FHFA Releases FHFA Strategic Plan for FY 2015-2019 and Performance and Accountability Report

On November 21, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) published a news release announcing the release of the FHFA Strategic Plan: Fiscal Years 2015-2019.

News Release

FHFA Releases FHFA Strategic Plan for FY 2015-2019 and Performance and Accountability Report

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Washington, D.C. – The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) today released the FHFA Strategic Plan:  Fiscal Years 2015-2019, which reflects the agency’s priorities as regulator of the Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBanks) and as regulator and conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the Enterprises).  FHFA’s strategic plan also reflects the priorities outlined for the Enterprises in the 2014 Strategic Plan for the Conservatorships of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which the agency released in May.  Earlier this year, FHFA requested input on the draft agency strategic plan from Members of Congress, the public, and interested stakeholders in accordance with the Government Performance and Results Modernization Act of 2010.

FHFA’s strategic plan sets forth three goals for the agency:

  1. Ensure Safe and Sound Regulated Entities
  2. Ensure Liquidity, Stability and Access in Housing Finance
  3. Manage the Enterprises’ Ongoing Conservatorships

FHFA also released the Performance and Accountability Report this week, which details FHFA’s activities as regulator of the Federal Home Loan Bank System and as regulator and conservator of the Enterprises during fiscal year 2014.  For the sixth consecutive year, FHFA received an unmodified or “clean” audit opinion on its fiscal year 2014 financial statements from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. 

Link to FHFA’s Strategic Plan:  Fiscal Years 2015-2019

Link to Input Received on Draft Agency Strategic Plan [select Strategic Plan in pull down at top of page]

Link to FY 2014 Performance and Accountability Report

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Contacts:
Stefanie Johnson (202) 649-3030 / Corinne Russell (202) 649-3032??

Please click here to view the news release online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

FHFA Prepared Remarks of Melvin Watt

On November 7, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) released the prepared remarks of Melvin L. Watt at the 2014 National Association of Realtors Conference & Expo.

Prepared Remarks of Melvin L. Watt, Director, FHFA, at the 2014 National Association of Realtors Conference & Expo

Remarks as Prepared for Delivery
Melvin L. Watt, Director
Federal Housing Finance Agency
2014 National Association of Realtors Conference & Expo
New Orleans, LA

Thank you for inviting me to speak to you this morning.  As realtors, you are working on the ground every day to help individuals and families who want to achieve the goal of homeownership.  While we know that homeownership is not a good option for everyone, we also know that it is one of the primary ways that many Americans have accumulated and grown personal wealth.  Homeownership is also a means for many families to gain stability and invest in their communities. 

The last several years have been difficult ones for the housing market, especially when it comes to homeownership.  In the aftermath of the financial crisis, the market was hit hard with record defaults, loss of home value and equity, and foreclosures.  This market turmoil has affected your communities and your work as realtors.  But, things have started to improve.

At this time when the housing market is recovering but not yet fully recovered, there has been much needed conversation about homeownership, both about access to homeownership and about demand for homeownership. 

On the access to homeownership side, the conversations always start with the availability of and access to credit.  There is widespread concern that today’s credit market has swung from the reckless lending of the past to an opposite extreme in which only borrowers who have the most pristine credit can get a mortgage.  Compared to the pre-crisis period in the early 2000s, the overall volume for purchase mortgage lending has significantly declined.  In addition, credit scores required by lenders have, on average, risen considerably both across the entire market and within Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s guarantee business.  

FHFA, both as regulator of the Federal Home Loan Banks and as regulator and conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is at the heart of this conversation.  No one wants to return to the excesses and abuses of the past and FHFA is taking steps to ensure that this does not occur.  But the message we have tried to send is that we need to find a way back to responsible lending to creditworthy borrowers across all market segments.      

As part of FHFA’s statutory obligations (1) to ensure safety and soundness of our regulated entities and (2) to ensure liquidity in the housing finance market, the question of how to achieve responsible access to credit is of critical importance.  In putting the access to credit conversation in context, we should start with the mortgage lending reforms that have been adopted since the housing crisis began. 

