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Archive for November, 2011

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Mortgage insurer Radian Guaranty (RDN: 2.45 -5.41%), a subsidiary of Radian Group, noted Thursday that the number of delinquent loans within its insurance portfolio remained mostly unchanged from the prior month.

At the start of the month, Radian had 110,740 loans classified as delinquent. By months end, the number of delinquent loans edged down slightly to 110,614 mortgages.

The company measured new delinquencies during the month at 7,665 loans. During the same 30-day period, Radian had 6,133 loan cures, 1,384 pay offs and 274 rescissions and denials.

Overall, the insurer wrote $2.07 billion in new insurance.

Teresa Bryce Bazemore, president of Radian Guaranty, said earlier this month it's difficult for the mortgage insurance business to calculate its exact growth in terms of market share. But she does believe Radian's mortgage insurance business is benefiting from PMI's decision to halt its writing of new mortgage insurance.

Radian Group posted a third-quarter profit of $183.6 million, or $1.37 per share on Tuesday, while reporting significant growth in its mortgage insurance business.

That compares to a 2010 third-quarter profit of $112.2 million, or 84 cents per share.

Write to Kerri Panchuk.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Barclays Bank is to launch its first residential mortgage-backed securitization since May 2007.

Barclays Capital is arranging a series of investor meetings to drum up interest in its first issue since the financial crisis. The size and pricing of the transaction will be set after the meetings.

Rating agency Moody’s says the issue will be backed by prime U.K. residential mortgages originated by Barclays and will represent the fourth issue out of the Gracechurch Master Issue structure.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

A Las Vegas man pleaded guilty to serving as a straw buyer in a scheme devised by several conspirators to obtain influence over the way homeowners' associations allocate their business contracts.

The Department of Justice confirmed that Daniel Solomon, 39, was a straw purchaser at the Vistana condominium complex in Las Vegas.

Authorities claim Solomon and co-conspirators purchased multiple condo properties to obtain influence over the community homeowners' association. Once the conspirators gained board influence, they directed remedial construction contracts and lawsuits to one favored law firm and a construction company.

Solomon allegedly signed and submitted fraudulent loan applications to close on the condo properties. He also claimed to be living in one of the units when, in fact, he resided at another property.

Once Solomon made the straw purchase, he joined the HOA board of directors and used his position to direct the allocation of business contracts, the DOJ said.

Solomon officially pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud.

Write to Kerri Panchuk.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

The Government Accountability Office will conduct a wide study on the harm the recent financial crisis caused the U.S. economy, local governments and family households.

Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.), chair of the Senate Banking Committee, made the request Wednesday. He also sent a letter to top federal regulators asking for reports on how they are developing the new financial rules under the Dodd-Frank Act.

The GAO will consider the toll of mass unemployment; both near-term and long-term losses of economic output; the disappearance of household wealth; and the strain put upon local and state governments. The office will also study the effect of the Troubled Asset Relief Program and other emergency actions taken, and how Dodd-Frank allows regulators to respond to future crises.

Top federal regulators, including the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau were tasked with reporting how new rules would impact the economy, both benefits and costs.

Rule-makers were also asked to provide current and future plans of regulatory reviews; details on how the public is included in the process; how they're considering the effect on smaller institutions; and how they are coordinating with the Financial Stability Oversight Council.

With the requests, Johnson is attempting to gather the data and narrative necessary to weigh the promised benefits in Dodd-Frank to repair and protect an economy still recovering from over-leveraged Wall Street firms against what top Republicans are calling over-burdensome reaction to a situation they say the government started to begin with.

In the GOP presidential nominee debate Wednesday night, Republican front-runners including Mitt Romney, Herman Cain and Rick Perry said they would repeal most if not all of Dodd-Frank if elected to office.

"The reason we have the housing crisis we have is that the federal government played to0 heavy a role in our markets," Romney said.

Johnson, however, reiterated that he would resist any attempt repeal anything under Dodd-Frank in order to restrict banks from the abusive and negligent lending and leveraging that took place in the run-up.

"We must not forget that our economy suffered from inadequate regulations that contributed to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression," Johnson said.

Write to Jon Prior.

Follow him on Twitter @JonAPrior.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

The nation’s average mortgage rates changed little from last week amid a mix of economic data reports, Freddie Mac said Thursday.

The results of Freddie’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey revealed that the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.99%, dropping below 4% for the second time this year. On Oct. 6 the rate was 3.94%, and last week it was 4%.

This week’s 15-year FRM averaged 3.3%, down from last week when it averaged 3.31%. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 3.57%.

Five-year, Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 2.98% this week, up from last week’s average of 2.96%. A year ago, the ARM averaged 3.25%.

