Lenders contributions to non-agency mortgage-backed securities could continue to be subjected to high levels of scrutiny as the rating services emphasize upfront due diligence. Standard & Poors recently cautioned investors in non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities from putting too much faith into the representations and warranties provided on new securities. The fact remains that we believe loan and borrower quality are the most important factors for evaluating residential MBS ...
Sallie Maes recently announced plan to split into two publicly traded companies isnt leaving analysts at ratings services or Wall Street firms with much to cheer about on multiple fronts. In late May, the Sallie Mae board of directors authorized newly appointed CEO John Remondi to press ahead with plans to split the companys existing businesses into two publicly traded entities a new education loan management firm, known as NewCo, and a consumer banking company, to be known as Sallie Mae Bank. The boards stated intention with the move, talked about since at least as early as 2010, is...
JPMorgan Chase is set to issue a unique jumbo MBS, its second of the year, that will include originations from 20 different lenders that far outweigh the companys contributions to the deal. Another bank, EverBank, this week took steps to issue its second jumbo deal of 2013 as well. Since 2008, big banks have largely held their non-agency jumbo originations in portfolio, seeing better execution than non-agency MBS issuance. However, strong demand from non-agency MBS investors and a desire to shrink mortgage exposure has prompted Chase to resume issuing jumbo MBS. Chase declined...
Security issuers, investors and the rating services largely praised unsolicited rating requirements established by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2010, but they had different views on how the rules should be changed. Rating agency information arbitrage has been eliminated, Kevin Duignan, global head of structured finance at Fitch Ratings, said of the SECs Rule 17g-5, which established unsolicited rating standards. Were all getting the same information and we know were getting the same information. Rule 17g-5 requires...
The lack of a specific computer code for reporting short-sale mortgage transactions is creating numerous false reports of foreclosure on consumer credit reports, inhibiting their re-entry into the housing market, according to lawmakers on Capitol Hill and consumer advocates. Earlier this month, Sen. Bill Nelson, D-FL, dispatched letters to the Federal Trade Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau citing the disturbing consumer credit reporting practice of lumping short sale within the same industry code as a foreclosure in consumers credit reports. If a short sale is reported...
Rating services are putting considerable energy into assessing the companies that are originating loans for the new breed of jumbo non-agency MBS, in addition to thorough due diligence reviews of the collateral itself, industry experts say. The rating services dont even begin the rating process until the major loan originators in a transaction clear the gating process, said Kathryn Kelbaugh, a senior analyst at Moodys Investors Service, during a panel session at last weeks secondary market conference sponsored by the Mortgage Bankers Association. We want to know what originators are doing, have third-party reviews and look at reps and warranties. You have to pass those gates before we can do a rating. Margaret Sweeney, a director at Fitch Ratings, said...
Shellpoint Acceptance Corp. hopes to come to market with its first non-agency MBS by summer, securitizing not only jumbo loans, but a host of mortgages that fall outside Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac underwriting guidelines for different reasons. According to a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company has committed $2 billion in capital to its shelf registration, though its first deal will be smaller than that. Shellpoint refers...
Although Redwood Trusts soup-to-nuts approach to representations and warranties has dominated the fledgling recovery in jumbo mortgage-backed securities issuance, some experts think a shorter term alternative may gain popularity among issuers. Its important for investors and rating services to anticipate putbacks in jumbo MBS, Peter Sack, a managing director at Credit Suisse, said during a panel session at the recent secondary market conference sponsored by the Mortgage Bankers Association ...
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 ...
Standard & Poors was the most active rating service in the non-mortgage ABS market during the first quarter of 2013, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis, while DBRS continued to dominate the non-agency MBS space. S&P rated a total of $31.9 billion of newly issued ABS during the first three months of the year, or 67.8 percent of total issuance. That was up from the companys 58.1 percent share of ABS ratings for all of 2012. S&P was particularly strong in rating credit card ABS, covering 86.1 percent of that market after grading just 50.3 percent of last years card deals. Because nearly all public deals have multiple ratings, the sum of the ratings by firms exceeds...[Includes two data charts]