Company: FOACW
Filing Date: 2025-03-14
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001828937-25-000009
Chunk: 355

Company: Finance of America Companies Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-03-14
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 355
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. As an approved non-supervised FHA mortgagee and an approved Ginnie Mae issuer, FAR pools interests in HECM (also known as participations) into HMBS. The Ginnie Mae HMBS guide imposes a mandatory repurchase requirement on a HECM issuer to repurchase a pooled HECM when such HECM reaches 98% of its maximum claim amount (which is the maximum FHA insurance amount available for a HECM). In December 2022, Reverse Mortgage Funding LLC (“RMF”), one of the nation’s largest reverse mortgage lenders, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy primarily due to its inability to secure adequate financing relating to its Ginnie Mae HECM repurchase 

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obligations. RMF’s bankruptcy filing initially created disruption in the reverse mortgage market and adversely impacted the liquidity of reverse mortgage-backed securities as well as the cost of and availability of credit to reverse mortgage financial participants.

Following RMF’s bankruptcy filing, each of HUD and Ginnie Mae took several steps to support the reverse mortgage market. Among other things, HUD issued a mortgagee letter that streamlined certain processes relating to assignment of mortgage loans to HUD, thereby creating efficiency in the assignment process for mortgagees and easing the financial burden relating to assignments. In addition, HUD changed the determination of the debenture interest rate (the interest earned on loss claims between the due and payable date and the date of the loss claim) to be as of the date the loan becomes due and payable rather than the initial date the loan was endorsed by the FHA. Further, Ginnie Mae issued a memorandum relating to its HMBS program that allows issuers to pool draws relating to line of credit mortgage loans multiple times in a calendar month. In November 2024, Ginnie Mae announced the finalized term sheet for its HMBS 2.0 program expected to be implemented in 2025. Pursuant to the HMBS 2.0 program, HECM with UPBs ranging from 98% to 148% of the maximum claim amount are expected to be eligible for securitization into an HMBS. This would therefore enable us to securitize into HMBS additional HECM that are required to be bought out of pools of HECM securitized pursuant to Ginnie Mae’s existing HMBS program. Our Company has welcomed these changes from HUD and Ginnie Mae and relies on the implementation of the HMBS 2.0 program for the benefit of reverse mortgage market participants. If the HMBS 2