The Federal Housing Finance Agency is exploring the possibilities of a streamlined lender-placed or force-placed insurance policy between Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. FHFA is keenly interested in costs associated with force-placed insurance and related impacts to borrowers, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the taxpayer, a Finance Agency spokesman told Inside The GSEs. We are looking at policy related to force-placed insurance to see where there might be opportunities to reduce costs. Some existing force-placed policies are controversial because they are sold by insurance companies owned by lenders or by insurers with which the lenders have a financial relationship.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have adopted a common language to improve and help ease lenders delivery of loans and appraisals to the government-sponsored enterprises. The GSEs full adoption of the Uniform Loan Delivery Dataset (ULDD) on July 23 establishes a common usage and standardizes most of the data required at the time of loan delivery, minimizing differences wherever possible. Freddie Mac hailed the new system as a critical milestone of the Uniform Mortgage Data Program, a joint GSE initiative to provide...
Lenders experiences with repurchase requests from the government-sponsored enterprises appear to have diverged in recent months, with big banks emerging fairly confident in their dealings with the GSEs. Other lenders, meanwhile, appear to have started to have significant interactions with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on the issue only recently. Wells Fargo had a decrease in GSE repurchase requests in the second quarter of 2012 compared with the previous quarter but the lender increased its repurchase reserves by $239 million during that time due to an increase in expected demands from the GSEs regarding 2006 to 2008 vintages. We continue to see...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has hired PricewaterhouseCoopers to develop a plan for taking Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks into receivership. The FHFA reports it has entered into a contract with PricewaterhouseCoopers to create a blueprint for liquidating Fannie, Freddie or any of 12 Federal Home Loan Banks, if ever necessary. But it is all part of routine planning activity under the agencys mission, said a spokesperson. The FHFA has engaged in...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has not effectively employed its monitoring and supervision of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac risk related to real estate owned properties, according to the FHFAs Office of Inspector General. The FHFA will benefit from a more comprehensive REO risk assessment and from using the assessment to enhance its planning and supervisory activities, said the OIG. A more comprehensive assessment of the risks associated with [Fannies and Freddies] shadow REO inventory can help the FHFA provide for the enterprises safety and soundness and help protect the taxpayers from undue losses by ensuring the agency focuses on its supervision where it can best mitigate risks. From 2007 through 2011, the GSEs combined REO inventory rose...
The mortgage industry is facing mounting legal challenges to force-placed insurance practices as evidenced by two class-action lawsuits filed or advanced last week while state and federal policymakers look for ways to reduce homeowner costs on lender-placed insurance. A Florida homeowner filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court in Fort Lauderdale against Wells Fargo Bank, accusing the lender of engaging in a pattern of unlawful and unconscionable profiteering and self-dealing by charging inflated force-placed insurance premiums to homeowners who had allowed their coverage to lapse. Ira Fladell, a lawyer representing himself, claims the bank breached its contract with him and acted in bad faith and that the lender bought...
Record low interest rates and loosened underwriting guidelines have induced strong refinance activity during the first half of 2012. Industry participants agree that the refi boom will continue through the third quarter of 2012, but then predictions get hazy. During Wells Fargos earnings presentation for the second quarter last week, Timothy Sloan, a senior executive vice president and CFO at the bank, downplayed suggestions that refi activity has declined this month compared with June. The business is good and were optimistic about it, he said. Very optimistic, added...
Fannie Mae executives and staffers were at the front of the line of Countrywide Home Loans sophisticated influence peddling operation that showered not just GSE employees but Washington insiders with deeply discounted mortgage loans in order to curry favor, according to a newly released House committee report. The 136-page report completes a three-year investigation by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee of Countrywides so-called Friends of Angelo program, named after CEO Angelo Mozillo, which ran for a dozen years until the lender was acquired by Bank of America in 2008.
Mortgages modified by Fannie Mae performed slightly better than Freddie Mac loans in the short term although the performance gap between the two GSEs remained relatively narrow one year after modification, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.The OCC Mortgage Metrics Report for the First Quarter of 2012 noted that Fannie loans had an 11.4 percent re-default rate three months after modification, while Freddie mods saw a 12.3 percent rate. At the six-month mark, Fannie stood at 18.3 percent compared to Freddies 18.6 percent.
The McGraw-Hill Companies announced it has tapped Freddie Macs former chief executive as the newest member of its board of directors. Charles Haldeman became the companys 13th director last week after the company added a new seat to the board table. The rating agency Standard and Poors is part of the McGraw-Hill companies.