Short of a market miracle, the chances of other Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities servicers catching up with market leaders Wells Fargo and Bank of America are practically nil. Wells Fargo and BofA appear to have a solid lock on 55.0 percent of Ginnie Mae servicing outstanding based on a combined portfolio total of $634.0 billion at the end of June. Overall, the supply of Ginnie Mae servicing grew 3.8 percent during the second quarter. Wells Fargo commanded a 28.2 percent share of Ginnie Mae servicing during the second quarter, up 4.7 percent from the first quarter. Not far behind is second-ranked BofA with a 26.6 percent share, thanks to... [Includes one data chart]
Officials testifying before a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing this week came out in strong opposition to eliminating a government guarantee in the MBS market of the future, claiming that such measures would have a significant impact on borrowers ability to obtain plain vanilla 30-year fixed-rate mortgages. Many large investors utilize the MBS market to execute trades driven by macroeconomic views and would not utilize a market which combines credit risk with interest rate risk, said Andrew Davidson, president of Andrew Davidson & Co., an analytics and consulting firm. With a smaller investor base, liquidity would be...
Production of agency MBS in July slipped to its lowest monthly level since early 2009, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside MBS & ABS. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae issued a total of just $70.34 billion of single-family MBS during July, down 3.4 percent from the previous month. It was the lowest one-month production level since January 2009 and left year-to-date issuance down 4.3 percent from the first seven months of 2010. Ginnie production was actually up slightly from June levels, but both Fannie and Freddie posted significant slowdowns. Freddie issuance dropped 15.5 percent from the previous month and accounted for [Includes one data chart]
Major MBS issuers are concerned about the potential harm evolving risk-retention regulations could have on securitization structures, regardless of which structure issuers decide to use. In response to the interagency proposed rule on credit risk retention, Citigroup said the public interest is not served by requiring securitizers to hold positions that are designed to take losses. For example, all deal parties, the rating agencies and the investors are fully aware that the lowest tranche, sometimes referred to as a first loss tranche, may take losses and no representation is made that such tranche is either investment grade or will receive...
Issuers of ABS backed by vehicle loans urged federal regulators to adopt a pool-level approach to determine new risk-retention requirements rather than the all-or-nothing standard proposed earlier this year that featured a narrowly drawn definition of qualified auto loans. Like the more widely discussed provisions on non-agency MBS securitization, the interagency proposed rule carved out an exemption from the 5 percent risk-retention requirement for auto ABS that are backed exclusively by qualified auto loans. But issuer members of the American Securitization Forum said the proposed definition of qualified auto loans features...
Nationally recognized statistical rating organization Kroll Bond Rating Agency demonstrated its optimism in the non-agency market by requesting public comment this week on its rating methodology for evaluating residential MBS. By providing complete transparency into our approach and processes, we aim to instill trust in the market and to raise the bar on ratings accuracy, said James Nadler, Krolls president, in a statement. These [publications on our proposed rating process] demonstrate our strong commitment to serving the market through a rigorous evaluation of the collateral as well as key parties in an RMBS, and combine all aspects of...
Wall Street and the Chicago City Council are at loggerheads over a revised ordinance establishing mortgage lender liability for vacant and abandoned buildings caught in the foreclosure process. Tentatively set to take effect Sept. 18, the ordinance addresses the issue of vacant and abandoned foreclosed properties for which ownership is unclear. It holds banks responsible for the upkeep and security of such properties even before they assume title to those properties. In a recent analysis, Moodys Investors Service warned that such lender liability laws increase mortgage lending transaction costs, which will worsen if...
Two Harbors Investment Corp. said this week it is impressed with the investment opportunities in the non-agency MBS sector, particularly over the next year and beyond and is pushing forward with its plans to begin a securitization program. Thomas Siering, president and CEO of the New York-based real estate investment trust, said during a conference call to discuss the firms second quarter earnings that despite the challenging non-agency environment in June, there is tremendous opportunity to profit from non-agency MBS issuance throughout the rest of this year into 2012. The recent pullback in the non-agency market has created...
The Mortgage Bankers Association urged the Federal Housing Finance Agency to include other fee structures and not just seek public comment on one servicing fee structure in a forthcoming proposal. The FHFA has been working behind closed doors with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae to devise a new servicing compensation structure for mortgages securitized by the agencies, which account for over 90 percent of new lending. Industry groups and others have been consulted during the process, which is expected to result in an exposure document subject to public comment. The MBA cautioned the FHFA against showing preference for any...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will not be branching out into the role of a master servicer in a new, yet-to-be-launched $2 billion bond program as top Republican members of the House Financial Services Committee feared, according to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.In a letter dated July 21 and in response to a letter sent by Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus, R-AL, Vice Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-TX, and four of the committees subcommittee chairman, Geithner firmly ruled out any participation by the two GSEs in Treasurys loan-guarantee program.