The federal government will likely turn a profit on the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac MBS purchased by the Treasury Department in the wake of the collapse of the two government-sponsored enterprises in September 2008. Treasury said it received an additional $12.9 billion during the month of May in proceeds from its agency MBS investment, through sales with a market value of $10.5 billion ($10.0 billion principal value) and principal and interest payments of $2.4 billion. Through the end of May 2011, taxpayers have received...
Bank executives expect it will be a tall order for their firms to address the various tax implications of the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as the Basel III liquidity standards, particularly with regard to securitizations, according to a recent survey by audit, tax and advisory firm KPMG. KPMG reported that 48 percent of respondents said their firms were still trying to figure out the tax implications of Dodd-Frank and Basel III, while 49 percent said...
The increasing return of private capital to the mortgage market that is expected to materialize post Dodd-Frank will provide plenty of opportunity for mortgage real estate investment trusts, with those investing in agency MBS likely to face a particularly low-risk environment, some leading financial services analysts suggest. gWe believe that the increased privatization of the mortgage market combined with the risk retention requirements of the equalified residential mortgagef will create...
Rating agency DBRS has clarified its position on several key provisions following a review of market comments on its exposure draft on third-party due diligence criteria for U.S. residential MBS. Not all firms can produce 36 months of payment history on seasoned home loans, particularly with respect to recently purchased home loans. Hence, verification of the pay histories of loans seasoned more than 18 months up to less than 36 months will be allowed...
Backed by a significant amount of collateral from older deals, the rebound in commercial MBS activity has taken on a different look than the pre-crash market, experts say. The CMBS 2.0 market is expected...
Even as securitization market watchers in both the U.S. and the European Union attempt to reconcile each others new and evolving risk-retention rules, experts warn that an obscure provision of the Dodd-Frank Act could complicate...
A modest gain in the issuance of securities backed by auto financing and a boost from the student loan sector helped push total non-mortgage ABS issuance up 5.4 percent in the first quarter, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside MBS & ABS. The ABS market generated... [Includes three data charts]
Private capital could help resolve the foreclosure crisis if servicers and investors can agree to programs allowing the sale of distressed mortgages out of non-agency MBS pools, according to Jordan Dorchuck, vice president and chief legal officer at American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. Dorchuck outlined a proposal to allow...
The Securities and Exchange Commission this week proposed a new method for determining whether non-agency MBS will enjoy certain federal exemptions without relying on credit ratings. The SEC and other agencies in recent years have been gradually eliminating references to credit ratings in a variety of regulations affecting...
Representatives of the securitization industry are raising concerns that some key aspects of the risk-retention proposed rule that federal bank regulators are working on might bring the secondary mortgage market to a grinding halt, and are urging regulators to remove or clarify some proposals. Much of the concern has to do with...