Come next year, Freddie Mac will assess lenders a fee of $7,500 if they fail to deliver mortgage loans with an aggregate principal balance of more than $5 million.
Banks and thrifts saw another drop in their MBS holdings in the first quarter of 2013 despite holding their own against the Federal Reserves voracious appetite for agency MBS. A new Inside MBS & ABS analysis of bank and thrift call reports reveals that industry investment in residential MBS fell 1.1 percent during the first quarter of 2013 to $1.562 trillion. That was down 4.4 percent from the record $1.634 trillion of MBS held in portfolio by banks and thrifts at the end of the first quarter of last year. Banks reported...[Includes two data charts]
Security issuers, investors and the rating services largely praised unsolicited rating requirements established by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2010, but they had different views on how the rules should be changed. Rating agency information arbitrage has been eliminated, Kevin Duignan, global head of structured finance at Fitch Ratings, said of the SECs Rule 17g-5, which established unsolicited rating standards. Were all getting the same information and we know were getting the same information. Rule 17g-5 requires...
Even as industry chatter increases about an effort to extend the eligibility date of the Home Affordable Refinance Program, analysts speculate that more HARP may be too much of a good thing for the mortgage market. Analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Keefe, Bruyette & Woods cite evidence of a creeping goal line to move back by 12 months the June 1, 2009, cut-off date for HARP eligibility. KBW cites a Saturday morning address by President Obama earlier this month on the subject of refinance. While he did not specifically mention extending HARP, we think an announcement could be coming over the next few weeks to extend the eligibility back one year, said KBW. More telling, said BAML, is...
Investors are paying more for vintage non-agency MBS with repurchase disputes and pending settlements than securities not involved in representation and warranty litigation, according to analysts at Amherst Securities Group. The increased pricing comes as the proposed $8.5 billion settlement on non-agency MBS issued by Countrywide Financial nears its conclusion. In the past year, pricing on non-agency MBS involved in rep and warrant litigation outperformed securities not subject to such lawsuits, according to Amherst. It appears these securities received different treatment, as investors likely included recovery cash flows, and priced the bonds accordingly, the analysts said. As an example, Amherst pointed...