The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has created a program to systematically modify troubled home loans from IndyMac Federal Bank. FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said the program is designed to create affordable and sustainable mortgage payments for borrowers and increase the value of the loans by rehabilitating nonperforming loans and turning them into performing ones. She said the program will primarily target IndyMac's alternative-A borrowers. The FDIC said it plans to send 4,000 modification proposals to eligible borrowers this week and thousands more in the weeks to come. The modifications will be designed to create payments that represent 38% debt-to-income ratios for the borrowers. Interest rates may be reduced to below the Freddie Mac survey rate for a period of five years. IndyMac was closed and taken over by the FDIC and the Office of Thrift Supervision on July 11.
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A tour of the technology that banking has run on, dating back to Franklin's anti-counterfeit measures and the bank-note bulletin that preceded American Banker.
July 3 -
Issuances of new HECM-backed securities dropped off in June on both a monthly and yearly basis, according to a new report from New View Advisors.
July 2 -
The vote to approve the $12 per share deal, which rejected a hostile bid from UWM Holdings, came following several postponements of a special meeting.
July 2 -
A mortgage customer claims his data was compromised in a hack last year at a tax and accounting firm reportedly used by the wholesale giant.
July 2 -
The government-sponsored enterprise clamped down on project review requirements and certain factory-built home appraisals while loosening other guidelines.
July 2 -
The June jobs report is creating an overhang on economist forecasts for interest rates going forward, especially when combined with recent inflation data.
July 2









