A number of lenders increased their originations of interest-only mortgages in 2013, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. IOs with loan applications of Jan. 10 and beyond will subject lenders to greater liabilities due to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s ability-to-repay rule, but many lenders note that they will continue to offer IOs to well-qualified borrowers. Lenders reported ... [Includes one data chart]
Undisclosed third parties rejected a small portion of Ocwen Financial’s planned acquisition of mortgage servicing rights from OneWest Bank, according to a report this week from Fitch Ratings. The lack of approval on Ocwen’s MSR purchase was just the latest hurdle faced by nonbank servicers with plans to grow. Last year, Ocwen announced it planned to acquire a significant portion of MSRs from IndyMac Mortgage Services, a division of OneWest. Fitch said the acquisition ...
A number of real estate investment trusts and other nonbanks plan to invest in nonprime assets other than vintage non-agency mortgage-backed securities as part of an effort to take credit risk as opposed to interest rate risk. The plans include investments in credit-sensitive loans, seller financing for lenders that work with nonprime borrowers and, potentially, even direct nonprime lending. A year ago, Two Harbors Investment saw an opportunity in what it calls credit-sensitive loans ...
Variations on the treatment of extraordinary expenses in jumbo mortgage-backed securities have prompted the rating services to alert investors. A warning on this issue last week by Fitch Ratings follows similar concerns raised by other rating services. Extraordinary expenses in non-agency MBS can be caused by legal claims against the trust, costs associated with a third-party reviews to identify representation-and-warranty breaches, and costs related arbitration, among other issues ...
CORRECTION: A March 14, 2014, story in Inside Nonconforming Markets with the headline “Credit Suisse Taps New Penn for Another Jumbo MBS” stated that according to Standard & Poor’s, due-diligence firms found that New Penn Financial allowed exceptions to its underwriting guidelines for some mortgages included in CSMC Trust 2014-SAF1. In fact, the underwriting exceptions were allowed by Credit Suisse on mortgages from lenders not identified by S&P ... [Includes three briefs]
Bank of America and James Nutter & Co. have agreed to indemnify the Department of Housing and Urban Development to resolve allegations that they failed to perform due diligence in underwriting Home Equity Conversion Mortgage loans. An audit of the HECM program by the HUD Office of Inspector General found that the financial institutions allowed 33 HECM borrowers to take out more than one loan, a violation of program requirements. The program requires borrowers to reside in the mortgaged residence as their principal residence. In addition, borrowers may not have more than one principal residence at the same time. In BofA’s case, one borrower obtained two HECM loans on properties she owned in Massachusetts and Florida, both of which she identified as her principal residence. The HUD OIG said there was sufficient information to alert BofA and the underwriter that ...
Overall FHA production fell significantly in all 50 states in 2013 apparently due to mortgage insurance premium increases and policy changes that made it difficult for even qualified borrowers to obtain an FHA-insured single-family loan. FHA volume by state dropped 27.5 percent in the fourth quarter to $35.8 billion, from $49.4 billion in the previous quarter, with all states showing varying percentages of decline during the period. Year over year, production by state declined by 9.2 percent, data showed. Total FHA originations were $211.3 billion for 2013, with the first quarter ending strongly with $63.7 billion. Production, however, lost steam over the next three quarters. Among the top five FHA states, Virginia suffered the largest quarterly drop, 35.2 percent, in FHA volume. California was the top FHA producer state with $35.2 billion for a ... [2 charts]
Roughly 2 percent of depositories said they will cease offering mortgages altogether because of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s ability to repay rule and QM standards.
The resulting lender, which will keep the Ethos name, plans to start originating qualified mortgages in the second quarter of 2014 and non-QMs by the end of the year.