Fannie Mae Revision to Servicer Expense Reimbursement Processing

On March 5, Fannie Mae released a revision to the servicer expense reimbursement processing update.

Servicer Expense Reimbursement Processing Update – Revised
This Change Notification provides a revised version of the Servicer LPS Line Item changes associated with the Black Knight (Invoice Management) notification posted in January 2014.

Reminder: Annual Certifications and Financial Statements Due for Most Lenders
As a reminder, Fannie Mae lenders are required to submit their audited financial statements and Form 582 Lender Record Information and Certification within 90 days of their fiscal year-end. For lenders that ended their fiscal year on Dec. 31, 2013, the required submissions are due by March 31, 2014.
 
Remember, the Form 582 application is now available every day, 24 hours a day, except 8 p.m. ET Sunday to 8 a.m. Monday for weekly maintenance. Please review the job aid for tips and contact your customer account team if you need further assistance.

Please click here to view the online update.

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 Releases Servicing Policy Updates

On March 12, Fannie Mae released two servicing policy updates and announced a redesign of its Servicing page.

Selling/Servicing Notice: Discontinuance of the Federal Reserve Board CD Index
This Notice announces that Fannie Mae is substituting indexes based on the LIBOR rates published in The Wall Street Journal for the discontinued Federal Reserve Board CD rates. Also, two standard ARM Plans based on the discontinued index are retired, effective immediately. The updated Standard ARM Plan Matrix is available on the business portal.

Servicing Notice: Effective Date Change for Fannie Mae Standard Modification and Streamlined Modification Updates
This Notice announces that Fannie Mae is postponing the effective date of April 1, 2014, for implementation of requirements set forth in Announcement SVC-2013-28, Fannie Mae Standard Modification and Streamlined Modification Updates. An announcement will be issued in the near future that sets a new effective date and updates other requirements related to these modification programs.

Servicing Page Redesigned to Suit Your Needs
In response to user feedback, we have redesigned the Servicing page to provide you a faster and easier way to access content. Resources on the page were consolidated into simpler sections and are now organized under clear and logical headings that align with the terms used in the Servicing Guide. We appreciate your continued feedback on the site.

Please click here to view the online release.

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 Issues SVC-2014-05 Modification Updates, Two Servicing Notices

On March 28, Fannie Mae issued Servicing Guide Announcement SVC-2014-05 regarding standard and streamlined modification updates, as well as servicing notices pertaining to mortgage loan reporting and allowable foreclosure attorney fees.

Announcement SVC-2014-05: Fannie Mae Standard Modification and Streamlined Modification Updates
In this Announcement, Fannie Mae is updating the modification terms for mortgage loans with pre-modified mark-to-market LTV ratios less than 80%. It supersedes and replaces SVC-2013-28, Fannie Mae Standard Modification and Streamlined Modification Updates, in its entirety. This Announcement also updates requirements related to the Evaluation Notice, solicitation letter, and Trial Period Plan.

Servicing Notice: Late or Inaccurate Mortgage Loan Reporting
This Notice announces that effective May 1, 2014, Fannie Mae will begin issuing warning letters to and assessing compensatory fees on servicers that submit late or inaccurate reports.

Servicing Notice: Updates to Allowable Attorney Foreclosure Fees
This Notice announces that Fannie Mae is updating the maximum allowable foreclosure attorney fees for mortgage loans secured by properties in the state of New York. The Allowable Attorney and Trustee Foreclosure Fees exhibit on Fannie Mae’s business portal reflects these changes and corrects an error in the footnote annotations for certain states.

Please click here to view the online announcement.

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 Extends Incentive Program For HomePath Properties

On March 27, Fannie Mae published a release titled Fannie Mae Extends Incentive Program For HomePath Properties.

Fannie Mae Extends Incentive Program For HomePath Properties

Homebuyers Receive 3.5 Percent Closing Cost Assistance During FirstLook Period

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Fannie Mae (FNMA/OTC) announced it is extending the 3.5 percent closing cost assistance incentive for HomePath® properties purchased during the FirstLookTM period in 27 eligible states. During the FirstLook period, owner-occupant or public entity buyers are able to submit offers on HomePath properties, giving them the opportunity to purchase a home without competition from investors.  The FirstLook period is in effect for the first 20 days a property is on the market. 

