Skip to content
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Cart
  • Inside Mortgage Finance
  • MBS & ABS
  • The GSEs
  • The CFPB
  • Mortgage Trends
  • FHA/VA Lending
  • Nonconforming Markets
  • Data
    • Subscribe to Data
Home » Newsletters » Inside The GSEs

Inside The GSEs

July 28, 2017

View Archived Issues

Download Files:

  • Inside The GSEs Full Issue July 28, 2017 (PDF)

Second Tier of Servicers Building Share in GSE Mortgage Servicing

Large banks continue to dominate the business of servicing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac home loans, but a group of hard-charging non-depository institutions are gaining ground. A new Inside The GSEs analysis of Fannie and Freddie mortgage-backed securities disclosures shows that total single-family MBS outstanding actually declined slightly, by 0.1 percent, during the second quarter. This was due to a 0.3 percent drop in Fannie MBS servicing – the figures do not include servicing of whole loans held by the enterprises – while the Freddie market grew 0.3 percent. Some 46.2 percent of Fannie/Freddie MBS servicing was held by banking organizations with more than $100 billion in assets. That included four of the top five GSE servicers and seven of the top 10. Read More

More Government Documents Unsealed in Shareholder Case

New documents were recently unsealed in Fairholme Funds vs. United States that give GSE shareholders more hope in proving the Treasury sweep was designed with an ulterior motive in mind.“The release of these documents is a very positive development in the case against Fannie [Mae] and Freddie [Mac]. These documents fatally undermine the government’s claim,” said Pete Patterson, a partner with the Cooper & Kirk law firm representing the plaintiffs. Officials from Treasury have repeatedly said that the sweep was designed to prevent the two mortgage giants from collapsing. But the latest batch of 33 confidential emails and memos released under court order appears to illustrate otherwise. Read More

FHFA CRT Update Shows GSEs Transferred $5.5B in Q1

The Federal Housing Finance Agency published a progress report on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac credit-risk transfer programs this week. The report covered the first quarter and showed that together the GSEs transferred $5.5 billion worth of credit risk during the first three months of the year.The risk was transferred on mortgage loans with $174 billion in unpaid principal balance. That’s a good start to 2017 being on track with the $18.1 billion the GSEs transferred in all of 2016 on mortgages with $548 billion in UPB. Debt issuance was the largest category of CRTs, accounting for 77 percent. Reinsurance transactions followed, but represented a much smaller 19 percent share. Read More

Community Banks Say Multiple GSEs Would be Problematic

While lawmakers continue to mull over the multitude of plans for housing finance reform, small lending institutions said a complete overhaul of the secondary market is unnecessary. In fact, they said it would make things too complicated. Representatives from community banks spoke during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs hearing last week focused on GSE reform. There was consensus among the community banks that there’s no need to add more guarantors in addition to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the name of competition. They said doing so would just increase the regulatory burden. Read More

Freddie Exploring Affordable Single-Family Rental Market

Freddie Mac plans to dip its toes into the single-family rental market in the near future, but don’t expect its deal to mirror Fannie Mae’s. The GSE differentiates its single-family rental plan by focusing on the affordable segment of the rental home market. But, with no deal to announce yet, Freddie is still in the exploratory phase. A spokesman for Freddie told Inside The GSEs that the Federal Housing Finance Agency has authorized the GSEs to explore single-family rental transactions on a very limited basis. He said this was done to “help better understand the challenges and opportunities in this growing segment of the rental market.” Read More

Fairholme Staying the Course on its Fannie, Freddie Investment

In a recent conference call, Fairholme Capital Management founder and Chief Investment Officer Bruce Berkowitz stood his ground regarding the firm’s investment in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac junior preferred shares, believing that the bet will pay off in time. He made it clear that Fairholme, at this time, has no plans to sell its stake, which the firm has valued at roughly $115.7 million. But Berkowitz also made it clear he sees little chance of GSE reform passing any time soon, and he anticipates that Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Mel Watt will not permit the Fannie/Freddie capital position to fall to zero in early 2018. Read More

Urban Institute Recommends CSP as Potential Path to Reform

The common securitization platform, if expanded to allow other users, could become a centerpiece for housing finance reform. That’s the view of Jim Parrott, a fellow at the Urban Institute and former White House senior advisor at the National Economic Council under the Obama administration. Converting the CSP to a government or government-like utility open to issuance by other guarantors could help end the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac duopoly by reducing barriers for new entrants. Parrott added that examining which functions the GSEs currently provide that could be moved to the CSP to help level the playing field for more competition would be ideal. Read More

