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Loss Mitigation

Congress Scrutinizes Federal Housing Programs

Federal housing programs came under attack during a congressional hearing Thursday titled ""The Obama Administration's Response to the Housing Crisis."" Members of the Senate challenged witnesses with questions about the effectiveness of several programs, including the Neighborhood Stabilization Program and the Home Affordable Modification Program. Industry experts also discussed the potential of new initiatives, such as the REO rental proposal.

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HAMP Results Continue to Slip

Treasury released a new progress report on its Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) Wednesday. The number of modifications granted continues to slip - fewer than 26,000 in August - but each month's results are chipping away at the pool of eligible borrowers who fit the HAMP criteria. Treasury's report comes just one day before a House subcommittee is scheduled to hold a hearing on the administration's response to the housing crisis, and one of HAMP's most outspoken critics is heading to Capitol Hill to testify.

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Rekon Enables Top Lender to Ensure Clean Titles for Foreclosures

Rekon Technologies has installed the latest edition of its namesake software for one of the top three mortgage lenders in the nation. The company provides software solutions to loan servicers and lenders that prepare, record, manage, and track loan documents, such as assignments, lien releases, and UCC terminations. The latest version of the Rekon software is designed to reduce assignment backlogs and ensure clean titles for foreclosure proceedings.

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Massachusetts AG Readies Foreclosure Suits Against Major Servicers

With little faith that ongoing negotiations between state officials and major mortgage servicers will result in a fair and just settlement, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley signaled Wednesday that she will be taking her case to the courts. Coakley did not disclose which companies would be targeted, but cited servicers' failure to establish their right to initiate foreclosure and filings of false or misleading documents as the basis for the impending legal actions.

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Fannie Mae Opens Mortgage Help Center in St. Louis

Fannie Mae has opened up a new Mortgage Help Center in St. Louis, Missouri, to provide free education and counseling services to struggling homeowners. The St. Louis facility is the GSE's 11th Mortgage Help Center to open across the country. It was developed in partnership with the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis, local community and elected officials, and area mortgage servicers.

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Inspector General: FHFA Was Aware of Robo-Signing and Other Abuses

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) had knowledge of such foreclosure procedural abuses as robo-signing and falsified documentation years before these infractions made front-page headlines and triggered industry-wide investigations, according to the agency's own inspector general. Beyond a number of very specific red flags - including consumer complaints, media reports of foreclosure mills, and even public court filings - the inspector general says the sheer nature of market conditions should have been enough to lead FHFA to take action.

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Fed Governor Calls for Revised Incentives for Servicers

The current compensation structure for mortgage servicing needs to be revised so servicers' incentives will align with those of borrowers and investors, stated Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin in a speech Tuesday. Raskin says it is imperative that servicers have adequate incentives to perform payment processing efficiently on performing mortgages, and to perform effective loss mitigation on delinquent loans. She also believes investors need methods to allow them to monitor servicer performance.

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FHA May Crack Down on Lenders and Servicers

The Federal Housing Administration's (FHA) reserves have fallen below legal limits, and the agency now holds $4.7 billion against a $1 trillion portfolio. According to reports recently released by FBR Capital Markets & Co. and HUD's Office of Inspector General (OIG), FHA may crack down on lenders and servicers and may not be paying out default claims quite as generously as in the past. FBR says FHA claim denials could cost the industry as much as $13.5 billion.

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Credit Union Coalition Develops Foreclosure Intervention Toolkit

The National Federation of Community Development Credit Unions has completed a new Credit Union Foreclosure Intervention Toolkit to help credit unions combat the foreclosure crisis in their communities. The toolkit was developed with the support of a financial education grant from the National Credit Union Foundation (NCUF). The federation says it has seen the national foreclosure crisis reflected in a dramatic shift in demand between different types of counseling services, from pre-purchase to foreclosure intervention counseling.

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New Foreclosure Actions Jump Nearly 20% in August

Data released by Lender Processing Services (LPS) Monday shows that foreclosure starts were up in August by 19.7 percent when compared to the previous month. However, overall foreclosure starts were down more than 12 percent from August of last year. At the same time, LPS says the number of loans in the 90-plus day delinquency bucket on which foreclosure has not been initiated has contracted to levels not seen since 2008, and the loan deterioration rate is less than half that seen in 2009.

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