Further declines in refinance activity and some softening in home-purchase lending pushed agency single-family MBS production down to just $93.57 billion in October, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside MBS & ABS. October was the first month since September 2011 that agency MBS issuance fell below the $100 billion mark. Production last month was down 12.3 percent from September, and it represented the sixth consecutive monthly decline. There was...[Includes two data charts]
The non-agency mortgage market is expected to take the brunt of the changes prompted by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus new ability-to-repay rule and requirements for qualified mortgages. However, two months before the rule takes effect, the rating services havent released guidelines for how non-QMs will be rated, prompting issuers to be cautious with plans for non-QMs. Kroll Bond Rating Agency was the only rating service to offer details to Inside MBS & ABS in response to questions about ratings for non-agency MBS once the QM requirements take effect. Glenn Costello, a senior managing director at KBRA, said the securitization of non-QM loans will require additional credit enhancement relative to QMs. DBRS and Standard & Poors declined...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency spent the last two weeks racking up several legal settlements in its massive litigation action against some of the nations financial institutions. Look for more to come predict industry analysts. On Oct. 25, JPMorgan Chase agreed to pay $4.0 billon to settle claims on $33.8 billion of non-agency mortgage-backed securities purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issued $67.7 billion in single-family mortgage-backed securities during the month of October, a 13.8 percent decline from September but a 4.6 percent rise for the first 10 months of 2013, according to a new Inside The GSEs analysis. Octobers decline was less steep than Septembers 20.0 percent month-to-month fall off in MBS.Top-ranked Wells Fargos Fannie and Freddie securitization at $11.6 billion fell both on monthly and year-to-date bases by 27.0 percent and 23.3 percent respectively. [Includes one data chart.]
A few weeks back, many servicing brokers were predicting a land rush to close deals by year-end, but theres a new school of thought that predicts sellers might wait until early 2014 to unload some of their deals. While we dont expect the [mortgage servicing rights] deal flow to turn off completely for 2013 just yet, we have noticed quite a slowdown in the marketplace as compared to the summer and early fall, said George Christo, executive vice president of The Prestwick Group. Many of our conversations with buyers and sellers have pivoted to setting the table for the first quarter of 2014 settlements. Moreover, the frothy prices being offered for MSRs are...
It was pretty much stimulus as usual at the Federal Open Market Committee this week, as the Fed showed not the slightest indication of when it would begin winding down the third phase of its quantitative easing program, known informally as QE3 when it was first unveiled, but increasingly referred to as QE Infinity by those who emphasize its long, drawn-out nature. The status quo results mean the Fed will continue adding to its agency MBS portfolio at a pace of $40 billion per month and longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion per month, and keep plowing its principal payments from its agency debt and MBS holdings back into agency MBS and rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. Among those voting in favor of keeping the Feds pedal to the metal were...
The jumbo MBS market is frozen because investors in the AAA tranches are scarce and still lack confidence in the product following the housing bust and the ensuing tidal wave of litigation swamping issuers and underwriters. According to MBS pioneer Lewis Ranieri, theres only one to fix the problem: give investors more information on the deals. At a speech this week during the annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers Association, Ranieri, the chairman and CEO of Shellpoint Partners, noted...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency declared this week that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will finish making claims on pre-conservatorship mortgage acquisitions by the end of this year. It is time for us to wrap up all our open issues dealing with that period and move on, said FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco during a speech at the annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers Association. I look forward to a speedy resolution of remaining claims in the coming months. The two GSEs became wards of the federal government in September 2008. For years, lenders have complained...
Standard & Poors rated more non-agency MBS, by dollar volume, than any of its peers during the first nine months of 2013, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis and ranking. S&P rated $11.65 billion of non-agency MBS issued through the end of September. Although that was more than any of the other four rating services, it represented just 43.4 percent of total issuance in a market that is significantly more fragmented than it was before the financial crisis. Back in 2006, for example, S&P rated...[Includes two data charts]
Ginnie Mae remains a very good profit center for MBS issuers and investors, making government-backed lending appealing and beneficial to consumers, according to securitization experts. Government loans offer great value to lenders because they cover broader borrower eligibility than conventional loan products and lenders can execute more efficiently, said panelists at the Mortgage Bankers Associations annual conference this week. The discussion focused on government loan programs FHA, VA and Rural Housing Service and on execution options for the loans and their mortgage servicing rights (MSRs). CMG Financial has found...