2012 actuarial review of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund yielded a more troubling result than what HUD reported to Congress in November last year. In the actuarial review, IFE reported that ...