And one-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 2.95%, rising from last week when it averaged 2.88%. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 3.26%.

Referencing data from the National Association of Realtors, Frank Nothaft, Freddie vice president and chief economist, said soft house prices and low mortgage rates have kept home-buyer affordability historically high.

“In the third quarter, 74% of the NAR’s metropolitan areas exhibited annual house price declines compared to 72% in the second quarter,” Nothaft said. “In addition, 30-year, fixed mortgage rates averaged 4.3% in the third quarter as opposed to 4.7% in the second. These factors helped raise September’s NAR Housing Affordability Index to the third highest reading on record which dates back to 1971.”

Results of Bankrate's weekly national survey of large lenders put the 30-year FRM at 4.25%, a 0.02% increase from last week. Fifteen-year FRM for the week is 3.5%, also up .02% from last week.

And five-year ARM came in at 3.16%, down 0.03% from last week.

Write to Justin T. Hilley.

Follow him on Twitter @JustinHilley.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Federal Housing Finance Agency leader Edward DeMarco responded to scathing criticism of executive pay at the government sponsored enterprises on Thursday, saying compensation levels have already been cut by 40% and the agencies need consistent, top talent to oversee $5 trillion of mortgage assets and $1 trillion in new taxpayer-supported business.

"I have concluded that it would be irresponsible of me to risk this enormous contingent taxpayer liability with a rapid turnover of management and staff, replaced with people lacking the institutional, technical, operational and risk management knowledge requisite to the running of corporations with thousands of employees and more than $2 trillion in financial obligations each," DeMarco wrote.

The letter comes before a Senate Banking Committee meeting to consider the issue on Nov. 15. DeMarco will attend that hearing.

DeMarco's defense of GSE executive pay comes days after 60 U.S. senators sent a letter criticizing executive pay at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The senators criticized regulators' approval of  $13 million in bonuses to 10 employees at the mortgage giants, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

DeMarco noted that while the criticism is understandable given the recent taxpayer bailouts, he is charged with making sure the GSEs have the talent to manage the assets that inevitably are supported by taxpayers and will remain a priority even as the government moves towards a private housing system.

"The public scrutiny and criticism is often harsh, and almost everyone expects the enterprises to cease to exist, at least in their current form, in the future," DeMarco wrote. "At the same time, the taxpayer is backing enterprise financial commitments that have thirty year lives, and we will need expert management of those guarantees for years to come. Given the amount of money at risk here, small mistakes can easily be amplified to losses far greater than the compensation paid to enterprise executives."

"Losses at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have already resulted in more than $170 billion in taxpayer expense, and I consider it the most important part of my job to minimize any further taxpayer costs," DeMarco said.

DeMarco said after the GSEs were placed in conservatorship, executive pay was cut on average by 40% and in consultation with the Treasury a new pay structure was adopted that the government had designed for large, special assistance TARP organizations.

"Over the past two years, we have reduced the number of top level positions, and as these positions turn over, we have further reduced pay levels," DeMarco said.

Write to Kerri Panchuk.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

So many idiotic things were said about housing during the Wednesday night GOP debate. Oh, where to start?

We had Newt Gingrich claiming that banks profit more from foreclosures than they do from short sales. I'd like to hear from all the banks "profiting" from either foreclosures or short sales.

Then we had Michele Bachmann, who in the Las Vegas debate told moms in foreclosure to "hang on," asserting that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are destroying housing and "we need to put them back into bankruptcy and get them out of business." Technically they are in conservatorship and losing money, what some might say is akin to bankruptcy, but I don't think either has ever filed for bankruptcy protection or come out of bankrupcty (or conservatorship) in order for her to put them back in. And, Fannie and Freddie are pretty much "the" housing market right now.

Ron Paul, meanwhile, said prices on mortgages are too high, and that's being done to prop up the banks.

In his own words: "We face a housing crisis once again because it's price-fixing. They're fixing the prices of these mortgages too high, and this is why nobody will buy them. This is why you have to get rid of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, sell all of that into the marketplace. And the reason they do this is to prop up the banks, because the banks have invested in Europe, they've invested in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and these credit defaults swaps."

Huh?

I diverge. Let's get back to Gingrich, who asserted that he wasn't greasing any wheels in Washington on behalf of Freddie Mac when his firm received $300,000 from the GSE at the height of the housing bubble. The great advice he gave was ignored, he blithely admitted.

"I offered advice. My advice as a historian when they walked in and said we are now making loans to people that have no credit history and have no record of paying back anything but that’s what the government wants us to do. I said at the time, this is a bubble. This is insane. This is impossible."

