Investors continue their attraction to mortgage-related offerings, debt or otherwise. The latest firm to saddle up to the capital markets bar: Mr. Cooper.
Loans backing securitized products are holding up fairly well even though the use of forbearance has increased. A combination of investor protections and changes in underwriting practices is helping.
Although ABS issuance backed by auto finance fell 26% from the first to the second quarter, the sector still accounted for nearly 57% of non-mortgage securitization in the first half of 2020. (Includes two data charts.)
Rating services are requiring higher credit enhancement levels and taking negative actions on outstanding deals due to problems stemming from the coronavirus. Fitch finalized new criteria for residential MBS late last week.
Federal regulators have delayed their review of risk-retention requirements until next year. Also, most regulatory actions planned for MBS and ABS fall into the “long-term” category.
The consumer ABS sector is in recovery mode after hitting a rough patch due to the coronavirus pandemic, according to comments made during a recent webinar.