We now have in place a robust set of mortgage lending protections that could well have prevented the abusive lending boom we experienced.  With the passage of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, borrowers now have meaningful protections against the kind of mortgages with risky features that resulted in high default rates and helped fuel the crisis. 

With these reforms, before a mortgage loan can be made, lenders are now required to assess whether a borrower has the ability to repay a mortgage.  This requirement provides a critical protection for borrowers, contributes to the stability of the housing market, and is fundamental to safe and sound lending.  Assessing a borrower’s ability to repay prevents the no-doc lending that was pervasive during the boom and led to widespread losses. 

Reforms that have been adopted also restrict other mortgage products, such as subprime teaser adjustable rate mortgages that led to unaffordable payments when interest rates increased a few years into the loan.  Other reforms restrict the prepayment penalties that stripped away home equity when borrowers tried to exit unaffordable loan products.  And, mortgage originators can no longer be paid more for putting borrowers who qualify for better loan alternatives into more expensive loans.

The Dodd-Frank Act also created the Qualified Mortgage standard.  This standard requires loans to be fully amortizing, meaning no interest only or negatively amortizing loans.  To be a Qualified Mortgage, points and fees cannot exceed the specified thresholds and loan terms also cannot exceed 30 years.  And FHFA has directed the Enterprises to limit their mortgage purchases to loans that meet these Qualified Mortgage product feature requirements. 

These reforms establish a solid new foundation for the housing market to responsibly provide access to credit for creditworthy borrowers. 

However, today’s constrained credit environment has resulted in relatively few borrowers buying houses and benefitting from these protections and improvements.  The recent lender practice of setting higher minimum credit score standards than required by the Enterprises has locked many creditworthy borrowers out of today’s market.  This practice has been driven both by an overall cautious approach to the post-financial crisis housing market and by uncertainty about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s repurchase requirements.  As a result of these and other factors, mortgage originators have focused on refinancing and lending to borrowers with higher credit scores in recent years. 

But there are also a number of troubling headwinds limiting demand for homeownership.  These demand factors are keeping some individuals and families on the sidelines of the market instead of looking to buy a home.  So, factors driving down demand must be an important part of the conversation also.  What are some of these factors?

Increasingly, millennials – which include young people between 25 and 34 years of age – are choosing to remain renters.  Signs suggest that many millennials want to own a home in the future, but are holding off on purchasing for a number of reasons.  Many are getting married and having children later in life than their parents did, which often delays a decision to become a first-time homebuyer.  Additionally, many of them continue to face economic hardships from having entered the job market during the Great Recession.  The number of adult children living with their parents has also risen dramatically. 

Student loan debt is also having a financial impact on some millennials, and there are many nuances to this issue.  On the one hand, higher education may lead to increased future income for many in this group and, therefore, ultimately increase their ability to become successful homeowners.  However, many individuals with student loans are struggling with high debt levels and impaired ability to save for a down payment – both of which make it more difficult to qualify for a mortgage.        

On the demand side also, prospective borrowers other than young people and millennials are also facing challenges in accumulating enough money to make a large down payment and cover closing costs.  This is a problem of particular importance to communities of color, which generally have significantly lower average household wealth and experienced record loss of wealth during the financial crisis as a result of abusive mortgage products, the economic downturn and other factors.  And the impact of this wealth disparity is likely to have a growing impact on the future housing market since people of color are projected to account for approximately 70 percent of the increase in number of households over the next decade. 

Demand in today’s market is also limited by former homeowners who found themselves unable to keep up with their mortgage payments during the financial crisis, including many who lost their jobs during the recession or faced reductions in their income.  Many of these individuals not only lost their homes, but also seriously damaged their credit.  Many filed for bankruptcy.  Although some of them may be back on their feet in terms of income, their impaired credit records constrain their ability to return to homeownership.  

A less quantifiable factor on demand is the psychological impact of the housing crisis across the country.  Many people watched their friends or loved ones lose their homes or suffer financial hardship in the housing crisis, and this has deterred them from entering the homeownership market.  

