Mortgage delinquency rates reached a five-year low during the third quarter of 2013, according to the Inside Mortgage Finance Large Servicer Delinquency Index. A group of 19 lenders that serviced $5.33 trillion of home loans reported that just 6.78 percent of those loans were in some stage of delinquency or default. That figure, which is not seasonally adjusted, was the lowest rate in the index since the third quarter of 2008. The overall delinquency rate improved...[Includes one data chart]
The STACR deal was structured so that Freddie Mac will take the first 30 basis points of losses on the transaction, followed by private investors, which bought debt notes on the following 300 basis points of potential losses.
Are mortgage bankers so diabolical that they attempt to find a way around new regulations? Industry consultant Joe Garrett of Garrett, McAuley & Co. thinks so.
Consumer advocate Mike Calhoun questioned if lenders will offer non-QMs at all, due to the liability posed by such originations and their designation as less safe mortgages.
In its successful civil suit against Bank of America, DOJ estimated that the two GSEs lost $850 million from thousands of loans acquired through Countrywide's Hustle program.
After a relatively strong first eight months of the year, no jumbo MBS were issued in September or October. Although investor interest seems tepid, the market is showing signs of life as Citigroup issued its first post-crisis jumbo MBS this week, and Redwood Trust offered its first jumbo deal since August. The activity comes just weeks after Shellpoint Partners tried twice to sell a jumbo MBS, eventually pulling the deal and opting for a whole-loan sale. Pricing for jumbo MBS has improved enough for Citi and Redwood to test the market, and investors have also shown strong interest in other recent non-agency offerings. The $209.95 million Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust 2013-J1 received...
U.S. Bank, as trustee for a mortgage loan trust, has sued Citigroup in New York state court to force the financial giant to cure or repurchase defective loans from a securitized pool. In a separate case, a federal court in New York dismissed a shareholder action against Citigroup in connection with certain residential MBS. At issue in the first case is a pool of 4,792 mortgage loans that Citigroup Global Markets Realty Corp. purchased and securitized in May 2007. Citigroup sold the loans to Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, which, in turn, deposited the loans into the trust and assigned its rights to U.S. Bank. The trust then issued the MBS. According to the court summons and notice, Citigroup conducted...
Glenn Costello, a senior managing director at KBRA, said the securitization of non-QM loans will require additional credit enhancement relative to QMs.
The bipartisan Senate blueprint for secondary mortgage market reform includes several key provisions designed to facilitate small-lender access when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are no longer around.