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Fannie Mae is giving the mortgage servicing industry's handling of troubled government-backed loans a makeover. But it would rather do so in private.
December 16 -
Friday morning, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury fell to lows not seen in the last couple of months, a sign that mortgage rates will stay low.
December 16 -
O2 Funding, Foothill Ranch, Calif., late this week closed its East Coast mortgage production operation, electing to concentrate on West coast lending, according to industry officials familiar with the matter.
December 16 -
Fannie Mae's latest multifamily DUS REMIC priced under its guaranteed multifamily structures program included some exceptionally large orders - and high demand for a yearend auction.
December 16 -
Many organizations are feeling the impact of a stagnant housing market. Homeowners associations (HOAs) are no exception, but the pain they experience is also felt by mortgage servicers and investors.
December 16 -
The vacant property ordinance imposed by the City of Chicago demonstrates a lack of vision of the larger foreclosure crisis picture.Under the ordinance backed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, mortgage holders are required to pay a $500.00 vacant property registration fee either 30 days after a property becomes vacant or 60 days after the loan goes into default, whichever is later.
December 16 -
With Congress moving closer to raising the guarantee fee on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans, a proposal to hike Ginnie Mae fees by an equal amount is being circulated on Capitol Hill, National Mortgage News has learned.
December 16 -
Of the 11 largest servicers evaluated through the Fannie Mae Servicer Total Achievement and Rewards program, only CitiMortgage, Everbank, GMAC Mortgage (Ally Bank) and Wells Fargo made a satisfactory grade in the third quarter.
December 16 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday sued Richard Syron, the former chief executive officer of Freddie Mac, and Daniel Mudd, ex-CEO of Fannie Mae, over disclosures they made about subprime assets the GSEs invested in.
December 16 -
Rank and file workers at the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac this week were told that there will be no "merit salary" increases in 2012, according to a memo provided to National Mortgage News.
December 16



