Archives for 2012

MBA, MAA Urge Congress to Reconsider G-Fee Increase

On November 29, MBA reiterated its strong opposition to use of increased Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guarantee fees to fund legislation unrelated to housing. MBA sent a letter to House leadership opposing the use of g-fees to fund H.R. 6429, an immigration bill that would provide visas for qualified workers in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

MBA also joined other housing trades in sending a joint letter (please see second half of the above attachment) opposing the increase, while the Mortgage Action Alliance issued a Call to Action urging its members to contact their members of Congress to oppose the increase.

 

MBA Responds to State-Level G-Fee Pricing

On November 26, MBA submitted a comment letter responding to the announcement by the Federal Housing Finance Agency that it would impose an additional charge on mortgages originated in states where foreclosure costs were substantially above the national average.

This charge, which ranges from 15 to 30 basis points based on the state, is intended to reflect the additional costs incurred by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac when foreclosure proceedings become necessary in these states. MBA requested additional transparency in the pricing model used to determine the fee to be assessed, and recommended a corresponding incentive for those states with less costly foreclosure regimes.

MBA also highlighted the consumer impact of the charge and thanked FHFA for including flexibility with respect to how the charge is financed. Finally, MBA pointed out that the announcement did not address servicer costs, and that the format of the charge varied slightly from the format of other loan-level price adjustments, which could potentially create confusion as originators incorporate the charge into their business practices.

 

MBA, State MBAs Call for Adoption of CSBS Uniform State Test for Mortgage Loan Officers

Over the past two weeks, MBA has been working with state MBAs nationwide to urge adoption of the Uniform State Test being developed by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the licensing of state-regulated mortgage loan officers.

The UST will streamline the pre-licensing testing requirement for loan officer qualifications for states that choose to implement it. So far, 29 states have signaled their intent to CSBS to adopt; these states will be announcing their plans in January and the UST will consequently be available for implementation by states in April 2013.

In its campaign for further state adoption, MBA is providing draft correspondence to state MBAs to submit to their state mortgage banking regulator, along with a memorandum of support to attach from MBA President and CEO David Stevens. In states without an MBA, a letter has been sent directly from MBA to the state mortgage banking regulator. As of today, state MBAs in California, Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, North and South Carolina, Ohio and Texas have expressed their support to MBA for the UST and are contacting their state banking regulators; many more state MBAs have articulated their interest and are beginning the process of joining in the campaign.

If you would like to use MBA’s draft letter for state MBAs to write your own letter of support, please click here.
MBA President and CEO Speaks to the Center for American Progress on FHA

On November 30, MBA President & CEO David Stevens participated in an event at the Center for American Progress, Putting the FHA’s Financial Problems in Perspective

Following a keynote address from acting FHA Commissioner Carol Galante, Stevens participated in a panel discussion, moderated by Nick Timiraos of the Wall Street Journal, that included Roberto Quercia, director at the University of North Carolina Center for Community Capital; Joseph Tracy, senior advisor to the president at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Susan Wachter, professor of financial management at The Wharton School; and Sarah Rosen Wartell, president of The Urban Institute.

 

MBA Highlights Concerns of Independent Mortgage Bankers at CSBS Policy Committee Fly-In

On November 29, MBA staff met with the 11 members of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors Policy Committee, which included regulators from five states and representatives from state regulatory groups, including the American Association of Residential Mortgage Regulators.

The Policy Committee plays an instrumental role in the development of CSBS actions, which influence state regulatory matters nationwide. The conversation was not only an opportunity to express MBA’s support for the Uniform State Test being developed for mortgage loan officers employed at state-regulated lenders, but it was also a forum for MBA to present several issues of concern beyond the inconsistent regulatory landscape that exists for small and independent mortgage bankers.

Among the issues raised by MBA was the inconsistent application by states of licensing requirements for servicing personal generally, and loan modification staff in particular. MBA also voiced its view that it is inappropriate to expand the use of the National Mortgage Licensing Service to apply to pawn brokers and pay day lenders. MBA will continue to present these and other concerns to state regulators, and to raise these issues in other forums to advocate for small and independent members of MBA.

