Home / Tag Archives: FHFA (page 74)

Tag Archives: FHFA

Administration: Investors Wanted to Rent out Government REOs

The Obama administration is setting the stage for a public-private collaboration to tackle the growing inventory of REO homes. On Wednesday, federal officials called on private investors and industry stakeholders to share their recommendations on how best to dispose of foreclosed homes held by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA. Together, the three hold nearly 250,000 REO homes. Federal officials believe the most effective tactic is to sell off pools of properties to responsible investors who will employ an REO-to-rental strategy.

Read More »

Fiserv Predicts Price Declines Through 2011 Followed by Gains

Fiserv, Inc. released its home price index Tuesday noting declines but predicting stabilization by the end of 2012. For the short-term, Fiserv sees continuing declines - at least until the end of the year. However, beginning in 2012, Fiserv predicts small gains in prices. Fiserv notes that the first quarter of 2011 showed a continuation of the double-dip trend started last year when demand waned after the expiration of the homebuyer tax credit. Price declines early this year were also driven by a jump in foreclosure sales.

Read More »

Senator Reed Urges FHFA to Require GSEs to Rent Foreclosed Properties

Senator Jack Reed (D-Rhode Island) has sent a letter to the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) recommending the agency require Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rent out foreclosed properties rather than immediately attempting to sell them at bargain prices. Reed believes renting the properties would help the market on all fronts by reducing foreclosure inventories, providing affordable housing, and creating jobs in hard-hit industries.

Read More »

Unemployment Rate Slips to 9.1%

After heading higher for three straight months, the nation's unemployment rate declined to 9.1 percent in July, down from 9.2 percent in June, according to figures released Friday by the U.S. Department of Labor. The economy added 117,000 jobs last month. July's numbers beat analysts' forecasts. Investors are hoping the news will help dispel fears of a double-dip recession and quell some of the sell-off frenzy seen in the stock market yesterday, which led to the largest one-day drop in the Dow since the financial upheaval following Lehman Brothers' collapse.

Read More »

Recent Study Shows Insurance Lowers Default Risk

An independent study conducted by Promontory Financial Group concludes that significantly more insured mortgages have survived the housing crisis than loans with ""piggyback"" second mortgages, which has been the most prevalent alternative to the use of mortgage insurance for the past decade. The study examined almost 5.7 million mortgages originated between 2003 and 2007. Compared with insured, low downpayment mortgages, loans with piggyback second mortgages were almost 21 percent more likely to go into default.

Read More »

FHFA Sues UBS to Recover Fannie and Freddie Losses

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) filed a lawsuit last week in a New York federal court against UBS Americas, Inc. for violations of federal securities laws related to UBS' sale of $4.5 billion in private-label residential mortgage-backed securities to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The lawsuit alleges that UBS Americas made material misstatements and omissions about the mortgage loans underlying the bonds. Fannie and Freddie claim they have already lost in excess of 20 percent of their entire investment.

Read More »

Fannie Pushes Implementation of New Delinquency Management Rules

Fannie Mae has issued a notice to servicers alerting them of a change in the effective date for new delinquency management and default prevention standards. According to the bulletin, Fannie is pushing the date by which servicers must implement the new requirements out by a month to October 1, 2011. The revised rules are part of the directive issued by the company's regulator in late April to bring both Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's procedures for handling past-due mortgages in line with one another.

Read More »

FHFA Records Second Straight Monthly Increase in Home Prices

Home prices in the U.S. rose in May, marking the second consecutive monthly increase, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) reported Thursday. Before the string of two-month gains, FHFA's market gauge had recorded declines in property prices for 10 straight months. The agency's monthly House Price Index (HPI) is calculated using purchase prices of homes backing mortgages that have been sold to or guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It rose 0.4 percent from April to May.

Read More »

Housing Market Expected to Follow Overall Economy

Home sales are expected to outpace 2010 sales by 3 to 5 percent for the remainder of 2011 as the housing market follows the overall economy, according to Freddie Mac. The GSE's latest outlook, released Monday, suggests the housing market is not likely to see a full ""double dip."" According to the report, June's disappointing jobs report likely reflects a temporary ""soft patch"" in the economy rather than an inflection point in economic growth. Freddie's economists expect housing to shadow GDP forecasts and improve over the balance of 2011.

Read More »

MBA Proposes Reserve Account to Cover Servicing of Delinquent Loans

With mortgage delinquencies at unprecedented levels, it's become clear that the current servicing-fee model is lacking. The GSEs and Ginnie Mae are in the process of developing new servicing compensation structures to provide greater flexibility for the servicing of nonperforming loans. As deliberations move forward, the Mortgage Bankers Association is recommending they consider the idea of a new ""reserve account"" strategy to cover the higher expenses associated with default servicing.

Read More »