The risk-retention rule re-proposed by federal regulators in September needs significant adjustments, according to issuers of collateralized loan obligations and asset-backed commercial paper. Investors are largely happy with the re-proposed rule, and issuers concede that the re-proposed rule significantly improved on the rule initially proposed by federal regulators in 2011. The Dodd-Frank Act requires federal regulators to establish risk-retention requirements for certain securities that dont meet qualifying standards. Issuers of such securities will generally be required to retain at least 5.0 percent of the risk from such issuance. We remain concerned...
There was no surprise about why. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae securitized a total of $41.71 billion of refinance loans in October, down 22 percent from the previous month.
Glenn Costello, a senior managing director at KBRA, said the securitization of non-QM loans will require additional credit enhancement relative to QMs.
The bipartisan Senate blueprint for secondary mortgage market reform includes several key provisions designed to facilitate small-lender access when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are no longer around.
The mortgage slowdown will separate the men from the boys, the girls from the ladies. It's time to fire all underperforming loan officers, says mortgage consultant David Lykken.
The top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee said that she and other members on the panel are drafting an alternative approach to improve upon the existing housing-finance reform proposals currently circulating in both chambers of Congress. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-CA, noted during a speech at a Bipartisan Policy Center Housing Commission Policy Forum this week that the proposal in progress would encompass the set of principles House Democrats issued in July with a particular emphasis on preserving an affordable 30-year, fixed rate mortgage.
Congress is making an important start on GSE reform but a final, tangible product may not come to fruition for several more years, according to Capitol Hill insiders. Speaking at the Mortgage Bankers Associations annual convention in Washington, DC, last week, former House Financial Services Committee Senior Counsel Michael Borden and former Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee Staff Director Dwight Fettig agreed its a virtual certainty that a final reform bill will not materialize during the 113th Congress.
Servicers working for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now prohibited from being reimbursed altogether for expenses associated with lender-placed insurance practices, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced this week. The FHFAs action follows a notice the agency published in March calling for seller/servicers to be prohibited from accepting sales commissions or fees related to lender-placed or force-placed insurance where a conflict exists between them and the insurance providers and their affiliates.
Industry observers doubt the White Houses commitment to replace the current interim head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, despite louder recent lip service, following an embarrassing, if not unexpected, rejection last week by the Senate of the Congressman who would be the new FHFA director. On Oct. 31, Senators voted 56 to 42 to limit floor debate on the nomination of Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC. The final tally was well below the 60-member supermajority required to invoke cloture and shutter any potential filibuster under current Senate rules.