Officials at the Federal Housing Finance Agency provided some advice to real estate investment trusts along with the announcement this week that REITs will lose their access to funding from Federal Home Loan Banks: ask Congress to make some changes. “Congress has amended the Federal Home Loan Bank Act in the past to allow additional entities to become members of a Federal Home Loan Bank and it can certainly do so again if it wants some of these entities to ...
Issuers of jumbo mortgage-backed securities stuck with plain vanilla mortgages in 2015, according to a new analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. Meanwhile, a wide variety of lenders contributed to jumbo MBS last year, with only one bank accounting for an outsized share of contributions. First Republic Bank was the top originator of jumbo mortgages that were securitized in 2015, accounting for nearly 20 percent of all jumbo MBS issuance ... [Includes two data charts]
The performance risks posed by a new breed of alternative-documentation mortgages are likely much lower than the mayhem caused by reduced-documentation mortgages originated before the financial crisis, according to Moody’s Investors Service. While most lenders verify the borrower’s income and assets used to qualify for mortgages, some non-agency lenders are willing to originate loans with less than full documentation. Lenders allowing for alt-doc underwriting typically ...
The most active issuer of jumbo mortgage-backed securities in 2015, based on the number of deals sold, is set to issue the first jumbo MBS of the year. Two Harbors Investment is preparing a $304.75 million deal, according to presale reports. A presale report from Standard & Poor’s on the deal on Jan. 4 ended a span of 31 days without a presale report for a new jumbo MBS. Fitch Ratings published a presale report on the same deal the following day. The deal will mark the first ...
CORRECTION: A story in the Jan. 1, 2016, issue of Inside Nonconforming Markets regarding jumbo mortgage-backed security issuance as of the end of the fourth quarter of 2015 inadvertently omitted a $231.2 million jumbo MBS issued by Hatteras Financial in December. The online version of the story has been updated, including a revision to the companion data table. SoFi announced this week that it no longer considers credit scores ... [Includes four briefs]
Issuers of Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities pushed a record $435.80 billion of government-insured loans through the program during 2015, according to a new Inside FHA/VA Lending analysis and ranking. Last year’s total Ginnie MBS issuance topped the previous record of $429.50 billion issued during 2009. The $435.80 billion total for 2015 includes securitization of FHA home-equity conversion mortgages and other single-family loans guaranteed by FHA, the VA, and the Department of Agriculture rural housing program from Ginnie pool-level MBS data that are not truncated. Production in 2015 hit its high-water mark in the third quarter with $128.23 billion in issuance, and then fell 18.0 percent in the final three months of the year. Purchase mortgages continued to account for most Ginnie business in 2015, 58.0 percent of the agency’s forward-mortgage securitizations. But a huge factor in the ... [ Charts ]
Interactive Mortgage Advisors is auctioning off $3.02 billion in Ginnie Mae residential mortgage-servicing rights for an undisclosed client. According to IMA, the seller is a “well-known, independent mortgage banker with very strong net worth and well-versed in servicing transfers.” The loans are being sub-serviced by LoanCare. The MSR package consists of 17,989 loans – FHA (15,288) and VA (2,610) – with an average loan size of $168,886. The yield on the underlying mortgages is 4.069 percent. The service fee is 0.2917 percent. An estimated 8.92 percent of all loans in the deal are delinquent. Approximately 3.07 percent of the loans are either in bankruptcy or in foreclosure. The top states in the transaction are Texas, which accounted for 11.4 percent of all loans; California, 9.6 percent; Florida, 8.1 percent; and New York, 5.8 percent. The deadline for ...
The first rated securitization backed by nonperforming Home Equity Conversion Mortgage loans contains strong, credit-positive features that outweigh the credit risk associated with nonperforming loans, according to a Moody’s Investors Service analysis. The effect of some of these positive features on the performance of Nationstar HECM Loan Trust 2015-2, however, depends on whether Nationstar Mortgage remains as servicer for the transaction, said the rating agency. Nationstar has a servicer rating of B2/Stable from Moody’s and is also the transaction’s sponsor. Nationstar issued NHLT 2015-2 in November 2015 and by the end of December, the first remittance report showed strong initial performance. Credit enhancement to the Aaa (sf)-rated notes increased by 1.69 percent in the first month of operations, Moody’s noted. “As long as Nationstar continues to be the ...