An official involved in the non-agency MBS market said it’s easier to sell private placements than it is to meet requirements for publicly registered deals
The DBO request for proposal asks that applicants for the Ocwen contract state whether they – or any affiliates – have done any consulting work for the servicer.
On loans with LTVs ranging from 90 percent to 95 percent, for example, GSE pricing was better for all borrowers with credit scores over 620. But things are different now.
Issuers of non-agency MBS will likely continue to favor private placements over registering deals with the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to industry participants. While publicly registered deals in the ABS market and commercial MBS market are common, no non-agency MBS issued in 2014 was registered with the SEC. Instead, non-agency MBS issuers offered deals as 144A private placements. An official involved in the non-agency MBS market said...
Freddie Mac is set to sell a first-loss tranche on a Structured Agency Credit Risk transaction for the first time. The deal priced this week and the $880 million STACR 2015-DN1 is scheduled to settle next week. On previous STACR deals, Freddie has retained a tranche equaling at least the first 30 basis points of loss. Investor demand for the government-sponsored enterprises’ risk-sharing transactions has been strong but some have called for the GSEs to offer first-loss tranches, which can offer higher yields than the tranches that are more buffered from losses. Freddie said...
Wells Fargo was the largest Fannie/Freddie servicer at yearend with $791.0 billion, followed by Chase Home Finance ($429.1 billion) and Bank of America ($260.4 billion).