Wells Fargo announced it has made progress in meeting requirements to offer homeonwers relief as outlines by the national mortgage servicing settlement. The company stated in a release that it has helped more than 27,000 homeowners under the settlement terms, and it estimates it has fulfilled about 35 percent of its $4.3 billion consumer relief and refinance commitment.
Read More »360 Mortgage Expands Active Loan Pipeline Over 700% After HARP 2.0
360 Mortgage Group is seeing a significant increase in refinancings being offered to homeowners under HARP 2.0, the company announced Thursday. Since HARP 2.0 went into effect in March, 360 Mortgage has seen a dramatic increase in the active loan pipeline and anticipates more in the future.
Read More »Refinance Activity Helps Boost Originations 44.6% Year-Over-Year
Outpacing industry forecasts, mortgage originations ticked up 5.2 percent in the second quarter, totaling $405 billion during the three-month period, according to a report released this week from Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. On an annual basis, originations are up 44.6 percent, according to the study. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods suggests much of the increase came from refinance activity driven by low interest rates.
Read More »President to Congress: Pass Refinancing Bill
In an unexpected appearance before the White House Press Corps on Monday, President Barack Obama called for Congress to pass a refinancing bill to benefit American homeowners.
Read More »Freddie Mac: 95% of Refinanced Borrowers Opted for Fixed-Rate Loans
For borrowers who refinanced in the second quarter, shorter fixed-rate mortgages dominated consumer preferences. Among those who refinanced in Q2, more than 95 percent opted for fixed-rate loans, according to the Freddie Mac Quarterly Product Transition Report.
Read More »FHFA: HARP Accounts for Record 33% of June Refinances
HARP-assisted refinances drove record refinance activity in the month of June, FHFA revealed Tuesday. The agency released its Refinance Report for June 2012, showing that refinance volume remained strong in June as mortgage rates fell to all-time lows. An estimated 33 percent of refinance volume was done through HARP, the highest percentage since HARP's inception. The report revealed that at the end of June, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae had refinanced 422,969 loans through HARP in 2012, more than the estimated total of 400,000 for all of 2011. This brings the total number of HARP refinances by the GSEs to 1.4 million.
Read More »Housing Scorecard Examines Hobbled Recovery
HUD and Treasury Department released the latest scorecard Friday, providing a look at a market in recovery but threatened by an expected increase in foreclosure activity. According to the report, foreclosure starts and completions both declined in June, painting a picture of continued recovery. However, officials expect foreclosure activity to pick up in coming months as firms lift delays in foreclosure processing.
Read More »Report: 81 Percent of Q2 Refinances Maintained or Reduced Debt
Freddie Mac released the results of its second quarter refinance analysis Wednesday, revealing that homeowners who refinance continue to strengthen their housing situations. Freddie Mac's report showed that 81 percent of homeowners who refinanced their first-lien home mortgage either maintained the same loan amount or lowered their principal balance in the year's second quarter.
Read More »Freddie Mac Announces Planned Changes to Relief Refinance Program
The GSE announced that it will align requirements for mortgages with loan-to-value (LTV) ratios that are equal to or less than 80 percent with those for mortgages with LTV ratios greater than 80 percent. In addition, Freddie Mac said it is evaluating the Relief Refinance program by focusing on its Open Access offering and determining the best approach to maximize the program's reach.
Read More »Oregon Senator Proposes Refi Plan Funded with Bond Sales
Sen. Jeff Merkley(D-Oregon) announced a plan Wednesday to allow underwater homeowners to refinance at lower interest rates through the creation of a Rebuilding American Homeownership Trust. His plans call for a one-time trust he says is similar to the Homeownership Loan Corporation created during the Great Depression. As banks refinance underwater homeowners, the trust would purchase the loans from the banks. Meanwhile, the trust would receive funding from bond sales.
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