The National Association of Federal Credit Unions is apprehensive about the unintended consequences of the Federal Housing Finance Agencys decision to limit Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac future mortgage purchases to qualified mortgages as defined by the final rule issued earlier this year by the CFPB. Earlier this month, the FHFA directed the two government-sponsored enterprises to limit their future mortgage acquisitions to loans that meet the requirements for a qualified mortgage, including those that meet the special or...
Legislation Would Revise QM Points-and-Fees Calculation Sens. Joe Manchin, D-WV, and Mike Johanns, R-NE, introduced legislation last week that would amend the way points and fees are calculated to determine if a loan meets the qualified mortgage definition under the CFPBs ability-to-repay rule, issued earlier this year. Under the rule, a QM cannot have points and fees exceeding three percent of the loan amount. S. 949 is a companion to H.R. 1077, the Consumer Mortgage Choice Act, which has steadily picked up support since...
While non-agency MBS participants largely oppose a credit rating assignment system proposed by Sen. Al Franken, D-MN, some of the main players in the market endorse a model based on ratings rotation. At a roundtable hosted by the Securities and Exchange Commission this week, Martin Hughes, CEO of Redwood Trust, said issuer-paid rating conflicts could be reduced by requiring non-agency MBS issuers to alternate rating services so that one firm didnt rate more than two consecutive deals from the issuer. He noted that Redwood has established a self-imposed rotation between Moodys Investors Service and Standard & Poors on its non-agency MBS issuance. The requirement to frequently alternate among the nationally recognized...
The Federal Reserves MBS purchase party isnt over yet but it looks like the nations central bank is getting nearer to the last call. Late last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that officials at the nations central bank have developed a strategy for dialing back their unprecedented level of support of the housing market. The plan involves reducing the amount of bonds the Fed buys in careful and potentially halting steps, the WSJ said, with the purchases varying on the read officials have of the job market and of inflation. And although the timing of the Feds wind-down is...
Exactly one year after it filed for bankruptcy, Residential Capital announced this week it has entered into a comprehensive plan support agreement with its parent, Ally Financial, and ResCaps creditors, who say they are owed some $25 billion in mortgage liabilities. The plan gets Ally out from under the threat of billions of dollars in lawsuits by settling all existing and potential claims between Ally and ResCap and all potential claims held by third parties related to ResCap that could be brought against Ally and subsidiaries that are not Chapter 11 debtors. The settlement, which is subject to approval by a federal bankruptcy court in Manhattan, fully releases...
Hedge funds are paying as much as 20 cents on the dollar for preferred stock in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Meanwhile, the GSE buyback war is not over yet.
SunTrust Mortgage is in settlement discussions with the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Justice over alleged violation of the False Claims Act in connection with the banks origination of FHA loans. The Atlanta-based mortgage lender disclosed the ongoing talks in a recent regulatory filing after being notified by the agencies of the results of their preliminary investigation during the first quarter of 2013. Even with the ongoing settlement talks, SunTrust continued to deny any wrongdoing, making clear its disagreement with the governments analysis and methodology. It gave no further ...
Changes to the FHAs mortgage insurance premium cancellation policy, which take effect on June 3, could ultimately cause some FHA loans closed after the effective date to become a higher-priced mortgage loan that no investor would want to purchase, lenders warned. Eliminating the MIP cancellation and requiring insurance to be kept for the life of the mortgage loan will raise the annual percentage rate 150 basis points above the average prime offer rate (APOR) index. This will trigger a higher-priced mortgage loan (HPML) designation for some ...