“We have received a strong response from the incentive since it went into effect on February 14, and we are happy to extend the offer to even more homebuyers,” said Jay Ryan, Vice President of REO Sales. “With the unusually cold and extended winter season ending, we want to give people more opportunity to use the incentive to buy properties that they will call home.”

To be eligible for the incentive, the initial offer must be submitted by April 30, 2014, and close on or before June 30, 2014. The incentive will offer qualified buyers up to 3.5 percent of the final sales price to pay closing costs. In many cases, buyers could use these savings to buy down their interest rate through upfront points, resulting in additional savings over time. Buyers can work with the lender of their choice to determine if this is an option.

Prospective buyers can search for properties and easily identify how many days remain on a property’s FirstLook period by visiting www.HomePath.com. Each qualifying property will be identified by the sales incentive icon. HomePath properties offer buyers a wide selection of options, including single-family homes, condominiums, and town houses. For more details on the program, visit www.HomePath.com.

Please click here to view the release 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.

CFPB Recovers More Than $1 Million for Servicemembers, Veterans, and Their Families

On March 6, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) released an update titled CFPB Recovers More Than $1 Million for Servicemembers, Veterans, and their Families.

CFPB Recovers More Than $1 Million for Servicemembers, Veterans, and their Families

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announced today that servicemembers, veterans, and their families who complained to the Bureau about financial products or services have recovered more than $1 million. The relief was reported in the CFPB’s second snapshot of complaints from military consumers, which also highlighted how some military families are not receiving the added consumer protections they have earned. The report covers more than 14,000 complaints from servicemembers, veterans, and their families received by the CFPB from July 21, 2011 through February 1, 2014.

“Military families make enormous sacrifices for our nation and deserve to be protected,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “I am pleased that the Bureau has assisted thousands in cutting through red tape when dealing with their financial institutions. However, the complaints show that many servicemembers, veterans, and their families are not getting the protections accorded to them by federal laws and that raises concern.”

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which created the CFPB, established the Office of Servicemember Affairs to address specific consumer protection concerns for the nation’s military community. A priority of the office is to monitor the consumer complaints the Bureau receives from active-duty servicemembers, veterans, and their families.

By and large, the complaints submitted by the military track with those of the population at large. In the last fiscal quarter, the Bureau handled on average more than 250 complaints per week from military families. Complaints have come from every state, and every rank and branch of the Armed Services.

Servicemembers, veterans, and their families who complained to the CFPB have received more than $1 million in relief since July 2011. Not all servicemembers, veterans and their family members who submitted complaints received money; a number of them received non-monetary relief — such as cleaning up their credit reports, stopping harassment from debt collectors, and correcting account information — and some had their complaints closed without relief. But the Bureau has seen monetary relief returned to military consumers across all products. Among companies that reported monetary relief, this includes:

  • A median amount of $470 for mortgages;
  • A median amount of $143 for credit cards; and
  • A median amount of $125 for bank account or service.

According to today’s snapshot report, the top three complaints by servicemembers, veterans, and their families are mortgages, debt collection, and credit cards.

Servicemember Protection Concerns

While servicemembers have all the protections that everyday consumers have, they may also have additional protections based on their military service. The CFPB is particularly concerned about when servicemembers are not seeing the unique protections accorded to them by federal laws. Specifically, the Bureau is concerned with:

  • Debt collection: Since the Bureau began taking debt collection complaints in July 2013, it has quickly become the top complaint category for servicemembers. Specifically, the CFPB is concerned about aggressive and deceptive tactics used by debt collectors against military members. These tactics often involve contacting a servicemember’s military chain of command, threatening punishment under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, threatening to have a servicemember reduced in rank, or threatening to have a servicemember’s security clearance revoked.
  • Student loans: The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) provides financial protections so that members of the Armed Forces can undertake military duties without adverse financial consequences. But military consumers have reported problems obtaining correct and consistent information on available SCRA protections for their student loans. Some report being incorrectly told by their loan servicer that protections apply only when they are deployed or that the loan must be in deferment. Consumers also report they are repeatedly and incorrectly asked to submit additional documentation such as paperwork showing recertification of active duty status.
  • Payday loans: The Military Lending Act (MLA) prohibits interest rates above 36 percent on some types of loans, including certain payday loans, auto title, and tax refund anticipation loans, to active-duty military, their spouses, and dependents. While the number of payday loan complaints received from servicemembers has been relatively small, the CFPB is concerned that lenders are skirting the MLA by lending just outside its narrow parameters.
  • Mortgages: Military consumers have complained about mortgage servicers’ lack of knowledge about military-specific programs. They report that servicers are unaware of the guidance offered by the CFPB and the other prudential regulators that servicers must provide accurate and timely information about available assistance options when a military family gets Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders. Military consumers have also complained that servicers do not know about the short-sale guidelines aimed at assisting servicemembers with PCS orders, or that a PCS move may be considered a qualifying hardship for various foreclosure-prevention programs.