Bottom line, there is no lack of rational explanations for why demand for homeownership is down, and these explanations will continue to change and evolve in the months and years ahead.  While things will not change overnight, it is my hope that many creditworthy individuals and families who are currently renters – but have the ability to pay a mortgage and become homeowners – will have the opportunity to pursue homeownership and will decide to do so.

A shift in this direction will not only be beneficial for our economy and overall housing market, but homeownership and paying down a mortgage remains a way that many individuals and families can save and build and retain wealth over time.1   The reforms I’ve already discussed will restrict the kind of wealth-stripping and abusive lending practices that characterized the subprime boom.  And, the foundation of these reforms and responsible lending practices will provide predictable mortgages that borrowers can afford and have the ability to repay.  Because of these factors, the fact that home prices are still low in many locations, and the fact that interest rates are low, now is a great time for realtors to be actively encouraging their customers who can afford it to become homeowners.

While FHFA can’t respond to every factor that is restricting demand for homeownership, we do have a number of efforts underway to encourage responsible lending and access to credit for those who want to become homeowners.  All of these efforts are consistent with our mandate to ensure the safety and soundness of our regulated entities and to ensure liquidity in the national housing finance market.  These efforts are also consistent with the actions we are continuing to take to strengthen the financial position of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac while they are in conservatorship, such as addressing guarantee fees, requiring the Enterprises to transfer significant credit risk to the private market, reducing their portfolio investments, and improving their servicing standards and loss mitigation options.      

As I discussed two weeks ago when I spoke to the Mortgage Bankers, FHFA is continuing the process of updating and clarifying the Representation and Warranty Framework (Framework) for the Enterprises.  While I won’t take the time today to repeat the details of this Framework, I do want to emphasize that FHFA is working to have the Enterprises place increased attention and resources on conducting quality control reviews and providing lenders access to automated appraisal tools to detect problems with mortgage purchases early on, even before the loan is purchased.  In addition, we believe that these revisions and clarifications to the Framework will reduce lender uncertainty about when the Enterprises will require repurchase of a loan and, as a result, will pave the way for lenders to lift some of their current credit overlays and reduce the cost of credit to borrowers without compromising the safety and soundness of the Enterprises.  

I also announced recently that the Enterprises are working to develop sensible and responsible guidelines for mortgages with loan-to-value ratios between 95 and 97 percent.  As I said earlier, there are creditworthy borrowers in today’s market who have the income to afford monthly mortgage payments but do not have the money to make a large down payment and pay closing costs.  Purchase guidelines that allow for 3 percent down payments will provide an opportunity for access to credit for some of these borrowers.  

To appropriately manage the Enterprises’ risk, the guidelines for these loans will be targeted in their scope and will include standards that support safety and soundness.  We know that the size of a down payment – by itself – is not the most reliable indicator of whether a borrower will repay a loan.  As a result, the guidelines will require that borrowers have “compensating factors” and risk mitigants – such as housing counseling, stronger credit histories, or lower debt-to-income ratios – in order to make the mortgage eligible for purchase by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.  This approach builds on the Enterprises’ experience using compensating factors and risk mitigants.  It also meets the objective to develop guidelines that look at and assess a borrower’s full financial picture and ability to repay, not just whether they have enough money for a big down payment.  Additionally, like other loans with down payments below 20 percent, these loans will require credit enhancement, such as private mortgage insurance. 

For individuals and families who rent rather than buy, continuing to support affordable rental housing is also an ongoing priority for FHFA and the Enterprises.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have historically played a key role in providing financing to multifamily projects and their multifamily business has demonstrated excellent performance even through the recent financial crisis. 

Under FHFA’s 2014 Conservatorship Strategic Plan, FHFA did not require a reduction in the Enterprises’ multifamily production levels, and we provided additional capacity for the Enterprises to participate in affordable multifamily projects.  Consistent with safety and soundness, FHFA is working with the Enterprises on multifamily initiatives for smaller rental properties and for manufactured housing communities which often are more likely to benefit smaller or more rural communities.  Additionally, the Federal Home Loan Banks continue to support affordable rental housing, including units affordable to very low-income families, through their Affordable Housing Program and other initiatives. 

