Despite gains in oversight and reform of the compensation packages for Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's top-level executives, the Federal Housing Finance Agency did not keep a close eye on the pay packages for scores of GSE vice presidents and directors, according to the FHFA’s official watchdog. In a heavily redacted draft memo released to the public, the FHFA’s Office of Inspector General said that while the agency reviewed and examined the GSEs' executive compensation, it did not keep close tabs on “non-executive senior professional compensation practices.”
First Horizon National Corp. announced last week it entered into a “definitive resolution agreement” with Freddie Mac regarding loan repurchase issues. The agreement settles all representation and warranty claims related to loans sold by First Horizon to Freddie Mac from 2000 to 2008. First Horizon CEO Bryan Jordan said in a statement the agreement with the GSE is “a big step forward” in the company’s ongoing efforts to unwind from the mortgage business the firm sold in 2008.
Fannie, Freddie Slashed CMBS Holdings in 2013. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continued to sell off their holdings of non-agency commercial mortgage-backed securities as the preferred strategy for meeting their regulator's demand that the two GSEs accelerate the reduction in their retained mortgage portfolios.The two GSEs reduced their CMBS holdings by 51.4 percent over the course of 2013, according to an analysis of year-end financial statements.
Higher guaranty fees and improving housing markets propelled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to banner profits during the fourth quarter of 2013 and for the year as whole. The two GSEs reported a combined 2013 net income of $133 billion, helped by significant nonrecurring items related to deferred tax allowance valuation reversals, private-label residential mortgage-backed security lawsuit settlements, increased representation and warranty settlements, and sizeable decreases in loan-loss reserves.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issued $44.6 billion in single-family mortgage-backed securities during the month of February, a 5.1 percent monthly decline and a 62.0 percent drop for the first two months of 2014. February’s decline was less steep than January’s 15.8 percent month-to-month fall off in MBS. Top-ranked Wells Fargo’s Fannie and Freddie securitization at $6.70 billion rose by 25.9 percent on a monthly basis but dropped 71.9 percent year-to-date.
The advance business for the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks increased throughout 2013 ending the year ahead both on a quarterly and an annual basis, according to preliminary figures released by the Federal Home Loan Bank Office of Finance. Advances increased 7.2 percent to $498.6 billion during the fourth quarter of 2013 while posting an even larger 17.1 percent increase from $425.8 billion a year earlier. The Office of Finance attributed the increase in advances due to “higher member borrowing, particularly by large-asset members.”
Commercial banks and savings institutions made $1.447 billion in mortgage repurchases and other indemnifications during the fourth quarter of 2013, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of call-report data. Repurchase totals for the final three months of last year were the lowest quarterly volume since the second quarter of 2008, when the industry made $1.533 billion in mortgage repurchases and indemnifications. The fourth-quarter ... [Includes one data chart]
When the going gets tough in the mortgage industry, nonbank lending firms start pondering the once unthinkable: selling their franchises, hoping the cash will tide them over until the next upswing in the cycle. The situation is no different this time around. Investment banking advisors say there are plenty of potential acquirers – all hunting for bargains – but sellers are picky. “Cheap is the goal now,” said Chuck Klein, a managing partner at Mortgage Banking Solutions ...
In new guidance to examiners and bankers, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is stressing the risks posed by mortgage banking, particularly for banks that rely heavily on the mortgage industry to turn a profit. “A mortgage banking operation’s income and expense components can change at significantly different rates and in different directions over time, resulting in substantial shifts in profitability,” the OCC said in its new handbook on mortgage banking ...
Officials at nonbank special servicers said they will continue to work to acquire servicing from banks, but they prefer to generate their own servicing via originations. Officials at Nationstar Mortgage, Ocwen Financial and Walter Investment Management noted that creating mortgage-servicing rights via their own originations can be more cost effective than acquiring MSRs or subservicing from other lenders. Nationstar originated $24.0 billion in mortgages in 2013, making it the ...