Two Harbors Investment is preparing to issue a jumbo mortgage-backed security that will include loans subject to the TRID integrated disclosure rule. The deal could help resolve the so-called “TRID-lock” seen in the jumbo secondary market as industry participants try to sort out the liability posed by the controversial rule. “TRID has proved to be a very strong headwind,” Diane Wold, a managing director at Two Harbors, said last week at the ABS Vegas conference produced by ...
Bank and thrift first-lien portfolio holdings continued to grow in 2015, including a sharp increase in the fourth quarter, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. Banks and thrifts held a total of $1.87 trillion in first-liens in portfolio at the end of the fourth quarter of 2015, up 0.9 percent from the end of the previous quarter and up 3.4 percent from the fourth quarter of 2014. The increase in holdings was largely driven by ... [Includes one data chart]
Two nonbanks with jumbo conduit operations have faced issues recently. Premium Point Investments recently announced the New Issue Opportunity Fund will no longer invest in new jumbo mortgage-backed securities from WinWater Home Mortgage. Premium Point is an asset-management firm that established WinWater in late 2013. Premium Point said the NIOF purchased approximately $3.3 billion in whole loans and invested in 10 mortgage-backed securities issued by ...
Competition from banks for conforming mortgages prompted Redwood Trust to discontinue its aggregation of mortgages for sale to the government-sponsored enterprises, according to officials at the real estate investment trust. “The business assumption that has changed is that we no longer believe that our conduit can generate sufficient conforming loan sale margins, primarily due to the unrelenting competitive pricing pressure from some major banks,” Redwood said in a document ...
The pessimistic pricing in the secondary market for jumbo mortgage-backed securities with exposure to the oil industry might be unwarranted, according to Standard & Poor’s. The rating service completed a stress test on the 59 jumbo MBS issued in 2012 and beyond. “Assuming the entire oil-sector workforce in three major oil-producing states defaults on their mortgages, even under extreme economic stress, the incremental collateral pool losses ... [Includes three briefs]
The FHA’s Home Equity Reverse Mortgage Information Technology (HERMIT) system will shift to a new vendor-operated host data center beginning March 21, 2016. Reverse Market Insight (RMI), a provider of data, analysis and portfolio valuation services for the reverse mortgage industry, has been tapped to manage, maintain and operate HERMIT. Launched in October 2012, HERMIT is an online, web-based automated system that monitors and tracks the FHA’s Home Equity Conversion Mortgage portfolio and automates insurance claim payments. HERMIT will shut down temporarily from 7 p.m., March 16, to 8 a.m., March 21, in order to complete the transition. The FHA said there would be no changes to the system’s functionality during transition to the host data center. User IDs and passwords for accessing HERMIT will remain unchanged. Following HERMIT’s transition to the ...
The supply of “conforming-jumbo” mortgage originations flowing into agency mortgage-backed securities programs contracted sharply in the fourth quarter of 2015, but overall jumbo lending still held up better than the overall market, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis. During the final three months of 2015, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae securitized $24.69 billion of mortgages with loan amounts that exceeded the baseline conforming loan limit, $417,000… [Includes three charts]
Years of warnings from securities issuers and investors about regulatory uncertainty appear to have shifted to actual consequences as liquidity in the MBS and ABS markets has declined significantly in recent months. Almost every panel session at the ABS Vegas conference produced by Information Management Network and the Structured Finance Industry Group this week included comments regarding liquidity and regulation. Daniel McGarvey, the head of U.S. asset-backed products origination at Societe Generale, noted that in recent months spreads on MBS and ABS have increased due to illiquidity. “Credit risk is not currently a driver of credit spreads,” he said. “This should be a concern for all of us in the securitization market.” Delinquencies and losses, traditional factors in liquidity, remain...
The U.S. Department of Justice will reportedly decide within the next few months whether or not to bring the hammer down on Moody’s Corp. for allegedly overstating its ratings on MBS transactions in the run-up to the financial crisis, Bloomberg reported last week, citing “people familiar with the matter.” According to the news account, the Justice Department is scrutinizing credit ratings that Moody’s assigned during the housing boom and trying to determine if the firm massaged its criteria to earn business from Wall Street banks that were bundling residential mortgages into securities. A proposed settlement has apparently been...[Includes one data table]
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau plans to host a call-in with a handful of trade groups shortly regarding delays and secondary market snafus caused by its integrated disclosure rule, but whether any true regulatory relief will be offered remains to be seen. In the meantime, industry officials continue to complain about delays in loan closings caused by the so-called TRID rule and the losses incurred by some nonbanks because loans are sitting on warehouse lines longer, especially non-agency jumbo loans. Late this week, Dave Stevens, president and CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association, told...