An official involved in the non-agency MBS market said it’s easier to sell private placements than it is to meet requirements for publicly registered deals
The DBO request for proposal asks that applicants for the Ocwen contract state whether they – or any affiliates – have done any consulting work for the servicer.
Wells Fargo was the largest Fannie/Freddie servicer at yearend with $791.0 billion, followed by Chase Home Finance ($429.1 billion) and Bank of America ($260.4 billion).
Ocwen Financial may have to settle with investors in non-agency MBS it services to avoid having the underlying servicing rights being yanked away by a trustee, according to investors and analysts tracking the situation. Early this week, Ocwen attorney Richard Jacobsen sent a letter to the law firm of Gibbs & Bruns, sternly telling the attorneys for some of the RMBS holders that there is no basis for default under the trust agreements. Gibbs & Bruns is working...
Investors are beginning to show renewed interest in buying servicing rights collateralized by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans, in particular “flow” transactions where the product is delivered in the future on a monthly basis. Moreover, there is even talk in the market that some of the megabanks may return as active buyers now that they’ve figured out their capital exposure under the Basel III capital rules. Basel caps mortgage servicing rights at 10 percent of Tier I capital, but some large “flow” buyers of yesteryear – including Wells Fargo – are under the limit and could have room to grow. Phase in of the Basel rule began last year. “We see a day when banks are active buyers again,” said Mark ...
Despite heavy volume in new single-family business in recent years, there has been little growth in the outstanding volume of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac servicing. GSE single-family servicing peaked at $4.794 trillion back in 2009. Up until 2014, refinance activity accounted for over 70 percent of Fannie/Freddie new business; there was a lot of churning in GSE servicing rights but a net decline in outstanding volume. The rebound in purchase-mortgage lending last year began to turn that around. A new Inside The GSEs analysis of Fannie and Freddie mortgage-backed securities disclosures shows total single-family servicing grew modestly in both the third and fourth quarters of 2014. The analysis shows a total of $3.956 trillion of single-family servicing at the ...