Thank you again for providing me with the opportunity to be with you today and to speak about our work at FHFA to improve access to mortgage financing in a safe and sound way.  Our efforts at FHFA build upon the foundation of mortgage lending reforms that now provide borrowers with significant protections from the abusive practices that contributed to the financial crisis.  In fact, as the housing market continues to recover, we all have a shared responsibility to ensure that the home purchase process provides borrowers with opportunities for homeownership that are sustainable.

As FHFA continues efforts to move the housing finance market back to a state of normalcy that is built on responsible lending, we look forward to our ongoing engagement with realtors and other stakeholders in this important endeavor.

 1 See e.g., Herbert, McCue, and Sanchez-Moyano, “Is Homeownership Still an Effective Means of Building Wealth for Low-income and Minority Households? (Was it Ever?),” Joint Center for Housing Studies, Harvard University, at 48 (September 2013) (available at http://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/jchs.harvard.edu/files/hbtl-06.pdf).

Contacts:
Stefanie Johnson (202) 649-3030? / Corinne Russell (202) 649-3032

Please click here to view the prepared remarks online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

FHFA Directs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to Change Requirement Relating to Sales of Existing REO

On November 25, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) published a news release announcing its direction of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to alter one of their policies relating to the sale of real estate owned (REO) properties in their current inventory.

News Release

FHFA Directs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to Change Requirement Relating to Sales of Existing REO

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Washington, D.C. – The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) today directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the Enterprises) to alter one of their policies relating to the sale of real estate owned (REO) properties in their current inventory.  The change will permit the two companies to sell existing REO properties to any qualified purchaser at the property’s fair-market value, as determined by the Enterprises. 

Prior to today’s directive, the Enterprises required homeowners who have been through foreclosure and want to buy their home back to pay the entire amount owed on the mortgage.  This requirement similarly applied to anyone buying the home for the benefit of the previous homeowner.  Under the new policy change for existing REO properties, former homeowners who are able to repurchase their home – or a third-party able to purchase on their behalf – may do so under the fair-market value policy that already applies to other purchasers of REO properties.  

The policy change is limited to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac REO inventory of single-family homes as of November 25, 2014.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have approximately 121,000 properties in their combined REO inventory.  Certain property exclusions may apply and will be handled by the Enterprises on a case-by-case basis.

“This is a targeted, but important policy change that should help reduce property vacancies and stabilize home values and neighborhoods,” said FHFA Director Melvin L. Watt.  “It expands the number of potential buyers of REO properties and is consistent with the Enterprises’ practice of requiring fair-market value for those properties.”

Under existing Enterprise rules, former borrowers must wait a minimum of three years after a foreclosure to be eligible to receive a loan purchased or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.  The purchase of an REO property for the benefit of the previous owner must also still be intended for use by that owner as their principal place of residence. 

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Contacts:
Stefanie Johnson (202) 649-3030 / Corinne Russell (202) 649-3032??

Please click here to view the news release online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

FHFA Announces Miami HARP Outreach Event Dec. 5

On November 19, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) published a news release announcing its fourth event to reach homeowners who are eligible for the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP).

News Release

FHFA Announces Miami HARP Outreach Event Dec. 5

Florida Has Most Homeowners in U.S. Eligible for Refinance Program

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

?Washington, D.C. – The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) today announced it will hold its fourth event to reach homeowners who could save as much as $200 per month through the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP).  FHFA Director Mel Watt will join housing experts and community leaders on December 5 in a town hall-style meeting at Miami Dade College North Campus in Miami, Florida.  The event is designed to provide tools to community leaders to encourage the more than 21,000 Miami area residents still eligible to take advantage of HARP.

“We will be working with community leaders and other trusted sources to get the word out that more than 97,000 homeowners in Florida are still eligible for and can save money by refinancing through HARP,” said FHFA Director Watt. “We will also be providing information about the range of assistance available to homeowners in distress other than those who are eligible for HARP.”

