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Tag Archives: Freddie Mac

California Congressman Suggests GSE Merger

Rep. Gary Miller of California is introducing a new idea for GSE reform - a merger of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The bill, drafted by Miller and co-sponsored by Rep. Carolyn McCarthy of New York, suggests the resulting entity would purchase mortgages and sell them to investors as government-backed securities. According to Miller, the new corporation would be privately capitalized but not privately owned, and would be limited to a market share of no more than 50 percent.

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Freddie Mac Details New Default Servicing Requirements

Freddie Mac has issued a bulletin to servicers announcing changes to the company's default management requirements. The move is part of the Servicing Alignment Initiative announced by the Federal Housing Finance Agency in late April to bring both Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's procedures for handling past-due mortgages in line with one another. Freddie also alerted servicers that it plans to roll out a new modification solution for borrowers who defaulted on previous modifications and who are ineligible for HAMP.

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Taylor Bean & Whitaker CEO Sentenced to 30 Years in Prison

The man charged with orchestrating possibly one of the most notorious mortgage fraud schemes in U.S. history has been handed a 30-year prison sentence. Lee Farkas, CEO of Taylor Bean & Whitaker, was told Thursday by a U.S. district judge in Virginia that his crimes merit three decades behind bars. Judge Brinkema said she did not detect ""one bit of actual remorse"" in Farkas. From 2002 through 2009, Farkas and his co-conspirators manufactured fraudulent mortgages and securities in a scheme that led to the collapse of Colonial Bank.

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Mortgage Rates Remain Steady Though 5-year Rate Sets New Record Low

For the fourth week in a row, 30-year fixed mortgage rates held steady at just above 4.5 percent, according to Freddie Mac's Primary Mortgage Market Survey, released Thursday. Freddie Mac calculates average interest rates based on data from about 125 lenders across the country. The 15-year rate remained unchanged from last week while the 5-year adjustable-rate mortgage dropped to a new record low.

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BofA Reaches Settlement With Investors Over Legacy Countrywide Deals

Bank of America will pay investors $8.5 billion to compensate them for Countrywide's dealings years before the subprime lender was acquired by BofA. The settlement resolves nearly all of BofA's first-lien repurchase exposure from Countrywide-issued bonds. It involves 530 trusts and $424 billion in securities. The company has also agreed to implement certain servicing changes, which will cost some $400 million. BofA says the cleanup will leave it with a loss for the second quarter, but the market has responded positively to the news.

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Freddie Mac-Taylor Bean Settlement to Yield Pennies on the Dollar

Freddie Mac has entered into a proposed settlement with the now defunct Taylor, Bean & Whitaker (TBW). Under the terms of the agreement, Freddie Mac will be granted an unsecured claim in the TBW bankruptcy estate for just over $1 billion. The GSE estimates it will only see between $40 million and $45 million from that claim. While the settlement entitles Freddie to additional funds related to its mortgage loans, it also requires the GSE to pay TBW and its trade creditors to settle their potential claims against the GSE.

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Michigan Counties Sue Fannie and Freddie over Property Taxes

Michigan's Oakland and Ingram Counties have filed lawsuits against Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, alleging the GSEs avoided paying the state property-transfer tax on thousands of REO homes by claiming false exemptions. Oakland County says there are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of deeds recorded by Fannie and Freddie where they claimed exemptions. Officials maintain the exemptions cost Oakland County at least $250,000 per year.

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Analysis: Private Markets Key to Preventing Housing Meltdown Sequel

According to an analysis authored by a former chief economist of Freddie Mac and a real estate economics professor at University of Aberdeen, responsibility for the failure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac falls directly on regulators and indirectly on their political overseers. The two analysts argue that the U.S. government's involvement in housing finance nurtured the excessively risky loans that fueled the housing bubble of the last decade and resulted in the systemic collapse of the global financial system.

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Freddie Mac’s Serious Delinquencies Continue Descent

The nation's second largest mortgage company has again reported a decline in the percentage of loans it holds that are 90 or more days past due and in foreclosure. Freddie Mac says its serious delinquency rate for single-family mortgages dropped to 3.53 percent in May. That's down four basis points from 3.57 percent the month before and down 53 basis points from 4.06 percent in May 2010. May's rate was the lowest it's been since September of 2009.

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Industry, Lawmakers Faceoff with Regulators on QRM’s Default Impact

The debate over what constitutes a Qualified Residential Mortgage (QRM) is heating up, with a pivotal argument centered around whether or not the proposed QRM stipulations will actually lower the risk of default. In one corner you have the handful of regulators charged with putting the definition of QRM into the rule book, and in the other corner you have just about everybody else, with consumer advocates joining mortgage bankers in a rare showing, and congressional lawmakers standing firmly alongside them.

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