Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller downplayed concerns raised by investors in non-agency mortgage-backed securities regarding the pending $25.0 billion servicing settlement. The current set of concerns arent particularly warranted, he said this week during a webinar hosted by Inside Mortgage Finance Publications. The Association of Mortgage Investors has asked for a number of changes to the settlement, including a cap on the amount of principal reduction that can be completed on non-agency MBS to meet the participating servicers loss mitigation requirements. Miller said the AMI is the only group he is aware of that might challenge approval of the settlement by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. I think that their concerns are not going to be realized ...
Prudential Financial this week issued a $1.0 billion bond to sell vintage subprime mortgage-backed securities. Analysts described the bond as a hybrid between an MBS and a covered bond. Standard & Poors gave Prudential Covered Trust 2012-1 an A rating, which was based on the rating of Prudential, not of the subprime MBS being sold. The bond was sold as a private placement and Prudential has not commented on the sale. However, in its recently released annual report for 2011, Prudential said it had transferred some of its subprime MBS holdings ...
PennyMac Loan Services has some unique loss-mitigation strategies, but Moodys Investors Service warned this week that some of the companys approaches are risky. Among other issues, PLS can require borrowers that otherwise would not qualify for a loan modification to deed their property to the servicer if the mod does not succeed. While this approach can improve loss mitigation performance or reduce timelines, Moodys believes these programs could result in borrowers and regulators challenging this practice as well as headline risk to the company, the rating service said. PLS has yet to employ the tactic. The warning from Moodys ...
Ocwen Financial has made a number of adjustments in recent months to better compete with other nonbank servicers. Perhaps most significantly, the special servicer has started to shift to an equity light business model. The shift occurred at the end of February when Home Loan Servicing Solutions completed a $186.2 million initial public offering. HLSS said it will use the proceeds to purchase the rights to receive servicing and other related fees, associated servicing advances and other related assets from Ocwen. HLSS was founded by William Erbey, chairman of Ocwen ...
Bank and thrift portfolio holdings of first liens increased in the fourth quarter of 2011 compared with the previous quarter, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Bank Mortgage Database. Loan modifications completed by the major bank and thrift servicers during that period also decreased significantly, as portfolio performance has improved. Banks and thrifts held $1.76 trillion in first liens at the end of 2011, up 1.9 percent from the third quarter of 2011. The increase in holdings suggests strong portfolio originations as some banks are allowing their mortgage portfolios to run-off and others are selling delinquent mortgages. At the same time, loan modifications offered by the major banks and thrifts declined by ... [Includes one data chart]
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA accounted for 41.8 percent of the $84.66 billion in lending over the $417,000 threshold in 2011, the lowest share theyve had since emergency loan limits went into effect in 2008, according to an analysis by affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance. The agency share of jumbo production peaked in the second half of 2009 at 53.1 percent.The government-sponsored enterprises and Ginnie Mae financed 36.6 percent of the loans exceeding $417,000 that were originated in the fourth quarter of 2011. That was down from a 42.7 percent agency share of the jumbo market in the third quarter of 2011 ... [Includes three briefs]
Home-equity lending in 2011 fell to its lowest level in more than 20 years as crumbling house prices and rigid underwriting continued to hammer away at second mortgage lending. Banks, savings institutions and credit unions reported a total of $803.6 billion of home-equity loans in their portfolios at the end of the year, down 7.2 percent from the previous December. Depository institutions accounted for the lions share, 92.1 percent, of the $873.0 billion home-equity market. Finance companies were the only other significant player in the market, with $49.0 billion at the...(Includes two data charts)
The documents governing a proposed $25.0 billion settlement involving five major banks include greater incentives for principal reduction loan modifications on portfolio loans rather than loans in non-agency mortgage-backed securities. However, non-agency MBS investors remain concerned that they could take losses due to the settlement. The consent judgments against Ally Financial, Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo were filed in federal court this week, a month after the settlement was announced by 49 state attorneys general and the federal government ...
Beginning June 1, the non-agency portion of the Home Affordable Modification Program will include a Tier 2 with expanded eligibility requirements and adjusted incentives. The Treasury Department released the details last week, officially making changes first announced in January. The changes to HAMP include eligibility for certain rental properties, less stringent debt-to-income ratio requirements, a loosening of the short sale and deed-in-lieu of foreclosure requirements and an extension of all HAMP programs through the end of 2013. HAMP was initially scheduled to expire at the end of this year ...
The $25.0 billion settlement involving five bank servicers includes refinance eligibility requirements that differ from the settlements loan modification program. Only portfolio loans are eligible to meet the settlements refi requirements, unlike the mod program, which includes portfolio loans, mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities and FHA loans. Under the pending settlement with 49 state attorneys general and the federal government, Ally Financial, Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo must dedicate $2.78 billion toward refis for certain borrowers with negative equity ...