PIMCO Says Private Market Reentry Should Precede GSE Reform

The Pacific Investment Management Company believes the private mortgage market should be revived before comprehensive GSE reform. In a paper published last week, the investment management firm weighed in on the debate to reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It noted that a few small legislative changes would make a huge difference in bringing private capital back to the housing-finance market. Growth in the housing market will come if policymakers are willing to modify existing laws and regulations governing the private mortgage market, according to PIMCO. The company said that would bring back responsible mortgage lending while boosting economic growth and providing more access to credit. Read More

Fannie’s New DTI to Result in Increased Mortgage Approvals

Fannie Mae’s announcement in May that it will raise the debt-to-income cap from 45 to 50 percent is a win for expanding access to credit, especially for minority families, says a recent report by the Urban Institute.UI anticipates that as many as 95,000 new mortgages could be approved annually. With African-American and Latino families more likely to have DTI ratios above 45 percent, the authors of the paper note that a large share of the new loans will likely be to those families. Prior to the change, Fannie allowed for flexibility up to 50 percent DTI in certain cases. Read More

Groups say GSE Reentry Into LIHTC Market Should Not Be Restricted

Participants in the low-income housing tax credit program said the re-entry of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into the market should not be limited to rural communities. The two GSEs were directed to stop investing in the tax credits in 2008 when they were placed under conservatorship. But a final rule issued by the Federal Housing Finance Agency in December, under its duty-to-serve requirement, determined that if the GSEs re-enter the LIHTC market, they should only be able do so in targeted areas. In May, the GSEs released draft proposals on ways to grow financing for specific underserved markets under DTS, which include rural housing, along with manufactured housing and preserving affordable housing for low- and moderate-income, households. Read More

GSE Roundup

Fannie Prices $1.4B CAS Deal. In the GSE’s fifth credit risk-sharing transaction of the year under its popular Connecticut Avenue Securities program, Fannie Mae announced a $1.351 billion offering last week. The CAS program, launched in 2013, has been steadily growing, according to Laurel Davis, Fannie’s vice president of credit risk transfers. She noted that buyers are attracted to the program’s liquidity and transparency. This latest reference pool includes more than 174,000 single-family mortgage loans with an outstanding principal balance of about $43.8 billion.Original loan-to-value ratios are between 60 and 80 percent with the loans having been acquired between... Read More

Latest Imf News

  • Retail Market Share for Nonconforming Originations Drops

  • Industry Groups Show Support for Executive Order on AI

  • Planet Home Leverages the Ginnie PIIT Program

  • Home Equity Declines in 3Q

More Imf News

Featured Data

  • Non-Agency Jumbo Originations Slow in Third Quarter

  • Jumbo Servicing Volume Slightly Down in Third Quarter

  • Refis Lift Agency MBS to Three-Year High in November

  • Broker Channel Regains Some Share in Third Quarter

More Featured Data

Featured Reports

  • Lender Profiles 2Q25: Top 25 (PDF)

  • GSE Repurchase Activity: Cumulative to Second Quarter 2025 (PDF Format)

  • Mortgage Profitability Report 2Q25 (PDF)

  • IMF HMDA Dashboard: 2024

More Latest Reports

Featured Poll

As homeowner equity continues to build, more and more lenders are launching home equity lending products. Are you thinking of joining this market?

View Results
  • About
    • About Inside Mortgage Finance
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Privacy Policy/Terms
    • Article Reprints/Web Postings
    • Copyright FAQ
  • Customer Center
    • Subscribe
    • Request a Sample
    • Account Inquiries
    • Change of Address
    • Change of Delivery Method
    • Data Licensing
    • Password Reminder
    • Group Subscriptions
    • Refunds
    • Renew Your Subscription
    • E-mail Newsletters
  • Mortgage Data
    • Origination
    • Servicing and Portfolios
    • Mortgage Insurance
    • Securitization
    • Agency MBS Activity
    • Non-Agency MBS Activity
    • MBS Investor Activity
    • ABS Activity
    • Commercial MBS Activity
    • Funding Activity
    • Earnings and Financials
    • Regulatory Data
    • Mortgage Rates and Terms
    • Subscribe to Data
    • Lender Profiles
    • HMDA Dashboard
    • Contacts Directory
    • Custom Data
    • Data Licensing
  • Reports
    • Data Reports
    • Industry Studies
    • Regulatory Reports
    • Statistical Annual
    • Free Reports

© Copyright 2025 Inside Mortgage Finance Publications
Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing