Compliance & Regulation

  • The Federal Housing Administration expects the capital ratio of its reserve fund will be higher at yearend than it is today thanks to improving claim rates. FHA commissioner David Stevens told a Senate appropriations subcommittee Thursday morning that the federal mortgage insurance fund will end fiscal 2010 "where we are or higher." According to outside auditors, the MIF had a capital ratio of 0.53% as of Sept. 30, 2009. But the agency has not provided a public update on the MIF cash position in seven months. Stevens told the panel the fund's capital position is in a "stronger position" today than it was last fall but is still far below its 2% statutory minimum capital ratio. Stevens stressed that early default and claim rates on FHA single-family loans have declined 15% since December, which is a "strong indicator that loan quality is improving." However, he noted that actual foreclosures are increasing. He expects 125,000 foreclosures with a 50% loss on each sale. Last year, FHA paid claims on 76,300 foreclosures.

    May 13
  • The Senate Thursday evening approved by unanimous consent an amendment that will exempt "qualified mortgages" from the 5% risk retention provisions in the Wall Street reform bill. As approved, the language will ensure the 5% risk retention provision does not obstruct the securitization of the safest mortgages: loans that generally have 20% down payments or carry mortgage insurance. The amendment, sponsored by Senators Mary Landrieu, D-La., Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., and Kay Hagan, D-N.C., instructs federal regulators to exempt low risk, fully documented loans from risk retention. "We commend the Senate for the passage of the Landrieu/Hagan/Isakson amendment that exempts soundly underwritten, stable, consumer friendly mortgages from the risk retention requirements," said Glen Corso, managing director of the Community Mortgage Banking Project. Sen. Isakson supported the qualified mortgage exemption after his effort to strike the risk retention provision from the bill failed. "Risk retention is not the cure-all for good lending-underwriting is," the Georgia lawmaker said. Sen. Landrieu noted the amendment will ensure that applicants with good credit who finance their home the "old fashioned way" will not face higher interest rates due to risk retention. At the same time, the 5% risk retention provision will "eliminate the risk taking we saw in the home mortgage market between 2004 and 2007," Landrieu said.

    May 13
  • A new report issued by the National Credit Union Administration on last year's failure of Eastern Financial Florida Credit Union of Florida found that the one-time high-flying CU was brought down by risky investments in derivatives known as collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, as well as loan losses and other concerns. "Eastern Financial suffered substantial losses in the CDO investments during 2007 and 2008 that, coupled with increasing loan losses and other contributing operating factors, quickly eroded the credit union's net worth and led to its insolvency," said the report, conducted by NCUA's Office of Inspector General. At one time, EFFCU boasted $2.4 billion in assets. To date, its failure is the largest in CU history, according to The Credit Union Journal. The nonprofit was chartered in 1937 to serve employees of Eastern Airlines. Eventually it was acquired in a supervisory merger by Space Coast Credit Union. NCUA says as Eastern's profitability lagged its asset growth, management and the board approved a leverage strategy allowing it to invest in risky investments-specifically CDOs.

    May 12
  • Indicating growing investor interest in commercial deals, bidders rushed to a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development auction of $306 million in non-performing multifamily and healthcare HUD loans that generated proceeds equal to almost half their unpaid balance, according to loan sale advisor KDX Ventures. KDX said 67 bidders submitted over 200 individual and pool bids for the 26 assets offered for sale in April. Executives said the 12 winning bids submitted on individual assets generated proceeds of over 48% of unpaid principal balance demonstrating "the pent-up demand and liquidity for commercial real estate assets." According to DebtX CEO Kingsley Greenland, even though over the past two years, investors have amassed a tremendous amount of capital to invest in commercial real estate loans, "there has been only a small amount of product available for sale." KDX is a joint venture between boutique investment banking firm KEMA Advisors, Hillsborough, NC, and international online marketplace, DebtX, Boston.

    May 12
  • Ginnie Mae guaranteed more than $32.6 billion in mortgage-backed securities in April. Ginnie Mae II single-family pools totaled more than $18.9 billion and Ginnie Mae I single-family pools were $12.6 billion. Ginnie Mae's multifamily MBS issuance was over $1 billion, marking the second time during fiscal year 2010 that multifamily issuance crossed the $1 billion threshold. March numbers for 90-plus day delinquencies released with the April issuance figures showed late payments of this type dropped to 1.85% from 2.02% in February.

    May 12
  • The Senate Wednesday morning approved an amendment that sets minimum underwriting standards on single-family loans with a "safe harbor" that essentially limits the points and fees lenders can charge to 3% of the loan amount. The National Association of Mortgage Brokers said the provision would "shut down" the broker channel due to the 3% cap on points and fees. "This amendment will take mortgage brokers completely out of the competitive landscape," said NAMB's top lobbyist Roy DeLoach. The amendment sponsored by Democratic Senators Jeff Merkley (Ore.) and Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) requires lenders to verify a borrower's income and ability to repay the mortgage. As part of an anti-steering provision to prevent borrowers from being forced into higher cost (and riskier) loans, the amendment has a safe harbor provision allowing lenders and brokers to know when they are compliant. Lenders will know they are operating on "sound ground," when their fees do not exceed 3%, said Sen. Merkley. The Senate voted 63-36 to approve the Merkley/Klobuchar amendment, which was drafted to counter an amendment by Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. The Corker amendment would have set minimum underwriting standards including a 5% downpayment requirement on most loans, including FHA-backed mortgages. The Corker amendment also would have stripped the 5% risk retention requirement from the Wall Street Reform bill. Corker's amendment was defeated in a 57-42 vote.

