The Federal Housing Administration is temporarily delaying the effective date of its new policy to shield appraisers from loan officer and mortgage broker pressure until Feb. 15. The new policy would put FHA in synch with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and prohibit commission-based staff and brokers from selecting appraisers. FHA officials initially set a Jan. 1 effective date. But they concluded FHA lenders need more time to change to their systems and decided to give them 45 more days, according to sources. Back in September, FHA officials outlined a number of risk management initiatives, including the new appraisal policy. "FHA does not require the use of appraisal management companies or other third party providers, but it does require lenders take responsibility to assure appraiser independence," FHA officials said.
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The FHA published a request for information in the Federal Register Friday, looking for stakeholder comment on how to improve and modernize property standards.
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Some international investors, who represent roughly 20% of Ginnie's market, are gravitating to real estate mortgage investment conduit securities.
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The total delinquency rate rose 0.2 percentage points annually in March, with the share of loans 90 days late rising out of the range they were in since 2024.
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The test of automated risk assessments for government-sponsored enterprise-eligible mortgages are designed to help determine when waivers might be possible.
2h ago - AB - Policy & Regulation
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said Friday that she believes price growth is still heading toward the central bank's 2% target when factoring out one-time shocks such as tariffs and elevated oil prices.
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Consumers sued 11 more industry players in the past two months over alleged unwanted contact, as the pace of spam call class action cases increases.
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