PennyMac Corp. wanted to test the market for non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities but it wasnt generating enough collateral through its conduit program and turned to a bulk purchase to get a critical mass. The $550.46 million PMT Loan Trust 2013-J1 is set to receive AAA ratings with credit enhancement of 7.75 percent for the top-rated tranche. Some 70.7 percent of the mortgages to be included in the deal were acquired in bulk from Bank of America, which aggregated the loans from ...
Shellpoint Partners is preparing to issue a $308.64 million non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security and officials at the firm are hoping that interest rates stay calm at least until the issuance is completed. Interest rates spiked after Shellpoint offered its first jumbo MBS in June, a $261.58 million deal, prompting the company to voluntarily provide credit enhancement of 20.0 percent on the security double what was required by the rating services in an effort to attract investors. The latest deal features ...
A number of companies are preparing to enter the non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security market, bolstered by expected decreases to agency loan limits and eventual resolution of the conservatorships of the government-sponsored enterprises. David Akre, a managing director at Five Oaks Investment, said licensing for the real estate investment trusts jumbo operations is nearly complete and the establishment of warehouse funding is 90 percent complete. David Carroll, CEO of Five Oaks, said increased competition ...
Lenders have started to loosen their underwriting standards for jumbo mortgages in an effort to increase originations for borrowers who have performed exceptionally well in recent years. Loan-to-value ratio requirements in particular have loosened, allowing for lower downpayments or increased use of second liens. After the non-agency mortgage-backed security market collapsed in 2008, combined LTV ratios of 70 percent were common for jumbos as lenders looked to prevent pricey foreclosures on ...
An official at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency warned that non-agency jumbos with interest rates lower than comparable agency mortgages are a sign that banks are chasing yield. Darrin Benhart, deputy comptroller for credit and market risk, said banks are taking on more interest rate risk and credit risk to maximize returns. We are beginning to see signs of the classic cyclicality in banking where traditional lagging indicators are improving so bankers start to layer risk back into ...
Higher-priced mortgages accounted for 3.0 percent of the number of mortgages originated in 2012, according to a Federal Reserve analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act Data released this week. The loans had a 3.7 percent share of HMDA originations last year and a 26.0 percent share in 2006. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau last week finalized a number of tweaks to pending mortgage rules. Adjustments were made to the servicing rule, loan originator compensation rule, definitions for ... [Includes three briefs]
The U.S. Justice Department has subpoenaed documents from Clayton Holdings LLC, once Wall Streets largest mortgage due-diligence firm, as investigators eye-ball the due diligence that was performed on residential MBS deals in the run-up to the financial crisis. According to Bloomberg, the Justice Department presented a subpoena to Clayton on July 1, requesting an extensive amount of documentation having to do with the firms work on such deals. The DoJ is apparently seeking internal communications related to a review of pools of loans, due-diligence reviews performed by Clayton, as well as all communication between the clients for whom the company performed such reviews and the employees with which they dealt. The subpoena is...
Stewart Information Services, which has made a name for itself in the title insurance space, has purchased most of the assets of Allonhill, LLC, a due-diligence firm that conducts reviews on non-agency loans feeding jumbo MBS. No purchase price was disclosed on the sale. As Inside MBS & ABS went to press, both companies were saying little about the sale outside of a short press release. Due-diligence sources familiar with the deal say...
The revised risk-retention rule proposed last week by federal regulators includes provisions that are looser than current practices in the non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security market and some that are more stringent. Regulators also acknowledge that the proposed rule maintains incentives for lenders to focus on originations of agency mortgages. The regulators now favor aligning the definition of qualified residential mortgages under the risk-retention rule with the qualified mortgage standard ...
With backing from President Obama, the Federal Housing Finance Agency is considering lowering Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loan limits in 2014. Industry participants have used the potential change to call on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to alter requirements for qualified mortgages. Assuming the loan limits are lowered, the problem of excluding too many loans from QM coverage could be addressed, at least temporarily, by modifying the ability-to-repay rule, Pete Mills, a ...