The MBS market widely embraced the Federal Reserves decision to increase its holdings of agency MBS by $40 billion per month until job growth improves significantly, but some observers are questioning the long-term costs and effectiveness of the strategy. Mortgage Bankers Association Chief Economist Jay Brinkman said that the Fed plan is a way to inject more money into the economy, while noting that the purchase of the no-risk, lower-yielding assets is designed to force investors to expand their risk appetite. The idea is that if the Fed steps in and buys up some of these safe-haven assets, that is going to force people to go out and invest more and take on more risk, he said during an MBA conference in Washington, DC, this week. This approach is actually turning...
Private capital remains on the sidelines of the mortgage finance industry, unwilling to gamble on future government policy or the nascent recovery in housing markets, industry experts say. Banks and their examiners are pointing fingers at one another over who is responsible for the current credit crunch because regulations are not all in place, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moodys Analytics. During a symposium in Washington, DC, this week, Zandi said providers of private capital are also concerned about a housing market that has performed much better in the last six months but still raises doubts about sustaining house price gains. I dont think [it can be sustainable] until we nail down...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency late this week followed through on its promise to develop a post Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac secondary mortgage market infrastructure by releasing for public comment its proposed new securitization platform that could be used by either GSE, as well as by private issuers. The FHFAs white paper proposed a framework for both a common securitization platform and a model pooling and servicing agreement. Public input on the proposal is due to the Finance Agency by Dec. 3.
Freddie Mac last week cut some slack in the form of a lifeline to MGIC Investment Corp. which will allow the mortgage insurer to write additional policies even as the MI and the GSE work through a simmering dispute over pool insurance. On Sept. 28, MGIC announced that Freddie has reduced the amount of capital contribution MGIC Investment must pay its principal subsidiary MGIC to $100 million from $200 million. The GSE also extended the deadline for this contribution from Sept. 30 to Dec. 1.
The Federal Reserves decision to keep interest rates low until the U.S. economy creates a significant increase in employment will help banks continue to enjoy solid earnings from their mortgage banking activities, according to analysts at Credit Suisse. The Fed is increasing its already huge portfolio of agency mortgage-backed securities by $40 billion a month. Along with the $25 billion a month the central bank has been buying to replace principal paydown, the Feds total MBS acquisitions ...
The nature of mortgage fraud evolved over the past few years, and unless mortgage companies adapt to keep pace, they increasingly risk exposing themselves to fraud-driven losses, according to the auditing firm of PriceWaterhouseCoopers. In the past, mortgage fraud largely occurred in the loan origination process. But with the sharp increase in mortgage defaults, fraudsters have evolved their schemes to target default servicing, PWC said in a new white paper. Now, more fraud is occurring among loan ...
The unrelenting pressure to comply with industry regulations and standards is the greatest factor impacting eMortgage and paperless mortgage initiatives, according to a survey by Xerox Mortgage Services. Xeroxs eighth annual Path to Paperless survey found that an ample 86 percent of industry respondents looked to a technological solution to avoid being caught on the wrong side of regulatory enforcement. Mortgage laws, regulations and standards continue to evolve in a direction toward ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been discreetly broadening its influence on statutory and regulatory interpretations through its largely unannounced filing of amicus curiae briefs in a handful of important cases brought by private litigants, according to an analysis of the CFPBs legal activity by two leading industry attorneys.Since December 2011, the bureau has filed six such friend-of-the-court briefs in federal appellate cases, always assuming the role of steadfast consumer advocate, according to a review of the briefs by Arthur Axelson and Jeffrey Jamison, senior counsel and associate, respectively, with the Dykema law firm. In fact, in several of its amicus curiae briefs, the CFPB has even sought to reverse a general consensus among the federal appellate courts, the pair noted. In Birster v. American Home Mortgage Services, Inc., filed Dec. 21, 2011, in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, the question of interest to the bureau was whether activity surrounding foreclosure is immune from the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The CFPB argued that it is not. In Marx v. General Revenue Corp., filed Jan. 26, 2012, in the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, there were...
If a mortgage lending industry that remains anxious about regulatory overkill wants to capture the attention of regulators and policymakers and convince them to lighten up, it will make more of an inroad talking about how those regulations will hurt consumers as opposed to lamenting the impact on companies themselves, a top industry official said this week. Among the regulatory rulemakings keeping mortgage industry representatives up at night are the Basel III proposal, the pending qualified mortgage rule, the qualified residential mortgage rule, the repurchase rule and the loan originator compensation rule, according to Mortgage Bankers Association President and CEO David Stevens. However, The real thing that I think all of us have to be vocal and adamant about as we talk about these rulemakings, is...
The CFPB said it wants to make it more expensive for lenders to break the law than to obey it. That message was sent loud and clear last week when the bureau and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced a $200 million joint enforcement action against Discover Bank over some of the companys credit card marketing practices.Discover will also have to pay $14 million in a civil money penalty to be split 50/50 by the CFPB and the Department of the Treasury. The $200 million is to be divided among more than 3.5 million...