Director Watt will kick off the event and Maria Fernandez, Associate Director for the Office of Housing and Regulatory Policy at FHFA, will moderate a panel discussion including representatives from the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ditech Mortgage Corporation/Green Tree Servicing, and a representative with Consolidated Credit Solutions in Miami. 

According to new data from the FHFA, as of the second quarter, there are more than 722,000 eligible homeowners nationwide who would benefit financially from HARP, with more than 97,000 in Florida alone.  This includes more than 21,000 in Miami, 17,000 in Tampa, more than 11,000 in Orlando, and more than 9,000 in Jacksonville.  FHFA’s interactive map of the U.S. shows HARP-eligible borrowers by Metropolitan Statistical Area, county, or zip code.

To be eligible for HARP, homeowners must meet the following criteria:

  • Their loan must be owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
  • Their mortgage must have been originated on or before May 31, 2009.
  • Their current loan-to-value ratio must be greater than 80 percent.
  • They must be current on their mortgage payments with no late payments in the last six months and no more than one late payment in the last 12 months.

Borrowers generally benefit from HARP if they meet those criteria and have a remaining balance of $50,000 or more on their mortgage, have a remaining term on their mortgage of greater than 10 years, and their mortgage interest rate is at least 1.5 percent higher than current market rates. 

FHFA and the Treasury Department introduced HARP in early 2009 as part of the Making Home Affordable program.  As of August 2014, more than 3.2 million homeowners have refinanced through HARP.  HARP is one of the few refinance programs that allows borrowers with little or no equity to take advantage of low interest rates and other refinancing benefits. 

FHFA launched a nationwide public awareness campaign and the website HARP.gov and HARP.gov/espanol? to reach borrowers who are eligible to participate in HARP.  FHFA has held HARP outreach events in Chicago, Atlanta, and Detroit, the cities with the highest number of eligible borrowers.  Follow @FHFA on Twitter for information on the Miami event. 

?Link to HARP Toolkit?

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Contacts:
Stefanie Johnson (202) 649-3030 / Corinne Russell (202) 649-3032?

Please click here to view the news release online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

FHA #INFO 14-69 Increasing Use of FHA’s Claims Without Conveyance of Title Procedures

On November 26, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) released single family housing news and updates in FHA INFO #14-69.

TO: All FHA-Approved Mortgagees

What’s New

Increasing Use of FHA’s Claims Without Conveyance of Title Procedures

Today, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) published Mortgagee Letter 2014-24 entitled, “Increasing Use of FHA’s Claims Without Conveyance of Title Procedures”, the purpose of which is to notify mortgagees that the Commissioner’s Adjusted Fair Market Value1 (CAFMV) must be used at a foreclosure sale or during any Post-Foreclosure Sale Effort for properties sold through this procedure.

This policy is expected to decrease the number of property conveyance claims being filed as such claims result in greater losses to FHA’s Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. This Mortgagee Letter is effective for all foreclosure sales and Post-Foreclosure Sale Efforts associated with defaulted FHA-insured mortgages, scheduled on or after February 1, 2015.

1 FHA is permitting, but not requiring, the use of the CAFMV for Small Servicers (i.e., those servicers that either (a) service, together with any affiliates, 5,000 or fewer loans, all of which the servicer (or an affiliate) is the creditor or assignee; or (b) servicers that are Housing Finance Agencies as defined in 24 CFR 266.5).

Quick Links and Resources

  • View Mortgagee Letter 2014-24 at: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/administration/hudclips/letters/mortgagee
  • Call HUD’s National Servicing Center at (877) 622-8525 or send an email to cwcot@hud.gov
  • Contact the FHA Resource Center:
    Visit our online knowledge base to obtain answers to frequently asked questions 24/7 at www.hud.gov/answers

    E-mail the FHA Resource Center at answers@hud.gov and phone messages will be responded to during normal hours of         operation, 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., ET, Monday through Friday on all non-Federal holidays.

    Call 1-800-CALLFHA (1-800-225-5342). Persons with hearing or speech impairments may reach this number by calling the Federal Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339.