The CFPB accepts complaints about credit cards, mortgages, bank accounts, payday loans, private student loans, consumer loans, credit reporting, debt collection, and money transfers. The Bureau requests that companies respond to complaints within 15 days and describe the steps they have taken or plan to take. The CFPB expects companies to close all but the most complicated complaints within 60 days. Complaints inform the Bureau’s work and help to identify problems, which then feed into the Bureau’s supervision and enforcement prioritization process.

The Bureau released its first snapshot of consumer complaints received from servicemembers, veterans, and their families in the spring of 2013.

To submit a complaint, consumers can:

  • Go online at www.consumerfinance.gov/complaint
  • Call the toll-free phone number at 1-855-411-CFPB (2372) or TTY/TDD phone number at 1-855-729-CFPB (2372)
  • Fax the CFPB at 1-855-237-2392
  • Mail a letter to: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, P.O. Box 4503, Iowa City, Iowa 52244
  • Additionally, through AskCFPB, consumers can get clear, unbiased answers to their questions about payday loans at consumerfinance.gov/askcfpb or by calling 1-855-411-CFPB (2372).

The full report can be found at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201403_cfpb_snapshot-report_complaints-received-servicemembers.pdf

A blog about the report by Holly Petraeus, the Assistant Director for Servicemember Affairs, is at: http://www.consumerfinance.gov/blog/behind-the-numbers-servicemember-complaints/

###

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.

Please click here to view the online release.

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.

Agencies Issue Proposed Rule on Minimum Requirements for AMCs

On March 24, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) issued a joint release titled Agencies Issue Proposed Rule on Minimum Requirements for Appraisal Management Companies.

Agencies Issue Proposed Rule on Minimum Requirements for Appraisal Management Companies

WASHINGTON—Six agencies today issued a proposed rule that would implement minimum requirements for state registration and supervision of appraisal management companies (AMCs). An AMC is an entity that serves as an intermediary between appraisers and lenders and provides appraisal management services.

In accordance with section 1124 of Title XI of the Financial Institution Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989, as added by section 1473 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the minimum requirements in the proposed rule would apply to states that elect to establish an appraiser certifying and licensing agency with the authority to register and supervise AMCs.

The proposed rule would not compel a state to establish an AMC registration and supervision program, and there is no penalty imposed on a state that does not establish a regulatory structure for AMCs. However, an AMC is barred by section 1124 from providing appraisal management services for federally related transactions in a state that has not established such a regulatory structure.

Under the proposed rule, participating states would require that an AMC:

  • Register in the state and be subject to its supervision;
  • Use only state-certified or licensed appraisers for federally related transactions, such as real estate-related financial transactions overseen by a federal financial institution regulatory agency that require appraiser services;
  • Require that appraisals comply with the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice;
  • Ensure selection of a competent and independent appraiser; and
  • Establish and comply with processes and controls reasonably designed to ensure that appraisals comply with the appraisal independence standards established under the Truth in Lending Act.

The proposed rule also would require that the certifying and licensing agency of a
participating state have certain authorities, including the authority to:

  • Approve or deny initial AMC registration applications and applications for renewals;
  • Examine the AMC and require the AMC to submit relevant information to the state;
  • Verify that the appraisers on the AMC’s appraiser network or panel hold valid
    state certifications or licenses;
  • Conduct investigations of AMCs to assess potential violations of appraisal-related laws;
  • Discipline an AMC that violates appraisal-related laws; and
  • Report an AMC’s violation of appraisal-related laws, as well as disciplinary and
    enforcement actions, and other pertinent information about an AMC’s operations
    to the Appraisal Subcommittee of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination
    Council.

