Freddie Mac reported that 4% of its single-family mortgages are 90 days or more past due, up from 2% in January of 2008. The serious delinquency rate edged up 16 basis points in January to 4.03%, according to the GSE's monthly activity report. The secondary market agency's report also provides investors with an update on the delinquent mortgages the GSE is buying out of its existing mortgage backed securities. On Feb. 10, Freddie said it will purchase all loans that are 120 days or more past due out of its MBS. The update on MBS coupons affected shows that $71.5 billion in loans were eligible for purchase as of Jan. 31. Freddie will disclose its initial purchases in a March 4 report. Meanwhile, Freddie purchased $22.6 billion in refinanced loans in January, down from $27.3 billion in the previous month. MBS issuance totaled $36.6 billion, down from $44 billion in December. For all of 2009, Freddie issued $475.4 billion in MBS, compared to $357.9 billion in 2008.
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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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Deephaven expanded its HELOC product for wholesale lenders, Attom launched an AVM model and First American added an AI assistant to its title platform.
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The Canadian-American bank's first AI agent does the work of gathering any missing documents and verifying data for mortgage applications.
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This is the fourth settlement MV Realty reached in the last two months over its controversial homeownership benefits program, which is now illegal in 33 states.
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Mortgage payments climbed to a 10-month high in April as rates rose, but strong annual wage growth of 5.3% helped keep the MBA's affordability index nearly flat month to month.
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A report from the Financial Stability Board said limited transparency in the private credit market makes it difficult for regulators to monitor and understand risks, potentially masking challenges to the financial system.
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