A commercial MBS issued in late December that received AAA ratings from Fitch Ratings and Standard & Poors wouldnt have been rated higher than A1 by Moodys Investors Service. Moodys said the $375 million RBS Commercial Funding Inc. 2013-GSP Trust lacked structural support to obtain the highest ratings. The deal was a single-asset transaction without subordinate classes to absorb expenses that the trust cant pass along to the borrower. In cases where a subordinate class is not present to protect highly rated senior investors, some other feature, such as a reserve fund, has been employed to mitigate the risk, according to Daniel Rubock, a senior vice president at Moodys. The GSP Trust lacks any such structural mitigant. Fitch said...
Nationally-recognized credit-rating agencies continue to show improvements in certain problem areas despite new concerns raised by federal examiners in their latest review, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission staff report. The SECs 2013 credit-rating agency examinations found deficiencies in eight key areas, particularly in the credit-rating agencies internal controls. Examiners stopped short of branding their essential findings as material regulatory deficiencies, although the SEC may do so in the future and require stronger corrective action, the report noted. Based on the latest exams, the SECs Office of Credit Ratings found...
A continued decline in GSE refinance activity helped contribute to an overall dip in the volume of single-family mortgages securitized by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in November, according to a new Inside The GSEs analysis. Fannie and Freddie issued $58.7 billion in single-family mortgage-backed securities in November, a 13.4 percent decline from October and a 6.2 percent decrease for the first 11 months of 2013.
Underwriting standards for loans in commercial MBS are loosening due to competition among issuers for volume, according to industry analysts. Issuers have also removed loans from two recent commercial MBS transactions due to pressure to come to the market quickly. Increasing competition among commercial MBS loan originators raises the risk that they will further lower underwriting standards from the more stringent practices used in early second-generation commercial MBS 2.0 deals, said Tad Philipp, director of commercial real estate research at Moodys Investors Service. Analysts at Fitch Ratings said...
A Manhattan federal court this week approved a proposed settlement between Residential Capital and the Federal Housing Finance Agency that both clears the way for the former conduit to exit bankruptcy and brings the FHFA one step closer to completing its massive legal action against some of the nations top financial institutions.Judge Martin Glenn of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York approved the agreement, which is tied to a settlement the FHFA reached with Ally Financial, ResCaps former parent, in late October.
Mortgages originated by brokers and correspondents, once a concern for MBS investors, have actually performed better in recent years than retail-originated loans, according to Moodys Investors Service. The rating service said risks from third-party originations will remain low if lenders continue to put an emphasis on retail-originated mortgages. Default rates on securitized mortgages have decreased significantly in recent years regardless of origination channel. However, Moodys noted that beginning in 2010, production from third-party originators started performing better than retail mortgages. From 2003 through 2009, third-party originations defaulted...
Ginnie Mae is taking a go slow approach to merging its Ginnie I and Ginnie II MBS programs, noting in a new stakeholder letter that players in the market have voiced concerns about the logistics of how we get there, and in particular, what will become of the legacy Ginnie Mae I security. Ginnie officials declined to provide an update on the process this week. A spokeswoman issued a statement saying the agency is still studying the issue, adding that, We are currently evaluating what market participants want. Since 2010, Ginnie Mae II issuance has been increasingly outpacing...
A reformed housing finance system should first and foremost put the risk and rewards of mortgage lending in the hands of private actors, with the government playing a key role to reduce the impact of the inevitable financial-market failures, especially when their failures are exacerbated in a cyclical downturn, an Obama administration official noted this week. Speaking at an Urban Institute event, James Stock, a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, outlined the administrations central theme of cyclical resilience or the need for the mortgage finance system to provide liquidity at reasonable rates during both good and bad times. A cyclically resilient housing finance system provides...
Foreclosure timelines and servicers emphasis on loss mitigation has dampened improvements to loss severities on non-agency MBS, according to Fitch Ratings. The rating service said this week that while national average home prices have increased by 14 percent in the past year, loss severities on liquidated properties in non-agency MBS have improved by only 5 percent. In the third quarter of 2013, it took an average of 32 months to liquidate a mortgage included in a non-agency MBS, according to Fitch, more than twice as long as average liquidation timelines in 2008. Longer timelines translate...
Citigroup Global Markets Realty last week issued the first jumbo mortgage-backed security in more than a month and Redwood Trust is preparing a deal for next week. However, industry participants suggest that jumbo MBS issuance will remain limited through at least early 2014 due to a lack of demand from investors and strong portfolio appetite jumbos among from big banks. Citis $209.95 million jumbo MBS, its first in the new era of the non-agency market, wasnt met with strong demand, according to ...