The proposed rule would provide participating states 36 months after its effective date
to implement the minimum requirements. An AMC that is a subsidiary of a financial
institution and regulated by a federal financial institution regulatory agency is required
by section 1124 and the proposed rule to meet the same minimum requirements as
other AMCs, although such an AMC is not required to register with a state.

In conjunction with the proposal, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is
proposing to rescind appraisal regulations promulgated by the former Office of
Thrift Supervision (OTS). The OTS appraisal regulations are duplicative of the
FDIC’s appraisal regulations in Part 323. Similarly, in a separate rulemaking,
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is rescinding appraisal regulations
promulgated by the former OTS.

The proposal is being issued jointly by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Federal
Housing Finance Agency, and the National Credit Union Administration.

The Federal Register notice is attached. The agencies are seeking comments from the
public on all aspects of the proposal. The public will have 60 days to review and
comment on the proposal and the proposed Paperwork Reduction Act analysis.
Publication of the proposal in the Federal Register is expected shortly.

Please click here to view the joint release and Federal Register notice.

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.

USDA Countdown: 7 CFR 3555

On February 7, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released a single family housing servicing update titled Countdown: 7 CFR 3555.

On December 9, 2013, the Federal Register published 7 Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR) Part 3555, “Guaranteed Rural Housing Program.” The new regulation sets forth
policies for the SFHGLP as authorized by Section 502(h) of the Housing Act of 1949,
as amended. It replaces RD Instruction Part 1980 Subpart D and ushers in important
changes (some listed in the “Dig In!” section below) that position the program to meet
the needs of today’s rural homebuyers. The “3555” becomes effective for all complete
loan applications received by USDA on or after September 1, 2014.

This “Countdown: 7 CFR 3555” newsletter is a key communication to assist the Agency
and our lending and real estate partners to plan and execute a successful transition
from RD Instruction Part 1980 Subpart D to 7 CFR Part 3555! It is just one of the new
communication and training tools that the Single Family Housing Guaranteed Loan
Division will make available to you ahead of the September 1, 2014 effective date.
Electronic mail ListServ notifications will also be used to deliver important
announcements. To sign up for ListServ follow these steps:
    1. Log on to: http://www.rdlist.sc.egov.usda.gov
    2. Enter your email address.
    3. Select the boxes next to the ListServ subscriptions you wish to receive. The following
        are recommended: “SFH Origination News,” “SFH Guaranteed Underwriting System
        (GUS) News” and “SFH Servicing News.”
    4. After your selections have been made, scroll to the bottom of the webpage and select
        “Subscribe.” You may unsubscribe at any time.

Please click here to view the 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.

The Fate of Fannie and Freddie and the Importance of GSE Reform

On February 5, DSNews published an article titled The Fate of Fannie and Freddie and the Importance of GSE Reform.

The Fate of Fannie and Freddie and the Importance of GSE Reform

Congress chartered Fannie Mae in 1938 as part of the New Deal and Freddie Mac in 1970. Although they were chartered by the federal government, the corporations were owned by private shareholders for the purpose of making homeownership affordable for lower- and middle-class and other underserved Americans.

In theory, GSEs purchase mortgages from lenders, guarantee them, and package them into mortgage-backed securities, which they either keep as investments or sell to institutional investors. Lenders are able to increase liquidity and lending potential by selling these loans to the GSEs, which in turn should increase availability of credit.

In practice, they have dominated the mortgage finance market, thus promoting homeownership. This domination is attributed to the ability of the GSEs to buy mortgages by borrowing at below-market rates based on the illusion of a government guarantee.

In the 1990s, they implemented housing initiatives to lenders to offer low-down-payment mortgages to low- and middle-income families and to loosen underwriting guidelines, both factors which contributed to the housing bubble.

In the early 2000s, Wall Street increased quantity of loans—often non-GSE, riskier loans that were securitized, another factor contributing to the bubble. By 2005, the GSEs, which were losing market share, loosened underwriting guidelines, taking on more risk without an increase in capital reserves.

As the bubble began bursting in 2008, some in Congress wanted the GSEs to take on more risk, but U.S. Treasury officials, alarmed by continued devaluation of GSE loan portfolios, GSE weak capital reserves, potential investor sell-off, and impact on global markets—against the GSEs, with their weak capital reserves—persuaded the GSEs to consent to conservatorship in September 2008.

