Article Archive for August 2012
By Ryan Schuette | 08/31/2012
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently unveiled several recent changes of guard for senior personnel. The bureau said in a release on Tuesday that Kelly Thompson Cochran, Chris Lipsett, Stephen van Meter, and Delicia Reynold Hand would move into senior roles. Cochran will transition from her role as deputy assistant director into a new office as acting assistant director for regulations. Van Meter will take up a new position as deputy general counsel, a change from his past role as assistant general counsel for policy with the CFPB.
Read More
By Ryan Schuette | 08/31/2012
Credit unions found reason to celebrate recently, with the National Credit Union Administration revealing that unions saw their biggest quarterly push in lending since fall 2008. According to the report, released on Friday, credit unions signed off on $581.7 billion in outstanding total loans over the second quarter. The uptick marks the fifth straight quarterly increase for total loans and helped credit unions originate 1.7 percent more home loans from the quarter before. The boost in lending helped increase total assets.
Read More
By Ryan Schuette | 08/31/2012
Independent mortgage bankers and originators saw their profits rise over the second quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The trade group released a statement on Thursday that found independent mortgage banks and subsidiaries clinching $2,152 on average for every loan from the second quarter. That's an increase from $1,654 per loan from the quarter before. Net production income shot up by 107 basis points, a leap from 82 basis points from the first quarter.
Read More
By Tory Barringer | 08/31/2012
The slowing pace of workouts hasn’t stopped CMBS special servicer volume from falling, Fitch Ratings reported. According to Fitch’s weekly U.S. CMBS Market Trends newsletter, the balance of loans in special servicing as of June 30 was $80.5 billion, a drop from $83.1 billion at the end of 2011 and $85.6 billion in June 2011. This news comes despite a slowdown in resolutions in the year’s first half, with 1,242 loans resolved in that time (compared to 1,556 in the first half of 2011).
Read More
By Esther Cho | 08/31/2012
Illinois has decided to set aside part of its funds from the national mortgage settlement to provide free legal assistance for Chicago area homeowners, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced earlier this week.
About $4.7 million from the national foreclosure settlement funds will go to the Legal Assistance Foundation. LAF will use the funds to reach out to distressed homeowners and provide services to keep struggling owners in their home. The funds will also help LAF work with the courts to improve the Cook County Foreclosure Mediation Program and support its staff.
Read More
By Esther Cho | 08/30/2012
Residential Capital was denied approval from a federal bankruptcy judge to pay its executives bonuses, Reuters reported Wednesday. The key employee incentive plan was for bonuses between $4.1 million and $7 million to be distributed to 17 of the top 20 employees from ResCap. The written court opinion stated the debtors, or ResCap, argued the bonuses would serve to "motivat[e] . . . key talent" during a sales process that has required ResCap employees to assume "responsibilities above their normal duties," and subject them to “extraordinary stress, pressure, and uncertainty as to the security of their jobs."
Read More
By Krista Franks Brock | 08/30/2012
While fraud in the financial services sector declined year-over-year from April through June, mortgage fraud increased, according to the latest report from Experian, a global information services company based in London. Thirty-nine out of every 10,000 mortgage applications were fraudulent during the April to June period, up from 32 out of 10,000 in the same period last year, according to Experian. Mortgage fraud far outpaced savings account fraud.
Read More
By Tory Barringer | 08/30/2012
After a month of weekly increases, mortgage rates followed Treasury bond yields down this week. Freddie Mac reported that the 30-year fixed averaged 3.59 percent (0.6 point) for the week ending August 30, down from 3.66 percent in the previous week’s survey. The 15-year fixed also fell, dropping to 2.86 percent from 2.89 percent. In addition, both the 5-year and 1-year adjustable rate mortgage averages fell, declining to 2.78 percent and 2.63 percent, respectively.
Read More
By Mark Lieberman, Five Star Institute Economist | 08/30/2012
Personal income rose $42.3 billion in July but consumer spending increased $46.0 billion, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. The increase in income – 0.3 percent – topped expectations of a 0.3 percent boost, and the 0.04 percent increase in spending also met economist expectations. The Mr. Micawber-like report ("Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result misery," per Charles Dickens) meant personal savings dropped in July.
Read More
By Mark Lieberman, Five Star Institute Economist | 08/30/2012
First time claims for unemployment were unchanged at 374,000 for the week ended August 25, the Labor Department reported Thursday after revising upward by 2,000 the prior week’s originally reported 372,000 claims. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected 370,000 initial claims. Continuing claims – reported on a one-week lag – dipped 5,000 to 3,316,000 from the prior week's 3,321,000, revised from the originally reported 3,317,000. The BLS report will be published September 7. From mid-July to mid-August, first time claims are down 14,000 but continuing claims.
