A decade after the nation’s subprime mortgage market came to a crashing halt, traditional Wall Street firms are now back in the game, offering repo lines and other forms of financing to a new breed of non-agency lender that plies its trade in the “expanded credit” mortgage sector.
After a couple of years away from ABS issuance, loanDepot and Volkswagen are providing collateral for new deals. Meanwhile, Freedom Financial Network is a first-time issuer. All are getting positive reaction from investors.
DBRS maintained its lead position as the top rating service in the non-agency MBS market during the first quarter of 2018, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking. [Includes two data charts.]
Efforts to adopt certain consumer protections at both the state and federal levels will increase credit strength for ABS backed by Property Assessed Clean Energy programs, rating services said.
The U.S. Supreme Court decided this week that it’s not going to hear an appeal from Royal Bank of Scotland and Nomura Holdings, which were hoping to overturn an $839 million award ruling on an old MBS suit. This puts an end to a drawn out seven-year battle between the government and the two banks.
Credit Suisse issued a large prime non-agency mortgage-backed security this week with an unprecedented lack of disclosure: the single lender that provided loans for the deal wasn’t identified in presale reports. Fitch Ratings and Morningstar Credit Ratings placed AAA ratings on the $1.60 billion CSMC 2018-J1 Trust. It is the second largest post-crisis non-agency MBS backed by new originations. All of the loans in the deal were “acquired from a single originator in a bulk purchase ...
Several non-agency mortgage-backed securities closed before the end of the second quarter. A nonprime deal in the works from Verus Mortgage Capital could be issued early in the third quarter. JPMorgan Chase closed two non-agency MBS in June: a $938.2 million issuance backed by loans from Chase and other originators and a $490.5 million deal backed by a variety of seasoned mortgages originated by First Republic Bank. Some 59.2 percent of the mortgages in the larger Chase deal ...
Starwood Property Trust announced this week that it agreed to purchase up to $600.0 million of non-qualified mortgages originated by Impac Mortgage Holdings in the next 12 months. The real estate investment trust also revealed that it has already acquired $900.0 million of non-QMs from Impac. “We are excited to formalize our partnership with Impac, which we believe will help scale our opportunity to provide non-QM loans to high-quality borrowers while sourcing ...