Issuers of non-agency mortgage-backed securities should disclose when they seek a rating from a firm and ultimately decide not to hire the firm, according to a variety of non-agency participants. If one rating is 7 percent subordination and the other is 15 percent, we dont need to accept the 15 percent subordination, but we do need to disclose the 15 percent subordination opinion to investors, Martin Hughes, CEO of Redwood Trust, said this week at a roundtable hosted by the Securities and Exchange Commission ...
Investors in subordinate tranches of recently issued non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities have seen strong returns on the investments. Real estate investment trusts have focused on the assets, which are likely to be subject to risk-retention requirements going forward. We like the loan assets and the ability to diversify our funding in this manner where we dont have a duration gap, there is no margin risk, and the assets and liabilities amortize and prepay at the same rate, eliminating the need for ...
After years of holding onto investments in non-agency mortgage-backed securities even as prices declined significantly, the government-sponsored enterprises are preparing to sell some of their $101.5 billion in non-agency MBS holdings. Freddie Mac is offering $1.0 billion in non-agency MBS for sale with plans to unload as much as $5.0 billion this year, if pricing for the securities remains strong. A spokesman for the GSE said the sales are part of an effort to meet goals set by ... [Includes one data chart]
As more firms contemplate issuing jumbo MBS, there are growing concerns that there could be a few speed bumps along the way, namely rising whole loan prices, and an increase in the cost of money for investors that use swaps to fund their purchases of the AAA-rated tranches. The increase in whole loan prices is less of a concern, because it was somewhat anticipated given the hot nature of the market. Over the past few months, prices for jumbo whole loans have risen to as high as 103, compared to 101 and 102 last year. Craig Cole, a jumbo consultant and a former top production manager at Union Bank, San Francisco, told...
One of the things that is unusual about this housing recovery is the extent to which it has been supported by investors and not just individuals looking for rental property. Institutional investors have jumped into the rental home market in a way not seen before, and that is benefitting some industries you might not expect, or in ways you may not have anticipated. In traditional housing recoveries, individuals and households provide the bulk of the demand the market needs to rebound, said ...
Standard & Poors, along with Moodys Investors Service, last week settled a lawsuit involving their pre-financial crisis securities ratings before it got to a jury trial, but S&P suffered a setback with another ratings challenge lawsuit brought by Connecticut state officials. Experts predict a pickup in MBS litigation ahead of pending filing deadlines for legal challenges. S&P and Moodys reached the confidential settlement with a group of 14 plantiffs led by Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and King County, WA. Abu Dhabi and the over investors filed suit in 2008 and 2009 in Manhattan federal court claiming that the defendants misled them by allegedly inflating ratings on two structured investment vehicles they purchased. By settling the investors lawsuit, which claimed $638 million in losses, S&P and Moodys were able...
Issuance of securities backed by servicer advance receivables has increased significantly recently and is expected to continue to grow, fueled by nonbank servicers and demand from investors. However, analysts at Standard & Poors warn that servicers are increasing their use of unconventional features and product types, which could increase risks for investors. S&P rated $7.8 billion in servicer advance securities from the second quarter of 2012 through the end of the first quarter of 2013, up from $7.7 billion from the two-year period ending in the first quarter of 2012. S&P said issuance is expected to increase as more and more servicing assets trade hands and servicers use securitization to fund their collateral acquisitions. Recent issuance has been driven...
Its not a money problem, theres plenty of money out there, Martin Hughes, president and CEO of Redwood Trust, said last week at a hearing by the House Financial Services Committee. The difficulty now is the uncertainty of investors that need to be waved back into the water. Hughes said non-agency mortgage-backed security issuers need to make adjustments for investors. I believe we need to first address investors demands for better risk mitigation, transparency, and alignment of interests ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development this week issued more detailed guidance to changes in the FHA Lender Insurance Program based on a final rule published in the Federal Register in January 2012. Under the LI program, high-performing direct endorsement lenders have the authority to conduct pre-endorsement reviews and endorse loans. Mortgagee Letter 2013-12 supersedes guidance HUD issued last month and provides additional details on initial and continuing eligibility for Lender Insurance. It also talks about HUD monitoring of program participants as well indemnification procedures, which were discussed in ...
Wall Street has unveiled policy proposals calling for premium and guaranty fee adjustments and reduced loan limits for FHA and the government-sponsored enterprises to jump start the return of private capital to the U.S. housing market. The American Securitization Forum said the current level of government activity in the mortgage market is neither sustainable nor advisable. The government, through FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, directly or indirectly guarantees 90 to 95 percent of new mortgage originations in the country, the trade association said. While everyone agrees the governments role in housing should be reduced over the long term, there is ...