The MBS market widely embraced the Federal Reserves decision to increase its holdings of agency MBS by $40 billion per month until job growth improves significantly, but some observers are questioning the long-term costs and effectiveness of the strategy. Mortgage Bankers Association Chief Economist Jay Brinkman said that the Fed plan is a way to inject more money into the economy, while noting that the purchase of the no-risk, lower-yielding assets is designed to force investors to expand their risk appetite. The idea is that if the Fed steps in and buys up some of these safe-haven assets, that is going to force people to go out and invest more and take on more risk, he said during an MBA conference in Washington, DC, this week. This approach is actually turning...
Private capital remains on the sidelines of the mortgage finance industry, unwilling to gamble on future government policy or the nascent recovery in housing markets, industry experts say. Banks and their examiners are pointing fingers at one another over who is responsible for the current credit crunch because regulations are not all in place, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moodys Analytics. During a symposium in Washington, DC, this week, Zandi said providers of private capital are also concerned about a housing market that has performed much better in the last six months but still raises doubts about sustaining house price gains. I dont think [it can be sustainable] until we nail down...
The Federal Reserves decision to keep interest rates low until the U.S. economy creates a significant increase in employment will help banks continue to enjoy solid earnings from their mortgage banking activities, according to analysts at Credit Suisse. The Fed is increasing its already huge portfolio of agency mortgage-backed securities by $40 billion a month. Along with the $25 billion a month the central bank has been buying to replace principal paydown, the Feds total MBS acquisitions ...
Gibbs & Bruns, the law firm representing non-agency MBS investors that reached a precedent-setting settlement with Bank of America, is now targeting Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley. The law firms clients issued Wells and Morgan Stanley a notice of non-performance last week identifying covenants in pooling and servicing agreements that the servicers have allegedly failed to perform. The holders notice alleges that each of these failures has materially affected the rights of the certificate holders and constitutes an ongoing event of default in the servicers performance under the relevant PSAs, the law firm said. Bank of America received...
Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley last week received notices from non-agency mortgage-backed security investors represented by the law firm of Gibbs & Bruns, which helped negotiate the pending $8.5 billion non-agency MBS settlement with Bank of America. Industry analysts suggest that the notices of non-performance could prompt settlements from Wells and Morgan Stanley, though the circumstances differ from the BofA case. The notices identify covenants in pooling and servicing agreements that the servicers ...
Fixed-rate mortgages comprised most of Augusts FHA production, which totaled $22.1 billion, up 13.2 percent from July and 37.9 percent from a year ago, according to an Inside FHA Lending analysis of FHA data. FRMs accounted for 98.9 percent of new loans with FHA insurance in August. In-house originations made up 79.6 percent of new endorsements while purchase loans accounted for 56.1 percent of FHA originations during the month. Wells Fargo is the only top FHA lender to exceed the billion-dollar mark. In fact, the bank reported $2.2 billion in new FHA originations, 76.0 percent of which were produced in-house. The purchase mortgage share of Wells total FHA originations was ... [2 charts]
Banks and thrifts held a record $158.5 billion of non-mortgage ABS in their investment portfolios as of the midway point in 2012, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking and analysis. The depository institutions increased their ABS holdings by 3.1 percent during the quarter, pushing them past the previous record of $154.9 billion at the end of 2009. Bank and thrift ABS holdings have jumped by 14.1 percent since the fourth quarter of 2011. The biggest chunk of bank ABS holdings is...[Includes one data chart]
The Federal Reserves plan to purchase an additional $40 billion in agency MBS per month, above and beyond the $25 billion to $30 billion the Fed has been buying, will primarily benefit the agency MBS sector but could also spur revitalization of the non-agency market, analysts say. The open-ended plan, in effect until the U.S. economy and employment picture show significant improvement, adds some $480 billion in annual demand for agency MBS, a market that is on track to produce about $1.5 trillion in gross issuance. The pressure on asset values to richen further will be substantial, said analysts at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch. The additional MBS purchases and ongoing principal investments will...
A ranking Republican on the House Financial Services Committee this week gave notice that GOP lawmakers will be looking to rein in the Federal Reserves radical and unfettered influence and authority over the nations financial system during the 113th Congress next year. Rep. Scott Garrett, R-NJ, chairman of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises, outlined his two top priorities for Congress in 2013 just as the Federal Open Market Committee announced plans to add about $40 billion a month to its massive agency MBS portfolio. Garrett said the committees first priority will be...
As unpalatable as it may sound to MBS investors, a hedge fund executive said its well past time for the mortgage industry to cut its losses by forgiving principal and re-underwriting troubled mortgages to more traditional criteria in order to revitalize the sector and the broader economy. Michael Corasaniti, chief executive officer of Tourmalet Advisors, a hedge fund in New York City, told attendees at the American Mortgage Conference sponsored by the North Carolina Bankers Association this week that old-fashioned manual underwriting is the way out. Early in my career, I was...