The Housing and Economic Recovery Act (HERA), enacted in July 2008, created the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), the GSEs’ conservator since 2008.

Fannie and Freddie continue to dominate the secondary mortgage market: They currently have more than $5.6 trillion in obligations outstanding, an amount nearly 40 percent the size of the entire U.S. economy, and they owned or guaranteed about 61 percent of all new residential mortgage loans in the United States in 2012. Contrasted with private mortgage origination, only $5.2 billion in residential mortgage-backed securities have been issued without government support in the same time period.

Importance of GSE Reform
Freddie and Fannie received a $188 billion bailout from Treasury and had paid $146 billion back by September 2013, with two-thirds paid back this year. They continue to be profitable, while having increased lender fees and tightened underwriting guidelines, and, along with the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), which guarantees reverse mortgages to seniors, insure nearly 90 percent of all residential mortgages.

The costs beyond the direct infusion of the $188 billion bailout are much higher: an estimated $7.4 trillion loss in real property equity, for one.

The GSE “privatized gains and socialized losses” model remains firmly entrenched in housing, and, along with the mortgage-interest federal tax deduction, has been described as having evolved into an entitlement.

Both ends of our political spectrum agree GSE reform is required to minimize risk in U.S. housing markets. Methodology, however, varies depending upon the perspective of the GSEs, which promoted homeownership by loosening standards at the urging of politicians, or private investment companies, which securitized and sold riskier loans.

Suggested Actions
Sens. Bob Corker (R-Tennessee) and Mark Warner (D-Virginia) introduced a bill this past June that would replace the GSEs with federal reinsurance for mortgage-backed securities, similar to FDIC-insured bank deposits. This is thought to encourage private investors to take first losses on mortgages, knowing there is a backstop in economic downturns. President Obama has endorsed this approach in theory.

A government insurance program could assuage the concerns of consumer and trade groups, who prefer the status quo about availability of mortgages, and the ability and promotion of prospective owners to buy homes, the mission of Fannie and Freddie.

Most legal and residential mortgage banking and related professionals and industries advocate a thoughtful approach to reform, which would include some type of government guarantee or insurance. The U.S. housing market includes and affects untold numbers of homeowners and home occupants, who are served by a vast industry of professionals—all of whom value the intrinsic permanency of homeownership and solidarity found in our country based on our private real estate market.

While larger lenders may not like the competition of the GSEs’ rates, they benefit, as smaller lenders do, by the liquidity and pseudo-government guarantee offered by the GSEs. Smaller lenders do not want the GSEs to wind down because they cannot compete with the liquidity of the large banks.

On the other end of the spectrum are advocates of a free market system, with the government almost completely out of housing finance, except for, say, FHA/HUD first-time low- to middle-income buyer mortgages. They propose winding down the GSEs while legislating the definition of a prime loan (could the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s qualified mortgage definition be the foundation for this?) that would be the standard for a private finance market.

Free market advocates note that the stated purpose of the GSEs, to encourage and expand home ownership, has not been substantially accomplished. Since 1998, when the GSEs increased efforts, ownership only increased from 66 percent to 70 percent, and it is now back down to 1998 levels. When the economic and human expense is added to this paltry result, the GSEs are not sustainable, though Fannie vows to remain viable. These advocates point to the Western European housing markets, which operate efficiently with very little government involvement, but with respectable percentages of homeownership.

Almost everyone agrees that something needs to be done with the GSEs, and almost everyone recognizes that the “something” will be a complex undertaking in our housing and financial markets which are enmeshed with the GSEs, but we must be up to this task, we must be thoughtful about reform, avoid unintended consequences, and strike a middle ground between growing a private mortgage market and providing a government backstop.

On the Horizon
While there were housing reform hearings on Capitol Hill during the Congressional fall session, the topic is not on the House agenda and therefore is not a legislative focus compared to the current highlight on the debt ceiling and the Affordable Care Act.

Hill insiders predict substantive GSE reform would take many years. Financial services company analysts point out the current profitability of the GSEs, and as noted previously, community and large banks like the advantages they receive, in different ways, from the GSEs’ liquidity.

In fact, some hedge funds have heavily invested in the GSEs’ preferred stock, and two of them, Perry Capital and Fairholme Funds, have sued the United States for devaluation of the stock based upon Treasury changes in agreements with the GSEs.

