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Secondary Market

Collingwood Group Acquires GWN Consulting

The Collingwood Group announced this week that it has acquired GWN Consulting, LLC, a firm specializing in Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and Ginnie Mae risk management and quality control. GWN's business will operate as part of Collingwood's risk management and compliance division, and will be managed by Brian Montgomery, chairman of Washington, D.C.-based Collingwood. GWN's team of professionals have more than two centuries of combined direct HUD experience.

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Freddie Mac Extends Forbearance for Unemployed Homeowners

Freddie Mac has announced an extension of forbearance for unemployed borrowers of up to 12 months. According to Freddie Mac, almost 10 percent of delinquencies in the GSE's portfolio are linked to unemployment. Under the new directive, servicers may offer up to six months of forbearance to unemployed homeowners without prior approval, and with prior approval they may offer up to six months more, totaling a possible one year in some cases.

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Fed Identifies Markets Primed for Bulk REO-to-Rental Programs

The Federal Reserve is throwing its support behind a large-scale REO-to-rental program to address the oversupply of vacant homes and prevent property values from falling further. The Fed notes that in contrast to the market for owner-occupied homes, rental housing is strengthening. Officials say a government-facilitated program has the potential to help the housing market and improve loss recoveries. They've identified specific markets with large concentrations of vacant REOs, where bulk sales to investors make sense.

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CMBS Delinquency Rates Trending Upward: Report

The delinquency rate among commercial mortgage backed securities (CMBS) rose in eight of 12 months in 2011, according to a report released Wednesday by Trepp. Most recently, the rate rose seven basis points to 9.58 percent for the month of December. That's up from 9.2 percent one year ago. Trepp views this as the first of a six to twelve month stretch where the rate could increase by 75 basis points in aggregate, as loans originated in 2007 begin reaching their balloon dates.

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New Law Requires GSEs Increase Guarantee Fees

The two-month extension of the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut, signed by President Obama December 23, holds immediate implications for the GSEs. The law requires the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) to increase Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's guarantee fees by at least 10 basis points over the 2011 average for all single-family mortgage-backed securities. FHFA says the increase will be remitted to the U.S. Treasury, rather than retained as reserves by the two mortgage financiers.

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Lawmaker Presses for Criminal Investigation of GSEs

Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts says the civil lawsuit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) last week against six former executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ""does not go nearly far enough."" Brown is pressing the Department of Justice and the SEC to immediately open criminal investigations into Fannie and Freddie. The senator says authorities need to take a closer look at the GSEs' business dealings prior to the housing collapse and their disclosure of subprime mortgage holdings.

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Moody’s Mark Zandi Lowers Expectations for Economic Growth

Moody's Analytics' chief economist Mark Zandi has lowered his expectations for the growth of the U.S. economy into 2012. He says GDP will grow 2.6 percent next year and unemployment will likely remain high. Zandi and his colleagues at Moody's expect the U.S. economy to perform a bit better in 2012, but they say the outcome will depend on policy decisions coming out of both Europe and Washington.

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CEO’s Corner: A New Year for Our Industry

With a New Year comes new challenges for our industry - and the promise of a better tomorrow. For homeowners. For our economy. For our nation. As it does for many Americans, a New Year offers the mortgage lending and servicing industry a chance to take a step back and reflect. The message we should take from 2011 is clear: The American Dream of homeownership is far from over. Americans want to own their slice of the dream, and one nightmare - namely, a financial crisis - will do anything but soften the strength and ingenuity of a time-tested people.

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FHFA: Home Prices Decline 0.2% in October

Home prices in the U.S. decreased 0.2 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis in October, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency's (FHFA) House Price Index released Thursday. On a yearly basis, prices were down 2.8 percent. The drop brings prices to levels seen in February 2004. Current prices are about 19.2 percent below their peak in April 2007. FHFA also revised the previous month's index, lowering the 0.9 percent increase reported for September to a 0.4 percent increase.

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Fannie Mae Removes ‘Ability to Repay’ from HARP 2.0 Guidelines

Fannie Mae has updated its Selling Guide to reflect the recently announced changes to the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). Most of the revisions were previously disclosed in November, but there's one nuance that stands out. Fannie Mae has removed the ""reasonable ability to repay"" clause from the criteria for vetting borrowers for a new HARP loan. Analysts say the subjective ability-to-pay requirement was one of the significant hurdles to HARP refinancing.

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