It’s Time to Scale Back Dodd-Frank, Industry Says. With a new Republican majority now in power and calling the shots on Capitol Hill, the industry consultants at The Collingwood Group recently asked mortgage industry officials what they thought the new Congress could do to bolster the housing market. Their answer? Rein in Dodd-Frank. “Although just fewer than 50 percent of respondents selected ‘repeal Dodd-Frank’ or ‘abolish the CFPB,’ the comments submitted clearly indicate that these industry insiders prefer a tempered approach with reasonable modifications to these two reactionary reform measures stemming from the crisis,” Collingwood said. “Many respondents stated that the Dodd-Frank Act should be revised to remove barriers to innovation and to reduce the cost of manufacturing a mortgage.” ...
Some $4.60 billion in jumbo mortgage-backed securities were issued in the first quarter of 2015, the highest quarterly volume seen in the aftermath of the financial crisis, according to Inside Nonconforming Markets. Jumbo MBS activity has had large swings in recent years due to shifting investor appetite and volume hasn’t been anywhere near the levels seen before 2008. However, the market recovered from an unexpected increase in interest rates ... [Includes one data chart]
The unusual appointment of a senior advisor to replace Acting FHA Commissioner and Assistant Secretary of Housing Biniam Gebre is causing Republicans to sit up and take notice. Last week, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro tapped Edward Golding to head the FHA, not in an acting capacity, but as a “principal deputy assistant secretary.” The new title grants Golding broad powers to manage the FHA’s daily operations but does not come with the full authority of an FHA commissioner. For example, Golding is restricted from issuing final rules or notices of funding availability. He may not endorse mortgages for insurance that exceed $50 million, such as loans for hospitals and other multifamily structures. Moreover, it is unclear how much enforcement power Golding can wield. More interestingly, however, the process that facilitated Golding’s appointment allows ...
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae securitized $151.1 billion of refi loans during the first quarter, a 34.8 percent increase from the end of 2014.
Mortgage and asset securitization started 2015 with improving issuance volume and a chance to reverse last year’s paltry output. A total of $335.1 billion of residential MBS and non-mortgage ABS were issued during the first three months of 2015, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis. That was up 7.7 percent from the fourth quarter of 2014, and it was a big 34.3 percent jump from the first quarter of last year. The first quarter of 2014 was...[Includes two data charts]
A little known lender called Angel Oak Mortgage Solutions hopes to fund $540 million of product this year and generate the industry’s first nonprime non-agency MBS of the “new era” with financing provided by Nomura. According to industry officials who have viewed investor materials issued by the company – a copy of which was provided to Inside MBS & ABS – Nomura has even agreed to provide “gestation repo” warehouse credit to the privately held originator. One source who claims to have knowledge of the arrangement said...