Read More
By Tory Barringer | 08/29/2012
Sales of single-family homes in the Bay State continued their steady rise in July, The Warren Group reported Tuesday. A total of 4,979 single-family homes sold statewide in July, up from almost 27 percent year-over-year. This July was the best for sales volume since 2005, when sales reached 6,672. Year-to-date, 26,596 homes have sold in Massachusetts, a 24.8 percent increase from the same period in 2011. July also saw condominium sales increase in the state, rising 34 percent year-over-year.
Read More
By Krista Franks Brock | 08/29/2012
Five months after the nation's top five servicers settled with the states attorneys general and several federal agencies to address iniquities in foreclosure processes, Joseph A. Smith, Jr., the settlement monitor, released a preliminary report to inform the public of the servicers' progress so far. Thus far, the five servicers – Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Ally Financial – offered $10.56 billion in relief to borrowers and have implemented between 35 and 72 percent of the 304 servicing standards detailed in the national settlement.
Read More
By Mark Lieberman | 08/29/2012
The nation's economy expanded gradually from early July through mid-August, the Federal Reserve reported yesterday in its periodic Beige Book. The description of the economy, drawn from reports from each of the 12 Federal Reserve districts differed from the usual tone of Beige Books which have recently described economic growth as "modest" or "moderate." Six Districts, according to the Beige Books, "indicated the local economy continued to expand at a modest pace.
Read More
By Mark Lieberman, Five Star Institute Economist | 08/29/2012
In another positive sign for the housing sector, the Pending Home Sales Index rose 2.4 percent in July to 101.7, its highest level since April 2010, the National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday. Economists had expected a 1.0 percent increase to 100.3. The July increase more than reversed an unexpected 1.4 percent drop to 99.3 in June. The only negatives in recent reports were a slight drop in housing starts in July and drops in the median price for existing and new homes in July.
Read More
By Mark Lieberman, Five Star Institute Economist | 08/29/2012
The U.S. economy grew in the second quarter at 1.7 percent, slightly faster than the originally estimated 1.5 percent, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported Wednesday. At the same time BEA reported second quarter grew at a meager 0.5 percent from the first quarter, but an improvement from the 2.7 percent drop in corporate profits registered in the first quarter. Profits in the financial sector though fell more than 9 percent. The upward revision in second quarter GDP growth was in line with the forecast by economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
Read More
By Ryan Schuette | 08/28/2012
Just when you thought they were on a rebound, mortgage rates once again fell precipitously this week, with the 30-year fixed-rate home loan slamming into 3.39 percent. Zillow reported the latest numbers on Tuesday. The real estate website found the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage slipping from 3.5 percent to 3.4 percent earlier this week. Interest rates for the 15-year home loan averaged 2.76 percent, while those for 5-year and 1-year adjustable-rate mortgages hovered at 2.38 percent.
Read More
By Ryan Schuette | 08/28/2012
As bank failures dwindle, FDIC-backed institutions continue to see their own coffers swell, with an agency report finding that banks with government guarantees earned $34.5 billion over the second quarter. And banks seemed to sweat a little less over the last quarter. The FDIC reported that banks with its seal of approval saw their year-over-year increases for the 12th straight quarter. Loan balances meanwhile ticked up by $102 billion, increasing for the fourth time in the last five quarters.
Read More
By Krista Franks Brock | 08/28/2012
New York-based GFI Mortgage Bankers Inc. reached a $3.5 million settlement with the Justice Department regarding discriminatory lending practices Tuesday. The lawsuit, filed in a Manhattan federal court, alleged GFI priced “residential mortgage loans for qualified African-American and Hispanic borrowers higher than for similarly qualified non-Hispanic white borrowers between 2005 and 2009. GFI admitted there were “significant disparities” between loans offered to minority borrowers.
Read More
By Abby Gregory | 08/28/2012
Michael Strahan, one of the most memorable players to ever wear a New York Giants uniform, has listed his California estate for $1.849 million. The former defensive end and current football analyst for Fox is set to take a loss on the Hermosa Beach property, which he purchased for $2.2 million in 2005.
Read More
By Abby Gregory | 08/28/2012
Reality television star Camille Grammer, best known for her high-profile marriage and divorce with actor Kelsey Grammer, has put her Malibu, California, estate on the market for $17.9 million. The large home, which Realestalker.com dubs a family compound, sits on 4.77 acres, and the gated property includes equestrian facilities, a tennis court, swimming pool, lily pond, and two spas.
Read More