Neighborhood Housing Services of America said it is planning an "orderly wind down" of its affordable housing programs due to "extraordinary liquidity demands" resulting from the housing downturn and is ceasing its purchases of new loans. "The financial demands of the current market and expected continuing challenges have contributed to NHSA's inability to secure its annual grant from NeighborWorks America," NHSA said in a press release. "The lack of grant funding has left the nonprofit organization with liquidity levels that will not allow it to continue operations." However, a spokesman for NeighborWorks America told this publication it was "surprised" by NHSA's announcement as it had been in talks with NHSA for some time about what NHSA might be able to do to continuing meeting the terms of its grant and had been "hopeful" that it would. "We hoped that we could come to an agreement that [would keep] NHSA doing the work its done for years for nonprofit organizations but apparently it couldn't find a way to make that happen," the spokesman said. NHSA said in its press release it had made several changes over the past year and negotiated concessions in loan terms and interest rates from its lenders/investors "in anticipation of obtaining the grant funding." While NHSA will no longer purchase new loans, it plans to continue to collect payments and service existing mortgages "until arrangements can be made to transfer these responsibilities to other parties." NHSA also said it "may seek to sell mortgage loans, mortgage servicing rights, its interest in intellectual technology rights and other assets, as appropriate." It added, "Should other opportunities emerge, the board will evaluate the feasibility of others outcomes." NHSA said the wind-down would take place "over the next several months."
-
Jay Farner takes a majority ownership stake in Detroit's professional soccer franchise through the investment group he launched after leaving Rocket in 2023.
7h ago -
The major government-related secondary-market loan buyer is moving to a new approach that mortgage companies can start transitioning to later this year.
9h ago -
Short-sale transactions increased 4% from 2023 to 2024, nearly 10% from 2024 to 2025 and about 16% annually in the first quarter of this year, according to Realtor.com.
9h ago -
The 30-year fixed rate loan average is at its highest since August, while the 15-year is now above where it was one year ago, Freddie Mac found.
11h ago -
A one-time chief lending officer for Heritage State Bank has been barred from the industry for signing off on mortgages backed by over-valued appraisals.
July 16 -
Sales trends for new homes are on the upswing, another reason mortgage lenders need to keep an eye on this segment, the Mortgage Bankers Association found.
July 16









