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Tag Archives: Fannie Mae

With $2.7B Profit, Fannie Mae Ends Q1 Without Drawing Taxpayer Funds

Fannie Mae said Wednesday that it brought in $2.7 billion dollars in net income during the first quarter of this year, and for the first time since it was seized by the government in September of 2008, the company does not need a draw of taxpayer funds from Treasury to get out of the red. Fannie Mae says its improving numbers can be traced to lower credit-related expenses as the decline in home prices slowed and the company shed some of its REO holdings.

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In California, GSE-Backed Loans to Accept Funds for Reducing Principal

Due to one important adjustment, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac might start accepting funds to be applied toward principal reduction in California. The Keep Your Home California program once required participants in its principal reduction program to match funds it provided towards reducing principal. Recently, housing finance agency officials from the state announced a decision to no longer require lenders to match the funds the program provides, the L.A. Times first reported.

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FHFA Explains Intentions of REO-to-Rental Initiative

Clarification was offered Monday on misconceptions regarding the REO-to-Rental Initiative, currently in pilot stages. Meg Burns, FHFA's senior associate director for housing and regulatory policy, explained in testimony to lawmakers the purpose and intent of the pilot program, which involves the bulk sale of Fannie Mae REO properties to investors who will then convert their purchases into rental units. Burns made it clear that the program is highly targeted for select markets that have specific characteristics including an oversupply of single-family homes for sale and a strong demand for rental housing.

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Fannie Mae: Confidence in Economy and Home Values Increasing

The expectation for home prices and the percentage of those who think the U.S. economy is on the right path reached record all-time highs in Fannie Mae's April 2012 National Housing Survey. Americans continue to expect home prices to go up, with the projection averaging 1.3 percent over the next 12 months, the highest value recorded. The percentage of Americans who believe the economy is on the right track rose to 37 percent, a 2 point increase from the previous month and the highest level in the survey's two-year history. Still, an even greater 56 percent believe the economy is moving in the wrong direction.

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Economists Give Their Take on April’s Troubling Employment Numbers

The economy added 115,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate dropped to 8.1 percent. With an upward revision of 53,000, March's payroll growth is now 159,000. Economists expected payrolls to grow by 165,000 for April. The government sector cut 15,000 jobs, and the private sector added 130,000 jobs. With these reported numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, economists from IHS Global Insight, Capital Economics, and Fannie Mae provided their own analysis on what the numbers really mean and what they may indicate for the future.

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Fannie and Freddie Set Timeline Requirements for Short Sales

Beginning June 15, real estate agents working with distressed homeowners whose loans are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should expect to receive a decision on a short sale offer within 30-60 days. The GSEs issued new guidelines Tuesday that aim to bring greater transparency to the short sale process and expedite decisions related to these pre-foreclosure sales. Fannie and Freddie plan to use the new short sale timelines to evaluate servicer compliance with their Servicing Alignment Initiative.

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Head of IMF Calls for Principal Reductions for American Homeowners

The head of one of the world's most powerful financial policy bodies has tossed her hat into the debate over mortgage principal reductions. Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), says ""the housing problem in the U.S. is something that needs to be addressed"" and it is ""a matter of urgency."" Lagarde tipped her hat in favor of the administration's proposal of principal reductions, but said the problem is that ""the big boys and girls - Fannie and Freddie - have to be part of that equation.""

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Eleven AGs Send Letter Urging DeMarco to Reverse Course

Eleven state attorneys general sent a letter to Edward DeMarco, Acting Director of the FHFA, urging him to allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to move forward with principal reductions. Headlined by Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, the letter doubled down on the FHFA to ""preserve assets and prevent unnecessary foreclosures by implementing loan modifications that include principal write-downs."" State attorneys general said that new reductions ""should consider all of a borrower's debts, not just the monthly mortgage debt, be uniform, transparent, and publicly disclosed.""

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Lawmakers Say GSEs’ REO Rental Initiative Isn’t for California

Nineteen members of California's congressional delegation want to keep Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's ""for rent"" signs outside their state's borders. Led by Congressman Gary Miller, the group sent a letter to Edward DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, petitioning him to exclude the 600 homes in California slated for the pilot program of the REO Initiative, which aims to sell off homes repossessed by the GSEs and FHA to institutional investors who will turn the properties into rental homes.

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Americans More Likely to Buy, Not Rent, According to GSE Survey

According to the March 2012 Fannie Mae National Housing Survey, 48 percent of Americans who responded expect rental prices to increase, and the expectation is that they will go up by 4.1 percent over the next 12 months, the biggest projected increase recorded to date. Also, 33 percent of respondents expect home prices to increase over the next 12 months. Americans project home prices will go up by 0.9 percent over the same time period. If respondents were going to move, 66 percent say they would buy a home.

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