Even as industry chatter increases about an effort to extend the eligibility date of the Home Affordable Refinance Program, analysts speculate that more HARP may be too much of a good thing for the mortgage market. Analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Keefe, Bruyette & Woods cite evidence of a creeping goal line to move back by 12 months the June 1, 2009, cut-off date for HARP eligibility. KBW cites a Saturday morning address by President Obama earlier this month on the subject of refinance. While he did not specifically mention extending HARP, we think an announcement could be coming over the next few weeks to extend the eligibility back one year, said KBW. More telling, said BAML, is...
Investors are paying more for vintage non-agency MBS with repurchase disputes and pending settlements than securities not involved in representation and warranty litigation, according to analysts at Amherst Securities Group. The increased pricing comes as the proposed $8.5 billion settlement on non-agency MBS issued by Countrywide Financial nears its conclusion. In the past year, pricing on non-agency MBS involved in rep and warrant litigation outperformed securities not subject to such lawsuits, according to Amherst. It appears these securities received different treatment, as investors likely included recovery cash flows, and priced the bonds accordingly, the analysts said. As an example, Amherst pointed...
Ginnie Mae officials are moving ahead to create a blueprint for consolidating its two MBS programs, although some industry experts say the proposal could cost investors $5.5 billion. The agency got considerable backing from a variety of stakeholders for its straw man proposal to shift to a single MBS program based on the existing Ginnie II, said John Getchis, senior vice president in Ginnies capital markets office. We got...
Freddie Mac this week issued $1.04 billion of MBS backed by modified loans, making a small dent in the government-sponsored enterprises portfolio of distressed mortgages. The securities were issued under a new MBS prefix reserved just for modified loans, and Freddie officials indicated that the securities would be held in portfolio rather than sold in the market. All of the modified loans are fixed-rate mortgages, although $138.2 million of the loans were originally adjustable-rate mortgages. Most of the loan mods have 30-year terms. The loans in the first batch of mod MBS were originated...
Ginnie Mae has proposed revising its buyout policy to eliminate inconsistencies in servicers repurchase practices and to discourage early buyouts of seriously delinquent loans from Ginnie MBS. Under the current policy, Ginnie Mae issuers may buy out delinquent loans if the borrower fails to make any payment for three consecutive months. However, many issuers have been applying the policy inconsistently, according to Michael Drayne, senior vice president for issuer and portfolio management at Ginnie Mae. Some servicers have been interpreting...[Includes one data chart]
Two repurchase lawsuits in the New York state court involving allegedly defective mortgage-backed securities and the states six-year statute of limitations have resulted in different outcomes for defendants, one of which could potentially limit MBS putback claims in the Empire State. In a May 13 decision, Justice O. Peter Sherwood of the Commercial Division of the New York Supreme Court dismissed with prejudice a $259 million MBS putback lawsuit against Nomura Credit & Capital. The decision was significant in part because it was the first among dozens of MBS putback cases currently pending in NY state court that was dismissed with prejudice on grounds that the six-year statute of limitations has expired, according to defense attorneys. Two affiliates of hedge fund Fir Tree Partners filed...
Freddie Mac this week issued $1.04 billion of mortgage-backed securities backed by modified loans.The notes are being pooled into new Freddie Mac Fixed-Rate Modified Participation Certificates with new "MA-MD" prefixes. The GSE bought the majority of these loans out of participation certificates when they were at least 120 days past due. A Freddie official said that it will not sell the new bonds in the open market and instead will hold them on balance sheet.
The $443 million non-agency MBS, Chases second of the year, is set to receive AAA ratings with credit enhancement ranging from 6.90 percent to 10 percent for the top tranches.