As federal regulators move to raise Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guaranty fees for the second time this year, some industry analysts question whether it will help shrink the role of government programs in the mortgage market or simply shift more business to the FHA. Thats a concern, said Meg Burns, senior associate director for housing and regulatory policy at the Federal Housing Finance Agency, during the American Mortgage Conference sponsored by the North Carolina Bankers Association last week. There are discussions all the time about what will FHA do when Fannie and Freddie are raising the g-fees, and whether FHA is actually in position to move the premium charges? Burns noted that the government-sponsored enterprises have...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is pushing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to devise contingency plans to address the potential meltdown of their business partners. The government-sponsored enterprises which are themselves still in business under the conservatorship of the FHFA had placed over 300 high-risk counterparties on watch lists as of the third quarter of 2011, according to a new report by the FHFA Office of Inspector General. The failures of four companies that do business with the GSEs have cost them some $6.1 billion since 2008, and they estimated they still have some $7.2 billion in exposure to high-risk counterparties. The OIG wants...
A trio of industry trade groups is asking a federal appeals court to uphold a nearly century-old law that grants federal-court jurisdiction to civil lawsuits against any U.S. corporation in which claims arise from international banking or banking transactions in a U.S. territory. Last week, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, New York Bankers Association and California Bankers Association filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals on behalf of Bank of America in its MBS lawsuit with American International Group. AIG filed...
The government-sponsored enterprises guaranty fees will increase by an average of 10 basis points in the coming months as the Federal Housing Finance Agency works to align agency pricing with the private market. An increase earlier this year brought interest rates on agency mortgages slightly closer to the rates on non-agency jumbo mortgages but industry analysts suggest that the conforming loan limits have a greater impact on the market share for non-agency originations. These increases will move [GSE] pricing ...
The eminent domain proposal from Mortgage Resolution Partners will either painlessly help thousands of non-agency borrowers or severely harm the non-agency market, according to industry participants. The newly expanded plan could even hinder efforts to revive the non-agency market going forward, according to MRPs opponents. Eminent domain is an important method for mitigating losses to investors, Graham Williams, CEO of MRP, said in a comment letter last week to the Federal Housing Finance Agency ...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency and the National Credit Union Administration recently filed separate lawsuits seeking repurchases of mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities. The FHFA lawsuit filed in August against DB Structured Products relates to ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2006-FM1, which Freddie Mac purchased in August 2006. The FHFA did not disclose the size of Freddies investment. And last week the NCUA filed a lawsuit against UBS Securities ... [Includes three briefs]
SunTrust Banks, Inc. is planning to shift $3 billion of loans, including an undetermined number of delinquent Ginnie Mae loans and other nonperforming loans, to its held-for-sale portfolio and record a $375 million provision for mortgage repurchases in the third quarter of 2012. The moves are expected to strengthen SunTrusts mortgage portfolio and put the company in a better position by improving its risk profile and balance sheet and stabilizing its capital ratios. The $3 billion transfer of loans to the held-for-sale (HFS) category will include ... (1 chart)
Legislation was introduced this week in the House of Representatives that would effectively neutralize a proposal for local governments to use eminent domain powers to seize underwater mortgage loans and perform controversial modifications. Rep. John Campbell, R-CA, has introduced The Defending American Taxpayers from Abusive Government Takings Act, which would prohibit the FHA and VA from originating, insuring or guaranteeing a mortgage loan in jurisdictions that have invoked the power of eminent domain to seize a loan within the last 10 years. Fannie Mae and Freddie would be subjected to ...
Mortgage industry officials are lauding the Federal Housing Finance Agencys long-awaited move toward clarity on repurchase demands made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac based on lenders representations and warranties. Part of a broader series of FHFA strategic initiatives called seller-servicer contract harmonization, the new rep and warranty framework on GSE mortgages sold or delivered on or after Jan. 1, 2013, aims to clarify lenders repurchase exposure and liability on future deliveries, according to FHFA Acting Director Edward Demarco. Lenders want more certainty about their risk exposure and the enterprises want...[Includes two data charts]
Uncertainty about risk in a rapidly changing regulatory environment and the still destabilized economics of the housing market continue to keep private capital from returning to the mortgage market, according to industry officials at this weeks American Mortgage Conference sponsored by the North Carolina Bankers Association. Everybodys very concerned about the role of the government, that the government is supporting too much of the marketplace today, said Meg Burns, senior associate director for housing and regulatory policy for the Federal Housing Finance Agency. But its really hard to envision how people can pull back from that government support when we dont actually understand not only who holds the credit risk but what the requirements are for retaining that risk in terms of capital. All of the Dodd-Frank Act regulations that are still in play are...