Among the top 10 residential servicers, just three firms managed to grow their receivables from the third to fourth quarter: Quicken, Walter and U.S. Bank Home.
A long-awaited proposal from the Federal Housing Finance Agency that would codify minimum net worth and liquidity requirements for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac seller/servicers received mostly good reviews from the industry, but there are concerns about some of the details. For the Mortgage Bankers Association, the chief worry centers around the agency’s liquidity requirements. Released late last week, the FHFA is asking...[Includes one data chart]
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is giving no hints on where it’s headed regarding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guaranty fees and may not make a final decision until after March 31. But industry observers predict changes in loan-level pricing adjustments and an overall reduction in g-fees. During a press briefing this week, FHFA Director Mel Watt said, “We don’t want to charge excessive g-fees.” He added: “We can’t set them so low” that the government-sponsored enterprises are not compensated for the risk they’re taking on. “People are going to know...
Pingora Asset Management is trying to raise $500 million of additional capital to buy mortgage servicing rights from eager sellers. If successful, it will bring the young company’s investment in residential receivables up to $1 billion. According to new figures compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance, Pingora owned $25.38 billion of Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac residential servicing rights at yearend, ranking 24th among all servicers. Three years ago, it didn’t even exist. Company founder and Chief Executive Michael Lau was said...
Freddie Mac is set to sell a first-loss tranche on a Structured Agency Credit Risk transaction for the first time. The deal priced this week and the $880 million STACR 2015-DN1 is scheduled to settle next week. On previous STACR deals, Freddie has retained a tranche equaling at least the first 30 basis points of loss. Investor demand for the government-sponsored enterprises’ risk-sharing transactions has been strong but some have called for the GSEs to offer first-loss tranches, which can offer higher yields than the tranches that are more buffered from losses. Freddie said...
Wells Fargo was the largest Fannie/Freddie servicer at yearend with $791.0 billion, followed by Chase Home Finance ($429.1 billion) and Bank of America ($260.4 billion).
Securitization of income-property mortgages continued to post strong new issuance numbers in 2014, with the non-agency commercial MBS sector doing particularly well, according to a new market analysis by Inside MBS & ABS. A total of $164.77 billion of securities backed by commercial mortgages were issued last year, down just 0.6 percent from 2013’s level, which was the high-water mark since just before the financial collapse. And non-agency CMBS production was up 11.6 percent in 2014, at $96.48 billion. Agency MBS issuance fell...[Includes one data chart]