Shellpoint Partners is preparing to issue a $308.64 million non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security and officials at the firm are hoping that interest rates stay calm at least until the issuance is completed. Interest rates spiked after Shellpoint offered its first jumbo MBS in June, a $261.58 million deal, prompting the company to voluntarily provide credit enhancement of 20.0 percent on the security double what was required by the rating services in an effort to attract investors. The latest deal features ...
A number of companies are preparing to enter the non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security market, bolstered by expected decreases to agency loan limits and eventual resolution of the conservatorships of the government-sponsored enterprises. David Akre, a managing director at Five Oaks Investment, said licensing for the real estate investment trusts jumbo operations is nearly complete and the establishment of warehouse funding is 90 percent complete. David Carroll, CEO of Five Oaks, said increased competition ...
An estimated 86.4 percent of new mortgage originations were packaged into MBS during the first half of 2013, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis. Despite some growth in the non-agency jumbo market, primary market lenders remain focused on production that they can safely securitize through Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae. Securitization rates generally climb...
Commercial banks and savings institutions held a total of $1.528 trillion in residential MBS in portfolio as of the end of the second quarter, down 2.1 percent from the end of March, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside MBS & ABS. Combined bank/thrift investment in MBS has been under steady pressure since the Federal Reserve resumed buying massive amounts of new agency MBS. The second-quarter decline brought the industrys total MBS portfolio to its lowest point in two years. The one area where banks and thrifts have beefed up...[Includes two data charts]
Freddie Macs multifamily K-Deals are a model for the future of mortgage securitization, according to David Brickman, a senior vice president overseeing multifamily activities at the government-sponsored enterprise. However, the risk-sharing deals face regulatory hurdles and differ in a number of ways from practices in the residential mortgage securitization market. While Brickman pushed K-Deals as a model, it wasnt the design used in the Structured Agency Credit Risk risk-sharing transaction Freddie issued in July. K-Deals include subordinate bonds that are not guaranteed by the GSE, while the STACR transaction was unsecured corporate debt based on a reference pool of mortgages with Freddie taking a small first-loss position followed by two non-guaranteed tranches. When Freddie issued the STACR transaction, the GSE stressed...
Two years ago, no megabank in its right mind would dare originate a jumbo mortgage without asking for at least a 20 percent downpayment unless the borrower was a special client of the companys wealth management division. Today, its a different story. As refi volumes begin to dwindle, a handful of large banks are loosening their jumbo underwriting standards, allowing for lower downpayment requirements and higher debt-to-income ratios. Wells Fargo has been offering...
Securities issuers won a major victory as the revised proposed rule on risk retention issued by federal regulators last week removed the requirement for a premium capture cash reserve account. The highly controversial PCCRA was replaced with a fair value calculation requirement for retention which regulators said will increase the value of retained risk compared with the original proposal. The ASF is extremely pleased to see the elimination of the premium capture cash reserve account provisions from the re-proposed rule, said Tom Deutsch, executive director of the American Securitization Forum. The provisions would have completely eliminated the economic incentives of securitizers to issue residential MBS and commercial MBS. The original proposal generally measured...
Revised risk-retention requirements proposed last week by federal regulators for certain non-mortgage ABS and commercial MBS are somewhat looser than the standards initially proposed in 2011. Perhaps most significantly, blended pools would be allowed for commercial mortgages, commercial real estate loans and auto loans, allowing issuers to mix qualifying loans and non-qualifying loans in the same security. Securitized loans that dont meet qualifying underwriting standards will be subject to the 5 percent risk retention as required by the Dodd-Frank Act. Blended pools would be eligible for reduced risk retention, as low as 2.5 percent. The agencies believe...
Standard & Poors this week threw another counterpunch against the federal governments civil fraud lawsuit filed earlier this year, slamming the litigation as retaliation for the rating agencys August 2011 downgrade of the countrys AAA credit rating. The Justice Department in February filed a $5.0 billion lawsuit accusing S&P of knowingly inflating its ratings in residential MBS and collateralized debt obligations to boost its revenue and market share in the years leading up to the 2008 financial crisis. The filing in the U.S. District Court in Santa Ana, CA, by S&Ps parent company McGraw-Hill Co. seeks...
Stewart Information Services, which has made a name for itself in the title insurance space, has purchased most of the assets of Allonhill, LLC, a due-diligence firm that conducts reviews on non-agency loans feeding jumbo MBS. No purchase price was disclosed on the sale. As Inside MBS & ABS went to press, both companies were saying little about the sale outside of a short press release. Due-diligence sources familiar with the deal say...