Some market analysts see an investment opportunity brewing in subprime auto ABS in the coming year, despite increasing regulatory attention. But certain rating analysts are emphasizing the rising losses the sector has been seeing for the last few months, and a few contrarians think the market is either poised to enter bubble territory or is already there. Consumer ABS analysts at Wells Fargo Securities are recommending subprime auto subordinated bonds rated BBB, convinced they offer good value on a risk-adjusted basis. With spreads set to finish 2015 at historically wide levels (excluding the financial crisis), the analysts expect...
American Homes 4 Rent, the largest publicly traded player in the single-family rental market, late this week agreed to buy American Residential Properties in a deal valued at $1.5 billion. It was the second transaction involving real estate investment trusts in the SFR sector within three months, and has sparked talk of further consolidation, including perhaps mortgage REITs. A research note from Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, penned right before the AH4R-ARP combination was unveiled, noted that mergers in the space are possible “given current valuation discounts ….” In other words, the share prices of single-family rental REITs have been...
Among the regulatory initiatives underway at the Securities and Exchange Commission is a potential crack-down on conflicts of interest at credit rating agencies. In the SEC’s latest regulatory agenda, the agency noted that its Office of Credit Ratings is “considering recommending that the commission propose rules and amendments designed to address the conflicts of interest associated with the issuer-pay business model.” In other words, at issue is...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac saw a huge drop in new single-family business in November, according to a new Inside The GSEs analysis of loan-level mortgage-backed securities data. The two companies produced just $50.94 billion of new single-family MBS last month, a 25.2 percent decline from October’s level. November 2015 was the slowest month in GSE MBS issuance since May 2014. MBS issuance was down 30.6 percent at Fannie and off 17.4 percent at Freddie. The sharp drop in monthly production had a distinctly seasonal tone. GSE securitization of purchase mortgages fell a whopping 33.2 percent from October to November, and purchase mortgages accounted for less than half of Fannie/Freddie business last month.
The Mortgage Bankers Association is urging the Federal Housing Finance Agency to incorporate more explicit up-front risk-sharing goals in the soon-to-be released 2016 Scorecard that dictates GSE activities for the year. The MBA touts the advantages of using mortgage insurers, and said in a letter addressed to FHFA Director Mel Watt that the MI approach would be the most accessible for the vast majority of lenders. The trade group emphasized that
Mortgage lenders repurchased $434.2 million of home loans from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac during the third quarter of 2015, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of securities disclosures made by the two government-sponsored enterprises. That was the lowest quarterly repurchase total since the GSEs, and other “asset securitizers,” began filing disclosures mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act with the Securities and Exchange Commission ... [Includes two data charts]
In the ongoing Fairholme Funds v. The United States case, Judge Margaret Sweeney recently denied Fannie Mae’s motion to quash or invalidate a subpoena issued by the plaintiff’s counsel. As part of the discovery phase, Fairholme Funds asked that Egbert Perry, appointed chairman of the noard of Fannie in 2014 and board member since 2008, be called to testify in the case. In the motion, Fannie and Perry argued that based upon the discovery conducted so far, deposing Perry is “unnecessary and burdensome.” The court rejected that and other arguments made to relieve Perry of testifying. In the November order, Judge Sweeney said that the court permitted discovery in this case to ensure that plaintiffs would have every opportunity to...
Quicken Loans recently launched a new, TRID-friendly product dubbed the “rocket mortgage,” so named because “in the eight minutes it takes a space shuttle to reach orbit, Americans will now be able to receive a full mortgage approval online,” the lender says in its marketing pitch. “Rocket Mortgage simplifies the largest, most complex and important financial transaction most consumers experience in their lifetime,” said Linglong He, chief information officer for the lender ...
Instead of serving as a vehicle to help reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the “Jumpstart GSE Reform Act” would only hinder the mortgage giants, some groups say. A handful of fair housing advocates and civil rights groups joined forces to pen a letter urging House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-WI, along with Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, Sens. Mitch McConnell, R-KY and Harry Reid, D-NV, to reject the Jumpstart GSE Reform Act and any attempts to include it in the FY 2016 appropriations agreement. In September, a streamlined version of S. 2038, the Jumpstart Reform Act, sponsored by Sens. Bob Corker, R-TN, Mark Warner, D-VA, and Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, was reintroduced in Congress, then placed on hold and reintroduced again, and...
Mortgage employment has risen by just over 5 percent the past year while loan production is on track to increase 33 percent from 2014 – a sign that residential lenders continue to hire as few workers as possible and use outsourcing firms. According to interviews conducted by Inside Mortgage Trends over the past week, it appears that demand for experienced loan officers will remain strong in the coming year, but servicing staffs will continue to shrink. Mortgage recruiter ...