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Texas Capital Bank Sues Ginnie Mae Over $28 Million Bankruptcy Loan

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Texas Capital Bank said it was convinced by the U.S. government to loan $28 million in December to help a bankrupt reverse-mortgage company fund payments to elderly homeowners and avert a crisis in the reverse-mortgage industry, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. But the Dallas lender was left empty-handed after the government said it extinguished the bank’s collateral rights, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday against the Government National Mortgage Association, known as Ginnie Mae, and its parent agency, the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Texas Capital Bank said that it was induced by Ginnie Mae to extend a bankruptcy loan to Reverse Mortgage Investment Trust, one of the largest lenders participating in the government-backed reverse-mortgage program. HUD and Ginnie Mae declined to comment, citing pending litigation. Starwood Capital Group-backed RMIT filed for chapter 11 in November with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., facing a liquidity crunch because of rising interest rates. After the bankruptcy filing, RMIT failed to fund payments to thousands of elderly homeowners, according to the bank’s complaint. Ginnie Mae allegedly told Texas Capital Bank that its loan was needed to fund those draws while avoiding a catastrophic disruption to the reverse-mortgage program, the bank said in its lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in Amarillo, Texas.