The Federal Reserve has purchased more than $1 trillion in agency mortgage-backed securities to support the mortgage market this year and Fed officials are trying to wind down its $1.25 trillion purchase program by March 31. The New York Federal Reserve Bank purchased $1.09 trillion in Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae MBS this year, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. At the start of the program in early January, the New York Federal Reserve Bank was purchasing $20 billion to $25 billion in agency MBS a week. Now the Fed is purchasing agency MBS at a $16 billion weekly rate, which means it could continue at that pace for another 10 weeks. At the conclusion of its monetary policy meeting on Dec. 16, Fed officials said they are "gradually slowing" the pace of MBS purchases so the last transactions will be completed by the end of the first quarter of 2010. Mortgage strategists at Credit Suisse say the slowdown in Fed purchases will not affect MBS spreads to any large degree. "The Fed's exit from the MBS purchase program will likely be well absorbed by the market," according to a weekly Credit Suisse "Market Watch" publication. After March 31, the "Fed will likely assume a backstop role for the MBS market to prevent a double dip in housing," Credit Suisse strategists say.
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Jumbo lending helped offset a decline in June's credit numbers, as government-backed programs noticeably contracted, the Mortgage Bankers Association said.
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Colorado homeowners pay the highest premiums at $463 a month, as insurance costs now exceed property taxes in 15 states, LendingTree found.
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CPI inflation remains above the Federal Reserve's 2% target, but the slower rate of increase gives the central bank time to weigh the best course of action.
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Movement Mortgage added to its operations leadership and Click n' Close named a new chief information officer.
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The award is one-third of the $26 million settlement the parent company of three servicers agreed to earlier this year to settle claims from a 2021 data breach.
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Michael Burry, a GSE investor and early predictor of the Great Financial Crisis, is eyeing the senior preferred liquidation preference and a 2028 deadline.
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