Although the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has finalized its servicing regulations, it likely will take a close look at the transfer of mortgage servicing rights a business that has been booming of late, with most of the activity tied to legacy product.
Trade groups that represent loan brokers are still analyzing the details of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus 500-plus page loan originator compensation rule, but at first glance officials are lukewarm on what they see.
Redwood Trust is set to issue its second non-agency jumbo MBS of the year, a $666.13 million security, according to a presale report released today by Kroll Bond Rating Agency. The MBS will largely consist of 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, with 51.4 percent of the originations from First Republic Bank. Plus other mortgage news briefs.
The White House has placed former federal housing commissioner Nic Retsinas on its list of possible candidates to head the Federal Housing Finance Agency, industry officials familiar with the matter told Inside Mortgage Finance.
Remember the 4.4 million delinquent mortgagors who were done wrong by the nations mega-servicers and lost their homes to foreclosure? Remember how the Comptroller of the Currency launched a program in 2011 to let these mortgagors appeal? Well, apparently...
Forget (for now) the story about Bank of America scuttling the sale of $14 billion of high-touch mortgage servicing rights. Inside Mortgage Finance is hearing that over the past several weeks the megabank was looking to unload upwards of $300 billion in MSRs, or at least talking about it to select buyers. BofA, as we pointed out, doesnt talk about its servicing sales, though it does acknowledge them (sometimes) in its earnings calls with analysts.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is expected to unveil its long-anticipated 'Qualified Mortgage rule this evening to certain parties with an official release coming Thursday morning, industry officials told Inside Mortgage Finance.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau likely will not publish a final rule on the integrated and simplified consumer disclosures under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act until sometime in September, according to the agencys newly released semiannual regulatory agenda.
Although the ink is barely dry on the new Qualified Mortgage rule, mortgage bankers are already voicing concerns about how it will hurt compensation and affect the jumbo market.