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.
Independent mortgage companies could lose access to warehouse funding or at least face significantly higher costs if Basel III capital requirements are implemented as proposed, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The capital requirements proposed by federal regulators would change the definition of financial collateral included in proposed standardized approach rules by excluding conforming residential mortgages. This change would significantly reduce the amount of funding available to non-depository mortgage bankers since the warehouse lines ...
Valuations of mortgage servicing rights could take a severe beating if scores of banks dump MSRs to avoid costly new capital requirements under rules to implement controversial international guidelines that have been proposed by U.S. banking regulators. Proposals to implement the Basel III capital rules for U.S. banks would be a game-changer for the mortgage industry, said David Motley, president of Colonial National Mortgage, during a panel session at the Mortgage Bankers Association annual convention last week. As proposed, the Basel III rules would restrict our ability to grow and may cause us to shrink, he said. The complex set of Basel III proposals would affect...
Officials at National Mortgage Insurance say a state-of-the-art business platform and a somewhat old-school approach to writing private MI will help the company establish a beachhead in an industry thats seen three long-time players washed out to sea by the housing market collapse. National MI hopes to have its Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac approvals within the next few months, and its made significant headway in lining up state approvals, officials say. In June, the new private MI was approved for an accelerated licensing process that allows it to seek multiple state licenses on a streamlined basis. The private MI industry has seen...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could repay the U.S. Treasury faster than previously forecast, according to updated projections of potential draws for the two government-sponsored enterprises issued last week by the GSEs conservator. According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Fannie and Freddie are expected to draw between $191 billion and $209 billion from Treasury by the end of 2015. This years reduced and more stable projection by the FHFA is lower than the previous estimate made only a year ago, which offered a range of between $220 billion and $311 billion for total support through the end of 2014. The key drivers of those results include...
The Department of Justices recent civil lawsuit against Bank of America/Countrywide over allegedly defective loans sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is a clear sign of the governments more aggressive use of the False Claims Act and the 1989 thrift bailout law to target not only participants in government loan programs but any lender who sold loans to the government-sponsored enterprises, according to industry lawyers. Filed last week by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, the suit is another example of the governments increasingly aggressive effort to recoup taxpayer losses from the financial meltdown and to remind potential violators of the significant whistleblower provisions in the FCA and the Financial, Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), noted the Washington, DC, law firm BuckleySandler. The DOJ is following...
Smaller mortgage lending institutions remain apprehensive about their legal liability when it comes to originating qualified mortgages under the CFPBs pending QM/ability-to-repay rule, and hope theyll get a full safe harbor. Recent talk has mounted that the bureau is considering a two-tier approach to its QM rule: a safe harbor for mortgages that will be defined as prime, and the lesser rebuttable presumption for subprime or nonprime. Elizabeth Eurgubian, vice president and regulatory counsel for the...
Last week, the Department of Justice raised eyebrows in a $1 billion legal action against Bank of America as successor to Countrywide Financial by filing the first civil fraud suit alleging violations of the False Claims Act and the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act in the sale of mortgages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The federal government asserts that since the Treasury Department has had to bail out Fannie and Freddie, approximately $1 billion in losses suffered by the companies...
The CFPB has released its proposed credit card ability-to-pay rule, an effort by which the bureau intends to make it easier for spouses or partners who do not work outside of the home to qualify for credit cards. The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act (CARD Act), enacted in 2009, requires that card issuers evaluate a consumers ability to make the necessary payments before opening a new credit card account. Under current CARD Act regulations issued by the Federal Reserve, a card issuer...
Representatives of the mortgage lending and financial services industries jointly told federal regulators they strongly support efforts to prevent property flipping, but they are also concerned that the regulators proposed rule to implement requirements for property appraisals in connection with higher-risk mortgage loans might be far too complicated. [T]he main complexity of the proposed rule relates to the fact that Congress defined higher-risk mortgages based on the spread of the annual percentage rate (APR) over...