The improvements that the Federal Housing Finance Agency is expected to make to the governments Home Affordable Refinance Program will likely come at the expense of MBS investors, say experts. The outlines of an expanded HARP are far from clear, but the FHFA is said to be giving serious consideration to lifting the 125 percent loan-to-value limit, in addition to waiving loan-level pricing adjustments, representation and warranties imposed on lenders, valuation requirements and the portability of mortgage insurance. The agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is expected to make an...
The credit rating industry is generally making progress in implementing a landslide of new regulatory requirements both in the U.S. and from overseas regulators but several firms continue to wrestle with conflict-of-interest standards and other issues, according to an annual report released this week by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Problems were found at all 10 ratings firms. The three larger nationally recognized statistical rating organizations Standard and Poors, Moodys Investors Service and Fitch Ratings all have more than 1,000 credit analysts and credit analyst supervisors, while...
Moodys Investors Service continued to rank as the top credit rating agency in the non-mortgage ABS market, putting its stamp on 66.9 percent of dollar volume of deals issued in the first half of the year, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis. Moodys was particularly strong in the vehicle finance and business loan sectors, with market shares approaching 75.0 percent in both categories. The company showed relatively little interest in the student ABS market, but ranked second in rating credit card deals. Standard & Poors ranked second overall with a 58.3 percent share of ABS ratings. That included a near...(Includes two data charts)
The strategic default problem is not going away, keeping pressure on servicers and MBS investors to find ways to dis-incentivize these actions. House prices continue to fall, and more underwater homeowners are willing to batter their credit rating and default on their mortgage to get out of an uneconomic deal. In a recent report, analysts at Deutsche Bank said the threat of legal action and risks to assets other than the mortgaged property play a large role in a homeowners decision to strategically default. Eleven states are considered non-recourse states, either because they explicitly forbid deficiency judgments or...
Securitization market participants continue to face significant uncertainty from regulatory forces on both sides of the Atlantic that is dampening securitization activity, raising costs and probably leaving some deals undone. Much of the problem stems from capital requirements and the use of credit ratings, which have fallen into disrepute among many lawmakers and regulators in the wake of the collapse of the subprime mortgage market and the resulting credit market freeze in 2008. After last years enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the...
Transparency, investor access to information and a willingness to engage in loss mitigation can help reduce the wave of litigation and investor losses resulting from repurchase demands, according to mortgage litigation experts. Theres a better alternative to fighting out buyback claims in court: all counterparties should sit down and find ways to resolve issues that trigger repurchase claims in an open and forthright manner, said panelists on a webinar hosted by Inside Mortgage Finance Publications. We have to work together because the country is hurting and the longer this drags on, the bigger the problem is going...
Investors in non-agency mortgage-backed securities would rather not fight in court to enforce buybacks, according to Talcott Franklin, shareholder of his namesake law firm. However, Franklin said litigation has been necessary because servicers largely those affiliated with lenders or MBS issuers have not done enough to prevent losses. If the banks can get it together on the servicing side and try to reduce these losses, that is going to be the best way for them to proactively reduce these [buyback] risks, he said this week during a webinar hosted by Inside Mortgage Finance Publications. ...
The servicing compensation structure for non-agency mortgages must be reformed, according to Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin. The Federal Housing Finance Agency noted that the options it proposed for agency mortgages last week could also serve as a model for non-agency mortgages and could help revive the sector. It is imperative to reconsider the compensation structure so that servicers have adequate incentives to perform payment processing efficiently on performing mortgages, and to perform effective loss mitigation on delinquent loans, Raskin said in a speech this week. ...
Lenders looking to participate in Redwood Trusts jumbo securitization efforts must meet high standards, according to a review of the real estate investment trusts new jumbo mortgage-backed security. The major originators in the $375.2 million jumbo MBS Redwood issued last week were all considered above average by Fitch Ratings. Redwood has invested significant resources into its jumbo conduit and correspondent program in an effort to revive non-agency securitization. ...
Lenders and consumer advocates are bitterly divided over rules for alternative mortgages released by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in July. While lenders generally support the preemption in the interim final rule, the Center for Responsible Lending raised major concerns about the rule and the spread of the subprime virus. The CFPBs interim final rule on the Alternative Mortgage Transaction Parity Act was required by the Dodd-Frank Act. ...