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Tag Archives: Refinance

AG Settlement Brings Relief to Military Members

The settlement reached last week between federal and state officials and the nation's five largest servicers includes specific provisions for U.S. military members wrongfully harmed by their mortgage servicer. Four of the five banks participating in the settlement - JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Ally - will review foreclosures of military members since January 2006, identifying instances of violation of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, according to the Department of Justice.

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Bank of America Focuses on Customer Satisfaction During Refi Boom

Bank of America is experiencing a deluge of phone calls from homeowners wanting to refinance. Consumer demand is so high, in fact, that without some internal adjustment, it threatens to compromise the level of customer service delivered by the bank's fulfillment personnel and interfere with closing timelines. The company says it's not willing to sacrifice long-term customer satisfaction for short-term volume, and it has instituted a temporary stopgap measure that alerts customers when it is experiencing processing delays due to high volume.

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California Secures $18B in Robo-Signing Settlement

Thursday's unprecedented $25 billion settlement between federal and state officials and the nation's top mortgage servicers was especially favorable to California. After leaving settlement negotiations in September, claiming the proposal at the time was inadequate for California homeowners, Attorney General Kamala Harris opted to sign on to the final settlement, which was revised to secure $18 billion for the state of California. At the time Harris left the settlement, California was expected to receive about $4 billion from the banks.

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Outstanding Mortgage Balances Declined $30B Each Month in 2011

Each month of 2011, outstanding mortgage balances in the U.S. declined by an average of $30 billion, according to a recently released report from Moody's Analytics and Equifax. The report attributes the decline to defaulted loans being written off. Aggregate delinquency rose by 6 basis points in December to 6.12 percent, according to the companies' joint study. The rate remains in line with rates seen since April but has declined since a January high of 8.25 percent.

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Rates Give Back Last Week’s Increases, Setting New Record Lows

Average mortgage interest rates have reversed from the upward blip reported last week. Declines this week completely erased the previous week's increases, as the average rate attached to the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, 15-year fixed-rate mortgage, and 5-year adjustable-rate mortgage all settled in at new record lows, Freddie Mac reported Thursday. The GSE attributed the about-face to the fact that recent data on economic growth fell short of market projections.

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Obama Details Plan for Mass Refi Program Funded by Largest Lenders

President Obama on Wednesday outlined his proposal to allow millions more homeowners to cash in on today's historically low mortgage rates. He issued a call to Congress to pass legislation to establish a streamlined refinancing program through the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) that would be open to all non-GSE borrowers with non-jumbo loans who are current on their payments. The program would cost $5 to $10 billion and would be paid for by imposing fees on the largest financial institutions.

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Refi Claims Against Freddie Mac Expose GSEs’ Public-Private Conflict

Was the nation's second largest mortgage company betting against mortgage refinancing? Allegations supporting the affirmative which were made public this week have prompted the U.S. Treasury to launch an official probe. Analysts say the story is less sensational than it appears and only highlights the conflict that comes with being neither fully public nor fully private. The GSE's main business is guaranteeing mortgage credit risk, but it needs to turn a profit to stay in this business, all the while being told its duty is to foster a housing recovery.

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Mortgage Rates Reverse Course

Freddie Mac reported Thursday that mortgage interest rates have done a 180 and are now starting to climb, buoyed by positive housing data over recent weeks which show the market ended 2011 on a high note. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 10 basis points in one week's time and is now averaging 3.98 percent, reversing its previous three-week trend of setting all-time record lows. Despite the jump, this marks the eighth consecutive week the 30-year fixed rate has remained below 4.00 percent.

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Obama Announces New Refi Program in State of the Union Address

Despite rumors earlier in the week that President Barack Obama would announce a settlement between the state attorneys general and the nation's top servicers in his State of the Union address, the president made no such announcement Tuesday night. However, he did announce his intention to save millions of homeowners approximately $3,000 annually on their mortgages by allowing them to refinance at today's low interest rates. Obama also plans to create a Financial Crimes Unit to protect consumers from fraud schemes.

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Mortgage Rates: How Low Can They Go?

Credit conditions may be tight, but for those who do qualify for a new home loan, the cost of borrowing has never been lower. Data released Thursday by Freddie Mac shows the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage edged down to 3.88 percent this week to hit a new all-time low. The 30-year rate has come in below the 4.00 percent mark for seven consecutive weeks now. The 15-year rate edged up just one basis point from its record low to 3.17 percent.

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