Please click here to view the online update in its entirety.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

FHA Extends Short Refi Program for Two More Years

On November 26, National Mortgage News published an article detailing the Federal Housing Administration’s extension of a principal reduction program through 2016.

FHA Extends Short Refi Program for Two More Years

The Federal Housing Administration has extended a principal reduction program for two years that helps borrowers refinance into FHA-insured loans.

The short refinance program was first authorized by Congress in 2008 to assist non-FHA borrowers that are underwater. It has evolved over time and is now being extended through 2016.

The FHA approved 1,660 short refis in 2013 with a total original mortgage amount of $238 million.  During the first 10 months of this year, nearly 1,330 short refis have been completed, according to the agency.

In an FHA short refi, the investor must agree to write down the principal balance by at least 10% and ensure the refinancing results in a loan-to-value ratio of 97.75%.  Once the refinancing is complete, the loans can be sold in Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities.

Bob Bodell, a vice president at Bloomington Ill.-based MSI, welcomed the two-year extension.  He noted there is “still a need for the program,” which is evident from all the nonperforming single-family loan sales.  Going forward, he expects FHA short refi volume will remain at current levels.

“Some of the competition has gone away,” he said.  “The loans are time consuming and sometimes difficult to do. But that is all we do at our [Frederick, Md.] branch.  So we have become very good at it.”

Hedge funds and other investors that buy distressed loans generally turn to MSI or its competitors to refinance underwater loans once the borrowers are current.

In the case of a delinquent borrower, the servicer is responsible for completing the trial payment process so the borrower can qualify for a FHA short refi.

“It is very good for the borrower,” Bodell said.  “It puts them in a whole new economic picture.”

During the short refinancing transaction, MSI pays off the investor and acquires the manually underwritten FHA-insured mortgage.

“It is one of the main ways a hedge or investor can liquidate the loan,” the MSI vice president said.  Then MSI turns around and sells the new loan in a Ginnie Mae securitization.

FHA conducts periodic sales of its nonperforming loans to investors.  In September, it sold 14,000 delinquent loans that are stripped of FHA mortgage insurance.

Bodell would like FHA to expand its short refi program so it could be used to refinance those former FHA loans.  “But it hasn’t been done yet,” he said.

MSI is a wholly owned subsidiary of First State Bank in Mendota, Ill.

Please click here to view the article online.

Please click here to view HUD’s Mortgagee Letter 2014-23 online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Fed Finalizes Merger Rule for Financial Institutions

On November 10, DS News published an article discussing the recent ruling of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board to implement section 622 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.

Fed Finalizes Merger Rule for Financial Institutions

The U.S. Federal Reserve Board recently issued a final rule to implement section 622 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.

The new rule, which goes into effect on January 1, 2015, prohibits a financial company from combining with another company if the liabilities of the newly formed company between the two exceed 10 percent of aggregate consolidated liabilities of all financial companies.

A financial institution’s liabilities are typically defined as the difference between risk-weighted assets and total regulatory capital, with the assets adjusted to include exposures from the regulatory capital.  Generally accepted accounting standards would be used to measure liabilities for firms that are not subject to consolidated risk-based capital rules. Institutions that are required to comply with the rule include depository institutions and companies that control insured depository institutions, bank holding companies, savings and loan holding companies, foreign banking organizations, and non-bank entities the Financial Stability Oversight Council for Board Supervision should designate.

Based on comments made in the last few months, the Fed made minor changes to the rule, which was originally proposed in May.  The company cannot acquire control of another company under merchant banking authority of the company has exceeded the 10 percent limit.  There is an exemption in the final rule, however, that allows a financial company to continue securitization if it has gone over the 10 percent limit.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Fannie Mae SVC-2014-20 Introducing the New Single-Family Servicing Guide

On November 12, Fannie Mae released Servicing Guide Announcement SVC-2014-20, subtitled Introducing the New Single-Family Servicing Guide.

Servicing Guide Announcement SVC-2014-20

Introducing the New Single-Family Servicing Guide

Fannie Mae is announcing the publication of the new Single-Family Servicing Guide (“Servicing Guide”), which will replace the 2012 Servicing Guide (as updated by Announcements) in its entirety.

