Investors have expressed a keen interest in programs that would facilitate bulk sales of real estate-owned properties. However, few are optimistic that such a program will come to fruition. Based on cost figures provided by Carrington Holding Company, Vincent Fiorillo, a portfolio manager at DoubleLine Capital, suggested investors could easily earn returns of 9.0 percent by renting REO properties. This is a very attractive alternative investment opportunity, Fiorillo said at the American Securitization Forums ASF 2012 conference last week in Las Vegas ...
Officials at the Federal Reserve signaled this week the bank will maintain its current level of market support for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae debt and MBS to help keep long-term interest rates for mortgages and other products at historic lows. The housing market remains mired in a lackluster recovery, shackled by massive foreclosures and a huge overhang of unsold inventory, despite all the unconventional support the Fed has bent over backwards to provide. During its meeting this week, the Federal Open Market Committee decided to maintain its highly accommodative stance for monetary...
The Federal Home Loan Banks continue to show an investment preference for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage-backed securities during the third quarter of 2011, posting a modest increase from the previous quarter, according to a new analysis by Inside The GSEs based on data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency.Ginnie Mae securities, meanwhile, remained popular within the FHLBank system during the three-month period ending Sept. 30, 2011.GSE MBS accounted for 68.9 percent of combined FHLBank MBS portfolios, up 1.7 percent from the second quarter of 2011. The Finance Agencys data do not separately break out Fannie and Freddie volume or share.
The mortgage securitization and servicing industries say proposed changes to the servicing compensation model for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securities would have a negative effect on liquidity in the to-be-announced market, hurt investors in agency MBS and increase the cost of mortgage credit for borrowers. The Federal Housing Finance Agency released a discussion paper last fall that outlined two potential new approaches to servicing compensation: a fee-for-service approach favored by the two government-sponsored enterprises, and a reserve account approach developed by lender...
Gibbs & Brun, the Houston-based law firm that spearheaded a massive investor lawsuit against Bank of America, has drawn a bead on Wells Fargo. The company announced this week that its non-agency MBS investor clients have asked two trustees U.S. Bank and HSBC to investigate whether ineligible mortgages were pooled in some $19 billion of Alt A and jumbo MBS issued by Wells Fargo between 2005 and 2007. Some 48 securitization trusts are covered by the action, and Gibbs & Brun said it represented investors who collectively held over a quarter of the voting rights in those trusts. Clients...
The group of institutional investors that negotiated a potential $8.5 billion settlement with Bank of America has recently targeted other non-agency mortgage-backed security issuers. The move is the latest development in a number of ongoing claims regarding non-agency MBS. This week, the group led by the law firm of Gibbs & Bruns asked trustees to open investigations on more than $19.0 billion of non-agency MBS issued by Wells Fargo. The investors said they hold more than 25 percent of the voting rights in 48 trusts that issued the non-agency securities between 2005 and 2007. ...
In 2011, high-touch subprime servicer Carrington Mortgage Services significantly decreased its delinquency processing timelines and had its servicer rating confirmed at the end of the year. The servicer also made adjustments after facing criticism from non-agency mortgage-backed security investors who claimed that Carringtons practices improperly favored investments made by the hedge fund that also owns the servicer. Carrington serviced $11.73 billion in subprime mortgages as of the end of the third quarter of 2011, according to estimates by Inside Nonconforming Markets. The servicer received a mid-range rating for subprime and special servicing from Fitch Ratings, with the rating service recently confirming that Carrington demonstrates proficiency in overall servicing ability. ...
Business was booming at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac during the just-completed fourth quarter of 2011, with total single-family mortgage securitization jumping 47.4 percent from the previous period, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside Mortgage Finance. The two government-sponsored enterprises pumped out a combined $261.2 billion in single-family mortgage-backed securities during the final three months of the year. That was the highest quarterly production level of the year, but it still came up 21.2 percent short of the volume generated....(Includes three data charts)
As a group, commercial banks reported a small increase in the volume of loan repurchases and indemnifications made during the third quarter, but some institutions posted much bigger increases than the overall industry trend. At the same time, a number of banks including two of the top five reported declines in the volume of buybacks and indemnifications compared to the second quarter of 2011, according to a new analysis of bank call report data by Inside Mortgage Trends. Bank mortgage repurchases and indemnifications totaled $5.94 billion during the third quarter, up...(Includes one data chart)
Risk-sharing programs that have already been tested and proven effective could be dusted off and made the focal point of efforts to steer the mortgage finance system to a more sustainable, less volatile foundation, investors say. There is widespread agreement that private capital needs to play a much greater role in the mortgage finance system that has been dominated by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the government mortgage-insurance programs since the financial crisis of 2008. There is no consensus on how to do that, and little likelihood that Congress will agree to a solution any time...