The overall size of the single-family mortgage servicing market isn’t changing much, but the dynamics of the business continued to shift in early 2015, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis and ranking. The Federal Reserve won’t provide an official reading on single-family mortgage debt outstanding as of the end of the first quarter for another month or so, but the data point to little or no growth in the market during early 2015. Mortgage originations were...[Includes two data charts]
Thanks to the recent uptick in interest rates, the value of mortgage servicing rights is on the rise again, which should pave the way for a busy spring and early summer for investment bankers who play in the space. “Prices are holding up pretty well,” said Mark Garland, president of MountainView Servicing Group, Denver. “Prepayment speeds increased in March, but April speeds have come down a bit.” According to Garland, buyers of receivables are paying...
Mortgage industry participants are encouraged by a bipartisan bill introduced in the House last week that would provide a temporary license for loan originators transitioning from a bank to a nonbank or between states. H.R. 2121, from Rep. Steve Stivers, R-OH, would change the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act to allow for a temporary transitional license and give loan originators 120 days to pass testing standards for nonbank LOs when transitioning from a bank or between states. “The SAFE Act inhibits...
Exams of nonbank servicers in 2014 were “significantly extended” due to consistent delays in receiving information, according to a recent report by the Multi-State Mortgage Committee. The committee handles supervision of nonbank servicers and lenders that operate in more than one state. Some servicers were even found to have tampered with their loan collection logs prior to providing them to examiners. Many of the problems were related to growth at nonbank servicers, according to Rick St. Onge, chairman of the MMC and examination chief of the division of consumer services at Washington State’s Department of Financial Institutions. “Over the year, large bulk loan transfers took place...
Compliance attorneys are urging mortgage lenders to reevaluate their lending policies and practices to ensure they are not biased against any protected groups even as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau warned about increased focus on fair lending and redlining in 2015. In their analysis of the CFPB’s recent report on fair lending, attorneys with the Washington, DC, law firm K&L Gates warned that the bureau will increase its scrutiny of mortgage lending amid growing concern about redlining, or refusal to lend to certain groups of borrowers or neighborhoods. Attorneys Melanie Brody and Anjali Garg said...
Mortgage servicing rights are playing an important role in how mortgage lenders finance their businesses, experts say, and a more balanced MSR market is expected this year despite persistent regulatory concerns and worries about high servicing costs. It was clear from a panel discussion at the Urban Institute this week that MSRs have grown in importance as a form of collateral and that it continues to divide lender/servicers and consumer advocates. Overall, six panelists agreed that certain reforms are needed if the market expects to thrive in the current environment. Stephen Fleming, senior vice president with Phoenix Capital, expects...
“Some companies were proactive in addressing these deficiencies in a timely fashion while others' control structures remained problematic,” the MMC said.