Three years and $141 billion of taxpayer money later, the first financial institutions to be rescued by the federal government, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, remain in conservatorship under the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The uncertain resolution of these government-controlled goliaths, which still dominate what is left of the mortgage finance business, is keeping most private sources of capital at bay. The FHFA acting director, Ed DeMarco, has a statutory duty “to conserve the assets” of the two entities. He is not a housing czar empowered to reform a broken market. Nor can he provide backdoor fiscal stimulus by sanctioning outright principal reductions on underwater mortgages, if these reductions would create greater losses to Fannie and Freddie.
Jason Philyaw was a reporter with HousingWire through mid-2012.see full bio
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HousingWire Mortgage Rankings have arrived, bringing data-driven benchmark to originator performance
HousingWire on Tuesday announced the launch of the HousingWire Mortgage Rankings, a new performance intelligence product designed to provide a clear, data-driven view of mortgage origination activity across the U.S. The rankings benchmark mortgage originators based on observed production, offering a standardized view of performance across geographies, loan types and channels. Historically, the mortgage industry has lacked […]
Jason Philyaw was a reporter with HousingWire through mid-2012.see full bio