Watt said in a statement in July that the purpose of the pay raises was to "promote CEO retention, allow reliable succession planning, and ensure the continuity, efficiency and stability" at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Watt's predecessor, Ed DeMarco, capped the GSE CEO pay at $600,000 a year more than three years ago after four years of conservatorship.
Read More »Banks Need to Take Precautions With Credit Risk to Avoid Repeat of Financial Crisis
In the last 18 months, however, banks have generally become profitable as economic conditions have improved, unemployment is down, and loan demand has increased, leading Curry to ask: “Where do we go from here? What will it take to ensure that banks remain solvent, stable, and secure in their role in the payments and credit system?”
Read More »Will Weakening the FSOC Put the Country at Risk of Another Financial Crisis?
One of the major reasons why the financial crisis occurred back in 2008 is that the country was ill-equipped to address risks to the financial system; the regulatory structure could not keep up with the changing U.S. financial marketplace and the country lacked single entity that was accountable for protecting the stability of the entire financial system, Pinschmidt said.
Read More »Fannie Mae’s Gross Mortgage Portfolio Sees More Substantial Contraction
The serious delinquency rate on single-family mortgage loans backed by Fannie Mae is still well below its pre-crisis levels after declining by three basis points in September down to 1.59 percent. The serious delinquency rate on Fannie Mae-backed single-family mortgage loans has declined every quarter since Q1 2010.
Read More »Civil Rights Groups Urge Administration to Recapitalize GSEs and End Conservatorships
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC), the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) sent a letter to President Obama, calling on the Administration to end the conservatorships and recapitalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Read More »Delinquency Rates Remain Low, Vacancy Rates Stabilize for SFR Securitizations
October 2015 marks the two-year anniversary since the first SFR securitization, IH 2013-SFR1 (Invitation Homes), in October 2013. Since then, total issuance for 25 single-family securitizations in two years have amounted to $13.08 billion backed by loans on nearly 100,000 homes, according to Morningstar.
Read More »Freddie Mac’s Mortgage Portfolio Sees Eighth Straight Month of Expansion
With that expansion of the total mortgage portfolio came a drop of four basis points in the serious delinquency rate for loans backed by Freddie Mac, down to 1.41 percent—a year-over-year decline of more than half a percentage point, from 1.96 percent in September 2014.
Read More »Bank of America Slashes More Jobs Amid Falling Distressed Loan Volume
At the end of the third quarter of 2015, the bank’s LAS unit was handling about 107,000 delinquent loans, according to the bank’s Q3 earnings statement released earlier in October.
Read More »Banks Can Expect a Change in Long-Term Strategy Due to Low Interest Rates
While waiting for the Fed to raise rates, banks will likely place "additional focus on cost controls to improve operating efficiencies and extend balance sheet duration" to reduce margin compression, according to a recent report from Fitch Ratings. Bank margins have fallen to 3.02 percent as of the first quarter of 2015, the lowest average since 1984, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said.
Read More »Fed Holds Off on Raising Interest Rates, Citing Insufficient Economic Improvement
On the downside, government officials saw net exports fall soft, job gains slow, and the unemployment rate held steady. In addition, inflation remains under the Committee's objective of 2 percent, reflecting falling energy prices and prices of non-energy imports.
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