The Federal Housing Administration is temporarily lifting an "anti-flipping" rule, allowing borrowers using government-insured loans to be more competitive in bidding on foreclosed properties recently purchased from banks and even the government. The Department of Housing and Urban Development's anti-flipping policy prohibits FHA financing on purchase transactions where the seller has owned the property for only 90 days. HUD found this policy blocked potential FHA borrowers from taking advantage of quick resales of real estate owned. REO sellers, generally, are unwilling to go with FHA borrowers because of holding costs and vandalism risk during the 90-day holding period. FHA is lifting the 90-day rule for one year starting February 1. FHA borrowers have "often been shut out from buying affordable properties," said FHA commissioner David Stevens. "This action will enable our borrowers, especially first-time buyers, to take advantage of this opportunity." FHA has been burned by property flipping scandals before. This time around it insists that all sales must be arms-length transactions with no evidence of flipping in the previous 12 months. If the resale price is 20% higher than the REO sales price, the lender has to provide supporting documentation and a second appraisal in some cases.
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Consensus estimates and BTIG analyst Douglas Harter's volume prediction both put Rocket ahead of UWM for the period, but by how much is where the two are different.
10h ago -
Mid-Atlantic home sales climbed in June as inventory grew, even with mortgage rates near 6.5%. High-income and repeat buyers led the gains, Bright MLS found.
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HUD must complete 124 actions to implement the new housing law, with roughly half due within a year. Here's what's changing for lenders and borrowers.
July 13 -
The Federal Reserve governor said the central bank should consider near-term rate hikes if core-measures of inflation continue to climb.
July 13 -
The plaintiff accuses Catalyst Mortgage of violating the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act through unsolicited telemarketing texts.
July 13 -
Residents who filed a class action lawsuit say the title insurer is unfairly profiting from their home data on its DataTree platform, without their consent.
July 13








