The Securities and Exchange Commission dropped its civil fraud case against Thomas Lund, former executive vice president of Fannie Mae’s single-family business in the years leading up to conservatorship. The discontinuance of the case was announced this week by Lund’s attorney Michael Levy of Paul Hastings. “Thomas Lund has been vindicated,” he said. “After investigating for three years, litigating for another three years, deposing 50 witnesses and hiring four experts, the SEC concedes that it has not prevailed,” he said, adding that Lund will refrain, for 12 months, from signing things that he never signed in the past and has no intention of signing in the future. Lund will pay the agency $10,000. However, the SEC is classifying the payment as a “gift” to the...
With mortgage debt outstanding climbing by 0.4 percent during 2Q, the share of securitized loans fell to 64 percent at June 30, the lowest level since 2012.
The supply of residential MBS in the market grew tepidly in the second quarter of 2015, but not enough to increase the overall securitization rate for home mortgages. A total of $6.335 trillion of single-family MBS were outstanding at the end of June, a slim 0.1 percent increase from the previous quarter. The supply of MBS has been bouncing slightly higher and lower over the past six quarters, without gaining much traction. With total home mortgage debt outstanding climbing by 0.4 percent during the second quarter, the share of securitized loans fell...[Includes two data tables]
A $1.5 trillion year is doable: according to survey figures compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance, residential funders originated $805 billion in the first half.
Investors at the ABS East conference sponsored by Information Management Network last week in Miami largely agreed that many MBS and ABS sectors are stronger than they were before the crisis in terms of issuance and certainly in terms of performance. While the investor base for securities has declined from the boom times of 10 years ago, there are also fewer distressed sellers. “You tend to see that bonds are held in strong hands, which makes for a strong underpinning,” said Alessandro Pagani, a portfolio manager and head of securitized assets at Loomis Sayles. “It makes for a pretty good balance between supply and demand.” John Vibert, a managing director at Prudential Fixed Income, said...
Nearly 100 approved issuers will be dismissed from the Ginnie Mae MBS program for failing to be active participants, according to a top agency official. Michael Drayne, senior vice president and head of the Office of Issuer and Portfolio Management at Ginnie Mae, said the agency is currently working through all of the Ginnie I (multifamily) and Ginnie II (single family) issuers that have not issued a single security since their approval. Drayne estimated...
The pricing disclosures mandated by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority for ABS have had a mixed impact on the market, according to industry participants, with many claiming that the transparency has reduced liquidity. In June, FINRA started reporting post-trade price information for ABS via the Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine, better known as TRACE. The disclosures include the CUSIP, price and volume, all disclosed within 45 minutes after a trade is made. Actual volume is disclosed for trades below $10 million while trades above that amount are noted as “$10+ million.” The disclosures apply to publically-registered ABS along with deals in the private-placement 144A market. At the ABS East conference held by Information Management Network last week in Miami, Rishi Kapur, a managing director at Babson Capital, said...
The average daily trading volume for agency MBS fell slightly to $187.6 billion in August from the prior month, the second lowest reading of the year, according to figures compiled by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. Lower trading volume indicates that liquidity has been reduced somewhat, but there could be brighter days ahead: the eight-month daily trading average is a bit higher at $200.9 billion and if that figure holds for the rest of the year, it will surpass last’s year’s daily average of $177.9 billion. Then again, $200.9 billion wouldn’t be...