The Federal Housing Finance Agency should immediately withdraw its proposal to impose additional, upfront guaranty fees on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages in states that have unusually slow foreclosure timelines because it unfairly penalizes homeowners with higher costs for forces beyond their control, according to Connecticuts congressional delegation. The Nutmeg States five congressmen and two senators dispatched a letter to the Finance Agency this week urging the FHFA to scrap its proposal issued in September targeting five states Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey and New York for an additional, one-shot guaranty fee of between 15 and 30 basis points in 2013.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency so far continues to bat 1.000 in court in its multiple lawsuits against non-agency mortgage-backed securities issuers for allegedly misrepresenting deals that were sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This week, Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Manhattan rejected motions to dismiss by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Deutsche Bank, in the defendants latest effort to make the FHFAs massive legal action go away. In separate motions, Judge Cote rejected Deutsches and Goldmans claims that the FHFAs allegations are inadequate to support the agencys claims of fraud.
A task force of state insurance regulators has agreed to require insurers to set aside additional capital to cover risks tied to residential and commercial MBS in an effort to buffer the industry from losses in the event of a severe downturn. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners Valuation of Securities Task Force voted 11-2 to support a proposed increase in the NAICs capital requirements for U.S. life insurers. The change in capital requirements is driven by year-end NAIC modeling assumptions related to RMBS and CMBS. The change raises...
There is substantial risk that the FHA may end up with a negative net worth, which would require congressional appropriations for the mortgage insurance fund and passage of legislation reforming the FHA, said a former top official at the Department of Housing and Urban Development. In remarks this week at the Urban Institute, John Weicher, former assistant secretary for housing and FHA commissioner in 2001-2005, said it is very unlikely in this weak economic recovery to see ...
Hurricane Sandy homeowners with FHA and VA mortgages have been given temporary relief, including a 90-day suspension on foreclosures and as much as 100 percent financing for victims who have lost their homes. The Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Veterans Affairs have announced federal disaster assistance to hard-hit areas in Connecticut, New York and New Jersey. Both agencies announced a three-month freeze on foreclosures in the affected areas as well as forbearance on foreclosures of FHA and VA home loans. The VA advised its lenders that careful counseling should ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has found significant non-compliance during its examinations of mortgage lenders, compelling them to take a variety of steps deemed necessary to be brought into compliance, according to the CFPBs first report on its examination findings. Violations under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act included failures to make proper and complete disclosures to consumers of costs and other terms because of errors in the good faith estimate and HUD-1 settlement statement, the CFPB stated. Truth in Lending Act violations included...
With third-quarter earnings results right around the corner for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Finance Agency last week released a revised range of projected draw-downs the GSEs could take from the U.S. Treasury over the next three years. Fannies and Freddies total taxpayer cash infusion could top as much as $209 billion by the end of 2015 a savings of more than $100 billion from similar projections one year ago, according to the Finance Agency.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced this week they will partner to create a national mortgage database to provide detailed information about mortgage loans. The database will primarily be used to support the agencies policymaking and research efforts and to help regulators better understand emerging mortgage and housing market trends, said the FHFA and CFPB.
A nonsupervised Arizona FHA lender whose high default and claims rate triggered a supervisory audit earlier found itself in a deeper mess for improper underwriting on a number of FHA streamline refinanced loans that resulted in losses to the FHA insurance fund. The Department of Housing and Urban Developments Inspector General found that Allen Mortgage of Centennial Park, AZ, violated HUDs regulations , procedures, and instructions in the underwriting of FHA-insured loans. Specifically, of the 73 streamlined refinance mortgage loans reviewed by the IG, 23 were ...
VA Home Loan Program Celebrates 20-Millionth Loan Beneficiary. The Department of Veterans Affairs this week commemorated the 20-millionth recipient of a VA loan under the agencys Home Loan Guaranty Program. Agency officials held a ceremony at the Woodbridge, VA, home of the loans recipient, Mrs. Elizabeth Carpenter, whose husband, Capt. Matthew Carpenter, passed away in 2010. Since 1944 as part of the original GI Bill of Rights, the VA has been providing guarantees to 30-year mortgage loans with low interest rates and has guaranteed ...