Much attention over the last few years has centered on how best to help revive non-agency mortgage securitization. But recent advances in technology have enabled whole loan trading to emerge as a viable alternative that is filling some of the void left in the marketplace by less securitization. At least in the U.S. residential debt market, we are seeing a much larger market for the trading of whole loans, said Wyck Brown, president of Denver-based BlackBox Logic, a provider of loan-level data aggregation, analytics and consulting services. Large whole loan blocks can ...
The federal judge in charge of overseeing the multiple lawsuits filed by the Federal Housing Finance Agency against non-agency mortgage-backed securities issuers for allegedly misrepresenting deals that were sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rebuffed yet another motion by one of the banks to shut down the legal action. Last week, Judge Denise Cote of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Manhattan rejected a motion to reconsider her December decision allowing the FHFA to proceed on behalf of the GSEs with most of its fraud claims against Ally Financial. On Dec. 19, the judge denied most of Allys motion to dismiss, including the defendants request that the court strike the demand for punitive damages, finding there were sufficient factual allegations in the FHFAs complaint to move forward with its fraud complaint.
Investment bankers that ply their trade in mortgage finance expect 2013 could turn out to be a strong year for mergers and acquisitions as current players, flush with cash, look to expand their franchises. But according to interviews conducted by Inside Mortgage Finance, outside money including private-equity capital and hedge funds might finally take the plunge this year as well. PE firms are definitely looking, said Chuck Klein, managing partner of Mortgage Banking Solutions. But he also cautions that hedge funds are hardly pushovers as buyers. Hedge funds do...
Newcastle Investment Corp., a behind-the-scenes player in Nationstars recent purchase of $215 billion of servicing rights from Bank of America, plans to spin off part of its business into a new unit called New Residential Investment Corp. According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, NRIC will invest in MBS, excess mortgage servicing rights, nonperforming loans and other asset classes. The company hopes to complete the spin-off by the end of March. The shares, though, will be spun-off...
It is 2013 and courtrooms across the country continue to hum with investor disputes over issuer liability for MBS investments that went bad. In its third lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase since mid-2011, the National Credit Union Administration is seeking millions of dollars in damages in connection with the packaging and sale of $2.2 billion in MBS issued by the now-defunct Washington Mutual to three corporate credit unions long before it was acquired by JPMorgan in 2008. Filed in Kansas federal court, the NCUA lawsuit alleged...
Although Congress and the presidents just-in-time agreement to forestall the fiscal cliff crisis, at least for a while, provided some mortgage market-friendly results, MBS investors still face some challenges in 2013, analysts say. The American Taxpayer Relief Act, H.R. 8, includes a one-year extension through Dec. 31, 2013, of the Mortgage Debt Forgiveness Act that exempts loan amounts forgiven by lenders and foreclosures from taxable income. Deductions on mortgage insurance premiums for borrowers making below $110,000 were extended through 2013 and made retroactive to cover 2012, as well. The combination of tax relief on mortgage insurance premiums and debt forgiveness should have...
Nationstar Mortgage announced this week that it agreed to purchase $113 billion in non-agency mortgage servicing rights, as measured by unpaid principal balance, from Bank of America. The sale will more than double Nationstars non-agency servicing portfolio. Some $102 billion in agency mortgages are included in the sale, which priced at $1.3 billion. Walter Investment Management concurrently announced the purchase of $93 billion of unpaid principal balance in Fannie Mae-backed servicing assets from BofA. Ocwen Financial also reportedly bid...
Servicers handling portfolio loans and non-agency mortgages continue to increase their use of principal reduction loan modifications, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Some 23,335 principal reduction mods were completed in the third quarter, up from 11,178 in the third quarter of 2011 and from 14,944 in the second quarter of 2012. The mods accounted...[Includes four briefs]
Residential Capital, a former subsidiary of Ally and currently in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, has asked the court for permission to sell an estimated $130 million in FHA-insured mortgage loans. ResCap made the request in a recent filing with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, which monitors and approves all of the beleaguered companys activities and requests during bankruptcy. According to the company, its unsecured creditors have signed off on the prospective sale of the FHA loans although the court would still have to approve the request during a scheduled hearing on Jan. 16. ResCap sought bankruptcy protection on ...
Now that Bank of America has inked a long-rumored deal to sell mortgage servicing rights on some $308 billion of distressed mortgages to Nationstar and Walter Investment Management, the question becomes how much more the bank may unload. The answer may be quite a lot. Paul Miller, an analyst with FBR Capital Markets, said that he anticipates the megabank will sell between $300 billion and $400 billion of MSRs by the time 2013 ends. According to Miller, the to be sold product includes $100 billion of Ginnie Mae servicing, $150 billion of Fannie Mae MSRs and $100 billion to $200 billion of Freddie Mac servicing. A BofA spokesman declined...[Includes one data chart]