Servicing

  • A group of credit unions calling themselves the Credit Union Housing Roundtable is calling on their regulator, the National Credit Union Administration, to make $1 billion of low-cost loans available to help consumers refinance troubled mortgage loans. The proposal comes as banking regulators are preparing a plan to fund mortgage refinancings through banks for millions of homeowners facing foreclosure or in delinquency on their home loans. "We think that credit unions are in a position to help and we ought to be able to create our own version that is not going to be at the taxpayers' expense," said Gary Oakland, president of BECU (formerly Boeing Employees CU), one of the organizers of the group. --Credit Union Journal

    October 31
  • Franklin Credit Management Corp., once an active bidder in the non-performing loan market, has received notice from the NASDAQ that its common stock will be delisted on Monday, November 3. The NASDAQ Hearings Panel recently rejected Franklin Credit's request for continued listing. The company said that going forward it expects its common stock to be quoted on the "pink sheets." Franklin also services performing, sub-performing and "scratch and dent" loans.

    October 31
  • Zaio Corp. of Canada abruptly pulled the plug on its U.S. property database unit, dismissing its top officers. The end came on Thursday when Zaio issued a press release confirming the shut down. The company said that the division's top officers, James Kirchmeyer and Douglas Vincent have resigned. Zaio, which bills itself as a technology and database company, says its secure database has 140 million property records and 24 million photographs.

    October 31
  • JPMorgan Chase said it is expanding it loan modification program to keep more people in their homes and plans to extend the effort to its Washington Mutual and EMC Mortgage divisions. "While implementing these enhancements, Chase will not put any additional loans into the foreclosure process," the company said. (JPM bought WaMu last month and took control of EMC when it acquired Bear Stearns.) As part of this initiative, the lender is setting up regional counseling centers, hiring additional councilors and introducing new financing alternatives. "The enhanced program is expected to help 400,000 families -- with $70 billion in loans -- in the next two years," the banking company said.

    October 31
  • The White House is reviewing several foreclosure prevention programs but is not ready to endorse a new loan modification program that the Treasury Department and the FDIC are working on. "We're doing an analysis right now on several different ideas" to help more homeowners, said the President's press secretary Dana Perino. During a press briefing she said the White House is willing to consider the FDIC proposal, which involves guarantees to increase loan modifications. She said the Administration wants any program to strike a balance in terms of effectiveness, fairness and protecting the taxpayer. After her remarks, Senate Banking Committee chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., sent a letter to President Bush urging him endorse the FDIC proposal and direct Treasury to create the new program. The program is needed to "address the exploding foreclosure crisis" and the country cannot afford "further delay," Sen. Dodd says in the letter, which was signed by eight other committee Democrats.

    October 31
  • Roughly 48% of Nevada homes that are mortgaged have negative equity -- making the state, by far, the hardest hit when it comes to the nation's housing crisis, according to a new report issued by First American CoreLogic. After Nevada, Michigan ranked second in negative equity (39% of homes with mortgages), followed by Florida and Arizona (29% each), and California with 27%. FACL based its findings on a database of 42 million properties where there's a first and/or second lien. Nationwide, 18% of homes have negative equity, the company found. During the housing boom, Arizona, California, and Nevada where among the fastest growing in terms of price appreciation. Michigan and Ohio (where 22% of mortgaged homes have negative equity) have been hard hit by the decline in the U.S. auto industry.

    October 31
  • Foreclosure filings were made on 14,477 properties in New York during the third quarter, according to the state's banking supervisory agency. Using data from RealtyTrac, the New York State Banking Department said foreclosure filings rose 19% from the third quarter of 2007. But that increase was much below the 71% national increase in filings. New York's third quarter foreclosure activity also was down 10% from the second quarter, despite a 3% quarter-over-quarter increase nationally. Richard Nieman, superintendent of banks for New York, said a recently enacted subprime lending law, which took effect at the beginning of September, has contributed to the drop in foreclosure activity. "I am interested to see fourth quarter numbers to review the full impact the bill will have when in effect for a longer period," he said.

    October 30
  • Deutsche Bank, Frankfurt, Germany, saw 1.2 billion euros ($1.5 billion) of partially mortgage-related writedowns in the third quarter but was able to record a net profit under recent European Union-endorsed accounting changes. The writedowns reflected exposure to residential mortgage-backed securities, commercial real estate and monoline insurers, among other things. The accounting changes allowed reclassification of certain assets "for which no active market existed in the third quarter and which management intends to hold for the foreseeable future," Deutsche Bank said. As a result of these changes, the company earned net income of 414 million euros ($532 million), down from 1.4 billion euros ($1.8 billion) during the same period last year. "If these reclassifications had not been made, the income statement for the quarter would have included negative fair value movements relating to the reclassified assets" of 845 million euros ($1.1 billion), the company said.

    October 30
  • Data show senior citizen borrowers are finding themselves particularly hard hit by recent market woes, according to one Internet-based reverse mortgage provider. "Seniors across the nation have been hit with a hard one-two punch. First the stock market, and now the realization of falling home values," said Eric Bachman, founder and CEO of Golden Gateway Financial, Oakland, Calif., noting that reverse mortgages may help rectify the problem. He said third quarter usage data from the company's reverse mortgage calculator show "a troubling picture." According to GGF, senior citizens self-reported a 4.5% decline in third quarter home values as compared to the first quarter of 2008. The average national existing mortgage debt of senior citizens in the third quarter of 2008 was $146,217. In California, the average mortgage debt in the third quarter was at $219,321 or 50% greater than the national average. The average mortgage debt reported by seniors in September was $211,411 or 74% of the month's reported home sale price of $283,000 across the state, DataQuick findings show. The company also quoted findings from a recent AARP study that shows over 684,000 of those aged 50 and over were either delinquent or in foreclosure.

    October 30
  • Fitch Ratings believes that the growing volume of loan modifications will mitigate payment reset defaults on LIBOR-indexed subprime, adjustable-rate mortgages. Fitch estimates that at the recent mid-October peak, subprime borrower payments could have increased by 30% to 50%, particularly for loans with deep initial teaser rates. Fitch managing director Roelof Slump said, "While LIBOR has been trending lower from its recent highs, it continues to be of concern, as it directly impacts borrower affordability, and ultimately collateral and bond performance." Fitch estimates that $418 billion of subprime ARMs are outstanding. Fitch said that approximately 1.8 million loans, accounting for $347 billion in outstanding principal balance, are on average half a year away from either their initial payment reset or their next payment reset. The six-month London interbank offered rate was the most widely used index for adjusting payment levels on subprime ARM loans, according to Fitch. Fitch noted that loan modifications have increased, citing Hope Now's calculation that mortgage servicers provided modifications on 212,000 borrowers in September, an increase of 23% from the August total.

    October 30