 

MBA Updates ALEC Conference on SAFE Act and Loan Officer Licensing

On November 28, MBA staff made a presentation to the American Legislative Exchange Council’s Financial Services Subcommittee on the regulatory impact of Dodd-Frank and the unintended consequences of the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act with respect to state licensing of mortgage loan officers.

The presentation–which took place at ALEC’s 2012 States and Nation Policy Summit in Washington, D.C. –highlighted the need for certainty in the mortgage markets as well as the need for common standards in regulations and consumer protections amidst the many rulemakings affecting the real estate finance industry. MBA highlighted the need for states to consider the totality of the regulatory environment being faced by small and independent mortgage bankers before legislating new requirements and burdens.

With respect to the need for common standards in loan officer licensing, MBA called on Subcommittee members to urge their states’ banking regulators to adopt the Uniform State Test for mortgage loan officers being developed by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors.

MBA CHIEF: FEAR, REGULATORY UNCERTAINTY FUEL CREDIT RESTRICTION

Fear of making bad loans and regulatory uncertainty are forcing lenders to restrict credit to all but the best borrowers, according to the head of the Mortgage Bankers Association.

MBA president and chief executive David Stevens told a consumer group Friday that bank executives and boards are telling their mortgage units, “Don’t make any bad loans. We don’t want to see our name in the headlines again.”

At the same time, the residential finance industry is facing implementation of a whole new regulatory regime. Pending rules—many of which will be decided in the months ahead—will impact disclosures, originations, loan officer compensation, servicing, appraisals and even capital requirements that likely will reshape the industry for years to come.

Right now, “lenders don’t know what the rules will be,” Stevens told the Consumer Federation of America. He noted that mortgage firms are compensating for the uncertainty by carefully reviewing and checking every loan, passing on extra operational costs to borrowers.

And while borrowers generally face tight lending standards, this is not the case with the HARP refinancing program. Under the Home Affordable Refinance Program, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have clearly spelled out the guidelines for refinancing borrowers with high LTV loans while reducing the lender’s risk of having to repurchase loans that go to into default.

As a result, funders are more willing to make HARP loans and the program has been a “success,” Stevens said.

The GSEs this week reported that mortgage companies have refinanced 709,000 loans through HARP since January with 300,000 having LTVs north of 105%.

The MBA president—a former FHA commissioner—stressed that the mortgage market will not function properly until there are clear rules of the road that protect everybody. This will allow consumers to borrow safely and mortgage firms to lend safely, he said.

Stevens expects most of the pending mortgage regulations to be in place by the end of 2013.

Builders Respond to Increased Demand for New Homes

Metrostudy: NEWS RELEASE

(Phoenix, AZ ) With an under-supply of resale homes on the market in Phoenix, more and more buyers have been looking to the new-home market to meet their housing needs.  This turnaround has challenged builders, who have had a difficult time building enough homes to meet buyer demand.  Builders were starting to sell out of their communities faster than they could replace them, and their costs are going up.  They have responded by limiting sales in some of their communities and raising prices an average of $15,000 from March to September, a 7 percent increase.  “This is the first wide scale increase in prices since 2005, but the increases are still lower than that of resale pricing over the same six-month period,” said Ben Sage, director of Metrostudy’s Phoenix division.

New home starts in the Phoenix area numbered 9,975 during the year ending 3Q12, which represents a 66% increase over last year.  Starts are based on Metrostudy’s lot-by-lot survey of all new construction subdivisions in Maricopa and Pinal Counties.  “Housing supply, both new and resale, is very tight as record-low mortgage rates and an improving economy are fueling home sales,” according to Ben Sage.  “From an historical perspective, new-home sales are still rather low, but many builders are reporting a two-fold increase in sales so far this year compared to 2011.”

New-home inventory, which includes under construction homes, has gone up this year from 5,744 units at the end of 2011 to 7,145 in 3Q12.  Importantly, however, the number of new-home inventory units that are finished but vacant has fallen from 2,438 at the end of 2011 to 1,934 at the end of the third quarter, a 21 percent decline.  “The increase in total new-home inventory reflects the increased demand, while the decline in finished vacant inventory indicates that builders can’t keep up with demand,” said Sage.

