Ginnie Mae will question certain mortgage-backed securities issuers about reporting inconsistencies in pool data submissions over the last couple of months and try to resolve those issues to avoid delay in MBS pool processing. In an audio conference with issuers last week, Ginnie Mae officials said agency staff discovered the flawed data submissions while poring over several months worth of pool data submitted by issuers. While most of the information fell within theVargas said the discrepancies were attributed to a small group of issuers, who will be contacted soon to work on corrections before Ginnie Mae puts stronger edits up front. She said the agency wants to ...
Principal reductions hold the potential for a positive impact on the mortgage market by preventing some foreclosures, but residential MBS investors stand to lose from an improperly implemented, wide-ranging loan modification effort, according to Fitch Ratings. The mandated principal reduction provisions in the recent $25 billion settlement involving state attorneys general, the federal government and the five largest mortgage servicers appear to be a sensible approach as loan modifications with principal reductions have performed better than other types of mods, but Fitch noted the benefit comes with a...
Commercial banks increased their stake in the residential MBS market to a record $1.360 trillion as of the end of 2011, with a lot of the growth coming in Ginnie Mae MBS. Bank MBS holdings rose 2.4 percent from the third to the fourth quarter as seven of the 10 largest bank MBS investors reported significant increases. Compared to the end of 2010, bank MBS holdings were up 10.3 percent over a period in which the outstanding supply of single-family MBS continued to decline. Commercial banks held a record 20.9 percent of outstanding residential MBS at the end of last year, based...(Includes two data charts)
MBS investors continue to sweat over the impact of the $25 billion multistate servicing settlement, especially regarding potential conflicts of interest when banks own a second mortgage while servicing a securitized first lien. The minimum requirement is that every time you modify a first lien, you have to modify the second lien to the same degree, or you have to write off the second lien entirely, explained Shaun Donovan, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, at a housing conference earlier this week. Donovan characterized the treatment of home-equity loans in the settlement as a positive...
There are additional signs of emerging investor interest and perhaps more importantly, actual capital for plowing into mortgage-related bonds, residential and commercial alike. Earlier this week, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York used a competitive process to sell off the remaining $6.0 billion of securities in the Maiden Lane II portfolio to Credit Suisse Securities. The New York Fed said the move will result in full repayment of the $19.5 billion loan it extended to ML II and generate a net gain for the U.S. taxpayer of about $2.8 billion, including $580 million in accrued interest on the loan...
Wells Fargo & Co. is looking to hire an independent third-party expert to continue an investigation started by the bank in its capacity as corporate trustee of mortgage trusts that could compel lenders to repurchase soured mortgage loans contained in a 2007 non-agency MBS. According to reports, Wells Fargo wants to hire Law Debenture Trust Co. of New York to look into alleged defects in loans contained in Bear Stearns Mortgage Funding Trust 2007-AR2 and to force JPMorgan Chase and its servicer subsidiary to repurchase the bad loans. Requests for comment to both Wells Fargo and Law Debenture had not...
Bank of America won a favorable ruling this week on its proposed $8.5 billion settlement with a group of non-agency mortgage-backed securities investors. With the settlement likely to be decided in state court, analysts suggest that the deal will serve as a model for other non-agency MBS disputes. Baupost Group, a distressed debt fund that has challenged the settlement under the name Walnut Place, succeeded in October in having the settlement moved to federal court. However, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals determined this week that the settlement should be overseen by the Manhattan State Supreme Court ...
With the economics of non-agency securitization uncertain, Redwood Trust announced this week that it is considering bulk sales of newly originated non-agency jumbo loans in lieu of securitization. The real estate investment trust said it plans to issue four to six mortgage-backed securities this year including the one completed in January depending on whether the REIT sells a portion of its whole loans on a bulk basis. The business decision to either securitize or sell whole loans will be based on balancing ...
Ginnie Mae will publish, in advance, the CUSIP and pool information for multiple issuer pools (MIP) on its website for the current month, plus the upcoming three months of issuance. The information will be published by pool term, pool type and security interest rate. This enhancement applies to all securities with an April 1, 2012, issue date and thereafter. According to Ginnie Mae, publishing the CUSIP and pool numbers will improve issuers ability to manage their loan pipelines and MIP loan package submissions before the pool is finalized. Both the finalized CUSIP and pool numbers as well as the future CUSIP and pool numbers for MIPs will be ...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit is apparently on the verge of deciding in which jurisdiction the pending $8.5 billion Bank of America/Countrywide residential MBS representations and warranties settlement with Bank of New York Mellon and investors will be finalized. The final outcome is expected to influence similar disputes involving other large mortgage originators, but probably on a smaller scale. Last week, the appeals court held a hearing to determine if the case should be moved back to New York state court, which would accelerate a conclusion of the settlement. A final decision from...