The four surviving private MIs that are still writing new business after the wreckage of the hous-ing market collapse last week agreed to pay a relatively modest $15.40 million to settle a longstanding dispute over their arrangements with captive reinsurance entities sponsored by lenders. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau alleged that Genworth Financial, United Guaranty, Radian Guaranty and Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp. violated the Real Estate Settlement Proce-dures Act by paying illegal kickbacks in the form of reinsurance premiums to get business from mortgage lenders. The payments made as supposed reinsurance premiums did not correspond to a proportionate transfer of insurance risk between the parties, said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. An Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of MI regulatory filings suggests...
The FHA may need to draw $943 million from the U.S. Treasury to reserve for further unexpected losses in the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, according to estimates in the Obama administrations fiscal 2014 budget proposal released this week. That is a bit of good news, despite Congress continuing concern about the FHA. Last year, an independent actuarial audit found a projected $16.3 billion shortfall in the MMIF as of the end of fiscal 2012. The audit also revealed that capital reserves for unexpected losses had fallen to negative 1.44 percent. Technically, the FHA has...
Theres a growing interest on the part of new investors in buying residential mortgage servicing rights, but observers say a major impediment for the market is a lack of confidence that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will acknowledge their ownership rights. Its a problem, said Tom Piercy, managing member of Interactive Mortgage Advisors, a servicing brokerage and advisory firm. Fannie and Freddie could learn a thing or two from Ginnie. The phrase new investors generally applies...
Consumer advocates are calling on the Obama administration to extend the Home Affordable Modification Program beyond the end of this year. While HAMP is far from meeting performance goals set by the administration, consumer advocates claim the program is favorable to proprietary loan modifications completed by servicers. Extending the HAMP program for several years or, at a minimum, for one year would greatly assist the housing market in general and neighborhoods most affected by high foreclosure rates in particular by helping more homeowners avoid foreclosure, 36 consumer groups, including the Center for Responsible Lending and the National Consumer Law Center, said in a recent letter to Jacob Lew, secretary of the Treasury Department. In January 2012, the Obama administration announced...
Two-thirds of the nearly 2,000 real estate agents that responded to a Campbell Communications and Inside Mortgage Finance survey want mortgage closings in 30 days or less.
The upcoming White House meeting on mortgage and housing issues may not address loan standards at all. Wells confirms plan to hire MSR 'project manager.'