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Home » Topics » Inside FHA/VA Lending » Government-Insured Originations

Government-Insured Originations
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FHFA’s Consideration of Expanded Mortgage Insurance Use on GSE Loans to Benefit Strongest; MI Firms Hopeful

October 6, 2011
The strongest mortgage insurers benefit the most if the Federal Housing Finance Agency follows through on recent comments that it is considering expanding use of MI as one of a number of potential risk sharing strategies for the government-sponsored enterprises, according to a recent report by Moody’s Investors Service. Moody’s noted that uncertainty about the role of private MI in a post-GSE environment “remains a key credit concern” for the industry. “If the FHFA opted for an increase in mortgage insurance as a way to share risk, even as the GSE mortgage universe shrinks, the action would likely to be a...
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Mortgage Market Braces for Modest Downshift in Conforming Loan Limits

September 30, 2011
Conforming loan limits will edge lower this weekend and likely have a bigger impact on the FHA market than on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac business, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis. Starting Oct. 1, the “emergency” conforming limits that were based on 125 percent of area median housing prices will be cranked down to “permanent” limits based on 115 percent of area median prices. That will lower the top high-cost market limit for single-family properties in the lower 48 states from $729,750 to $625,500. In the FHA market, there were some $2.39 billion of home loans exceeding $625,500 originated during...(Includes one data chart)
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FHA Can’t Stop Officers of Firms with Unresolved Indemnification Pacts from Reentering Market

September 29, 2011
Former executives of mortgage companies that failed to indemnify the Department of Housing and Urban Development on FHA losses are back in business – and the FHA can’t do a thing about it, according to HUD’s internal watchdog. In a new report, the HUD Office of the Inspector General said it found at least 12 corporate officers back in the business of originating FHA-insured mortgage loans after leaving their previous employers, all of which failed to honor their indemnification agreements with HUD. The seven lenders identified in the OIG audit had lost their FHA approval and are no longer in business. The OIG said...
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HARP 2.0 Will Not Have Precipitous Impact on MBS Market With Room to Grow, Analysts Say

September 23, 2011
Although the outlines of an expanded Home Affordable Refinance Program are far from clear, MBS analysts say the most likely changes designed to help more borrowers take advantage of record low mortgage rates will not have a disastrous impact on the MBS market. Observers note that there are two ways to expand the potential HARP population: remove the existing chronological restriction (loans made prior to June 2009) or lift the current loan-to-value restriction of 125 percent. The chronological restriction is relevant because a lot of borrowers who have used HARP already could benefit from refinancing again because...
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FHA Appeals to Congress on Behalf of Non-DE Banks

September 23, 2011
The FHA is urging Congress to restore the authority of community banks to close FHA loans in their own names without having to maintain an FHA lender approval to do so. While it took a regulation by the Department of Housing and Urban Development to take away small banks’ FHA correspondent status, federal law requires lenders to have FHA approval before they can close an FHA-insured loan. Only Congress can make the changes necessary for non-direct endorsement lenders to return to the business of originating and closing FHA loans in their name, according to a former HUD official. Assistant Secretary for Housing and...
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FHA Warns Lenders on Maintaining Accurate Records

September 23, 2011
FHA lenders that fail to report mortgage record changes for mortgage sales, transfers and termination of mortgage insurance will be referred to the Mortgage Review Board for disciplinary action, including civil fines, the agency warned. In Mortgagee Letter 2011-33, the FHA reminded lenders of their responsibility to reconcile their portfolios and ensure all accounts are properly identified. When the FHA’s records do not match lenders’ records, the latter are required to take corrective action. The Department of Housing and Urban Development will not pay any claims if the name and identification number of the holder or the...
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HUD Sees Good Points in GOP Draft FHA Bill But Says Some Provisions Still Need Rethinking

September 15, 2011
The Department of Housing and Urban Development said it would work with Congress to strengthen the FHA and Ginnie Mae in a way that protects taxpayers and facilitates the return of private capital despite its mixed views of a Republican draft bill to reform the two programs. Assistant Secretary for Housing and FHA Commissioner Carol Galante told members of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Insurance, Housing and Economic Opportunity last week that HUD is willing to work with lawmakers to increase access to credit and strengthen risk management and lender enforcement. But while the GOP draft bill contained elements similar to...
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Ginnie to Focus on Data Integrity, Process Improvement, Officials Say

September 9, 2011
Ginnie Mae in a conference call with its MBS issuers said it is going to be focusing its attention on new definitions related to data collection, and urged industry participants to provide feedback. Currently, the loan-to-value ratio definition stands as the ratio of the current unpaid principal balance amount to the appraised value, estimated value or purchase price of the property, and that value must include the upfront mortgage insurance premium. Under the new definition, however, the LTV ratio would be based on the original principal balance, said Ginnie officials. This includes any mortgage insurance premium to lower the sale price or...
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FHA Argues Against Raising Downpayment

September 9, 2011
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is urging Congress not to raise the minimum downpayment on FHA mortgage loans, saying that downpayments are not the best indicator of loan defaults. Testifying before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Insurance, Housing and Community Opportunity, Acting Assistant Secretary for Housing/FHA Commissioner Carol Galante warned that a legislative proposal to raise FHA’s minimum downpayment requirement to 5 percent would forestall recovery in the housing market and restrict access to credit for worthy borrowers. Galante said HUD has not made any determination as to ...
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HUD Weighs MBA Concerns About Forbearance Policy

September 9, 2011
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is pondering its next move after discussing with mortgage industry representatives their concerns about extending the current forbearance period for unemployed homeowners to a maximum of 12 months. HUD and FHA officials met recently with the Mortgage Bankers Association and several small mortgage servicers, which took issue with FHA’s recently revised forbearance policy. HUD declined to discuss the outcome of the meeting, saying it was more about understanding the industry’s concerns and discussing solutions. “No decision has been made as to whether we can or will make any changes, but we are looking into the issues they have raised,” said a HUD spokesman. On July 7, the FHA announced ...
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