“Builders are starting homes about as fast as they can, and they are scrambling to find land so they can grow with the market.  They have raised prices, but these price increases will moderate as the seasonal slowdown this time of year allows builders to come up for air,” said Sage.  “The old adage of ‘be careful what you wish for’ applies to builders, but they are pleased to be dealing with the new challenges facing them with this turnaround.”

See rankings and more about Metrostudy below

Starts By Community
The new-home communities that generated the most new-home starts during the year ending 3Q12 were as follows:

1. Lyon’s Gate (Gilbert) – 344 starts
2. Vistancia (Peoria) – 290 starts
3. Power Ranch (Gilbert) – 286 starts
4. Palm Valley (Goodyear) – 236 starts
5. Circle Cross Ranch (Hunt Hwy) – 201 starts
6. Ironwood Crossings (Hunt Hwy) – 194 starts
7. Seville (Gilbert) – 191 starts
8. Verrado (Buckeye) – 190 starts

Starts By Submarket
By a wide margin, Gilbert remains the top submarket for new home activity.  Starts in Gilbert are up 86%, and it now accounts for 20% of all starts in the metro area.  Here are the Metrostudy submarkets ranked by new-home starts during the 4 quarters ending 3Q12.

1. Gilbert – 2,043 starts
2. Queen Creek* – 970 starts
3. Chandler – 825 starts
4. Phoenix – 815 starts
5. Mesa – 746 starts
6. Goodyear – 679 starts
7. Buckeye – 630 starts
8. Peoria – 625 starts
9. Surprise – 408 starts

Note: These are based on Metrostudy submarkets and not incorporated city boundaries
* Queen Creek includes San Tan Valley in Pinal Co.

Master Planned Community Starts
Of the 9,975 starts in the metro area over the past 4 quarters, 2,745 were in large scale, master planned communities (MPC).  MPCs garnered a larger share of the overall market since the recession, growing from 15% of starts in 2007 to 28% currently.  It has come down a little this year, however, as first-time buyer product, which is not as prevalent in MPCs, is increasing in volume due to the extreme lack of resale supply in this segment.

It is also noteworthy that active-adult communities are not participating in housing’s upward trend right now.  There were 826 starts in this market segment over the past 4 quarters, which is unchanged from two years ago.  The share of active-adult starts has declined from 12% one year ago to 8% currently.  The top active adult communities in terms of starts over the past year are as follows:

1. Trilogy at Vistancia – 161 starts
2. Sun City Festival – 134 starts
3. Pebble Creek – 92 starts
4. Sunland Springs Village – 86 starts
5. Province – 60 starts
6. Canta Mia at Estrella – 51 starts
7. Sun City at Anthem Merrill Ranch – 40 starts
8. Mission Royale – 39 starts

For information contact:
ben sage @ 480.756.9300
email bsage@metrostudy.com

About Metrostudy
Metrostudy is the leading provider of primary and secondary market information to the housing industry and related industries nationwide. In addition to providing its own primary housing data for approximately 70% of the United States housing market, the company is recognized for its consulting expertise regarding real estate development, marketing and economic issues, and is a key source of research studies evaluating the marketability of residential and commercial real estate projects. Services are offered through an extensive network of offices located in major metropolitan areas throughout the U.S. For more information, visit www.metrostudy.com

Current Residential Legislative and Regulatory Update from MBA

As you all know, the current regulatory and compliance driven environment that we find our industry in today is vast, complicated and contradictory.  Last week, the MBA held the annual Regulatory and Compliance Meeting in Washington D.C and a record breaking 650 mortgage professionals were in attendance.   Topics of focus included:  QM,QRM, Disparate Impact, Safe Harbor vs. Rebuttal Presumption, Hoepa, and LO Compensation.  Members of HUD, the CFPB and an army of attorneys were on hand to offer their perspective and insight on what is likely to occur prior to the implementation of Dodd Frank on January 21st.  Thirty attendees then visited Capitol Hill to educate and inform members of the House and Senate Finance Committee’s senior staff.  I would encourage anyone that can do so to attend the National Advocacy Conference that will be held in Washington  D.C. next April and make your voice heard.    If you have not sent in your comment letters to the CFPB on the issues that affect this industry and your livelihood, I strongly suggest that you do so.   It was impressed upon everyone that we must stress how these issues can and will  negatively impact the consumer, not the mortgage industry.  Summaries of these issues that were provided by the MBA are available here.

