Bank of America Missing Documents-Ginnie Mae Halts Transfer of Servicing Rights April 2014
Bank of America Missing Documents-Ginnie Mae Halts Transfer of Servicing Rights April 2014
Bank of America Missing Documents-Ginnie Mae Halts Transfer of Servicing Rights April 2014
"As far as how big the issue is, we're not really sure," Tozer says. "We were under the assumption that everything was working well until B of A tried to sell blocks of servicing" and documents were found to be missing. He would not say the size of the proposed transfer from B of A or identify the nonbank servicer that was supposed to take over the loans. Shoddy document practices have plagued the largest mortgage servicers for years. The robo-signing of foreclosure documents ultimately forced the five largest mortgage servicers including B of A, Citigroup (NYSE:C), JPMorgan Chase, Wells and Ally Financial to sign a $25 billion national mortgage settlement in early 2012. Problems with missing documents resurfaced recently in a program Ginnie created a dozen years ago, before the mortgage crisis, after some of the largest servicers asked for delegated authority to quickly transfer servicing rights. "Back then, these banks never sold servicing servicing was gold," Tozer says. "When B of A did this deal [to be part of the program] they never thought that it would become an issue because they never sold servicing." Ginnie's "representations and warranties" program allows participating servicers to classify pools of loans as receiving "final certification" from Ginnie, even if there is no receipt of documents and no review by a trust's custodian that the essential documents have been delivered to the trust. Instead, the servicers in the program agree to send all the essential records of the mortgage, deed of trust, title policy and intervening mortgage assignments to the document custodian in the normal course of business, usually within a year, though there is no set time frame. Some servicers have asked the agency to extend leniency or grant waivers under the program; Ginnie has refused to do so. The agency now is asking the largest mortgage servicers for an
inventory of loans that may have missing documents that cannot be verified by trust custodians. continued at.SEE ORIGINAL STORY AT NATIONAL MORTGAGE NEWS-LINK ABOVE