Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – in conservatorship for almost eight years now – posted combined net income of $3.94 billion for the second quarter, with an assist from higher guaranty fee income and a noticeable decline in hedging charges. Fannie’s profit was $2.9 billion for the second quarter, more than double the $1.1 billion reported last quarter. The GSE attributed the increase in net income to lower fair value losses in the quarter, coupled with high credit-related income due to home price increases and interest rate decreases. Higher net revenues driven by increased mortgage prepayments also helped. Fannie booked $3.26 billion of guaranty fee income in 2Q16, compared to $3.22 billion in the first quarter.
The multifamily market continued to stay strong in the first half of 2016, despite a slowdown in origination volume. GSE multifamily business soared with record volumes in 2015 when lending reached $90 billion. Freddie Mac said steady economic growth and key drivers will keep the multifamily market moving forward through the remainder of 2016 and into next year. In its mid-year multifamily outlook, the mortgage giant noted that origination volume will have another record year in 2016, thanks to increasing property prices, new completions and maturities. Although fundamentals moderated some in the first half of the year, Freddie said they won’t decelerate enough to derail the multifamily industry because demand remains robust.
The senior tranche of the MBS will include credit enhancement of 6.40 percent, similar to the credit enhancement levels of previous deals from Two Harbors.
The agency single-family MBS market gained speed for the sixth consecutive month in July and appeared on track to top last year’s annual total by the time 2016 is over. According to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis and ranking, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae produced a hefty $129.30 billion of new single-family MBS in July. That was up 7.7 percent from June and represented the biggest month in new issuance since August 2013. While the year-to-date totals were still slightly below the volume produced in the first seven months of 2015, this year’s market probably hasn’t...[Includes two data tables]
MBS investments by most of the nation’s publicly traded mortgage real estate investment trusts continue to be in a holding pattern these days as they figure out what to do in an environment of declining interest rates and accelerating prepayment speeds. Market leader Annaly Capital Management held $64.9 billion of agency MBS at midyear, down ever so slightly from the prior quarter. Compared to June 2015, Annaly’s MBS portfolio was off 4.1 percent. American Capital Agency Corp., Annaly’s closest competitor in terms of REIT MBS investing, saw...
There’s more than $50.0 billion in capital ready to acquire new nonprime home loans, including non-qualified mortgages, according to Dan Perl, chairman and CEO of Citadel Servicing, a nonprime lender. “Liquidity is abundant,” he said last week at the California Mortgage Bankers Association’s Western Secondary Market Conference in San Francisco. “There is a ready market for this and I couldn’t say that two years ago.” William Pendleton, a senior vice president of portfolio lending at Caliber Home Loans, said...
Freddie Mac will publish a new set of disclosures to help the market track the exchange of its legacy MBS with a 45-day payment delay to a 55-day cycle under the new Single Security, according to a new update from the government-sponsored enterprise. A key disclosure involves the creation of “mirror securities” that help investors track how much of an existing MBS has been exchanged for the new securities. Mirror securities will be created for Freddie’s current participation certificates as well as second-level Giants that are comprised of PCs. Before new Single Securities are created, Freddie will create...
One of the largest players in the "new" nonprime mortgage industry is Citadel Loan Servicing, Irvine, CA, which now has a portfolio totaling $600 million.