MBA Article

Kelly Powers, National Production Manager, AmeriFirst Financial

 

 

Industry Is Lining Up To Block Eminent Domain Laws

The Mortgage Bankers Association and other industry groups have lined up considerable legal talent to prevent and block any local community from invoking eminent domain to seize and restructure underwater mortgages.

Their attorneys have assured the industry that this unprecedented use of eminent domain raises multiple questions under the U.S. Constitution and state laws. And they could contest any seizure and keep the matter bottled up in the courts.

So far, only a few communities have embraced the concept of eminent domain promoted by Mortgage Resolution Partners LLC, a San Francisco residential finance firm.

Not one mortgage has been seized yet. But the industry is concerned that any seizure could poison the well. “What investor in their right mind would ever invest in a community that allows arbitrary writedowns of negative equity,” said MBA president and chief executive David Stevens.

“The lack of investment capital will have a direct and profound impact on every future homebuyer in that community,” he said last week at a MBA symposium on eminent domain.

To fight its battle, the industry has turned to Congress for help. Rep. John Campbell, R-Calif., has introduced a bill that would essentially cut off a community’s access to government-backed loans if local officials invoke eminent domain to seize mortgages.

It would be very difficult to get Congress to pass a bill like that. But it shows the lengths the industry will go to stop the use of eminent domain in the seizure of mortgages. Industry officials are seriously concerned eminent domain could undermine the mortgage finance system. And its use as proposed by Mortgage Resolution Partners strikes a vulnerable sector of the mortgage market: private-label mortgage-backed securities.

The pooling and servicing agreements in private-label MBS make it difficult to engage in principal reduction modifications and provide relief for homeowners who are still current on their mortgages.

Complicating the situation is the fact that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks hold $145 billion in private-label MBS. Moody’s Investors Service recently estimated that wide-spread use of eminent domain could cause PLS investors to suffer immediate losses as high as 30%, according to an MBA letter addressed to the GSE regulator.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency has already served notice that it has “significant concerns” about eminent domain and revising existing contracts. In seeking public input on the issue, the FHFA said “resulting losses from such a program would represent a cost ultimately borne by the taxpayers” that could have a chilling effect on lenders and investors.

The eminent domain proposal advanced by Mortgage Resolution Partners calls for local governments to condemn underwater mortgages. Investors would then purchase mortgages and MRP would modify them through a principal reduction.

The new loans would meet Federal Housing Administration standards for a short refinancing so they could be pooled and sold via Ginnie Mae MBS.

Campbell said several bankrupt communities in his state have been tempted to use eminent domain to assist underwater borrowers. The congressman said his bill is intended to stop the promotion of these “abusive” proposals. “If they don’t stop, we will proceed with the bill,” the California congressman warned.

The Campbell bill would prohibit Fannie, Freddie, FHA and the Department of Veterans Affairs from insuring or guaranteeing newly originated single-family loans in counties that use eminent domain.

 

David H Stevens

President and CEO

Mortgage Bankers Association

Bipartisan Senators Write QM Letter to CFPB

Volume VI | Issue 24 | August 14, 2012 — Mortgage Action Alliance

 Last week was a busy regulatory week in Washington, DC, and began with FHFA announcing it had significant concerns with the use of eminent domain to seize underwater mortgages. Then on Thursday, as anticipated, the CFPB proposed its long-awaited national servicing standards. Meanwhile, Congress continues to take an active interest in the ability to repay rule as a bipartisan group of three senators wrote to the CFPB urging it adopt a safe harbor for qualified mortgages.

 Key Industry Developments

 Bipartisan Senators Write QM Letter to CFPB

On Friday, August 3, 2012, Senators Roy Blunt (R-MO), Jerry Moran (R-KS) and Mark Begich (D-AK) wrote a letter to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) expressing concerns regarding the proposed ability to repay rule and the definition of a qualified mortgage (QM).  The bipartisan letter emphasizes the Senators’ concerns that the QM definition, if drafted too narrowly, could severely restrict access to mortgage credit, and urges the CFPB to define the QM broadly with a true legal safe harbor.