The same holding pattern exists for the Protecting American Taxpayers and Homeowners (PATH) Act, introduced in the House of Representatives bill rolled out in July, which seeks to return the FHA’s market share to first-time, lower-income buyers. The best approach now or in future Congressional sessions is to recognize the interplay between GSE and FHA reform and the market shift between them due to reform.

Housing market reform is complex, topical, and looming on the horizon, if lessons from our recent history are heeded. Stay tuned for an always evolving and important dialogue on our nation’s housing market.

Please click here to view the online article.

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.

Senate Banking Bill on GSE Reform Nears Completion

On February 12, National Mortgage News published an article titled Senate Banking GSE Reform Bill Nears Completion.

Senate Banking GSE Reform Bill Nears Completion

Senate Banking Committee leaders are expected to soon unveil their highly anticipated bipartisan bill to overhaul the mortgage finance market as the window for moving legislation this year continues to narrow.

Chairman Tim Johnson, D-S.D., and Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, the panel’s ranking member, are likely to release details of their bill within the next two weeks, according to several sources tracking the negotiations.

“Indications are that they are very close to sharing legislation with everyone, if not introducing it entirely,” said James Ballentine, executive vice president of congressional relations and political affairs at the American Bankers Association.

But it’s clear the lawmakers are also running out of time to make significant legislative progress on their bill.

Johnson and Crapo began serious work on the issue in the fall, when they began holding a series of hearings and meetings with industry stakeholders. Behind the scenes, activity has spiked during the past two months as committee staff have worked nights and weekends to draft text and reach a final deal.

“The clock is ticking and every day that goes by makes it all the more difficult,” said Edward Mills, a policy analyst at FBR Capital Markets, adding that “end of March would be the latest” to release a bill for it to gain any traction.

The stakes for the committee and the financial services industry are high. If the lawmakers fail to reach an agreement on a reform plan by spring, it’s likely to put the issue on hold for at least a year and could set back efforts to overhaul Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac indefinitely.

Still, it appears for now that Johnson and Crapo are making progress. The two lawmakers issued a rare joint statement last week, reiterating that the issue remains the “top priority” for the committee.

“With the hearing and information-gathering stage behind us, our hard work continues as we dive deep into the drafting and negotiating phase of housing finance reform,” Johnson and Crapo said, adding that they “recognize that we must build a broad bipartisan consensus for an agreement to have a chance at becoming law.”

While it provided little in the way of detail on what to expect or when to expect it, observers said the tone of the statement bodes well for the ongoing efforts.

“The fact that it was a joint statement is significant, and that they actually mentioned pen on paper is significant,” said Brandon Barford, a partner at Beacon Policy Advisors.

But actual details of the bill have been closely guarded, which may speak to the trust cultivated between the two lawmakers and a genuine interest in producing legislation.

“I believe that the negotiating process is being tightly controlled, and that means folks are serious about getting something done,” Barford added. “If you start seeing sections or whole titles floating around town, then someone is negotiating in bad faith.”

Johnson and Crapo are expected to draw on a bipartisan framework to unwind Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac introduced by Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and Mark Warner, D-Va., last summer. That bill created an explicit backstop for the housing market, but required private lenders to hold a 10% loss position on any loans guaranteed by the government.

But Johnson and Crapo are likely to put their own touches on the legislation, including providing more detail on how to structure the multifamily housing market and the transition to a new system. They are also looking at the design and role of Corker-Warner’s proposed housing regulator, the Federal Mortgage Insurance Corp.

Many observers think Johnson and Crapo could also deviate from the 10% first-loss requirement, though how far is unclear. Corker has previously vowed to fight efforts to reduce the level of capital required of private firms but Johnson and Crapo are said to want more flexibility during economic downturns.

The banking panel leaders will also have to curry support from other members of the committee—particularly the six Democrats on the committee who did not sign on to the original Corker-Warner plan—as they continue to negotiate with each other.

Johnson and Crapo need strong support for the bill during any committee vote if the legislation has a chance of making it to the Senate floor. Part of the balancing act Johnson and Crapo face is keeping the original bipartisan coalition of 12 lawmakers that supported Corker-Warner on board, while attracting additional panel members.

