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JPMorgan Chase & Co. - which in years past has been one of the largest acquirers of residential servicing rights - said it will no longer be a buyer of "bulk" servicing packages from its correspondents. The edict goes into affect January 16, which is also the cutoff for its approval of loan packages submitted to it by mortgage brokers. Two days ago news broke that Chase (the name of JPM's mortgage division) was shutting down its entire wholesale division, the largest in the nation. A company spokeswoman said the bank would continue to buy mortgages from correspondents, which include non-bank lenders and depositories. At press time, the spokeswoman had not commented on its exit from servicing acquisitions, which include "forward" and "seasoned" bulk packages. Jeffrey Levine, managing director of Milestone Advisors, Miami, said JPM's decision to avoid bulk servicing purchases "may be a sign that they're being more selective on who they're dealing with" as a way to limit counterparty risk and allocate more capital to servicing generated by their bank and mortgage company retail customer base. Retail loans historically have performed better than third-party originations and offer higher cross-sale value, he said. As a correspondent buyer of mortgages, JPM usually buys the servicing rights along with the loans. As the mortgage crisis has worsened, few large banks have bought bulk servicing rights which represent the servicing "strip" of an underlying pool of mortgages. Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac loans carry an average servicing fee of 25 basis points, though it can vary depending on the arrangement with the seller/servicer. Investment bankers who perform advisory work have identified three firms as being the largest buyers of bulk servicing rights the past 12 months: Chase, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo.
January 15 -
Bank of New York Mellon, New York, is the new document custodian for mortgage loans that Fannie Mae holds in its portfolio. Until now, Fannie Mae had acted as its own document custodian. In addition, The Bank of New York Mellon will provide certification services beginning in May 2009. Fannie Mae's existing inventory of loan documents will be transitioned by October 2009 and those documents will be held at centers located in California and Texas. Scott Posner, chief executive of The Bank of New York Mellon's Global Corporate Trust business, said, "As the leading corporate trust provider in the world, we have the facilities, expertise and technology to handle the document custody needs of Fannie Mae's lender community."
January 14 -
A quarterly index that attempts to quantify the risk that housing prices will deteriorate over the next two years finds that the likelihood of further home value declines has broadened. The index, created by mortgage insurer PMI, shows the risk of price declines rose in 369 of the 381 metropolitan areas tracked in the survey. PMI estimates that half of the nation's 50 largest metropolitan areas have an "elevated or high" risk of seeing home prices fall further. And a growing number of cities in the industrial Midwest and the East Coast show an increase in the probability that home values will be lower in two years, PMI said. David Berson, PMI's chief economist and strategist, said that "the continued high level of foreclosures and rising unemployment" continue to put downward pressure on home values.
January 14 -
ForeclosureRadar has issued its California Foreclosure Report for December 2008 and year-end summary, noting that notices of default have rebounded from the stall caused by California State Senate Bill 1137, which it said temporarily slowed foreclosures by imposing new requirements on lenders. The Discovery Bay, Calif.-based website, says with 42,421 filings in December, notices of default are back to the record levels reached in the second quarter of 2008, nearly doubling the 21,557 notices recorded in November. In 2008, California saw 249,940 foreclosure properties sold at trustee sale auction, representing $107.8 billion in combined loan value. Of those properties 96.4% went back to the lender after no bid was received from a third party. For the year, there were a total of 437,955 notices of default filed, an increase of 56% over the 279,821 filed in 2007. Notice of trustee sale filings increased 122.9% over 2007 rising from 157,273 filings in 2007 to 350,514 filings in 2008. Properties sold at auction increased by 158% by volume, and 179% by combined loan value. Lenders took back a total of 241,093 properties, with a combined loan value of $103.9 billion, the report said. "While a number of lenders have announced significant loan modification programs to reduce payments to affordable levels, these plans fail to address the fact that the average foreclosure in California now has $180,000 in negative equity," said Sean O'Toole, founder of ForeclosureRadar.