FHFA Seeking Comments on the Proposed Use of Eminent Domain to Restructure Mortgages
On Wednesday, August 8, 2012, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) issued a press release announcing that it is seeking public comments on the use of eminent domain to restructure performing home loans. Proposals in San Bernardino County and Berkley, California as well as in Chicago, Illinois and elsewhere have recently gained national attention for their potential impact on the economy, the capital and mortgage markets as well as the future availability of mortgage credit. In its release, FHFA said it has significant concerns about the use of eminent domain to revise existing financial contracts and the alteration of the value of Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s securities holdings. The release also noted that “FHFA has determined that action may be necessary on its part to avoid a risk to safe and sound operations at its regulated entities and to avoid taxpayer expense.” MBA is part of a broad industry coalition that oppose such proposals, and recently, an op-ed  by MBA President and CEO David Stevens was published in the San Bernardino County Sun. Comments to FHFA are due by Friday, Sept. 7, 2012, and may be sent to eminentdomainOGC@fhfa.gov
or FHFA OGC, 400 Seventh St., SW, Eighth Floor, Washington, DC 20024.

CFPB Issues Proposed National Servicing Standards
On Thursday, August 9, 2012, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director Cordray held a media briefing announcing the impending release of proposed national servicing standards to protect consumers, especially those undergoing challenges in making their monthly payments on mortgages.  The comment period is 60 days until October 9, 2012. As you are aware, MBA is on record as a supporter of uniform national servicing standards.  MBA’s working group will review the proposed standards and proactively work to ensure that the standards add value to the process of treating borrowers in a fair and compassionate manner while continuing to meet any legal or contractual obligations to the investors in the underlying mortgages.

The proposal and related materials are available at the following links:

MAA Newsletter

Volume VI | Issue 22 | July 31, 2012

CFPB Director Richard Cordray faced a hostile audience last week when he testified before a House oversight subcommittee. Mr. Cordray acknowledged publicly that lenders were unlikely to originate non-QM loans, at least in the near term. The QM rule is expected to be finalized in late 2012.

Key MBA Actions

San Bernardino Newspaper Runs David Stevens Article on Mortgage Seizure Plan 

On Sunday, July 22, 2012, the San Bernardino County (CA) Sun published an article penned by MBA’s President and CEO, David H. Stevens, offering the likely negative impacts of a proposal that cities within San Bernardino County, particularly Fontana and Ontario, are considering that would allow the local government to seize underwater mortgages through “eminent domain.”  In the article, Stevens warns that implementing the proposed plan would decrease the availability of mortgage credit and drive down home values in any jurisdiction that institutes such a program.  

MBA Responds to FHFA’s Proposed Affordable Housing Goals for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

On Thursday, July 26, 2012, MBA submitted comments on the FHFA’s proposed Affordable Housing Goals for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for the years 2012-14. This letter was developed by the Secondary and Capital Markets and Multifamily Committees.  The letter expresses support for affordable housing finance but reiterates MBA’s position that imposing numeric affordability goals interferes with Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s primary mission to maintain market liquidity. MBA also asked the FHFA to reconcile the goals with other imminent market-shaping regulations such as those implementing the Dodd-Frank Act’s risk retention and ability to repay requirements.

 MBA Participants in Coalition Effort Urging Regulators to Extend the Basel III Comment Period

On Thursday, July 26, 2012, MBA along with 20 other trade associations signed a letter urging the federal regulatory agencies to extend the comment period from 90 days to 150 days for the Basel III proposed rules addressing regulatory capital requirements.  The letter noted that the Basel III Notice for Proposed Rulemakings must be viewed in the context of how other initiatives, including but not limited to the Volcker Rule and derivatives regulations, combine to affect non-financial businesses’ ability to raise capital.

 Senate Poised to Vote on FHA Nominee; MBA Sends Letter Supporting Nomination

Last Thursday, the Senate reached an agreement to bring Carol Galante’s nomination to serve as FHA Commissioner to a vote in the full Senate.  MBA sent a letter on Friday encouraging the Senate to approve the nomination when it comes to a vote. 

FHA’s Mortgagee Letter 12-11 Implementation Date Postponed

On Thursday, July 26, 2012, MBA staff and member representatives met via conference call with senior FHA staff to discuss concerns with FHA’s Mortgagee Letter 12-11.  This meeting was scheduled after MBA sent a comment letter developed by the MBA Loan Administration Steering Committee and the MBA HUD Claims Working Group. During the teleconference MBA representatives were notified that FHA will be issuing a formal delay of the August 1, 2012, implementation date for ML 12-11.  FHA has not indicated a new implementation date.

