Politics and policy
Politics and policy
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However, the pullback in mortgage-backed securities purchases will be one of the factors in rates rising in the medium term.
September 23 -
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he planned to move Tuesday to file a discharge petition to move Chopra’s nomination out of the Senate Banking Committee and onto the Senate floor.
September 21 -
The company will return to selling pieces of its credit exposure to private investors during the last three months of the year, but is still evaluating its strategy for 2022.
September 20 -
Sandra Thompson, who has been acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency since June, has won backing from the mortgage industry and community groups for the experience she brings to the role. The push comes as the administration is said to be considering Mike Calhoun of the Center for Responsible Lending.
September 20 -
Changes proposed this week stand to reverse the effect of the Trump-era rule, which disincentivized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from making such deals, according to critics.
September 17 -
The targets set by the rule pitched last month would be reduced from recent performance levels for non-minority low-income census tracts, reducing the incentive for the GSEs to purchase mortgages for families in these areas, writes a former principal economist from the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
September 17 -
The chair of the House Financial Services Committee endorsed acting Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Sandra Thompson as rumors abound that the administration is considering someone else for the job.
September 17 -
Speculation has mounted that Mike Calhoun, president of the Center for Responsible Lending, is under consideration to lead the Federal Housing Finance Agency. His nomination would be an endorsement of proposals to treat Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in a similar way as publicly regulated power or water companies.
September 15 -
If confirmed, Alanna McCargo would be the first Senate-approved president at Ginnie Mae since January 2017.
September 13 -
The pandemic, a refinancing boom and intensified appraiser shortage boosted appraisal alternatives in line with the rise in remote work. Now an overheating purchase market and policymaker scrutiny are shifting priorities.
September 13 -
Both government-sponsored enterprises approve more borrowers across the board than the broader market but the relative progress each has made differs across racial groups, numbers released Wednesday show.
September 8 -
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency made good on a promise to rescind Community Reinvestment Act reforms finalized by ex-Comptroller Joseph Otting as part of talks with other regulators on an interagency overhaul of the law.
September 8 -
The government-sponsored enterprises and their regulator are building on broader efforts by the Biden administration to close racial gaps in homeownership rates.
September 7 -
Some progressive lawmakers argue the Federal Reserve’s deregulatory moves under Jerome Powell should disqualify him for a second term as chair. But the Biden administration could let him keep his job because of monetary policies that helped low-income workers.
September 6 -
Almost $35 million of the total is earmarked for compliance efforts at 93 organizations.
September 3 -
By some current measures, nonbank capitalization looks strong compared to banks, but the way a Ginnie Mae proposal aims to assess the value of mortgage servicing rights would change that, Moody’s Investors Service reported Tuesday.
August 31 -
Rep. Val Demings introduced legislation in Congress that automatically triggers a stop on evictions and foreclosures for homeowners with federally-backed mortgages when a disaster is declared.
August 20 -
The home purchase target for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would set a new 10% benchmark for qualified single-family lending in census tracts that meet certain demographic and income targets.
August 18 -
The move adds to signs that the broader restart of foreclosures won’t get fully underway until 2022.
August 17 -
A hike in guarantee fees charged to lenders for the companies’ backing of loans was due to expire this year, but lawmakers now want to extend it to raise $21 billion for the bipartisan package.
July 29


