January 14 -
The incoming administration of Barack Obama wants to revamp the Hope for Homeowners program to make the Federal Housing Administration refinancing initiative more "effective," according to Shaun Donovan, Obama's nominee to be the new Housing and Urban Development secretary. Mr. Donovan told the Senate Banking Committee at his confirmation hearing that he is taking an active role in developing a "bold, comprehensive" foreclosure prevention effort that Mr. Obama has advocated. The former New York City housing commissioner and HUD deputy assistant secretary said the H4H program would be an "important piece" of the foreclosure prevention plan. And he said the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. plan that provides loan guarantees for newly modified loans is "promising." But they want to make sure the incentives are structured to reduce re-defaults and minimize taxpayer costs. The Senate is expected to confirm Mr. Donovan to be the new HUD secretary next week after Mr. Obama is sworn in as president.
January 14 -
In Washington, Fannie Mae is establishing a new national real estate owned rental policy that will allow qualified renters in Fannie Mae-owned foreclosed properties to stay in their homes. The company currently has an eviction suspension in place through the end of January, which will allow for the new policy to be fully operational prior to the end of the suspension. "Renters in foreclosed properties have often been a casualty of the foreclosure crisis the country is facing," said Michael Williams, chief operating officer of Fannie Mae. "This policy will help bring a measure of stability to communities impacted by high foreclosure rates." The new policy applies to renters occupying foreclosed properties at the time Fannie Mae acquires the property. Renters occupying any type of single-family property will be eligible including residents of two- to four-unit properties, condos, co-ops, single-family detached homes and manufactured housing. Eligible renters will be offered a new month-to-month lease with Fannie Mae or financial assistance for their transition to new housing should they choose to vacate the property. The properties must meet state laws and local code requirements for a rental property. While the company markets the properties for sale, Fannie Mae will manage the properties through a real estate broker or a property management company. To find out more, visit www.fanniemae.com.
January 13 -
The electronic registry for tracking ownership of mortgage loans and servicing rights has been expanded to allow the registration of loans where MERS is not the mortgagee of record. These "information only" registrations are being called MERS iRegistrations, and they give members the anti-fraud and tracking benefits of a "MERS as original mortgagee" registration without naming MERS as the mortgagee. The iRegistration procedure can be used to register a loan prior to closing, MERS said. The MERS website is www.mersinc.com.
January 13 -
Phoenix Capital, a Denver-based provider of mortgage servicing analytics, consulting and brokerage services, will begin using Compass's CompassPoint technology in determining the value of mortgage servicing rights. CompassPoint will be used by Phoenix as the cash flow engine and model with which Phoenix applies its market color and assumptions to generate valuations and analytics for MSR portfolios. The two companies said the transition to the Compass technology should be complete by the end of this month.
January 13 -
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is launching a new advertising campaign on Jan. 14 to alert troubled homeowners about foreclosure rescue scams. Outgoing HUD secretary Steve Preston will make the announcement along with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg at a press conference that morning to be held at the offices of Neighborhood Housing Services in New York. The new campaign, called "Keep Your Home. Know Your Loan." seeks to fight the proliferation of rescue scams that "often victimize struggling homeowners and push them closer to financial ruin," HUD said. The Federal Trade Commission recently sanctioned a Florida-based operation, Mortgage Foreclosure Solutions, which promised, for a $1,200 fee, to stop foreclosures and save their clients' homes. "Many consumers who paid the company ultimately lost their homes to foreclosure, and others avoided foreclosure only through their own efforts," FTC said.
January 13 -
The inventory of distressed homes in Orange County, Calif. - one of the hardest hit real estate markets in California - dropped slightly over the past few weeks. According to a report by Altera Real Estate of Mission Viejo, the inventory of distressed homes (short sales and foreclosures) fell by 401 units over the past month, bringing the total to 5,118, the lowest reading since March of 2008. Distressed homes account for 45.3% of the homes-for-sale inventory, a slight decline over the past few weeks. Altera's findings were first reported by The Orange County Register. Roughly 79% of distressed homes are priced under $500,000.
January 13