 Key Industry Developments

 REO Disposition:  Balancing Private and Public 

On Wednesday, July 25, 2012, MBA staff attended the “REO Disposition:  Balancing Private and Public Interestssymposium hosted by  the Asian Real Estate Association of America, the National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals, and the National Association of Real Estate Brokers, among others.  Acting FHA Commissioner Carol Galante addressed the participants and highlighted the Distressed Asset Stabilization Program.  Additional speakers included representatives from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Enterprise Community Partners, the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Federal Reserve.   The symposium explored the impacts of REO properties on neighborhood stabilization and REO disposition strategies.

CFPB Director Richard Cordray Addresses QM Before House Subcommittee 
On Tuesday, July 23, 2012, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director Richard Cordray testified before the Hose Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee concerning the CFPB’s reform efforts. The discussion was fueled by concerns for access to credit. Cordray established the importance of the definition of a qualified mortgage in guiding lending behavior for years to come, saying “If the QM is drawn too narrowly that would upset the mortgage market. That could be a notable example of a rule itself restricting access to credit.” 

 Key Political Developments

House 
AZ-6:  In the first publicly released poll for the intra-party Republican incumbent pairing featuring Reps. David Schweikert (R-AZ-5) and Ben Quayle (R-AZ-3), the National Research organization (7/22; 300 AZ-6 likely GOP primary voters) gives Schweikert a major 49-33% advantage for the August 28th primary.  The winner takes the seat in the fall and should hold it throughout the decade.

Lawmakers Back Strong Lawsuit Protection for Mortgage Bankers

July 11, 2012 02:54PM ET | Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) — The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau should give the strongest possible legal protection to mortgage lenders who follow key underwriting rules, according to lawmakers preparing a letter to the agency.

Representatives Shelley Moore Capito and Brad Sherman will send a letter to the CFPB on the so-called qualified mortgage rule later this week that calls for a strong standard, Capito said at a congressional hearing today in Washington.

“We must ensure that reforms do not increase the cost of mortgage credit and therefore restrict credit-worthy borrowers from receiving mortgage loans,” Capito, a West Virginia Republican, said during the hearing by a House Financial Services subcommittee. “If there is not sufficient legal certainty for these loans, the cost of credit for borrowers could rise as well as fewer mortgages being issued.”

So far, 90 lawmakers have signed the letter, of whom 13 are Democrats, Ben Fishel, a spokesman for Sherman, a California Democrat.

The regulation, which the bureau must issue by January 21, 2013, aims to discourage lenders from making home loans with risky features and outlining steps they must take to verify borrowers’ finances. Banks that follow the guidelines will gain protection against being held liable for borrower defaults.

The extent of that legal protection has divided both industry and consumer groups. The Federal Reserve, which proposed the initial rule in 2011 and then handed it off to the CFPB, has suggested two options: a “safe harbor” standard which offers complete protection from liability, or a “presumption” that loans issued according to quality standards were non-abusive. A presumptive standard could nonetheless be rebutted by a borrower or bondholder in court.

Credit Restricted

Some industry groups have argued that, without a safe harbor, lenders will pull back on lending for fear of provoking extensive litigation.

Debra Still, President and Chief Executive Officer of Pulte Mortgage, a lender headquartered in Englewood, Colorado, told lawmakers at the hearing that consumers harmed by a credit pullback could be among the most vulnerable.

“If this rule is not finalized appropriately, the impact will likely be worse for the very borrowers we are trying to protect and hinder the availability of credit for far too many borrowers who are otherwise qualified,” said Still, who is also chairwoman-elect of the Mortgage Bankers Association. “We will undoubtedly end up with a far more restrictive lending environment than we have today, and simultaneously harm the larger economy for years to come.”

Richard Cordray, director of the consumer bureau, said the agency wants to avoid the question “being punted into the courts.” He said it was less important which standard regulators pick than that it be written clearly.

“If you leave the standards vague and mushy, there’s not a lot of difference between the two,” Cordray said at a hearing on March 29.

