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Tag Archives: HARP

Fannie Mae Removes ‘Ability to Repay’ from HARP 2.0 Guidelines

Fannie Mae has updated its Selling Guide to reflect the recently announced changes to the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). Most of the revisions were previously disclosed in November, but there's one nuance that stands out. Fannie Mae has removed the ""reasonable ability to repay"" clause from the criteria for vetting borrowers for a new HARP loan. Analysts say the subjective ability-to-pay requirement was one of the significant hurdles to HARP refinancing.

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GSEs Total 2 Million Foreclosure Prevention Actions

Servicers for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have completed almost 2 million foreclosure prevention actions for the two companies since they went into conservatorship in 2008, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency's (FHFA) third-quarter report released Wednesday. More than half of these actions have been loan modifications, and of the remainder, about 676,500 have kept homeowners in their homes. About 269,700 were short sales or deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure.

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BOK Financial Mortgage Group Accepting HARP 2.0 Applications

BOK Financial Mortgage Group announced Thursday that it is now accepting applications for the recently extended and expanded Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). The program applies to homeowners who currently have a Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae mortgage and who meet certain other eligibility criteria. HARP 2.0 is designed to help borrowers, including those who owe more than their home's value, to take advantage of low interest rates and other refinancing benefits.

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CoreLogic Rolls Out New Services to Assist Lenders with HARP 2.0

CoreLogic has announced a new set of services designed specifically to address the anticipated increase in refinance activity expected from revisions to the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). Many lenders are expected to look to third-party providers to help them manage the expected spike in mortgage refinancing. CoreLogic says its new HARP 2.0 offerings will combine the company's data and analytics with experienced teams of outsourcing professionals to improve operational pull-through.

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Fannie and Freddie Detail New HARP Guidelines

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have released highly anticipated guidelines for the revised Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). Among the key program revisions, the GSEs have eliminated or raised the loan-to-value cap, and relaxed representation and warranty stipulations. Both government officials and market analysts have said rep and warranty waivers could spark heated competition among lenders to refinance borrowers through HARP. With the new guidelines, the GSEs laid out exactly what will be waived.

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Government Issues Housing Data, Says There’s ‘Much More Work to Do’

Treasury has released a new progress report on its Making Home Affordable initiative, covering all the ""H"" acronyms. Since the program started in April 2009, 857,000 homeowners have received permanent loan restructurings under HAMP, and 894,000 have refinanced their mortgages through HARP. HAFA transactions tally just under 19,000. Officials say they continue to see a fall in mortgage defaults due in part to foreclosure prevention programs reaching more borrowers upstream in the process, but there's ""much more work to do.""

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Senators Wish to Make HARP Available to High-Equity Borrowers

While the newly revised Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) includes several provisions aimed at widening the program's reach, Sens. Barbara Boxer of California and Johnny Isakson of Georgia are asking the Obama administration to broaden the program even more by opening it up to homeowners with higher equity in their homes. Currently, the revised program is aimed at helping those with less than 20 percent equity. Lawmakers say nearly 12 million more borrowers would benefit if there were no equity restraints.

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CoreLogic Identifies HARP 2.0 ‘Winners and Losers’

The administration unveiled its revamped Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) last week to allow borrowers who owe significantly more than their home is worth take out new loans with lower interest rates. CoreLogic says the impact will be targeted to those markets and local economies that have suffered the most from the housing collapse. The company believes HARP 2.0 will be positive for the GSEs and the origination market, negative for bondholders, and neutral for housing itself because distressed borrowers and shadow inventory are left out of the equation.

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Big Four Set to Participate in HARP 2.0

The industry's four largest mortgage servicers all say they will be taking part in the revamped Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). Bank of America, Chase, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo have each expressed their support of the program and the changes that will allow more underwater homeowners to refinance. Government officials expect the program's revisions to expand its reach and increase competition for mortgage refinancing, with an estimated 1 million homeowners to receive assistance under the new guidelines.

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HARP’s Rep and Warranty Waiver: Will It Spark a Refinancing Frenzy?

With the Federal Housing Finance Agency's (FHFA) retooling of the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP), one change in particular may hold the answer to just how much of an impact the initiative will have -- FHFA's decision to waive representations and warranties on loans that are refinanced through the program. The debate has already begun about whether such a move will indeed persuade lenders to step up participation in the program. Some lenders do see it as an opportunity, but market analysts say the rep and warranty waiver may be less effective than expected.

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