The most pressing concern of the Federal Housing Finance Agencys efforts to develop a post-Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac secondary mortgage market infrastructure is engineering a state-of-the-art securitization platform that could be used by either company, as well as private issuers, the agency head noted during a speech last week. Speaking at the National Association of Federal Credit Unions Congressional Caucus, FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco said the agencys immediate priority is a single, common platform, not a single government-sponsored enterprise security. A cornerstone of what we are seeking to build is...
Banks and thrifts held a record $158.5 billion of non-mortgage ABS in their investment portfolios as of the midway point in 2012, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking and analysis. The depository institutions increased their ABS holdings by 3.1 percent during the quarter, pushing them past the previous record of $154.9 billion at the end of 2009. Bank and thrift ABS holdings have jumped by 14.1 percent since the fourth quarter of 2011. The biggest chunk of bank ABS holdings is...[Includes one data chart]
The Federal Reserves plan to purchase an additional $40 billion in agency MBS per month, above and beyond the $25 billion to $30 billion the Fed has been buying, will primarily benefit the agency MBS sector but could also spur revitalization of the non-agency market, analysts say. The open-ended plan, in effect until the U.S. economy and employment picture show significant improvement, adds some $480 billion in annual demand for agency MBS, a market that is on track to produce about $1.5 trillion in gross issuance. The pressure on asset values to richen further will be substantial, said analysts at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch. The additional MBS purchases and ongoing principal investments will...
House Financial Services Committee member John Campbell, R-CA, last week introduced H.R. 6397, the Defending American Taxpayers From Abusive Government Takings Act, legislation that would prohibit the origination of taxpayer-guaranteed mortgages in jurisdictions of the country where the power of eminent domain would be used to seize mortgages. If Campbells legislation is enacted which is unlikely in the few days remaining in the legislative calendar of the 112th Congress, but probably will be resurrected in the 113th it could prove fatal to a controversial eminent domain mortgage seizure plan proposed in recent months by Mortgage Resolution Partners. MRPs plan would involve...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages originated in five states that have unusually slow foreclosure timelines would be subject to an additional, upfront guaranty fee, according to a proposal unveiled late this week by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. If implemented, the Finance Agencys proposal would target five states Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey and New York for an additional, one-shot guaranty fee of between 15 and 30 basis points in 2013. The size of the fee adjustments are intended to reflect the disparity in costs, as compared to the national average, explained the FHFA.
Although all of Fannie Maes nearly 700 real estate-owned properties sold earlier this month as part of the Federal Housing Finance Agencys first announced REO pilot transaction moved at near or above market value, a market analyst says it remains to be seen whether this deal is the shape of things to come. San Diego-based Pacifica Companies LLC was the winning bidder of 699 Fannie properties throughout Florida. The firm paid $12.3 million for a share in a joint venture with Fannie, resulting in an estimated transaction valuation to the GSE of $78.1 million or nearly 96 percent of the properties estimated value, according to the transaction summary.
Fannie Mae announced this week it has tapped Bradley Lerman to be the GSEs new executive vice president, general counsel and corporate secretary. Lerman, 56, joins Fannie Mae from Pfizer where he was senior vice president, associate general counsel and chief litigation counsel.Lerman replaces Timothy Mayopoulos, who was promoted to CEO in June.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is currently pondering how, or whether, the GSE conservator will intervene in the controversial and ever more contentious proposal to use local eminent domain laws to effect principal reduction for homeowners by seizing mortgage loans. Early last month, the FHFA cited significant concerns about the eminent domain proposals, warning that action might be necessary on its part to avoid a risk to the safe and sound operations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as to avoid taxpayer expense. Some 74 organizations and members responded to FHFAs request for input and submitted comment letters. The acting director will consider the input received in making a final decision, said a Finance Agency spokesman.
Fitch Ratings said it has affirmed the AAA long-term issuer default rating and support floors of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta.Fitch noted that as a GSE, the Atlanta Banks IDRs are linked to the U.S. sovereign rating. FHLBank Atlanta has historically benefited from its affiliation with the U.S. government and its current IDRs and outlook benefit from the implicit support that it receives, said the rating agency. Fitch believes that implicit sovereign support for the FHLBank system would be forthcoming due to its important mission as it pertains to homeownership, serving as a source of liquidity to its members and the wide global distribution of FHLBanks debt.
Some three years after it was first declared to be on fiscal thin ice, the Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle took a big step toward firmer financial ground earlier this month. The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates the 12 FHLBanks, reclassified the Seattle Bank as adequately capitalized, allowing it to move forward with plans to repurchase excess capital stock for the first time since December 2008. Even though this initial repurchase amount is relatively small, it is a significant milestone in our return to normal operations, explained FHLBank of Seattle President and CEO Michael Wilson in a letter to members.