Yes, that's insane, or should I say asinine because Freddie doesn't originate loans.

Herman Cain seemed totally stumped by the Fannie/Freddie question and tried his best answer with his 9-9-9 plan, but the questioner brought him back to reality and he fumbled through an answer about privatizing the GSEs after being put on the spot. (I guess that 9-9-9 may not solve all the country's problems, after all.) As Texas Governor Rick Perry would say in a situation like this: Oops.

Mitt Romney stuck to his free market script but gave no details on what exactly that means for housing. In fact, he seemed to puff out his chest when CNBC anchor Maria Bartiromo noted that his 59-point economic plan says not a word about housing. "Yes," he said, proudly, "because it's not a housing plan. It's a jobs plan."

Making some sense was Rick Santorum, who didn't get much air time but said he sought to put curbs on Fannie and Freddie before the housing bubble burst.

Former U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman seemed to be the only candidate to acknowledge that the housing crisis is causing real hardships on Main Street.

"Let me just say, on the housing discussion here, lost in all of this debate is the fact that there are people tuning in tonight who are upside down in terms of the financing of their homes. They are feeling real pain. People who probably heard today that they lost a job. These issues are very real. They are complicated. For us to say that there is an easy solution to housing, that's just not right, and that's not fair."

Do we have a new frontrunner?

Write to Kerry Curry.

Follow her on Twitter @communicatorKLC.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

French investment bank Société Générale believes a third round of quantitative easing from the Federal Reserve will be announced in January. The buying, they expect, will begin soon after in March.

That's when the next Federal Open Market Committee meetings will be held and a decision on interest rates made.

"QE3 remains in our central scenario and is likely to follow changes in communication strategy," said SocGen researchers in a note to clients. "The next round of QE, expected to come at the March FOMC meeting, will likely be heavily focused on MBS purchases."

They expect around eight months of MBS buying from the Fed, at around $75 billion per month, with a pre-commitment to about eight months’ worth of buying. This would increase the Fed’s securities portfolio from $2.65 trillion currently to $3.25 trillion by the end of 2012.

"Turning to the Fed, we believe that the next step will be an announcement of a conditional-trigger policy, with rates promised to be kept at zero until unemployment falls below 7.5% or inflation rises above 3% on a sustained basis," the analysts said. "Based on our forecasts, this would put the first hike in 2016."

Additionally, SocGen expects greater financial austerity packages from whoever is elected the next president in the United States as budget concerns will reach breaking point and delays in solutions to the nation's debt must be addressed.

Write to Jacob Gaffney.

Follow him on Twitter @jacobgaffney.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

The number of initial jobless claims filed last week fell 2.5% to the lowest level in about seven months.

The Labor Department said the seasonally adjusted figure of actual initial claims for the week ended Nov. 5 decreased by 10,000 to 390,000 from 400,000 the previous week, which was revised upward 3,000.

Analysts surveyed by Econoday expected 400,000 new jobless claims last week with a range of estimates between 394,000 and 410,000. Most economists believe weekly jobless claims lower than 400,000 indicate the economy is expanding and jobs growth is strengthening.

The four-week moving average, which is considered a less volatile indicator than weekly claims, declined by 5,250 claims to 400,000 from the prior week's revised 405,250.

The seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate for the week ended Oct. 29 stayed flat with the prior week at 2.9%, according to the Labor Department.

The total number of people receiving some sort of federal unemployment benefits for the week ended Oct. 22 rose to about 6.84 million from 6.78 million the prior week.

Write to Jason Philyaw.

Follow him on Twitter: @jrphilyaw.

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Multifamily lender Walker & Dunlop (WD: 11.98 +1.18%) posted a profit of $6.1 million, or 28 cents a share, during the third quarter as loan originations grew 104% year-over-year.

Comparatively, the company recorded a profit of $7.1 million, or 48 cents a share, in the third quarter of 2010. On a pro forma basis, the company's recent third-quarter profit is up from $4.4 million a year earlier.

Walker & Dunlop said results for year-ago third quarter of all of last year have been "normalized for tax expenses because of the change in our tax status due to our initial public offering in December." Based on these calculations, the company's third-quarter profit jumped 39% from 2010.

Loan originations grew 104%, hitting $906.7 million in 3Q, up from $444.4 million last year.

Total revenue also increased 50%, hitting $33.4 million in the third quarter, up from $22.2 million in the third quarter of 2010.

The company noted that gains from mortgage banking activity hit $21.6 million in the third quarter, up 75% from $12.3 million a year earlier.

Gains from mortgage servicing rights also hit $11.9 million in the third quarter, a 64% jump from $7.2 million a year earlier.

Write to Kerri Panchuk.



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