To contact the reporter on this story: Carter Dougherty in Washington at cdougherty6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Maura Reynolds at mreynolds34@bloomberg.net

Good News for Housing Market

By Karen Weise, businessweek.com

The housing market’s been giving mixed signals, flashes of hope mixed with sudden bad news. There’s no sign yet that a real recovery has taken hold, but some new data are optimistic.

Home prices and sales are on the rise. DataQuick says the average sale price for the past 30 days was $189,500, up $7,000 from a month earlier. Sales are also up 8.2 percent during this time. In Southern California, for example, DataQuick says the market is continuing its “step-by-tiny-step trek back toward normalcy.”

Shadow inventory is shrinking quickly. The so-called shadow inventory refers to distressed properties that aren’t listed for sale but probably will be—homes on which borrowers are grossly delinquent or already in foreclosure, or that banks have already  repossessed. CoreLogic says in April, 1.5 million homes were in the shadows, which equates to a four-month supply, down from a six-month supply a year earlier. A smaller shadow inventory can be positive for prices because it means there are fewer distressed homes poised to come on the market.

Foreclosures are up. In the fall of 2010, the robo-signing scandal erupted over how banks were using faulty paperwork to evict borrowers. They cut back on processing foreclosures, building up a backlog of distressed properties. In March, banks agreed to a $25 billion robo-signing settlement, and new data show banks are restarting the foreclosure machinery. In May, banks filed to foreclose on 205,990 properties—a 9 percent increase during April, according to RealtyTrac. The foreclosure pickup hurts the people who are losing their homes but helps the housing market in the long run because it lets banks get through the backlog and eventually move on.

Borrowers are building more equity in their homes. Our colleagues at Bloomberg News report that homeowners have made the biggest jump in home equity in more than 60 years. Half of borrowers who are refinancing are paying down some of their debt and reducing their loans. They’re also refinancing into shorter-term loans that have higher monthly payments but let them pay down principal quicker. Overall, mortgage debt is down 7 percent since 2007—a small consolation for the decline in home values, which are down 23 percent over the same period.

Finally, if you’re looking for more data and a big-picture view, check out Harvard’s annual State of the Nation’s Housing report that’s out today. It also sees signs of recovery in the market and says unless something comes along to dent the broad economy, the housing picture should become even brighter.

Harvard center forecasts uptick across country

June 14, 2012|Jenifer B. McKim, Globe Station

The US housing market, and the Boston area in particular, have likely reached bottom and will slowly start to recover this year, according to Harvard University researchers who are scheduled to release an annual housing report Thursday.

More than six years after the country’s housing market pitched into a deep slide, Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies said a recent increase in home sales, coupled with low ­inventories of available properties and rising rents point to a turnaround in housing prices.

“There are lots of positive indicators here,’’ said Eric S. Belsky, managing director of the housing center. “A floor is beginning to form under home prices.”

The center’s 2012 report, scheduled to be released Thursday at the Ford Foundation in New York City, contrasts with the forecast it released last year in which Harvard accurately predicted the US housing market would remain sluggish through 2011 as potential buyers remained on the sidelines out of fear prices would continue to fall and the economy still struggled.

For this year, Harvard researchers’ view of the Boston area is even brighter, primarily because the local economy is in relatively better shape than elsewhere in the country, and housing values did not fall as much. The online brokerage firm Redfin reported Wednesday that Boston-­area home sales increased by 21.5 percent and median prices jumped 5.5 percent in May compared with the month before — significantly higher than the United States.

“We are definitely going to be in front of the trend,’’ said ­Alex Coon, market manager for Redfin in Boston. “I think 2012 is going to be the base that the recovery for housing is built on.”

But the recovery will not be felt equally across the country. Michael Rubinger, chief executive of the nonprofit New York-based Local Initiatives Support Corp., said low-income communities continue to struggle with high jobless rates and too many underwater properties — where the house is worth less than its mortgage debt.

“I would like to think we turned the corner,’’ Rubinger said, but “I’d have to say the jury is still out.”

The Harvard report noted there are more than 11 million US homeowners who owe more money on their mortgages than their homes are worth. Another downward pressure point on the market is the huge backlog of homes in foreclosure — some 2 million nationwide.