Originations of purchase mortgages were strong in the second quarter of 2015 and through the start of summer, according to industry participants. In recent months, demand for home purchases has been driven by current homeowners and first-time homebuyers, two groups that are particularly reliant on mortgage financing. “The purchase market has been stronger than people expected in the second quarter,” said Paul Miller, a managing director at FBR Capital Markets. Kevin Hester, chief lending officer at Home BancShares, said...
Activity in the non-agency MBS market involving nonperforming loans and re-performing loans is expected to continue to flourish through at least the end of this year, according to industry analysts. Vintage mortgages in scratch-and-dent deals accounted for 42.0 percent of the non-agency MBS issued in the first half of 2015, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance MBS Database. The $15.60 billion in scratch-and-dent volume included a mix of nonperforming loans and re-performing loans. Issuance of non-agency MBS backed by NPLs and RPLs through two quarters this year equaled...
Meanwhile, the U.S. House of Representatives approved a modified bill that would require federal banking regulators to study the role of depository institutions in the MSR market.
The big gains in business volume at the FHA and the Veterans Administration reflect the two agencies’ differing missions, and officials at both organizations are looking at ways to improve risk management practices. Ed Golding, principal deputy assistant secretary at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, said the FHA dominates the market for high loan-to-value lending to borrowers with credit scores below 680. While some view 680 as borderline subprime, it’s the median credit score for the country, he noted during remarks at a symposium sponsored this week by the Urban Institute. “Risk management is...
Three leading Democrats in Congress are pushing the Department of Housing and Urban Development to re-issue a request for comments regarding potential changes to the HUD-92900-A form. HUD proposed the changes in mid-May to little fanfare, though the members of Congress warn that the proposal will create a loophole giving “Wall Street banks a free pass at taxpayers’ expense.” The May proposal from HUD involves certifications on the HUD/VA Addendum to Uniform Residential Loan Application form. HUD proposed removing a loan-level requirement that FHA and Department of Veteran Affairs lenders certify that they haven’t been convicted of a violation of federal or state antitrust statutes within the past three years. In a letter sent to HUD this week, Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-OH, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, and Rep. Maxine Waters, D-CA, said...