Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage-backed securities remained the preferred investment choice of the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks during the first quarter of 2012, with a modest increase from the previous quarter, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside The GSEs based on data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Meanwhile, Ginnie Mae securities posted a decline within the FHLBank system during the first three months of the year. GSE MBS accounted for 70.7 percent of combined FHLBank MBS portfolios, up 2.3 percent from the fourth quarter of 2011. The Finance Agencys data do not separately break out Fannie and Freddie volume or share.
Home Loan Servicing Solutions, recently launched as an independent acquirer of high quality mortgage servicing assets from Ocwen Financial Corp., is off to a good start as analysts gave it a thumbs up after a promising first-quarter debut. Analysts with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods gave the new company an Outperform rating and projected upward-trending dividend yields of 8.2 percent in 2012 and 9.9 percent in 2013-14. On May 8, the company declared a 10-cent monthly dividend, and the 30-cent quarterly dividend is slightly below KBWs estimate of quarterly earnings-per-share of 32 cents...
Last weeks launch of the RMBS Working Groups website demonstrated that government investigators see Wall Street insiders as a valuable source of information to detect and prove fraud and other misconduct in the packaging of mortgage securities. Fraud can be hard to uncover without help from whistleblowers who were corporate insiders, the task force said on the website. Whistleblowers can get rewards of up to 30 percent of the governments monetary recovery based on the specific information, as well as protection from retaliation. The inclusion of a whistleblower provision in the Dodd-Frank Act has...
In a move intended to maintain the integrity of data that helps guide the decisions of MBS investors, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority last week fined Citigroup Global Markets $3.5 million for allegedly providing inaccurate mortgage performance information, supervisory failures and other violations in connection with subprime residential MBS. Citigroup posted data for its RMBS deals that it should have known was inaccurate; and even after they learned that the data was inaccurate, Citigroup did not correct the problem until years later, said Brad Bennett, FINRA executive vice president and...
The Securities and Exchange Commissions no-action letter that cleared the way for the Royal Bank of Scotland to register public offerings of covered bonds is likely to fuel demand for U.S. dollar-denominated covered bonds, according to Fitch Ratings. The SEC letter paves the way for issuers to offer covered bonds to a wider range of investors than previous bonds issued under the restrictive Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1993, said Fitch analyst Vanessa Purwin. The rule provides a safe harbor from registration requirements for certain securities that are resold privately to qualified large...
More companies are seeking ratings for their warehouse lending facilities, but these programs require special consideration, according to a new report from DBRS. In the past, securitization warehouse facilities were mostly un-rated because they were completely executed and funded by banks or their conduits. But industry participants are now more keenly interested in assessing the relative risk of these entities, DBRS said. For instance, warehouse ABS may have a change in collateral composition thanks to a revolving period in warehouse facilities. To make up for this dynamism, other...
Most of the non-mortgage securitization market seems to be approaching the more normal levels that were seen prior to the financial crisis, according to market participants, analysts and observers gathered for the annual meeting of the American Securitization Forum this week in Washington, DC. Weve come a pretty long way, if you think about 2008, pre-2008 and post-crisis, said Bob Behal, principal with The Vanguard Group. He noted that there have been healthy pricing levels in auto loan and credit card ABS and more active student loan and container sectors, as well as some interesting niche products and...
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. late last week filed separate lawsuits against a number of companies that issued or underwrote non-agency MBS purchased by Citizens National Bank and Strategic Capital Bank, two Illinois banks that failed in May 2009. The two banks purchased some $140.5 million of non-agency MBS issued by Bear Stearns, Citicorp, Credit Suisse and Merrill Lynch. The lawsuits also name JPMorgan Securities, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Ally Securities, HSBC Securities, RBS Securities and UBS Securities as underwriters of these transactions. The FDIC is seeking $77.0...
The Securities and Exchange Commission has given Royal Bank of Canada the green light to issue residential mortgage covered bonds registered in the U.S. The SEC granted permission through a no-action letter shortly after RBC submitted plans for a program through which covered bonds backed by U.S. home loans will be offered to U.S. investors. RBC is a foreign private issuer under U.S. securities laws and, as a Form S-3 issuer, has a registered shelf with the SEC through which it can offer multiple securities on an immediate, continuous or even on a delayed basis. Covered bonds are debt securities backed by cash...
Uncertainty lingers in the wake of last weeks announced $8.7 billion settlement between non-agency MBS investors and Ally Financials subsidiary Residential Capital as the details and implications of the deal resonate throughout the market. The agreement with 17 residential MBS investors was struck in a photo finish shortly before ResCaps bankruptcy filing, and it represents the second major settlement between non-agency MBS investors and the sponsors of non-agency securitizations. Bank of Americas controversial $8.5 billion proposed settlement with investors that purchased Countrywide non-agency MBS...