The House of Representatives Tuesday afternoon passed a bill that reforms the Rural Housing Service's single-family program, extending it through Sept. 30 to prevent a shutdown. Supporters of the bill (H.R. 5017) hope the Senate acts quickly to approve the measure this week. The chief sponsor of the legislation, Rep. Paul Kanjorski, D-Pa., said RHS could run out of loan guarantee authority by the end of April. The bill makes RHS self-funding by increasing the upfront guarantee fee to 4% from the current 2% requirement. The Agriculture Department, which administers the program, is expected to impose a 3.44% fee on borrowers. The original bill allowed the Agriculture secretary to assess a 0.5% annual fee on the loan balance, but the measure was dropped during a committee markup. Congress originally granted RHS $13.1 billion for loan guarantee authority for fiscal 2010, but thanks to the program's popularity, the allocation is nearly gone. The bill increases that authority to $30 billion, but it expires Sept. 30 when the fiscal year ends. Congress will have to renew RHS's loan guarantee authority as part of the FY 2011 appropriations process. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., said the short-term extension is needed to foster a return of private lenders.
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AD Mortgage sent a letter to the FHFA explaining the importance of the limited review process in facilitating access to conventional condo financing.
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With margins remaining compressed, Bill Cosgrove sees mortgage industry consolidation continuing in the near future, and Union Home will be a player.
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The large nonbank mortgage company is replacing a multibillion-dollar facility it took out last year before the Mr. Cooper and Redfin deals closed.
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Cities in two southern states dominate the list for real estate, affordability, and quality of life, according to WalletHub.
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Lenders are still frequent targets of the class action complaints over unwanted mortgage solicitations, violations that have netted litigants big paydays.
July 17 -
Jay Farner takes a majority ownership stake in Detroit's professional soccer franchise through the investment group he launched after leaving Rocket in 2023.
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