Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac each received high marks on a relatively easy performance test from the Federal Housing Finance Agency in the GSEs compliance with the FHFAs Conservatorship Scorecard, both companies revealed in their fourth quarter 2012 financial filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In March 2012, the FHFA developed, with input from GSE management, the boards of directors and the companies compensation committees, a set of performance objectives and directed each firm to implement them. The three strategic goals of the scorecard called for the GSEs to build a new securitization infrastructure, contract Fannies and Freddies dominant marketplace presence and maintain foreclosure prevention activities and credit availability for new and refinance mortgages.
Despite its efforts to enhance its hiring outreach to potential minority and women contractors and employees during 2012, the Federal Housing Finance Agency still faces challenges finding qualified and diverse candidates, according to a new report to Congress by the FHFAs Office of Minority and Women Inclusion. Established under a Dodd-Frank Act mandate, the OMWI noted that the Finance Agencys overall representation of minorities and women compares favorably to that of the federal and private workforces. The FHFAs 585 staffers in 2012 were comprised of 32.4 percent minorities and 46.7 females, compared to the federal governments breakdown of 34.1 percent minorities and 43.5 percent females.
Despite an uptick in the fourth quarter, the volume of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages repurchased by lenders declined by 10.3 percent from 2011 to 2012, according to a new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of data reported by the government-sponsored enterprises. In their year-end earnings reports, the GSEs said total repurchases and other resolutions of buyback demands typically indemnification of the GSEs loss dropped to $20.57 billion last year. It was still the second ... [Includes one data chart]
Gain-on-sale margins for mortgage originations declined for lenders during the first quarter of 2013, according to industry analysts, but a number of factors appear likely to keep the margins this year well above historical levels. Core gain-on-sale margins for the major banks fell to 2.9 percent in the first quarter of 2013, according to estimates by Credit Suisse Securities, down from 3.3 percent in the previous quarter and from a high of 3.5 percent in the third quarter of 2012. The analysts warn ...
Its been a longstanding and usually treacherous tradition in the mortgage industry that when origination volume starts to sag, lenders begin to expand the credit box. One quarter does not a trend make, but the pattern in credit characteristics of loans sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac suggest that some easing may be underway as the market works to sustain production volume. A new Inside Mortgage Trends analysis of first-quarter sales to the government-sponsored enterprises ... [Includes one data chart]
Decisions by federal regulators have combined to promote issuance of agency MBS over non-agency MBS, a trend that is expected to continue for years to come, according to industry analysts. Panelists at a talk this week sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute cited rules from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau along with pending rules to set requirements for risk retention on MBS issuance and capital requirements for originations and securitization. Until you know what the rules of the game are going to be...
Over the past five years, lender captives paid $706 million in losses. Most of these captives were domiciled in the U.S. and sponsored by mortgage lenders, receiving $2.92 billion in ceded premiums.
The Federal Housing Finance Agencys lawsuit against UBS Americas and, by extension, more than a dozen other big banks, in connection with non-agency MBS purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will continue after a federal appeals court flatly denied UBS bid to dismiss the case. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling that denied UBS motion to dismiss the FHFAs suit as time barred. In the summer of 2011, the FHFA filed 18 lawsuits in Manhattan federal court against UBS and other big banks on behalf of the GSEs, alleging violations of the federal Securities Act of 1933 for approximately $200 billion in MBS sold to Fannie and Freddie in the years prior to the mortgage market meltdown. The UBS appeal argument largely revolves...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now earning money hand-over-fist - cash that will wind up in the coffers of Uncle Sam. But is the White House underestimating how much the two GSEs will earn?
Total MBS and ABS issuance rose almost 3 percent from the fourth quarter of 2012 to $515.3 billion during the first three months of 2013, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis and ranking.