Mortgage servicing transfers are likely to continue, particularly to nonbanks like Ocwen and Nationstar, with modest effect on most non-agency deals, according to a new study from Barclays Securitized Products Research. Researchers said the valuation effect of these servicing transfers is generally modest for most senior securities, with the exception of some that are likely to benefit from certain factors. Investors should also be aware of potential forbearance-related write-downs in these transferred deals, which may adversely affect subordinate bonds in the structure, they cautioned. The study attributes...
Fannie Mae will lower its maximum LTV. Mortgage insurance firms are not happy. Meanwhile, NAMB blames shrinking application volumes on summer vacations.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are eliminating or tweaking certain servicing initiatives, the two GSEs announced last week in separate bulletins. Effective Aug.1, the two enterprises have eliminated the complete Borrower Response Package and Delinquency Improvement Performance Standard, and the related incentive and compensatory fee structure.
Increases to home prices and employment rates along with servicers loss mitigation activities have combined to reduce delinquency rates to normal levels across most of the country, according to industry analysts. However, foreclosures remain a concern, particularly in states with a judicial foreclosure process. The overall delinquency rate fell to 7.38 percent in the second quarter of 2013 from 8.64 percent the previous quarter, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index based on 17 lenders that service a total of $5.42 trillion in home mortgages. Thirty-to-60-day delinquency rates actually ticked up...[Includes one data chart]