The Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. is recommending daily trade netting for to be announced mortgage-backed securities transactions. The DTCC said the move would cut what have been high costs in processing the trades and increase risk protection for the market. "The idea is to streamline the somewhat complex current `balance order' netting process," said Murray Pozmanter, DTCC's managing director, clearance and settlement/fixed income. "The industry's process today requires trading firms to allocate pools of mortgages against the TBA obligations we establish, and then to settle all those pools with multiple counterparties at different prices." He said the DTCC is recommending this be changed to a process where trades would be netted daily and the DTCC's Fixed Income Clearing Corp. subsidiary would "step in as the allocation and settlement counterparty." Currently, MBS trades are netted only once a month, beginning 72 hours prior to the monthly settlement date established for each kind of TMBA security. Because this forces trading firms to meet a netting cut-off on the "72 hour day," the number of trades incorporated in the current netting process can be limited, according to a DTCC report.
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Under the proposed rule, the definition of a manufactured home would allow upper floor sections to be transported and constructed without a permanent chassis.
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Even though the SAFE Act does not require AI loan officers licensing, other laws, as well as regulators, still look for a person to be responsible.
June 12 -
The government-related market's push has intensified efforts to draw up classic FICO comparisons or set up interim rating policies pending more data.
June 12 -
The changes provide standardized appraisal guidance in advance of a mandatory compliance date to a new reporting format in November this year.
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Provident Bank says My Mortgage used a $10 million line of credit to fund dozens of ineligible, dilapidated properties and sold them to their own employees.
June 12 -
OneTrust Home Loans says its employees secretly used Floify to funnel loans to brokerage E Mortgage Capital, which were then funded by the wholesale giant.
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