A credit rating agency has agreed to be barred for 18 months from rating asset-backed and government securities issuers, while a former broker-dealer executive has been charged with duping investors in connection with the sale of MBS. Egan-Jones Ratings Co. and its owner/president, Sean Egan, have agreed to the temporary prohibition as part of a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission for allegedly making willful and material misstatements and omissions while registering with the SEC to become a nationally recognized statistical ratings organization for ABS and government securities. The SEC discovered...
Wall Streets ability to hide and disguise significant risk through the abuse of derivatives and other novel financial products would be greatly reduced under a proposed modernization of tax rules issued last week by the Republican head of a top House committee. The discussion draft released by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Dave Camp, R-MI, would revamp, among other things, the tax treatment of bonds traded at a discount or premium on the secondary market, increase the accuracy of determining gains and losses on securities sales and prevent harvesting of tax losses on securities. Updating these tax rules to reflect modern developments in financial products will make...
Federal regulators faced with finalizing controversial rules on risk retention in non-agency MBS, ABS and commercial MBS transactions of the future are considering a fair-value approach instead of the controversial premium capture cash reserve account. Although no details on the proposal are available, the American Securitization Forum recently provided general views on how fair value calculations of an issuers risk-retention requirement could replace the PCCRA. The group said the change could be a significant improvement over the PCCRA, which could have wreaked havoc on the securitization market. The PCCRA, which would have required issuers to hold in reserve any premium they earned in selling assets to a securitization trust, was...
Secondary market investors interested in branching out beyond plain vanilla mortgage products are not going to have much to get excited about once the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus new ability-to-repay rule kicks in next year, top legal experts suggested this week. Will lenders make rebuttable presumption qualified mortgages? Remember, [lenders] are free to make loans that generally satisfy the ATR standard. We dont think those are going to be very common. We dont think they are going to be saleable in the secondary market at this point in time from what we know today, Donald Lampe, leader of the financial services regulatory and compliance practice with the Dykema law firm, told participants in a webinar hosted by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter. As he sees it, the real issue boils down...
With state and local lawsuits against Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac seeking payment for real estate transfer taxes from which the GSEs assert they are exempt, an industry attorney says the endgame for enterprise and municipality alike wont come from the courts but from the other two branches of government at the highest level. Last month, Spokane, WA, and Montgomery County, MD, joined a growing list of local governments to file suit against the two GSEs for unpaid taxes, challenging Fannies and Freddies claim that the firms are exempt under their federal charter from transfer taxes in connection with the recording of deeds upon transfer of property by sale or foreclosure.
Cooperatives or affinity groups are keeping quiet on what effect recent changes made by Fannie Mae regarding volume discounts will have on their businesses. To date, the three most widely recognized lender co-ops Capital Markets Cooperative, Lenders One, and Americas Mortgage Cooperative have said little or nothing on the situation, at least publicly. However, mortgage bankers close to the issue say it could affect Lenders One the most since the company once promoted a pricing advantage it enjoyed as a marketing tool. Some cooperatives charge members for their services upfront, while others only receive a percentage of the value derived from each secondary market transaction.
A large and potentially lucrative request for proposal issued several months ago that requires outside vendors to aid the Federal Housing Finance Agency in carrying out its Strategic Plan for taking the GSEs to the next stage in their evolution has yet to be awarded. According to a copy of the RFP obtained by Inside The GSEs, work on the contract was slated to start January 28. Potentially, the contract runs through January 2018. A spokeswoman for the agency said FHFA is still in the process of evaluating the situation.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have taken different positions on how to deal with new seller/servicers that havent been approved for very long. While Fannie has set purchase limits on how much production newly approved seller/servicers can sell to the GSE, Freddie Mac has shied away from such caps. A spokesman for Freddie told Inside The GSEs that it treats all its customers equally. We dont have a limit on new customers, he clarified. Lenders must meet the net worth minimum, which is roughly $2.5 million. Fannie Mae, on the other hand, is tying loan sale volume to net worth. The lower a lenders net worth, the less it can sell to Fannie. According to a recent message posted to Fannies website by executive vice president and chief risk officer John Nichols, Fannie placed limits on new customers primarily nonbanks because the company saw what it called a significant shift in the composition of our customer base and the emergence of many new originating institutions with whom we have done little or no business.
Municipalities determined to follow through with a proposal to use local government eminent domain powers to nullify existing mortgage contracts of underwater borrowers should expect a swift response from the government conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, warns an industry insider. Last week, executives of San Bernardino County, CA, voted to reject a proposal to use eminent domain to seize mortgages with negative equity to affect a principal reduction for borrowers. The decision was reportedly based on expert warnings about the destabilizing effect on the housing market such a policy would have, as well as a conspicuous lack of public support.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced this week that they will further extend the suspension of foreclosure sales and eviction lockouts for borrowers impacted by Hurricane Sandy. Announced in consultation with the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the GSEs new 90-day extension applies to homeowners with properties or employment within the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) declared disaster area that are eligible for individual assistance.