Mortgages modified by Freddie Mac performed slightly better than Fannie Mae loans in the short term while the performance gap between the two GSEs widened further one year after modification, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.OCCs latest Mortgage Metrics Report noted that Freddie loans had an 11.3 percent re-default rate three months after modification, while Fannie mods saw an 11.7 percent rate. At the six-month mark, Freddie stood at 18.1 percent compared to Fannies 18.8 percent.
Mortgage lenders delivered a hefty $303.9 billion in single-family home loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securitization programs during the first quarter of 2012, the biggest flow of new business to the government-sponsored enterprises in over a year, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside Mortgage Finance. During the first three months of 2012, GSE single-family securitization jumped 16.2 percent from the fourth quarter. It marked the fourth straight quarterly increase in production of Fannie and Freddie mortgage-backed securities after the market troughed...(Includes three data charts)
An ongoing Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into possible misconduct related to Wells Fargos sale of almost $60 billion in MBS has resulted in the agency filing a subpoena enforcement action in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against the firm. The commission is investigating possible fraud in connection with Wells Fargos sale of nearly $60 billion in residential MBS to investors, the SEC said. Pursuant to subpoenas dating back to September 2011, the bank was obligated to produce (and agreed to produce) documents to the...
Residential MBS investors should expect loans in states that require judicial review for every foreclosure to incur greater costs as they make their way through the foreclosure process, according to a new Moodys Investors Service report. The rating agencys fourth quarter 2011 Servicer Dashboard found that the average days in foreclosure at year-end 2011 stood at 654 days in judicial states and 297 days in non-judicial states with further increases in the foreclosure timelines expected. Of the six banks the Moodys report observes Bank of America, Chase, Citi, GMAC, Ocwen and Wells Fargo the...
The Securities and Exchange Commission and Wells Fargo are in a dispute regarding due diligence reports relating to almost $60.0 billion in non-agency mortgage-backed securities issued by Wells between September 2006 and early 2008. The SEC last week filed a subpoena enforcement action against Wells for failure to produce documents. The bank disputes the SECs account. The SEC said it has been seeking the documents since September. The regulator claimed that Wells agreed to produce the documents but has failed to do so. The SEC said its action relates to its investigation into whether Wells made material misrepresentations or omitted material facts on certain non-agency MBS issued by the bank ...
The Treasury Department this week finished winding down its holdings of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac MBS, claiming a positive return of $25 billion for the U.S. taxpayers from a market stabilization initiative launched in the teeth of the 2008 financial market meltdown. Treasurys holdings of MBS issued by the two government-sponsored enterprises peaked at $197.6 billion in December 2009. These MBS purchases helped preserve access to mortgage credit during a period of unprecedented market stress, the agency said. The Federal Reserve agency MBS investment program was far bigger, peaking at $1.12...
The non-agency MBS market showed some spark as always-performing loans continued to improve in February and more nonperforming loans moved to the re-performing bucket, according to Amherst Securities Groups latest analysis of the mortgage market. In its February report, Amherst said first-time defaults from the always-performing bucket dropped to 0.75 percent during the month from 0.82 percent in January. In dollar terms, new defaults constituted $4.0 billion, down from $4.4 billion the previous month, the firm reported. On a year-over-year basis, always-performing loans were down to $525.6 billion from...
Ginnie Mae will question certain mortgage-backed securities issuers about reporting inconsistencies in pool data submissions over the last couple of months and try to resolve those issues to avoid delay in MBS pool processing. In an audio conference with issuers last week, Ginnie Mae officials said agency staff discovered the flawed data submissions while poring over several months worth of pool data submitted by issuers. While most of the information fell within theVargas said the discrepancies were attributed to a small group of issuers, who will be contacted soon to work on corrections before Ginnie Mae puts stronger edits up front. She said the agency wants to ...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buyback demands on Countrywide mortgages were more than double the amount sought on any other lender, but the key reason is that Countrywide securitized a lot more loans than anyone else from 2006 through 2008. A new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of representation and warranties disclosures made by the two government-sponsored enterprises shows that some $16.22 billion of Countrywide mortgages were subject to buyback demands, both before and after the company was acquired by Bank of America in 2008. In a distant second place was Wells Fargo...(Includes one data chart)
The long-anticipated settlement among mortgage servicers, state attorneys general and federal agencies will be a positive for the housing market but have a modest impact on non-agency MBS, according to Moodys Investors Service. The deal provides $10 billion for principal reduction loan modifications, and coupled with an expansion of the Home Affordable Modification Program, should help up to 1 million homeowners avoid foreclosure, Moodys said. That may be a relatively small number compared to the 14.6 million households that are underwater, but it will help curb the flow of foreclosed...