The Small Business Administration is urging the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to delay making any changes until it has fully analyzed the impact of a proposed rule establishing new disclosure requirements and forms under integrated federal consumer protection regulations. Speaking on behalf of small banks and settlement service providers, the SBAs Office of Advocacy in a comment letter warned that proposed changes to the finance charge and to the high-cost mortgage coverage test could potentially lead some small businesses to leave the marketplace or stop making mortgage loans. In addition, the agency reiterated its concerns about the inadequate notice for small entities about the proposal. On Aug. 23, the CFPB published...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus recent proposed rule regarding loan originator compensation would expand and clarify anti-steering rules established by the Federal Reserve, in effect since April 2011. Compensation structures frequently gave loan originators incentives to steer consumers into loans with higher rates or other unfavorable terms, according to the CFPB. The regulators proposed rule cited a consent order issued by the Fed in 2011 regarding subprime steering by Wells Fargo ...
M&T Bank announced this week that it will acquire Hudson City Bancorp for $3.7 billion. The jumbo lender will merge into a subsidiary of M&T. Hudson City was the 10th-ranked non-agency jumbo lender in 2011, according to Inside Nonconforming Markets, with an estimated $3.15 billion in such originations. Officials at M&T said they acquired Hudson which was having difficulties funding its jumbo originations to expand M&Ts retail branch network. Officials at Hudson City said M&T will help expand ... [Includes five briefs]
The Treasury Departments surprise announcement late last week that it will now sweep up any and all future profits from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in lieu of the dividends the GSEs had been paying in return for taxpayer support solves some problems but creates new ones, industry observers say. Rather than continue to borrow from the Treasury to make dividend payments to the Treasury as the GSEs have since they were placed in conservatorship in September 2008 the revised preferred stock purchase agreements will replace the 10 percent quarterly dividend with a full income sweep of every dollar of profit that each firm earns going forward, according to Michael Stegman, counselor to the Treasury for Housing Finance Policy.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Macs newly amended preferred stock purchase agreement with the U.S. Treasury requiring the companies to accelerate the rate at which they reduce their investment portfolios will have little immediate impact but will become more challenging to the GSEs as time goes on, analysts predict. The Treasurys amended agreement calls for the GSE portfolios to be wound down at an annual rate of 15 percent, instead of the 10 percent annual reduction originally required of the two companies. The more aggressive 15 percent reductions will go into effect in 2013. Consequently, Fannies and Freddies portfolios must be reduced to the $250 billion target by 2018, four years earlier than initially scheduled.
Plans to hasten the resolution of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac through an amended preferred stock purchase agreement (PSPA) announced last week by the Treasury Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency has elicited mixed responses from stakeholders. Views vary as to whether the new deal will actually benefit taxpayers or simply protect holders of government-sponsored enterprise debt. The revised agreement will speed up the reduction of both GSEs investment portfolios, from an annual rate of 10 percent to ...
Bank and thrift holdings of residential MBS changed very little in the second quarter of 2012, although the portfolios of several of the biggest depository institution investors revealed substantial changes from the previous period. A new Inside MBS & ABS analysis of call report data showed a 1.5 percent decline in total residential MBS held by banks and thrifts during the second quarter. After hitting a record $1.634 trillion as of the end of March, banks and thrifts reported $1.610 trillion in MBS in their held-to-maturity and available-for-sale portfolios as of the end of June. Even with the decline since March, bank and thrift MBS holdings were...[Includes two data charts]
Secondary mortgage market participants have expressed support for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus efforts to establish clear standards for mortgage servicing that would balance investor and borrower interests. Issued last week, the proposed rules focus primarily on borrower protection and are described as measures that would benefit borrowers by eliminating surprises and run-arounds. However, they do not address servicers conflicts of interest that result in servicer breaches, which mortgage-backed securities investors have raised in the past, and other investor complaints. Specifically, the proposed rules implement...
A three-judge federal panel this week agreed to hear a rare interlocutory appeal by one of the defendants in a series of lawsuits that the Federal Housing Finance Agency has filed in connection with non-agency MBS purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals accepted UBS Americas appeal, which had been certified by Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court of New York in late June. UBS seeks to re-argue and reverse Judge Cotes May 4 denial of the banks motion to dismiss on statute of limitation grounds. The FHFA sued...
It has been another busy week in the turbulent world of litigation over non-agency mortgage-backed securities. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. filed lawsuits regarding non-agency MBS, Wells Fargo agreed to settle non-agency MBS-related charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice and the SEC dropped its non-agency investigation into actions by Goldman Sachs. The FDIC lawsuits against 15 issuers and underwriters relate to $1.46 billion in AAA tranches of non-agency MBS ...