GMAC Financial Services - which is trying to become a bank holding company and tap the Treasury's TARP program - has extended the deadline for its $38 billion note exchange program until Dec. 26, 2008 at 11:59 p.m. The "early" delivery portion of the note exchange was extended to Dec. 16 at 11:59 p.m. from this past Friday. GMAC, the parent of Residential Capital Corp., the nation's sixth largest servicer, is offering investors $0.55 to $0.85 on the dollar in cash or in the form of new bonds and/or preferred shares. It needs a 75% participation rate from note holders to reach its goal of amassing $30 billion in regulatory capital to form a bank holding company. Late last week, its participation rate was about 25%. ResCap controls roughly $400 billion in mortgage servicing rights. If GMAC does not become a BHC (and tap TARP funds) it may be forced into bankruptcy protection.
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HUD said its Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity has reduced a Biden administration case backlog by 27% and accelerated investigations.
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Bill Greenberg and Mat Ishbia held a video chat on June 11. The companies disputed the outcome, but in the end, UWM did not make a new proposal for Two Harbors.
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Third-party originators support tightening some standards but say greater flexibility and coordination could help the market avoid disruption.
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But moderating price growth and friendly building policies in many markets hint at emerging affordability for aspiring buyers, Zillow said.
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On a year-over-year comparison, title underwriters produced 15% more premiums in the first quarter, as mortgage rates briefly fell under 6% in February.
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The government-sponsored enterprise has provided language that servicers may utilize in situations involving temporary interest-rate buydowns.
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