Officials close to the matter said the MI policy briefing was cancelled due to Senate approval of a new permanent director to the agency, Mel Watt, a former North Carolina Congressman.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency this week announced it would direct Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to implement a three-pronged adjustment in guaranty fee the two government-sponsored enterprises charge lenders, including a 10 basis point g-fee hike beginning in March. The increases which would boost the average guaranty fee for new loans to over 60 bps are part of the FHFAs strategic plan for Fannie and Freddie to attract more private capital to the mortgage market and improve the relationship between g-fee and risk, according to FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco. As part of the plan, Fannie and Freddie will drop...
Purchase-mortgage originations continued to grow during the third quarter of 2013, with a significant share of the loans coming from loan correspondents, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. Lenders generated an estimated $218.0 billion in purchase mortgages during the third quarter, the highest three-month volume since the third quarter of 2007. That was up 17.2 percent from the second quarter and it brought year-to-date production to $583.0 billion, up 30.4 percent from the same period in 2012. Refinance production continued...[Includes four data charts]
The Department of Housing and Urban Development this week issued a final rule implementing a qualified-mortgage standard for FHA loans that is essentially unchanged from the agencys first proposal issued in late September. HUD determined that it had to tweak the calculation of points and fees that is in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus QM rule so that a large number about 19 percent of FHA forward mortgages will be classified as QMs. The final HUD rule establishes two categories of FHA qualified mortgages: safe-harbor QMs and rebuttable-presumption QMs. FHA forward mortgages will be considered...
A new report from FHFA confirms what small mortgage firms have long known: they can't catch much of break when it comes to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guaranty fees.
With the increase, the average g-fee for new loans will be in the range of 60 basis points. But there is some good news: FHFA said it would eliminate the up-front adverse market fee of 25 bps assessed on all but the four states whose foreclosure carrying costs are more than two standard deviations greater than the national average.