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President Trump is running out of time to do what hedge funds and other investment firms with big ownership stakes in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have wanted since he took office: put the mortgage giants on a path to exiting government control.
December 1 -
The Mortgage Bankers Association sees rates rising over the next two years, while Fannie Mae expects the average to remain under 3%.
November 17 -
There have been several extensions of the policy since it was put into place as a way to sustain originations amid a wave of forbearance allocated to borrowers with government-related loans.
November 13 -
The sector’s leaders are hoping for better in 2021, while not forgetting lessons learned about the market’s risks in 2020.
November 12 -
The forbearance rate continued recovering in lockstep with employment improvement, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
November 9 -
The former FDIC chief oversaw the resolution of hundreds of failed banks during the financial crisis and knows how to build relationships with regulators. Those skills could be crucial in helping Fannie exit federal control.
November 9 -
A number of unknowns about the election and the coronavirus response kept consumer confidence in check, according to Fannie Mae.
November 9 -
A White House-backed effort to free mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from government control has been cast into doubt by former Vice President Joe Biden’s victory over President Trump.
November 9 -
Mortgage rates are currently the lowest in the history of Freddie Mac’s survey, but sharp differences of opinion persist on whether that will make this a $4-trillion year or not.
November 5 -
One of the top banking regulators during the 2008 financial crisis could have a hand in nudging Fannie Mae out of conservatorship.
November 5