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Secondary Market

MountainView Taking Bids on $485M Fannie Mae Servicing Portfolio

MountainView Servicing Group announced Wednesday that it has been retained as the exclusive sale advisor for a $485 million Fannie Mae servicing portfolio. Ninety-nine percent of the portfolio consists of fixed-rate loans, primarily located in Illinois. The delinquency rate of the portfolio is 2.21 percent. MountainView is also marketing a $45 million portfolio of Ginnie Mae servicing rights.

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HOPE LoanPort Tops 3,000 Registered Counselor Users

HOPE LoanPort recently announced that the organization has now registered over 3,000 HUD-certified, nonprofit housing counselors in a little over a year of full operation. Counselors from more than 630 organizations in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are now using the system to assist struggling homeowners. HOPE LoanPort is also upgrading its technology to comply with the Federal Housing Finance Agency's new guidelines for managing the GSEs' delinquent loans.

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FHFA Files with Court Considering BofA Proposal to Mortgage Investors

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is the second regulatory body to file a petition with the New York federal court that is reviewing Bank of America's $8.5 billion settlement proposal to Countrywide mortgage investors. FHFA has filed a Notice of Appearance and Conditional Objection in order to obtain additional information related to the proposal, but the agency says it sees ""no basis"" to raise a substantive objection to the settlement at this time.

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Ginnie Mae Allows Buyouts After Trial Payment Plans

Ginnie Mae has announced a new rule regarding buyouts of delinquent loans. Servicers may now buy out loans at the end of a successful trial payment plan, instead of waiting until a borrower has missed three payments. This new rule is in line with recently released Federal Housing Administration (FHA) guidelines requiring most loans to undergo a three- to four-month trial payment plan before a loan modification is made permanent. The new FHA guidelines go into effect October 1.

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GCC Servicing Systems Assists Clients With Specialty Servicing Needs

GCC Servicing Systems, a provider of mortgage servicing technology and solutions, has announced the availability of a new investor accounting and reporting component through the company's professional services suite. This new offering enables servicers to meet the accounting and reporting requirements of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), and the USDA's Rural and Community Development loan program. It also agency default reporting.

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On Mortgage Defaults, UFA Says Industry Headed for Recovery

The default risk associated with newly originated mortgages continues to improve, according to the analysts at University Financial Associates (UFA). The company's default risk index for the third quarter indicates that with today's economic conditions, lenders and investors should expect defaults on new loans to be 32 percent higher than loans from the 1990s. That's down from an elevated risk of 41 percent during the first part of this year. UFA says at this rate, ""normalcy may not be far away"" for default and prepayment indicators.

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Bernanke Offers No Indication of New Economic Stimulus

The marketplace was zeroed in on Ben Bernanke and Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in hopes of a signal from the Federal Reserve's chief that new stimulus measures were in the works to rekindle the stalled economy. But there was no mention of new action. Housing was the black eye of the Fed chairman's speech. He said this recession was ""unusual"" because it was linked to a very deep slump in the housing market, and with an overhang of distressed properties and still-declining home prices, the housing sector is hindering economic growth.

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Freddie Mac Warns of Short Sale Fraud

Short sales are being used more frequently by homeowners, lenders, and investors to avert a foreclosure, and industry data released this week shows that these pre-foreclosure transactions are being pushed through at a faster pace. Freddie Mac says its short sales have risen from about 4 percent of completed workouts in 2000 to nearly 14 percent in 2010. The GSE warns that with the increase in short sale transactions comes an increase in fraud. It's become the top priority for Freddie Mac's fraud investigation unit.

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Government Officials Weigh New Refi Program

Word on the street is the administration is sizing up a new program that would provide millions of homeowners with new, lower interest, lower payment mortgages. The initiative would allow borrowers with loans backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to refinance at today's rates, even if they are in negative equity or have bad marks on their credit. Two Columbia business professors say such a move would save homeowners an average of $350 a month and pump an extra $118 billion into the economy.

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Moody’s: CMBS Delinquencies Hold Above 9% for Seventh Month

The delinquency rate on loans in U.S. commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) rose 22 basis points in July to hit 9.24 percent, according to Moody's. The increase follows two months in which delinquencies edged lower, and marks the seventh consecutive month the rate has come in above the 9 percent mark. The balance of loan delinquencies increased by $835 million last month. Moody's says CMBS delinquencies are likely to remain in the high single-digit range for the near term.

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