Consumers who attempt to pull off a ‘strategic default’ may have to deal with the Feds. No, not the FBI. National Mortgage News’ Lew Sichelman reports in an upcoming column that the Office of the Inspector General of the Federal Housing Finance Agency has strategic defaulters on its ‘to do’ list. (A strategic defaulter is an underwater mortgagor who has faithfully paid his mortgage, but who decides to go delinquent because he believes there is a financial advantage in doing so – perhaps to obtain a loan modification.) Meanwhile, the IG’s office, according to a recent presentation, has several investigative reports in the works including one that will assess Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s adherence to mortgage underwriting standards. Stay tuned.
-
While San Francisco had the biggest improvement in affordability for prices today versus 2019, Hartford remains in a very deep freeze, First American said.
3h ago -
The real estate fintech touted Doma's role in Fannie Mae's title-acceptance pilot as key to the deal, which follows Opendoor's recent mortgage product rollout.
4h ago -
Home prices increased 0.9% year-over-year and 0.1% month-over-month in January, according to the S&P Cotality Case-Shiller national home price index.
4h ago -
A federal judge granted the interview request for a brokerage accused of violating the megalender's restriction on selling loans to wholesale competitors.
7h ago -
Stock prices jumped notably following the billionaire and legacy GSE investor's comment indicating Fannie and Freddie have been "stupidly cheap."
7h ago -
The companies anticipate they will submit a joint stipulation of dismissal with prejudice within 45 days, according to a document filed Friday.
March 31









