Warehouse lenders that supply credit to nonbank originators have seen usage rates and new line requests increase significantly in the past few weeks, thanks in part to plunging interest rates brought about by the “Brexit” vote. David Frase, president of warehouse lending for Southwest Bank, said, “Any warehouse bank that isn’t seeing record volume is probably malfunctioning in some way. We’ve been pretty darn busy.” Other warehouse managers have reported...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development last week announced stronger protections for homeowners and more favorable pricing for nonprofit participants in its Distressed Asset Stabilization Program but reactions from community and advocacy groups have been mixed. The program has been under fire because the bulk auctions of nonperforming mortgages have primarily benefited private equity firms and hedge funds, which bought the loans at a steep discount but did little to save homeowners from foreclosure or revitalize the communities where the properties backing the loans are located. HUD converted...
This attendee said one primary concern was whether nonbank Ginnie issuers would have the financial wherewithal to make advances to MBS investors in the event of another financial crisis.
Edens is a principal and co-chairman of Fortress Investment Group, a publicly traded investment fund that happens to own 66.2 percent of Nationstar’s stock.
At the recent invitation-only Ginnie Mae “liquidity summit” in Washington, DC, some of the nation’s top regulators – including one from the Federal Reserve – expressed their concerns about the growing market share of nonbank issuers and servicers. The focus, as might be expected, centered on the capital position of nonbanks, which pales in comparison to depositories. As one attendee told Inside MBS & ABS: “It was all about bashing the nonbanks.” This attendee, who spoke under the condition his name not be used, said...