And that means: two more years of hyper-partisan bickering on both sides and legislation only getting passed if there’s a bi-partisan consensus or a national emergency...
Passive owners of mortgage servicing rights that have nothing to do with the monthly processing chores are now required to register with the Financial Institutions Division of the Ohio Department of Commerce, a change that has industry analysts and dealmakers scratching their heads.
The nation’s subservicing vendors ended the fourth quarter with $2.47 trillion worth of contracts on their books, a 9.8% sequential gain and a handsome 23.5% annual increase, according to figures compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance. [Includes one data chart.]
Mortgage banking firms trimmed 1,100 posi-tions during January, ending the month with 239,900 full-timers on their payrolls, according to figures compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Loan brokers, on the other hand, added 500 positions, bringing employment in the sector to 86,300.
The Community Home Lenders Association this week asked Congress to increase the pay for Ginnie Mae staffers, arguing that a professional, well-trained workforce would ensure the agency “does not have any unintended incentives to reduce the number of issuers it regulates, merely because it might lack the capacity or expertise.”
To date, the revival in the new “subprime” mortgage market has been driven exclusively by nonbank originators and aggregators, but now there’s a depository in the pond: Reliant Ban-corp, Brentwood, TN.