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HUD Studies Suggest Counseling Keeps Owners in Homes

Buying a home is the biggest financial investment many people will ever make. It's also an investment that, in recent years, has become lost for millions. According to data from CoreLogic, since September 2008, there have been 3.5 million completed foreclosures. Through counseling, HUD found homeowners are more likely to stay in their properties, even when facing foreclosure. HUD released reports on two types of counseling: pre-purchase and foreclosure prevention. In both studies, HUD found housing counseling significantly improved the likelihood homeowners remained in their homes. For those who enrolled into pre-purchase counseling, HUD found that 35 percent of participants became homeowners within 18 months of pre-purchase counseling and only one of those buyers fell behind on mortgage payments.

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Housing Permits Drop, Starts Increase; Permits Hit 15-Month Low

Housing permits dipped in April for the first time in four months, the Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Wednesday but housing starts improved. Both indicators remained far above year-earlier levels. The month-over-month increase in starts in April appeared still larger because of a downward revision to March's report. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected permits to drop month-over-month and starts to increase.

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With ResCap Deal, Ally Shifts From Home Loans to Auto Loans

After suffering from bad loans during the financial crisis, Ally Financial looks to close the books on its share of ownership in the mortgage business. Executives with Ally took to the phone with investors Tuesday to explain a filing for bankruptcy protection Monday by subsidiary Residential Capital LLC. The consensus: Residential mortgage loans are out for Ally and auto finance is back in the center. Ally will still subservice loans via ResCap while it serves as counterparty to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

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FinCEN: Mortgage Loan Fraud Reports See Yearly Increases Since 1996

Out of seven different categories of fraud reported by depository institutions, mortgage loan fraud (MLF) saw the second great increase from 2010 to 2011 and had the highest number of suspicious activity report (SAR) filings, according to a report from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. MLF SARs increased nearly 31 percent to 92,028 in 2011 compared to 70,472 in 2010. Consumer loan fraud saw an even greater increasing, spiking 127 percent after reaching 32,285 filings in 2011 compared to 14,194 SARs in 2010.

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Ally’s Mortgage Unit Files for Bankruptcy; New Strategies Announced

Ally Financial announced Monday that its mortgage arm Residential Capital (ResCap) filed for bankruptcy, enabling the bank to focus on strategies to pay back remaining bailout funds still owed to Treasury. ResCap filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Manhattan federal court, and Ally announced it will sell some its international operations to pay back Treasury. The financial institution will also focus on strengthening its auto and banking businesses.

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Settlement Monitor Launches New Online Complaint Tool

Consumer advocates now have the ability to report violations if their clients suspect any as the nation's five largest servicers complete requirements under the $25 billion settlement. Speaking at a conference hosted by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, Joseph A. Smith, Jr., the settlement monitor, announced the standup of a website portal for complaints about servicers. A statement said that the monitor will use any information gathered from the online tool to oversee implementation of the agreement with servicers.

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Three Refinancing Bills Propose Cutting Red Tape to Expand Eligibility

At a time when mortgage rates have hit record-low numbers, HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan stressed urgency in getting housing refinance bills on President Barack Obama's to-do list for Congress passed. During a teleconference Friday, which preceded Obama's stop into Reno, Nevada, to boost support for the housing proposals, Donovan outlined three bills that were introduced to Congress that week. Donovan says the bills would save homeowners an average of $2,500 to $3,000 a year.

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HUD Reaches $202M Settlement With Deutsche Bank

HUD announced Thursday that it reached a $202 million settlement with Deutsche Bank and Mortgageit over allegations of misconduct and false certifications with a government lender program. The agency said that Mortgageit acknowledged and accepted responsibility for false certifications it submitted to HUD in order to gain from a direct lender program under the Federal Housing Administration.

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CFPB Pursues Screening Standards for Mortgage Originators

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau unveiled new rulemaking proposals Thursday that would require background checks for mortgage originators and complement a previous rule that prohibits loan officers from steering borrowers to higher-priced products. Together with these rules, others would provide consumers with discounts for paying mortgage origination points, mandate comparison plans for those interested in tracking different products, and ban brokerage firms from charging fees that vary by the loan size.

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