Standard & Poor’s emerged as the top rating service in both non-agency MBS and non-mortgage ABS securitizations in 2014, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking. S&P rated $8.91 billion of non-agency MBS last year, or 25.4 percent of total issuance. Rating information is not available on most scratch-and-dent transactions and re-securitizations that are typically issued as private placements. S&P’s market share was down from 40.0 percent of non-agency MBS issued in 2013, when there were more transactions with multiple ratings. DBRS, which reports its ratings on re-securitizations, actually was involved...[Includes two data charts]
A push to seize a few thousand underwater mortgages in the San Francisco area by eminent domain has likely run into a dead end for now, after a report from the City and County of San Francisco Controller’s Office discouraged local officials from pursuing the idea any further. “Precluding any participation from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the use of eminent domain would seem to be an inviable option,” the document concluded. On Oct. 28, 2014, the Board of Supervisors issued...
RoundPoint Mortgage, a servicer with more than $41 billion of receivables on its books, is entertaining offers for the entire company, according to industry officials briefed on the matter. Moreover, servicing advisors contend that several large bulk servicing portfolios are ready to hit the market in what should turn out to be a busy late winter/early spring for both buyers and sellers of mortgage servicing rights. In a recent public disclosure, Ocwen Financial said...
Institutional investors that loaded up on mortgage stocks the past two years have been battered by huge losses thanks to a 34 percent plunge in originations and negative publicity generated by industry bellwether Ocwen Financial and some of its peers. But with some mortgage stocks – such as Owen – trading at 80 percent discounts to their 52-week highs, now may be the time to “re-enter” the volatile world of mortgage equities. At least, that’s how some hedge funds and private-equity firms view the matter. According to Henry Coffey, a vice president and senior analyst at Sterne Agee, there are...
New issuance of single-family MBS by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae fell 4.6 percent from December to January, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking and analysis. The three agencies produced $85.18 billion of new single-family MBS last month. The good news is that was up a hefty 24.3 percent from January 2014; the bad news is January 2014 came toward the end of a nine-month swoon in agency MBS production. All of the decline in monthly MBS issuance resulted...[Includes two data charts]
The Department of Justice and other allied parties this week reached a $1.375 billion settlement with Standard & Poor’s to resolve allegations that the firm’s investment-grade ratings misled investors into buying securities backed by badly underwritten mortgages. The agreement resolves the DOJ’s 2013 lawsuit against S&P and its parent, McGraw Hill Financial Inc., along with the suits filed by 19 states and the District of Columbia. Each of the lawsuits alleges that investors incurred substantial losses on residential MBS and collateralized debt obligations that carried S&P’s ‘AAA’ ratings, which effectively masked their true credit risks. S&P was accused...
BlackRock Financial Management plans to issue a unique ABS backed by peer-to-peer consumer loans originated via the platform established by Prosper Marketplace. Moody’s Investors Service assigned ratings to Consumer Credit Origination Loan Trust 2015-1 last week, noting a number of issues for investors to consider. The ABS is expected to have a balance of $344.85 million. The loan pool Moody’s examined had a balance of $306.71 billion as of the end of December. Approximately 14 percent of the total assets are expected to be added after closing. The deal doesn’t have a projected closing date yet, according to Moody’s. The rating service assigned...
A few months, back there was scattered talk in the market that a wave of consolidation might hit publicly traded real estate investment trusts that specialize in agency MBS. But thanks to continued low interest rates and the fact that mortgage REITs continue to trade below book value, such a rollup is looking highly unlikely. “I don’t see it happening,” said Credit Suisse analyst Doug Harter. “Why would you sell for below book value when you can just liquidate?” Jason Stewart, an analyst at Compass Point Research & Trading, agrees...
The Mortgage Bankers Association has secured a favorable clarification from the Financial Accounting Standards Board regarding the treatment of seriously delinquent mortgages in Ginnie Mae pools. The clarification was requested after one of the Big Four accounting firms began requiring lenders that service 90 days plus delinquent loans to put the loans on the balance sheet with an offsetting liability even if they do not intend to buy the loans out of the pool. The requirement would have been...[Includes one data chart]
If issuers were to include agency-eligible mortgages with slightly less than pristine underwriting standards in new non-agency mortgage-backed securities, the deals could receive ratings with credit enhancement levels similar to the levels on recent jumbo MBS, according to the results of an exercise released this week by the Treasury Department. Treasury asked six rating services to assign ratings to hypothetical non-agency MBS comprised of $19.75 billion of mortgages ...