Goals of the New Servicing Guide

Fannie Mae’s goals in creating the newly restructured and rewritten Servicing Guide were to make it easier for servicers to do business with Fannie Mae. The new Servicing Guide

  • makes it easier to locate servicing-related policies and requirements;
  • streamlines policy content by moving the procedural requirements to new separate Servicing Guide Procedures;
  • increases readability by using tables, bulleted lists, and more descriptive topic titles; and
  • allows for real-time updates as policies and requirements change.

Organization of the New Content

The new Servicing Guide is organized into parts that reflect the organization of a servicer’s operations. The structure within each part is further divided into subparts, chapters, sections, and topics that closely follow the mortgage loan lifecycle. All Fannie Mae servicing policies and requirements in the new Servicing Guide are located at the topic level. See the Servicing Guide Preface for an example of topics included by part and an overview of the new numbering system (similar to the numbering system of the Fannie Mae Single-Family Selling Guide).

Similarly, Servicing Guide Procedures are included in part F and are divided into documents based on servicing functional area or responsibility, which may serve as stand-alone reference documents.

Contents of the new Servicing Guide

The new Servicing Guide contains policies and requirements from the 2012 Servicing Guide, as amended through Announcements issued since September 2, 2011. All Announcements issued through October 17, 2014, have been incorporated into the new Servicing Guide.

With the new Servicing Guide, Fannie Mae

  • removed policies that are not required or duplicative,
  • aligned certain content to be consistent with the Selling Guide, and
  • added new policies that are being communicated through this Announcement.

Please click here to view the announcement in its entirety.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Fannie Mae Standard Modification Rate Adjustment

On November 7, Fannie Mae released a Servicing Notice announcing the new Standard Modification Interest Rate required for all Fannie Mae conventional mortgage loan modifications.

Servicing Notice

Fannie Mae Standard Modification Interest Rate Adjustment

Fannie Mae is adjusting the Fannie Mae Standard Modification Interest Rate required for all Fannie Mae conventional mortgage loan modifications, excluding Fannie Mae HAMP Modifications. The servicer must implement the new interest rate indicated on the Fannie Mae Standard Modification Interest Rate Exhibit for any mortgage loan modification evaluation conducted on or after November 14, 2014.

NOTE: As a reminder, the interest rate used to determine the final modification terms must be the same fixed interest rate that  was used when determining eligibility for the Trial Period Plan and calculating the Trial Period Plan payment.

Please click here to view the Servicing Notice online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Fannie Mae LL-2014-16 Advance Notice of Future Changes to Investor Reporting Requirements

On November 13, Fannie Mae released Lender Letter LL-2014-16, subtitled Advance Notice of Future Changes to Investor Reporting Requirements.

Lender Letter LL-2014-06

To: All Fannie Mae Single-Family Servicers

Advance Notice of Future Changes to Investor Reporting Requirements
This Lender Letter provides advance notification to servicers of upcoming changes to the following Fannie Mae investor reporting requirements:

  • Elimination of Mortgage Backed Security (MBS) Pool Balance Reporting
  • Changes to Due Dates for Fannie Mae Monthly Investor Reporting

Effective Date
The target effective date for the policies in this Lender Letter is during the third quarter of 2016; servicers will be notified once a specific effective date is established. Fannie Mae will conduct servicer outreach to provide additional information on implementation requirements prior to the effective date.

Elimination of MBS Pool Balance Reporting
Servicing Guide A1-4.2-01, Compensatory Fees Other Than Delays in the Liquidation Process

When these changes are implemented, the servicer will no longer be required to

  • report aggregate security balances for each MBS pool serviced,
  • reconcile the actual mortgage loan balance for all scheduled/scheduled remittance type mortgage loans that are in any given MBS pool to the aggregate security balance for that pool (or the servicer’s portion of that pool), or
  • pay compensatory fees for late or inaccurate reporting of MBS security balances and multiple wire transfers of MBS pool remittances.

Please click here to view the letter in its entirety.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.