Bayview Asset Management announced late last week that it will delay the issuance of a non-agency MBS backed by re-performing subprime mortgages with an unpaid principal balance of $215 million. The delay was prompted by concerns about property valuations and loss severity. Standard & Poor’s issued a presale report on Bayview Opportunity Master Fund Trust 2014-9RPL on April 28, and the deal was scheduled to close May 12. The MBS was set to receive a AAA rating from S&P, but the rating service said it withdrew its preliminary rating due to Bayview’s extension of the planned closing date. The delay in closing was prompted...
The sphere of mortgage lending that will exist outside the parameters of the qualified-mortgage standard established by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau represents an attractive opportunity for both lenders and bond buyers, but skittish investors need to be won back before they return and participate to any significant degree. That was one of the key take-aways from a webinar sponsored this week by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated publication. Non-QM mortgages will exist...
Over the past 10 days, MBS prices have risen by roughly 50 basis points. Since early April, prices have jumped 150 basis points, based on the Fannie Mae 4s, catching market participants off guard. Joe Farr, director of sales for MBSQuoteline, noted, “The expectation was that everyone thought bond prices would fall.” But it hasn’t turned out that way, even with the Federal Reserve continuing to taper its investment in MBS. The problem in the MBS market continues...
The retained mortgage portfolios of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continued to decline through attrition during the first quarter of 2014 as the two government-sponsored enterprises reported some $9.3 billion in profit, due largely to non-agency MBS legal settlements. The two GSEs held a combined mortgage-investment portfolio of $902.1 billion at the end of March, down 5.2 percent from the previous quarter. The biggest decline was in MBS holdings, down 7.3 percent, including an 8.3 percent drop in Fannie’s and Freddie’s holdings of their own MBS. Wall Street investment bankers and non-agency MBS issuers paid...[Includes one data chart]
Issuers of jumbo mortgage-backed securities could increase their activity in the second quarter of 2014 after two consecutive quarters of suppressed issuance. Pricing for new jumbo MBS has improved, according to industry participants, though many expect issuance to remain constrained. In April, Redwood Trust issued a $346.30 million jumbo MBS that priced at the end of the first quarter. At the end of April, Credit Suisse issued a $271.73 million jumbo MBS, according to rating reports ...
In the fourth quarter of 2013, Redwood Trust launched its program to acquire mortgages to be sold to the government-sponsored enterprises. The real estate investment trust’s GSE conduit activity is now poised to overtake the jumbo activity that Redwood has been known for in recent years. Redwood acquired $1.09 billion in residential mortgages in the first quarter of 2014, with jumbos accounting for 72.6 percent of the activity. Officials said the real estate investment trust’s goal is to ...
While originating loans that do not meet qualified-mortgage standards does pose litigation risk, many of the lenders willing to offer the loans to prime borrowers have established underwriting standards that minimize the risks while participating in a sector with less competition than the agency market. Mitch Hochberg, general counsel at Ethos Lending and a partner at Fenway Summer, estimated that non-QMs would account for at least 12.5 percent of originations in 2014, assuming a ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is considering allowing lenders that accidentally trip the debt-to-income ratio threshold for qualified mortgages to cure the mistake and maintain QM status for the loan. The 43 percent DTI ratio standard for QMs currently only applies to non-agency mortgages that aren’t eligible for sale to the government-sponsored enterprises. The limited right to cure DTI mistakes was proposed last week in conjunction with a proposal from the agency to ...
The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs is primed to resume its markup next week of legislation to reform the government-sponsored enterprises. While it remains unlikely that Congress will pass GSE reform legislation this year, industry participants of all sorts are working to change portions of the Senate bill. The markup last week was tabled after brief opening statements from Sens. Tim Johnson, D-SD, and Mike Crapo, R-ID, who are trying to ...
In April, William Erbey, chairman of Ocwen Financial, claimed that servicing sales to nonbanks had essentially stopped due to an investigation launched in February by the New York Department of Financial Services. “Nothing is really being put out for bid right now,” Erbey said during the earnings call for Home Loan Servicing Solutions, where he is also chairman. However, major nonbank servicers expect that the slowdown is temporary, with significant transfers likely to resume ...