Legislative sources say the partial government shutdown did not significantly impede the Senate Banking Committees work toward finding a solution to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
The Treasury Departments strategic plan includes working to reform the government-sponsored enterprises and establishing a new position for a chief risk officer, according to a memo by Mary Miller, the Treasurys undersecretary for domestic finance. The memo was dated Sept. 16 and uncovered this week by Bloomberg News. Reliable sources confirmed the accuracy of the report. According to the memo, the Treasury plans...
Is Ed DeMarco unimpressed with Fannie and Freddie's return to profitability? we should keep the recent reports of positive net income in perspective, he told the audience of the Bipartisan Policy Center this week. Much of it has been related to one-time adjustments..."
The ability-to-repay rule issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in January would exclude more than one in five loans originated today from the full safe harbor legal protections for so-called qualified mortgages. Thats the chief finding of an analysis of August and September 2013 originations by ComplianceEase, a provider of risk management solutions based in Burlingame, CA. ComplianceAnalyzer, the firms patented automated compliance solution, is now capable of auditing loans for ...
Countrywide Financial Corp. committed fraud when it sold questionable mortgages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac prior to the financial crisis, a New York federal jury determined this week. Bank of America acquired CFC in 2008 and is liable for the fraud. The jury also found that Rebecca Mairone, a former chief operating officer for CFCs subprime division, Full Spectrum, is liable for fraud for her role in leading its Hustle loan program, which was designed by Countrywide to speed up approvals for unqualified borrowers.
More than two years after it first filed its massive legal action against some of the nation’s largest financial institutions, the Federal Housing Finance Agency is demanding a high-cost exit fare before it will let two big banks off the hook. The FHFA reportedly is in separate talks with JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America to pay billions to quiet claims that the firms sold faulty mortgage-backed securities prior to the 2008 mortgage market meltdown.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency moved this week to formalize an anti-fraud initiative it rolled out some 16 months ago that requires Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks to notify the agency forthwith of fraudulent activity by a GSE-associated individual or company. The interim final rule published in the Oct. 23 Federal Register generally codifies the procedures under the FHFAs existing Suspended Counterparty Program, established in June 2012, with a request for public comment.
The law firm that pursued a nearly decade-long class-action fraud lawsuit on behalf of investors against Fannie Mae and their former auditor, KPMG LLP, until its settlement in May say they are entitled to a piece of the $153 million payout, plus expenses. In papers recently filed with the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, the firm of Markovits, Stock & DeMarco of Cincinnati is seeking attorneys fees in the amount of $29.1 million or 22 percent of the settlement amount, plus $15.3 million in out of pocket expenses incurred in the nine years of pursuing the class action.
Roughly 4,100 people have registered to attend the annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers Association, which launches Sunday night in Power City USA.