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December was the fifth month out of the last six in which credit conditions loosened, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported.
January 11 -
The change reflects a growing focus on an emerging banker segment that sells loans to the company on a non-delegated basis and includes a greater focus on servicing retention.
January 10 -
The loans in the portfolio on offer have nearly 11 months of seasoning, indicating they were amassed during a loan production boom that has contributed to higher average servicing deal sizes.
January 7 -
The Duty-to-Serve goals currently under review drew some objections from a coalition of affordable housing groups last year.
January 6 -
The government-sponsored enterprise also unveiled two new tranche slices for investors to purchase.
January 6 -
The company plans to hire an unspecified number of people in servicing as a result of the shift, with a particular focus on recruiting people for “customer-facing” positions.
January 4 -
The metric’s imminent end after more than 40 years means servicers need to put replacement plans in motion if they haven’t already.
January 3 -
The new leader, who officially joined the government mortgage-bond insurer on Jan. 3, is the first Senate-confirmed holder of the post in close to five years.
January 3 -
Mortgage performance in November was improving, coming close to crossing a key threshold for pandemic-era recovery, but Omicron raises questions about whether that trend will continue.
January 3 -
Average per-loan charges last year were little changed despite the addition of a new temporary fee for refinancing. Those for loan-to-value ratios above 80%, home-purchase financing and adjustable-rate mortgages only rose slightly.
December 27 -
The government-sponsored enterprise has 45 days to submit a plan on how it intends to meet the increased target for 2022 through 2024.
December 21 -
Under the Federal Housing Finance Agency rule, the GSEs would need to lay out how levels will change under a variety of stress tests, including required ratios separately proposed for amendment.
December 16 -
Bigger loans make mortgage bonds riskier for investors. When homeowners have larger loans, they become more likely to refinance even with relatively small declines in interest rates.
December 9 -
New securitizations of mortgages on energy-efficient rental housing totalled $12.7 billion during the first 11 months of this year, suggesting 2021’s total will come close to matching 2020’s $13 billion.
December 8 -
The findings in a new TransUnion study could lend momentum to recent efforts by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to encourage the reporting and use of rental-payment information in lending.
December 7 -
Acting Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Sandra Thompson and the Housing Policy Council say the new amounts are not good for affordable housing.
November 30 -
Due in part to pandemic-related forbearance, GSE portfolio loans with year-plus delinquencies hit the highest point seen since the Federal Housing Finance Agency started tracking them in 2015.
November 23 -
However, capacity issues, the suspension of the government-sponsored enterprise purchase caps and higher conforming limits all could affect activity, KBRA said.
November 22 -
The bulk package from an unnamed seller is associated with retail loans generally originated a little over a year ago and purchased by government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
November 18 -
Electronic signatures and remote online notarization can now be used for mortgages that previously were signed in person, subject to certain restrictions.
November 16


















