The Department of Housing and Urban Developments disciplinary arm hit 14 FHA-approved lenders with civil money penalties totaling $2.31 million for various violations of FHA regulations. HUDs Mortgagee Review Board imposed the fines as a result of separate administrative actions against the lenders from Aug. 1, 2011, to Dec. 31, 2011. The MRB report, which was published in the Sept. 10 Federal Register, cited various offenses, including improper lending practices, failure to follow FHA origination guidelines, fraudulent reporting, failure to remit mortgage insurance premiums, failure to report ...
SunTrust Banks, Inc. is planning to shift $3 billion of loans, including an undetermined number of delinquent Ginnie Mae loans and other nonperforming loans, to its held-for-sale portfolio and record a $375 million provision for mortgage repurchases in the third quarter of 2012. The moves are expected to strengthen SunTrusts mortgage portfolio and put the company in a better position by improving its risk profile and balance sheet and stabilizing its capital ratios. The $3 billion transfer of loans to the held-for-sale (HFS) category will include ... (1 chart)
Legislation was introduced this week in the House of Representatives that would effectively neutralize a proposal for local governments to use eminent domain powers to seize underwater mortgage loans and perform controversial modifications. Rep. John Campbell, R-CA, has introduced The Defending American Taxpayers from Abusive Government Takings Act, which would prohibit the FHA and VA from originating, insuring or guaranteeing a mortgage loan in jurisdictions that have invoked the power of eminent domain to seize a loan within the last 10 years. Fannie Mae and Freddie would be subjected to ...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are obligated to comply with recently enacted Massachusetts law requiring creditors to take commercially reasonable steps to avoid foreclosure, according to a letter to the GSEs conservator from state Attorney General Martha Coakley. The AGs Aug. 23 letter to Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco puts the agency on notice about a law signed Aug. 3 by Gov. Deval Patrick, D, An Act to Prevent Unnecessary and Unreasonable Foreclosures, which mandates loan modifications when they make economic sense.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is suing a unit of Deutsche Bank demanding the bank repurchase loans backing now toxic mortgage securities. Acting as conservator to Freddie Mac, the FHFA filed suit on Aug. 24 in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan against DB Structured Products Inc. The Finance Agency alleges that DBSP breached promises about loans that were pooled and securitized and failed to repurchase the loans as required, according to the agencys court filing.
The battle over legacy MBS continues to rage in courts across the country as Bank of New York Mellon filed repurchase-related lawsuits against two financial institutions, Massachusetts Mutual was allowed to proceed with its claims against Countrywide, and a federal banking regulator sued major banks for alleged MBS misrepresentations. On Aug. 21, BNY Mellon, in its capacity as trustee for a pool of loans known as GE-WMC Mortgage Securities Trust 2006-1, sued WMC Mortgage and GE Mortgage Holdings for their alleged failure to repurchase approximately $680 million in defective residential mortgages. According to the lawsuit filed in New York state court, a holder of more than 25 percent of the voting rights under the pooling and servicing agreement notified...
The initial progress report released last week on the national mortgage settlement drew attention to the early loss mitigation completed by the five banks participating in the settlement. However, Joseph Smith, the monitor of the $25.0 billion settlement, has also stressed that he is looking for noncompliance with the settlements 304 servicing standards. The Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight allows borrowers and professionals assisting homeowners to detail experiences with servicers participating in the settlement. Its important for people in the marketplace to let me know if they see conduct that they think violates the settlement agreement, Smith said. Smith said he has received...
The U.S. Department of Justice showed its willingness to go after relative unknowns as well as the name brands in reaching a multi-million-dollar pattern or practice fair lending settlement with GFI Mortgage Bankers Inc., the mortgage banking unit of GFI Capital Resources Group that funds roughly $1 billion in residential mortgage loans annually. The federal government alleged that GFI engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination by charging qualified African-American and Hispanic borrowers more for their...
The blowback over yield-spread premiums and subprime mortgages continued in Lee v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has determined that a lender in this case, Countrywide Home Loans, and by extension, parent Bank of America may be liable under state common law claims of civil conspiracy for failing to disclose fees paid to a mortgage broker. This subprime mortgage case was brought by the borrowers (the Lees) against the lender (Countrywide), its parent company (Bank of...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development appears to have lost a round in its fight to bring an alleged FHA defrauder to justice. HUD suffered a setback recently after U.S. District Judge Gray Miller in Houston granted declaratory relief to Allied Home Mortgage Corp. (AHMC) to challenge HUDs suspension of the lenders authority to originate and underwrite FHA-insured loans. The Houston-based lender contends that HUD acted capriciously and arbitrarily without due process of law. It based these claims on ...