Three nonbank mortgage servicers moved to strengthen their positions in the market, but several of the top banks in the industry also showed no sign of backing off, according to the latest ranking by Inside Mortgage Finance. While a number of analysts have predicted that banks would flee from the servicing business because of rising operational costs, increased compliance scrutiny and proposed increases in capital requirements, Wells Fargo continued to grow its business. The company reported a total of $1.879 trillion in servicing as of the end of September, up 0.9 percent from the previous quarter. After absorbing Wachovias mortgage operations in the third quarter of 2008, Wells relied...[Includes one data chart]
In the past four years, Ocwen Financial has gone from the 24th-largest residential mortgage servicer with a declining portfolio of distressed mortgages to, on paper, the fifth largest servicer with a portfolio increasing in volume and product type. The growth of the nonbank has involved unique tactics, including a reliance on offshore employees and tax structures. Ocwen handled a $121.8 billion portfolio as of the end of the third quarter, including subservicing, but pending acquisitions of servicing from Residential Capital and Homeward Residential, will push that to $361.7 billion. And Ocwen is...
Mortgage market watchers should expect business as usual from a second Obama administration as the White House and Congressional Democrats are poised to preserve gains under the Dodd-Frank Act, including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Both parties say they want to resolve the conservatorships of the government-sponsored enterprises, but experts say the necessity of addressing budget and tax issues will trump all other considerations next year. Clearly a second term for the Obama administration would be business as usual as best they can, explained Timothy McTaggart, partner at the Pepper Hamilton law firm during a pre-election webinar. I dont think Dodd-Frank will remain sacrosanct for all time. I think during a second term the [regulatory] agencies will get past the point of having to put the rules out, they will get some feedback and they will start making it known where they see gaps or deficiencies. Karen Shaw Petrou, managing partner of Federal Financial Analytics, said...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has found significant non-compliance during its examinations of mortgage lenders, compelling them to take a variety of steps deemed necessary to be brought into compliance, according to the CFPBs first report on its examination findings. Violations under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act included failures to make proper and complete disclosures to consumers of costs and other terms because of errors in the good faith estimate and HUD-1 settlement statement, the CFPB stated. Truth in Lending Act violations included...
MGIC Investment Corp. announced last week it has reached a tentative agreement with Freddie Mac on substantially all terms of a settlement of a simmering and prolonged dispute over pool insurance between the mortgage insurer and the government-sponsored enterprise. If MGIC and Freddie are able to agree on matters significant to final resolution involving payments to be made to the GSE, it would resolve a coverage dispute that threatened to prevent the MI from backing some loans. The principal economic terms concerning the amount of payments in settlement of MGICs obligations under the policies at issue have been...
The three-month surge in agency MBS issuance appeared to run out of steam in October, as total agency securitization of single-family mortgages dropped 11.4 percent from the previous month, according to a new market analysis and ranking by Inside MBS & ABS. The sharpest decline was in Fannie Mae issuance. The government-sponsored enterprise cranked out $58.92 billion in single-family MBS last month, down 28.4 percent from Septembers volume. It marked the lowest monthly production for Fannie since April, when the GSE issued just $46.12 billion in volume. Securitization activity at Freddie Mac was...
Non-agency MBS investors, issuers and the rating services appear to favor a new framework for representations and warranties that would incorporate provisions recently established by the Federal Housing Finance Agency for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac MBS. The new agency framework includes standardized provisions with three-year sunsets for certain repurchase obligations. At the ABS East conference sponsored by Information Management Network in Miami last week, Rebecca Dorian, head of non-agency MBS and ABS trading at Morgan Stanley, said the FHFAs rep and warrant framework could be scaled for the non-agency market. In fact, she said such standardization is necessary for non-agency MBS. Rep and warrant provisions in pooling and servicing agreements on outstanding non-agency MBS vary...
The Securities and Exchange Commission last week approved a proposal from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to increase transparency regarding MBS and ABS trading. Hearing no public comments after it announced the proposal in September, the SEC agreed to FINRAs plan to establish public reporting of trading in specified government-backed mortgage bonds and securities backed by Small Business Administration loans. According to the SEC notice published Oct. 23, the plan would leverage...
The Securities and Exchange Commissions overdue Franken amendment study will be out soon and may include alternatives to the issuer-pay ratings model, the agencys chief, Mary Schapiro, said last week at the annual meeting of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. The issuer-pay model has inherent conflicts in it, Schapiro said, referring to the prevailing system in which securities issuers generally pay to obtain ratings from the credit rating services. The SEC head provided no additional specifics regarding the alternatives that might be featured in the agencys pending report. The Franken amendment study is...
Basel III capital requirements proposed by federal regulators will have a significant negative impact on U.S. bank holdings of agency and non-agency MBS, according to industry participants. The capital requirements have yet to be finalized and are currently scheduled to begin being phased in Jan. 1 with full implementation in 2018. In June, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency proposed rules to implement Basel III capital standards the most comprehensive overhaul of the U.S. bank capital framework since Basel I was implemented in 1989. Comments were due last week, and strong warnings were submitted by trade groups representing MBS market participants, banks and mortgage lenders. If the Basel III [proposed rule] were implemented...