Although mortgage bankers are enjoying their strongest profit margins in years, smaller nonbank shops continue to live in fear that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under the auspices of their regulator may soon unveil higher net-worth minimums. Officially, the net-worth minimum is set at $2.5 million for both government-sponsored enterprises, although Fannie Mae has imposed volume limits on some newly approved seller/servicers that have posted big increases in their sales to the GSE. Several industry executives and their outside advisors fully expect...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lenders will be allowed to offer certain additional incentives to encourage more borrowers, particularly those underwater, to refinance under the Home Affordable Refinance Program, according to guidance issued by the two government-sponsored enterprises. The GSEs announced last week that lenders will be allowed to offer a refinancing incentive to underwater borrowers so they may obtain a lower payment or move to a more stable product or a shorter term. As a result of lender inquiries, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has led...
Residential mortgages sourced through the correspondent channel and sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac increased by 26 percent in 2012 compared to the year before.
Mortgage bankers of all sizes continued to report strong earnings on their mortgage banking operations during the fourth quarter of 2012, but the salad days may be over.
Lenders One, the nations largest mortgage cooperative, is telling its members they need to get their Fannie Mae servicing approvals by the end of January to be eligible for discounts under an affinity deal it has with the GSE.
Most securities issuers and investors who attended this weeks American Securitization Forum ASF 2013 conference in Las Vegas were optimistic about the market. We are seeing demand that we have not seen in years, said Michael Binz, a managing director and business leader of North America ABS at Standard & Poors. Binz noted that the mood at the conference a year ago was starkly different, with fewer investors, diminishing supply and regulatory uncertainty. About 5,660 people registered to attend the conference this year, up from 5,000 last year, according to Tom Deutsch, executive director of the ASF. Deutsch noted...
The government-sponsored enterprises are working several different risk-transfer pilots and will soon issue the securities, according to officials at the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Non-agency MBS investors appear eager for the securities, though a number of regulatory concerns remain, including complications with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Patrick Lawler, chief economist at the FHFA, said a risk-sharing transaction will hopefully be issued in the not too distant future. Speaking at the American Securitization Forums ASF 2013 conference this week in Las Vegas, Lawler and other officials with the FHFA and GSEs said risk-sharing transactions are a high priority this year. The commitment is...