The Federal Housing Finance Agency announced a settlement this week with UBS Americas regarding non-agency mortgage-backed securities purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac between 2004 and 2007. It is the third settlement out of 18 similar lawsuits filed by the FHFA in 2011 and the first to include a disclosed dollar amount. The FHFA said UBS will pay a combined ... [Includes two briefs]
Federal prosecutors and members of the Justice Departments Residential MBS Working Group are reportedly considering a new strategy for criminally charging Wall Street bankers for alleged fraud in their packaging and sale of MBS backed by subprime mortgages at the peak of the housing frenzy. According to Reuters, the members of the working group are eye-balling a shift in strategy that would involve moving away from the more widely used securities fraud charges to the less common offense of bank fraud. Perpetrators of bank fraud can be charged up to 10 years after their crimes, compared with the five-year statute of limitations on securities fraud, which has already run out on most events leading up to the 2008 financial crisis, Reuters reported. A bank fraud conviction carries up to $1 million in fines and a maximum prison sentence of 30 years. Laurence Platt, financial services practice leader in the Washington, DC, office of the K&L Gates law firm, said...
Small lenders have accounted for a growing share of contributions to non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities. Some deals have included more than 70 lenders, with most of the lenders contributing less than 5 percent of the volume of mortgages included in a security. While the lenders individual contributions to a particular jumbo MBS are small, they add up to significant market share, particularly when issuers dont identify the lenders in prospectus documents filed with the Securities ... [Includes two data charts]
Rising interest rates havent stopped JPMorgan Chase and Redwood Trust from working on new non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities with loans originated in the lower-rate environment. Chases security will include mortgages with an average age of four months, while the mortgages in Redwoods jumbo MBS are about two months old. The weighted average gross coupon on mortgages in Chases $345.05 million non-agency jumbo MBS is 3.79 percent, well below the average 4.68 percent interest rate quoted ...
Freddie Mac sold $500 million in non-guaranteed credit risk this week as part of an effort to eventually reduce the government-sponsored enterprises market share and help price their guaranty fees. While non-agency investor appetite for the transaction was strong, industry analysts suggest that the deal has limited usefulness for the long-term goals set by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt Notes Series 2013-DN1 included four tranches, all unrated. The two mezzanine ...
The guaranty fees charged by the government-sponsored enterprises are currently well below levels that would make issuing non-agency mortgage-backed securities attractive for originators of conforming mortgages, according to industry analysts. The g-fees charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have nearly doubled since 2011 and hit an average of 50 basis points in the first quarter of 2013, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The FHFA has directed the GSEs to increase their g-fees as part of ...
First Republic Bank is one of the few bank originators of non-agency jumbo mortgages that has sold a significant share of its production in the secondary market in the past year. Officials at the bank said the sales have been driven by borrowers preference for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages and investor demand in the non-agency market, both of which have changed recently. In the first quarter of 2013, First Republic originated $2.32 billion of mortgages, including $1.85 billion in non-agency jumbo mortgages ...
The House Financial Services Committee this week approved legislation that would dissolve the government-sponsored enterprises and leave the private market to pick up the slack, with all the panels Democrats and two Republicans voting against it. Obama administration officials suggest that bipartisan support will be necessary to enact GSE reform and significantly increase non-agency involvement in housing finance. The Protecting American Taxpayers and Homeowners Act of 2013, H.R. 2767, was sponsored by ...
Ocwen will have plenty of "high touch" loans to work on when it finally takes control of the OneWest portfolio. Meanwhile, the second lien market is heating up.