Legislation is “possible, as long as they don’t do what happens far too often—we get pulled apart based on the extremes of either party,” said David Stevens, president and chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association. “In our view, this committee has an obligation to do something substantive. It’s hard work and it won’t happen if they each go to their corners.”

That helps to explain why Johnson and Crapo have taken so long to unveil a bill, observers said. It’s difficult to craft legislation that addresses the complexities of housing reform and brings in additional members, said Dwight Fettig, former staff director for Johnson and a partner at Porterfield, Lowenthal, Fettig & Sears.

“It’s more important for the future success of housing finance reform to take the time necessary to get a strong vote out of the committee,” he said.

But pressure on the banking panel is mounting from the White House and others to get an agreement in place before Congress turns its focus to the midterm elections—particularly after the committee blew past an earlier self-imposed deadline to reach an agreement by the end of 2013.

President Obama asked Congress during his State of the Union address to send him housing reform legislation, and Michael Stegman, a top advisor at the Treasury Department, reiterated the administration’s commitment to mortgage finance reform in remarks last month. Gene Sperling, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, said last week that time is of the essence to get a deal done.

“All of us … are making it understood that everyone needs to feel a sense of urgency in moving forward quickly while there is still a window for bipartisan progress in 2014,” he told The Wall Street Journal.

The Treasury Department is engaged with the Banking Committee on the legislation, and some administration officials, including Sperling and Shaun Donovan, secretary for Housing and Urban Development, are said to have begun reaching out to the remaining Democrats on the panel.

“If we don’t get something done this year,” Donovan said during a Politico event on Wednesday, “we could end up in a place where reform is much harder to get to.”

Please click here to view the online article.

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.

OCC Bulletin 2014-2: Comptroller’s Handbook Revisions and Rescissions

On February 7, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issued OCC Bulletin 2014-2, subtitled Description: Comptroller’s Handbook Revisions and Rescissions.

Description: Comptroller’s Handbook Revisions and Rescissions

Summary

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issued today the “Mortgage Banking” booklet of the Comptroller’s Handbook. This updated booklet replaces a similarly titled booklet issued in March 1996 (and examination procedures issued in March 1998). The updated “Mortgage Banking” booklet also replaces Section 750, “Mortgage Banking,” issued in November 2008 as part of the former Office of Thrift Supervision’s (OTS) Examination Handbook for the examination of federal savings associations (FSA).

Highlights

The OCC’s “Mortgage Banking” booklet

  • provides updated guidance to examiners and bankers on assessing the quantity of risk associated with mortgage banking and the quality of mortgage banking risk management.
  • includes wholesale changes to the functional areas of production, secondary marketing, servicing, and mortgage servicing rights to incorporate recent lessons learned and regulatory changes.
  • addresses recent amendments to Regulation X and Regulation Z issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), as well as other statutory and regulatory changes, including those directed by the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd–Frank).

Note for Community Banks

The “Mortgage Banking” booklet applies to all banks engaged in mortgage banking activities.
 
Background

The OCC’s revised “Mortgage Banking” booklet is a comprehensive update that combines national bank and FSA guidance and examination procedures. The booklet provides an overview of Dodd–Frank’s mortgage-related provisions. Statutes and regulations governing FSAs also have been incorporated into the booklet.

Recently, the CFPB issued rules imposing new requirements related to mortgage servicing standards, loan origination compensation parameters, the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing (SAFE) Act of 2008, and ability-to-repay requirements, including conditions for residential mortgage loans to be considered “qualified mortgages.” The nature, general requirements, and core examination procedures are discussed in the appropriate sections. More comprehensive information regarding Regulation X and Regulation Z issues is available in other Comptroller’s Handbook booklets.

With the issuance of this booklet the OCC rescinds or replaces the following:

  • Replaces the OCC’s “Mortgage Banking” booklet issued in March 1996 (and examination procedures issued in March 1998).
  • Replaces Section 750, “Mortgage Banking,” issued in November 2008 as part of the former OTS Examination Handbook for the examination of FSAs.
  • Rescinds OCC Bulletin 2011-29, “Foreclosure Management: Supervisory Guidance” (June 30, 2011).

For further information, contact Joseph A. Smith IV, Credit and Market Risk Division, at (202) 649-6434.

John C. Lyons Jr.
Senior Deputy Comptroller and Chief National Bank Examiner

Related Link

 

Please click here to view the online bulletin.

 

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.