    May 12
  • The Senate voted 96 to 0 on Tuesday to compel the Federal Reserve Board to reveal recipients of its emergency lending programs during the financial crisis, but rejected a more sweeping alternative that would have audited all central bank actions including monetary policy. The compromise amendment from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), on emergency lending was adopted into the financial regulatory reform legislation that is still being debated. The amendment was significantly narrowed in scope - a previous Sanders amendment would have audited all Fed actions and could have extended into monetary policy decision-making activities - amid concerns from Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke that it would influence monetary policy making. "Last week a number of senators, Democrats and Republicans, indicated to me that they were uncomfortable with my original amendment, which they believed would have allowed Congress to be involved in the day-to-day monetary operations of the Fed," Sanders said on the Senate floor Tuesday. "That was never my intention and I still do not believe that the original amendment would have done that... Sen. Dodd indicated to me that if we could clarify this issue, he would not only be supportive of this amendment but he would co-sponsor it. That's exactly what he did and I very much appreciate his support."

    May 11
  • The National Credit Union Administration, as liquidating agent for the failed Heritage West Federal Credit Union, has filed suit against several member/borrowers of the defunct Salt Lake City CU, claiming they defaulted on millions of dollars in speculative real estate loans only to buy the properties back at steep discounts in foreclosure sales. The suits, removed to a federal court, are the latest in a variety of legal actions surrounding a troubled Salt Lake City residential development called Castle Stone Homes that was tied closely to the one-time $330 million credit union. Dozens of the project's borrowers, who were promised high returns, obtained loans through the credit union, which was acquired by Virginia's Chartway Federal Credit Union in a December supervisory merger engineered by NCUA. The case is reminiscent of those involving two big credit union failures: Norlarco Credit Union, and Huron River Area Credit Union, that financed speculative real estate projects in Florida's Gulf Coast. In the Salt Lake City case, the members claim that HeritageWest engaged in a variety of schemes to make loans readily available for the residential development. According to various courts documents, between 2005 and 2007 Castle Stone solicited individual investors with high credit scores to participate in their residential development designed to appeal to first-time investors that would provide big profits. After one of the initial lenders for the project, America First CU backed out, HeritageWest agreed to provide capital for the investors. Lawyers for Castle Stone did not return phone calls. NCUA declined to comment, saying it does not discuss cases in litigation.

    May 11
  • Returning to his Realtor roots, Federal Housing Administration commissioner David Stevens called on the nation's largest trade group of real estate professionals to storm Capitol Hill in support of legislation to reform the government's housing insurance agency. "The FHA is at risk," Stevens told NAR's midyear legislative meeting in Washington. The FHA chief, who came to the agency from Long & Foster Realtors, one of the largest independent real estate companies in the nation, said the government cannot continue to prop up the housing market "unless we do something to shore up" FHA's capital reserves. Currently, H.R. 5072, which would allow the FHA to more closely mirror how private sector mortgage insurers price their products and hold lenders accountable for the loans they originate, has been cleared by the House Financial Services Committee but has not yet been scheduled for floor action. Commissioner Stevens called it a "critical bill" because otherwise FHA cannot continue to be the cornerstone to the housing market it has been for the past 30 years. If the legislative changes Stevens wants are enacted, the estimated value to the FHA insurance fund would be some $330 million a month. He said the fixes would help the agency replenish its capital reserves even faster than if this authority was provided through the annual Congressional approval process.

    May 11
  • The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Tuesday revamped its securitization proposal, mandating that depositories hold a 5% risk retention piece, but exempting loans sold to the GSEs and into bonds guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association. The initial proposal issued in November required banks to season single-family loans for 12 months before securitization. As a result of industry comments, FDIC dropped the seasoning requirement and is now proposing that banks issuing residential MBS maintain a 5% reserve fund for one year to cover early defaults and breaches of representations and warranties. The new proposal, which will be published for a 45-day comment period, requires bank issuers to retain 5% of each MBS tranche. The FDIC proposal is designed to update the agency's policies on the treatment of commercial and residential MBS when the issuing bank fails. It is also designed to address problems that arose in the subprime market, placing additional requirements on residential MBS issuers, including disclosures by the servicing bank if they own the second liens on the loans being serviced. "We want the securitization to come back the right way, not the wrong way," said FDIC chairman Sheila Bair. Agency officials noted that their measure is similar to a Securities and Exchange Commission proposal that also imposes 5% risk retention on bank and nonbank MBS issuers. Chairman Bair said the SEC proposal, when finalized, will become the "base" for banks. The FDIC board of directors approved the securitization proposal for public comment by a 3-2 vote. Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan and the Office of Thrift Supervision acting director John Bowman voted against the proposal.

    May 11