The amount of collateral securing advances at the Federal Home Loan Banks increased by 12 percent, to $688 billion, at the end of 2014, according to a newly released report by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The report provides details of the levels of collateral pledged to the FHLBanks securing advances. Listing was the most used form of collateral as of the end of 2014, and accounted for 49 percent of collateral pledged. This was followed by blanket pledges, a lien on all or specific categories of a member’s assets, which was 39 percent of collateral pledged. Both were up 2 percent from the previous years. The report noted that FHLBanks typically give members greater borrowing capacity when...
It has been a full year since the Federal Housing Finance Agency proposed sweeping changes to the Federal Home Loan Bank membership rules and the agency said as recently as this week that the proposal remains under review. With the membership rules up in the air, last week the American Bankers Association penned a letter to the Senate urging that it adopt legislation requiring the FHFA to withdraw the proposal. In September 2014, the FHFA proposed changes that would require members to hold 10 percent of their assets in residential mortgages on an “ongoing” basis and ban captive entities from the definition of insurance companies. The revised asset test was especially controversial among community banks.
No More Adverse Market Charge. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac retired their “adverse market delivery charge” on Sept. 1. The loan-level price adjustments are removed from their loan matrixes. Former Freddie SVP Joins Collingwood. Paul Mullings, former Freddie Mac vice president of single-family business, joined The Collingwood Group as managing director, the group announced this week. FHLB NY Denied Lawsuit Trim. This week a bankruptcy judge denied the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York's bid to trim a lawsuit, according to Law 360. The suit alleges that the FHLB NY cheated Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. out of more than $150 million by undervaluing interest rate swaps. GSEs Update State Foreclosure...
FHLB Will Stay in Topeka. After mulling a move to places like Kansas City and Denver, the Federal Home Loan Bank of Topeka said it would stay put and build a new headquarters there. Construction on the $26 million, 80,000 square foot building will begin next year and employees anticipate a move to the new building in 2018. The bank needed a more modern and larger space than its current 60,000 square foot location offers. Freddie Prices $471 Million K-Deal. Freddie Mac priced a new offering of Structured Pass-Through Certificates backed by fixed-rate multifamily mortgages with seven-year terms. The company plans to issue more than $471 million in K-719 Certificates, which is expected to settle around Aug. 19. This is Freddie’s 15th K Certificate offering this year.
The Federal Home Loan Bank system earned $678 million in the second quarter of 2015 and attributes the 32 percent year-over-year increase to higher gains on litigation settlements and derivatives as well as hedging activities. Total net income for the first half of the year was even higher than the previous year, according to figures compiled by the system’s Office of Finance. Net income for the first six months witnessed a 58 percent jump, to $1.69 billion. Litigation settlements accounted for $143 million in the second quarter, driven by FHLBank of Boston’s $135 million settlement. Those claims came directly from investments in non-agency mortgage-backed securities. Total FHLB assets for the first half of the year were pretty much flat at $916.9 billion, representing...
Real estate investment trusts that focus on the MBS market saw the value of their holdings slump again during the volatile second quarter of 2015. Top mortgage REITs reported a fair market value of $249.10 billion for their single-family MBS holdings as of the end of June. That was down 5.6 percent from the previous quarter, and it was the group’s lowest MBS portfolio valuation since the fourth quarter of 2011. The decline came...[Includes one data table]
The Federal Housing Finance Agency recently established guidelines for the Federal Home Loan Banks to use when developing their individual strategic business plans.These guidelines were created to help determine if the 11 institutions are successfully achieving their core mission of making advances and establishing limits on its maximum holdings of acquired member assets.The FHLBanks are also charged with supporting their banks’ housing finance and community lending mission in less direct ways including advance commitments, housing finance agency debt instruments and investment in certain small business investment company securities and more.In assessing each of the banks’ core mission achievement the FHFA said it will calculate the ratio of its Primary Mission Assets relative to Consolidated Obligations at the...
While the Federal Housing Finance Agency takes its time deciding whether nonbanks should be allowed to use captive insurance units to become members of a Federal Home Loan Bank, real estate investment trusts appear to be ramping up their borrowings from the system’s advance window. At least that’s what Inside Mortgage Finance found when it recently conducted a spot check of mortgage REITs that have gained access to the FHLBank system via a captive insurance subsidiary. Redwood Trust, for example, had...
Residential MBS production continued to gain speed in the second quarter of 2015 while non-mortgage securitization remained strong, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis. A total of $419.42 billion of single-family MBS and non-mortgage ABS were issued during the second quarter, an increase of 21.2 percent from the first three months of the year. It was the strongest new issuance total since the third quarter of 2013 and marked the fifth straight quarterly increase since the market hit a cyclical low at the beginning of last year. Most of the gain came from the agency MBS sector, which totaled $352.73 billion in new issuance, a gain of 29.7 percent from the first quarter. All three agencies posted hefty gains, with the biggest coming at Ginnie Mae, where new issuance jumped 46.7 percent to hit $120.36 billion. A lot of Ginnie’s growth is coming from an unusual surge of refinance activity, which accounted for ... [ charts]
Non-members of the Federal Home Loan Banks are able to service mortgages under the Acquired Member Asset program, according to a recent regulatory interpretation issued by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. FHLBanks have been challenged with finding eligible members to take over the servicing of AMA loans from private financial institutions that want to transfer the servicing rights for various reasons. Some members want to do so because they can no longer service the loan, and others are unwilling to continue servicing the loan, said the FHFA. As a result, a number of banks have been considering or have already allowed the sale of servicing rights to institutions that are neither members of any bank, or affiliates of bank system members.