The Federal Housing Finance Agency is pondering a proposed principal-paydown plan to assist underwater homeowners holding Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac mortgages who have filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection.The plan based on a proposal pitched to the FHFA in November by Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-CA, and the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys would lower a borrowers mortgage payments under a five-year bankruptcy repayment schedule.An FHFA spokesman confirmed to Inside The GSEs this week that the NACBA proposal is under discussion by the Finance Agency but offered no additional details.
Fannie Mae will soon begin offering loan-level data for its single-family mortgage-backed securities to help investors, the GSE announced last week.Fannie said it will post the data files on an enhanced version of PoolTalk, the GSEs online disclosure application."The first release will provide at issuance loan-level data for newly issued single-family MBS, explained Fannie. Subsequent releases aim to enhance the at-issuance file by including additional data elements and to provide updated loan-level data on a monthly basis. The initial information will be available at the end of the first quarter, followed by monthly reports featuring adjustable-rate mortgage statistics, fixed-rate mortgages, interest-only loans and MBS data, Fannie said.
The Federal Home Loan Banks continue to show an investment preference for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage-backed securities during the third quarter of 2011, posting a modest increase from the previous quarter, according to a new analysis by Inside The GSEs based on data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency.Ginnie Mae securities, meanwhile, remained popular within the FHLBank system during the three-month period ending Sept. 30, 2011.GSE MBS accounted for 68.9 percent of combined FHLBank MBS portfolios, up 1.7 percent from the second quarter of 2011. The Finance Agencys data do not separately break out Fannie and Freddie volume or share.
Congress 11th hour decision at the end of last year to fund a temporary tax cut with a decade-long hike in the guarantee fees that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac charge to offset potential losses from bad loans will likely prolong the intended wind down of the GSEs, making it much harder to untangle the government from the mortgage market, say experts.Late last month, the Federal Housing Finance Agency directed Fannie and Freddie to increase g-fees on new mortgage products by 10 basis points starting April 1.The FHFAs directive to the GSEs implements the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011, passed by the House and Senate and signed by President Obama on Dec. 23. The legislation mandates that Fannie and Freddie raise their single-family guarantee fees by not less than 10 bps. The provision is scheduled to sunset in 2021.
Demands to repurchase poorly performing mortgages have resulted in a spike in the number of mortgage fraud-related Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) filed by banks in 2011, according to the Department of the Treasurys Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. In its 2011 annual report, FinCEN said increased buyback demands by investors have forced large mortgage lenders to conduct additional reviews of loans they originated, resulting in higher SARs filings last year. A review of SAR filings in the first quarter of 2011 found that the number of mortgage fraud reports rose to 25,485, up 31 percent from...
It started last week with an unsolicited white paper outlining a framework for thinking about certain issues and tradeoffs that policymakers might consider and blossomed into a coordinated assault by the Federal Reserve on the housing slump that wont go away. Having purchased over $1 trillion in mortgage securities in an effort to drive mortgage interest rates to all-time lows, the Fed appears to be using its speechmaking and paper-writing powers to try to get the rest of Washington moving on housing. In addition to the policy paper, Fed officials in the past week have made three speeches on...
A growing consensus is emerging among legal experts that someone will challenge in court President Obamas contentious recess appointment of Richard Cordray as the first director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. But a final outcome could take years and have no impact on the agencys actions while the case is unfolding. These appointments establish a dangerous precedent that threatens the confirmation process and undermines the system of checks and balances embedded in the Constitution, a number of House Republicans said in a letter they fired off to the president after he made his...
Fed Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin late last week stumped for creating an effective enforcement system to deal with shortcomings in the mortgage servicing industry that have come to light since the foreclosure crisis, as state officials pressed to expand a potential settlement over past abuses. The law is not a scarecrow where the birds of prey can seek refuge and perch to plan their next attack, Raskin said in a speech to a group of attorneys. The Fed governor said its important for servicers to have transparent, enforceable and sensible rules, adding that deferring to standard industry...
Refinance activity has represented more than half of home loan originations every year since 2006, and housing sales have been in a slump for the past five years. But individual mortgage lenders continue to carve out their own production strategies, including in some cases a devotion to the smaller purchase-mortgage sector. A new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of loans originated under the four major agency mortgage programs through the first nine months of 2011 shows that many of the top overall producers beefed up their market share by aggressively originating...(Includes one data chart)
The home-equity loan market declined further during the third quarter of 2011 as depository institutions reined in new production and their existing portfolios in most cases continued to wither. According to the Federal Reserve, the outstanding supply of home-equity loans both closed-end second mortgages and lines of credit fell to $887.5 billion as of the end of the third quarter. That was down 1.9 percent from the midway point in 2011 and off 21.5 percent from the HEL markets all-time high of $1.131 trillion reached back in 2007. Most home-equity loans are held in portfolio by..(Includes two data charts)