Despite the best efforts of supporters, including a renewed public showing of support from the White House, a new push to enhance the Home Affordable Refinance Program through legislation will go nowhere fast, say industry observers. Introduced by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-OR, the Rebuilding Equity Act, S. 1373, would modify HARP to cover $1,000 in closing costs for underwater borrowers who choose loan terms of 20 years or less to rebuild equity in their homes. Both [the Congressional Budget Office] and Fannie Mae have estimated that this bill would have no net cost, because it would reduce the severity of financial loss when defaults do occur, said Merkley. The bill would require...
Bank of New York Mellon has come under scrutiny for its actions in the proposed $8.5 billion settlement involving Bank of America and investors in 530 non-agency MBS issued by Countrywide Financial. A trial to approve the settlement regarding repurchase requests started in June and is on a break until early September. While the proposed settlement involves a payout from BofA, which acquired Countrywide, the settlement is an agreement between BNYM and 22 institutional investors represented by the law firm of Gibbs & Bruns. The agreement was reached under Article 77 which allowed BofA to have the settlement apply to all investors in the Countrywide securities in question. I can honestly say...
Securitization of income-property mortgages declined by 7.9 percent during the second quarter of 2013, with the biggest drop coming in non-agency commercial MBS issuance, according to a new market analysis by Inside MBS & ABS. A total of $43.92 billion of commercial mortgage securities were issued during the second quarter, which still ranked as the second strongest quarter since the third quarter of 2007. For the first six months of 2013, total commercial mortgage securitization was up 78.5 percent from the same period, and the market appears likely to set another post-crash record by the time the year is over. The non-agency CMBS market has seen...[Includes one data chart]
Mortgage lenders saw a noticeable decline in refinancing of underwater Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages during the second quarter of 2013, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of mortgage-backed...
The Senate opted to leave town this week for its five-week August recess without calling a vote on President Obamas nominee to head the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Two weeks ago, Rep. Mel Watts...
Industry analysts predict that Freddie Macs recently announced deal to shed some of the credit risk of the mortgages it guarantees to the private sector could provide the template for a broader risk-sharing program for both GSEs and opens the door for potentially promising policy implications. The $500 million offering of Structured Agency Credit Risk securities, which Freddie priced last week, aims to diminish taxpayer risk while introducing more private capital into the market. Due to investor demand, the size of the offering was increased from $400 million to $500 million, and about 50 broadly-diversified investors participated in the offering, including mutual funds, hedge funds, REITs, pension funds, banks, insurance companies and credit unions, according to Freddie CEO Donald Layton.
Fannie Mae has selected National Mortgage Insurance Corp. to insure a pool of approximately $5.0 billion of mortgages as the GSE looks to expand its risk sharing with private firms, the mortgage insurer announced this week.The Emeryville, CA-based unit of NMI Holdings explained that the transaction was offered through a formal bid process to private mortgage insurers.Fannie Mae selected National MI as the insurer based on its favorable terms and conditions, and beneficial risk-share attributes, said National MI.
The Senate opted to leave town this week for its five-week August recess without calling a vote on President Obamas nominee to head the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Two weeks ago, Rep. Mel Watts nomination cleared the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee along a straight party-line vote, with some key Republicans vowing to block the North Carolina Democrats confirmation. Until the mid-week announcement by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-NV, that Watts nomination would not be taken up for debate before Congress returns from its recess on September 9, Capitol Hill watchers were wary of another potential nomination showdown between Dems and the GOP.
More than a year after it was issued under court-ordered duress, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has withdrawn its proposed rule concerning Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac underwriting standards related to mortgages affected by Property Assessed Clean Energy programs. Local governments use the PACE Program, which is part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2008, to provide financing secured by a priority lien on the property to homeowners for the purchase of energy-related home improvements. While 27 states and the District of Columbia have legislation in place to permit PACE financing for green homes, in July 2010 Fannie and Freddie stopped purchasing PACE-related mortgages that had automatic first-lien priority over previously recorded mortgages.
Standard & Poors Rating Services has revised its outlook for the Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle to stable from negative, S&P announced two weeks ago. S&P said its revision reflects significantly reduced losses within the banks private-label mortgage-backed securities portfolio and strengthening capital.