Mortgage bankers are concerned about possible limits on the volume of loans they can sell to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and particularly the lack of information about the development of the new rules by the government-sponsored enterprises and their regulator. Fannie and Freddie are concerned about the ability of some approved seller-servicers to honor repurchase requests and are weighing new volume limits based on a sellers capital. The Mortgage Bankers Association wants the Federal Housing Finance Agency to bring the issue out into the daylight. Given the important nature of this issue, the MBA believes that the FHFA should...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency says its proposed new securitization platform could be used now by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as by private issuers, but its also intended to serve a post government-sponsored enterprise marketplace. Last week, the FHFA issued a call for public comment on a white paper outlining its proposed common securitization platform and a model pooling and servicing agreement. Those plans are also included in the agencys updated strategic plan issued this week. The 31-page strategic plan which updates a draft issued by the FHFA in February sets...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issued separate guidance to their mortgage servicers last week designed to continue the conservator-mandated effort to complement the servicing policies of the two government-sponsored enterprises and to develop a consistent framework for assessing servicer performance. The updated servicing policies seek to harmonize compensatory fee structures, servicer violations and remedies, and servicer terminations and transfer of servicing between Fannie and Freddie. Fannies and Freddies announcements also include...
The zero-zero requirement in the loan originator compensation proposed rule pending at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could inadvertently steer borrowers into more expensive mortgage loans, according to a top industry official. There is absolutely no doubt that forcing a zero-zero option is going to result in higher-priced loans, said David Stevens, president and CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association, during an Inside Mortgage Finance webinar this week. Premium [loans] dont get the same kind of multiple as a current coupon. So as the yield curve shifts and we see rates move, were going to see action that is going to make these numbers move around a lot. To give a more extreme example, if we have an interest-rate rally, you can drop...
Rules proposed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in August to revamp servicing practices prompted widely varied reactions from servicers, individual consumers and community banks. Servicers largely sought to keep current servicing rules unchanged while borrowers asked for greater protections and community banks requested an exemption from the proposal. The CFPB said the proposed rules are aimed at ending surprises and runarounds for borrowers. The proposed rules incorporated a number of provisions included in the national servicing settlement and consent orders between servicers and federal regulators. Some of those provisions were required by the Dodd-Frank Act. Servicers largely suggested that the CFPB should not implement servicing rules beyond those specifically required by the DFA. However, the Consumer Mortgage Coalition, whose members include the servicers complying with the settlement and consent orders, called...
Ocwen Financial is set to become the eighth largest mortgage servicer with its pending acquisition of Homeward Residential, according to an analysis by Inside Mortgage Finance. While the combined servicing portfolio will largely consist of nonprime mortgages, Ocwen is also looking to benefit from Homewards relatively new wholesale origination platform, which has produced a significant amount of agency mortgages this year. Ocwen announced last week that it plans to acquire Homeward and its servicing portfolio of more than $77.0 billion for $588 million in cash and $162 million in Ocwen stock. On a combined basis, including subservicing, the two companies serviced $202.0 billion in mortgages as of the end of the second quarter of 2012. We are...
Historically low mortgage interest rates generated a huge supply of refinance business during the third quarter of 2012 that drove Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securitization volumes higher, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside MBS & ABS. A total of $437.7 billion of single-family MBS were issued during the third quarter, up 15.8 percent from the previous three-month period. It was the biggest production volume for the market since the fourth quarter of 2010, and it lifted year-to-date issuance for the first nine months of the year to $1.207 trillion a 43.2 percent increase over the same period in 2011. MBS issuance gained...[Includes one data chart]
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman this week sued JPMorgan alleging fraudulent and deceptive acts in the pooling and sale of residential MBS by now-defunct Bear Stearns. Filed in the New York Supreme Court in Manhattan, the lawsuit is the first of several legal actions contemplated by the Residential MBS Working Group, a state-federal task force created by President Obama earlier this year to investigate those suspected of contributing to the financial crisis through the sale of defective mortgage certificates. Bear Stearns, which was taken over by JPMorgan, and co-defendant EMC Mortgage perpetuated...
Investors in vintage non-agency MBS have seen strong returns in recent months, particularly in August. Industry analysts suggest that returns are likely to remain elevated as there are few remaining risks for non-agency MBS and supply is limited. Despite increased profit taking on this years impressive performance, bonds continue to trade well, according to analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. While demand for non-agency bonds will likely grow as home prices recover, it will not be met with more new supply as is seen in the broader high-yield bond universe. This is a very strong backdrop for further price appreciation. From the beginning of June through the end of September, pricing on the ABX index that tracks subprime MBS has...
Interest shortfalls on non-agency MBS have increased significantly in the past five months, according to research by Morningstar Credit Ratings. The servicing-related issue causes investors to absorb unpredictable losses and could result in downgrades of non-agency MBS. A sample of 2,858 non-agency MBS deals (21,727 tranches) examined by Morningstar in May and again in August showed a 38.0 percent increase in the number of deals with interest shortfalls. Some 18.6 percent of non-agency MBS deals examined by Morningstar for the August remittance period experienced a shortfall in at least one tranche. Shortfalls increased overall even though 21.8 percent of the shortfalls seen in March had...