Mortgage lenders posted a sizable increase in home-equity loan originations last year, but the overall market fell to its lowest level since 2004. A new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis and ranking shows an estimated $182.6 billion in home-equity lending last year, mostly through home-equity lines of credit and, to a lesser extent, closed-end second mortgages. That was up 19.1 percent from a revised estimate of $153.3 billion back in 2014, somewhat slower than the 33.5 percent increase in first-lien originations in 2015. Home-equity originations declined...[Includes three data tables]
John Shrewsberry, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo, said the bank has focused on adding jumbo mortgages to its portfolio. “They are very safe loans,” he said. “I think we’ve got four basis points of loss coming through that portfolio.”
In another legacy residential MBS legal action, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System this week reached a record $130 million settlement with Moody’s Investors Service over the ratings service’s allegedly erroneous ratings of AAA-rated structured investment vehicles in the run-up to the financial crisis. Back in 2009, CalPERS sued Moody’s – along with Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings – after the pension fund claimed massive losses from investments in three structured investment vehicles that depended on the liquidity of assets that proved to be illiquid, such as subprime MBS, collateralized debt obligations and other ABS. In the lawsuit, CalPERS accused Moody’s of making “negligent misrepresentations” by assigning its highest credit rating to the investments. This caused significant losses as the market ...