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The House approved a bill Monday night capping pay for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's top executives, sending the measure to President Obama's desk to be signed into law.
November 17 -
The Federal Housing Administration's unexpected windfall is already generating industry talk about another premium cut by the agency but FHA officials insist such discussion is premature.
November 16 -
Lenders are doing a better job keeping consumers informed about the loan process, according to the latest J.D. Power mortgage survey. But the actual speed of loan closings is also a key factor to borrowers' overall satisfaction.
November 16 -
The Federal Housing Administration reported better than expected financial results on Monday, with the ratio of reserves to guaranteed loans soaring past its minimum threshold to reach 2.07%.
November 16 -
FHA loosens condo owner-occupancy rules and pledges to make further changes to facilitate condo financing.
November 13 -
The government's aggressive (and unsuccessful) prosecution of tiny Abacus Federal Savings Bank stands as one of the oddest episodes of post-crisis era.
November 13 -
Fannie and Freddie are irredeemable failures, which must be abolished as the first step in any type of housing finance reform if current and former officials of the U.S. Department of the Treasury are to be believed.
November 13
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The congressman thinks there could be an opportunity to push covered bond legislation through now that a standoff over the debt ceiling has been resolved.
November 12 -
Joshua Banschick, a mortgage bond trader at JPMorgan Chase & Co., has returned to work nearly a year after the bank placed him on leave amid government probes into that market.
November 12 -
A key element to the final qualified mortgage rule is supposed to deliver QM protection to otherwise unqualified loans, opening up smaller lenders to make more loans. Here's why that's not going to work.
November 11
Offit | Kurman -
The added clarity provided by the Federal Housing Administration's revised single-family handbook comes at the expense of lender flexibility to get loans qualified, including a popular workaround for borrowers with deferred student loan debt.
November 10 -
The former chief executive of a Nebraska bank has been convicted by a federal jury for lying to investors and regulators about considerable losses tied to risky commercial real estate investments.
November 10 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is pushing back against a lawsuit from PHH Corp. that claims the agency erred in overturning an administrative law judge's recommendation to limit the amount of penalties it could face.
November 9 -
While regulatory pressures remain top of mind for the mortgage industry, lenders surveyed by National Mortgage News are shifting their attention from defensive-minded compliance initiatives to ones that improve companies' ability to compete.
November 9 -
Title insurers are bracing for a bumpy fourth quarter due to the CFPB's new mortgage disclosure rules. But the timing of the regulation might actually help get the short-term pains out of the way during what's typically a slower period of mortgage activity.
November 6 -
Nonbank mortgage lenders added 1,600 employees to their payrolls in September, which combined with revised August figures brought industry employment to its highest point in more than two years.
November 6 -
While the overwhelming majority of Nationstar Mortgage Holdings' $4.9 billion in home loan originations in the third quarter were conventional loans, that will be changing soon if the company's chief executive officer has his way.
November 6 -
Former Rabobank trader Anthony Allen, found guilty for rigging a key financial benchmark, struck jurors in Manhattan as evasive, deceptive and "shaky," as one of them put it after delivering the verdict.
November 6 -
WASHINGTON The House passed a massive $340 billion transportation bill on Thursday, striking two key provisions hated by the banking industry while adding several other measures that could affect financial institutions.
November 5 -
Wells Fargo has agreed to pay $81.6 million to settle a federal investigation into its alleged failure to properly notify homeowners of increases in their mortgage payments.
November 5















