Advocates for GSE reform say recent actions by the Treasury and the Federal Housing Finance Agency have made it more important than ever for policymakers to start moving Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac away from government support or risk seeing the two enterprises enveloped forever within the federal budget. Two former Bush administration Treasury officials made their case this week in a Washington Post opinion piece, citing the governments recent sale of stock in insurance giant American International Group to recoup the bailout billions Uncle Sam floated the company during the financial crisis as an admittedly inexact blueprint for Congress and the White House to follow to get the feds out of Fannie and Freddie.
More than a year after the Federal Housing Finance Agency first announced its proposal to sell investors Fannie Mae foreclosed properties in bulk for rentals and two months into its second sale with less than 800 properties moved, market watchers are expressing skepticism about whether the program will ever advance beyond the pilot stage. Earlier this month, the FHFA announced that New York-based Cogsville Group LLC was the winning bidder of 94 Fannie-owned properties. The firm paid $2.1 million for a share in a joint venture with the GSE resulting in a transactional value to Fannie of $11.8 million or 86.2 percent of the properties estimated value.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has proposed a rule to acquire explicit discretionary authority to require Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or any of the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks to undergo a stress test every year, no matter how much the GSEs have in consolidated assets. The proposed rule, published in the Oct. 5 Federal Register, would implement a part of the Dodd-Frank Act, which requires certain financial companies with consolidated assets of more than $10 billion, and which are regulated by a primary federal financial regulatory agency, to conduct an annual stress test.
GSE observers say that the Federal Housing Finance Agencys Office of Inspector General appears to be blurring the line between constructive critic and backseat driver following the OIGs most recent report which takes the agency to task for deficient oversight of Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs business decisions. In a report issued last week, the OIG determined that the FHFA has not established criteria or policies to ensure a rigorous review of GSE business decisions.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency this week announced a second winning bidder of its pilot program to move GSE real estate-owned properties from money-losing foreclosures to money-making rentals and eventually off the books entirely. The FHFA announced that New York-based Cogsville Group LLC was the winning bidder of 94 Fannie Mae-owned properties as part of the FHFAs REO pilot initiative. The firm paid $2.1 million for a share in a joint venture with Fannie, resulting in an estimated transaction value to the GSE of $11.8 million or 86.2 percent of the properties estimated value, according to the transaction summary.
It looks like the controversial risk-retention proposal wont be issued by federal regulators until sometime next year, as major components of the Dodd-Frank Act remain in limbo. I think much of the Dodd-Frank regulatory process is on hold until after the elections, and were unlikely to see decisions on most major issues until sometime in 2013, said Steven Abrahams, an analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities. The only process that seems to be rolling is the one run by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to define mortgage origination and servicing standards. As he sees it, the first half of next year will probably see...
New temporary guidelines for approving FHA financing for condominium projects should boost sales of condo units across the country and improve current housing market conditions, according to industry stakeholders. The Department of Housing and Urban Development announced the guideline changes on Sept. 13 after extensive consultations with industry participants. Effective for all condo project approvals and recertifications, the revised guidelines will apply until Aug. 31, 2014, unless extended by the FHA. Stakeholders are confident that the changes, though temporary, will be ...
Fixed-rate mortgages comprised most of Augusts FHA production, which totaled $22.1 billion, up 13.2 percent from July and 37.9 percent from a year ago, according to an Inside FHA Lending analysis of FHA data. FRMs accounted for 98.9 percent of new loans with FHA insurance in August. In-house originations made up 79.6 percent of new endorsements while purchase loans accounted for 56.1 percent of FHA originations during the month. Wells Fargo is the only top FHA lender to exceed the billion-dollar mark. In fact, the bank reported $2.2 billion in new FHA originations, 76.0 percent of which were produced in-house. The purchase mortgage share of Wells total FHA originations was ... [2 charts]
The Federal Housing Finance Agencys Office of Inspector General reported last week that Freddie Mac will increase its repurchase requests to between $0.8 billion and $1.2 billion this year and between $2.2 billion and $3.4 billion overall following its review of the GSEs settlement agreement with Bank of America in January 2011. A year ago the OIG took the FHFA to task for approving what the IG considered a lowball $1.35 billion agreement from BofA to Freddie to settle current and future repurchase claims.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency incorrectly piggybacked and failed to independently verify Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs mandated assurances or covenants that the GSEs were in compliance with the Treasury Departments terms in exchange for taxpayer support during conservatorship, according to a recent report by the FHFAs official watchdog. The FHFAs Office of Inspector General noted a gap in the Finance Agencys compliance with the terms of the preferred stock purchase agreement with the Treasury.Until June 2012, FHFA did not provide Treasury with a certification that the enterprises filings and related documents were free of materially false or misleading statements, said the OIG report, issued in August.