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Thirty-Year Rates Edge Up to Three-Week High

Data released by Freddie Mac Thursday shows that amid mixed economic reports and ongoing debate over the nation's debt, the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage edged up ever so slightly this week but hit its highest mark in three weeks. Rates for adjustable-rate mortgages, on the other hand, inched down to a three-week low. The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage remained unchanged from a week earlier.

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Former Freddie Mac SVP Joins the Collingwood Group as Advisor

The Collingwood Group announced Wednesday that it has retained Manoj K. Singh as a special advisor. In his new role, Dr. Singh will work with the Collingwood Group to help clients navigate the business opportunities that exist in Washington as a result of the housing crisis. Dr. Singh was previously SVP of single-family pricing and securitization at Freddie Mac. He also held executive-level positions with Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and Wasserstein Perella Capital Management.

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Metro Foreclosure Rates Decline Due to Processing Delays: RealtyTrac

Eighty-four percent of the country's largest metro areas experienced declines in foreclosure activity in the first half of the year, according to RealtyTrac's midyear metropolitan foreclosure report released Thursday. However, RealtyTrac attributes these declines not to an improving market, but to delays in local foreclosure processes. Even the top 10 metro areas with the highest foreclosure rates in the first half of the year showed a year-over-year decrease in foreclosure activity.

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Bank of America Signs on to California’s Principal Reduction Program

Bank of America has agreed to participate in Keep Your Home California's principal reduction program, the California Housing Finance Agency announced Wednesday. Principal write-downs offered under the state-run program are part of a $2 billion, federally funded effort to help hard-hit families remain in their homes and ease the California foreclosure crisis. Bank of America has been engaged in a pilot of the principal reduction program since February, and is now moving into full participation.

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MERS Bows Out of Foreclosure and Bankruptcy Proceedings

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) is withdrawing from the foreclosure business. MERS has issued a notice to its members stating that no foreclosure proceeding may be initiated and no legal proceedings in a bankruptcy may be filed in the name of MERS. Amid an onslaught of court filings and foreclosure-related investigations, MERS proposed a rule change in March banning its members from using MERS as the foreclosing agent. The policy change has officially been adopted.

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Auction.com Hosts Sale of Texas Commercial Real Estate

Auction.com is in the midst of a three-day online auction of Texas commercial real estate properties and nonperforming notes. The company says in total, the assets up for sale are valued at more than $300 million, making it the largest conglomerate of commercial real estate assets to be auctioned online in Texas history. Barclays Capital matched the list of assets to be sold to its database of commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS). The firm pegs CMBS exposure to the Texas auction at about $262.5 million.

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Homeownership Preservation Foundation Unveils Enhanced Website

The Homeownership Preservation Foundation (HPF), an independent nonprofit dedicated to helping distressed homeowners avoid foreclosure, unveiled its new, redesigned website Wednesday. HPF operates the nationwide Homeowner's HOPE Hotline. Its new site now mirrors the assistance already available via phone, including step-by-step details on the foreclosure process, an overview of alternative lender solutions, and details on government mortgage relief programs.

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Trepp Estimates Declines in Delinquency Rates

Trepp, LLC estimates decreases in all types of bank loan delinquencies in the second quarter of 2011. Delinquencies are expected to decline among residential mortgages, commercial mortgages, construction loans, and commercial and industrial loans, according to the research firm. Based on its research and analysis of earnings reports and call report filings from smaller banks, Trepp says the credit recovery that began in mid-2010 has resumed, after stalling in the first quarter.

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Elizabeth Warren to Depart Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Raj Date will replace Elizabeth Warren as special advisor to the secretary of the Treasury on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) when Warren departs from the agency at the end of this month, Treasury said in a statement Tuesday. Warren is returning to her position as the Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law at Harvard Law School.

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Fitch: Is CMBS 2.0 a Sign of Healthy Growth or Cause for Concern?

Concerns have begun to mount that underwriting standards for loans in newly issued commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) are on the decline. Addressing this issue, the analysts at Fitch Ratings say they believe there is quite a way to go before standards approach levels seen in 2007, a year viewed by many as the most volatile vintage for CMBS. While Fitch agrees that underwriting standards have declined in recent months, the company stressed that deterioration so far has been off of ""very high standards.""

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