Beginning June 15, rating services involved in MBS and ABS will be subject to increased disclosure standards from the Securities and Exchange Commission. Rating services expect to make a number of changes to comply with the final rule that was issued last August, with some concerns about the usefulness of the increased disclosures. The SEC is requiring nationally recognized statistical rating organizations to disclose rating histories, make changes to rating methodologies and disclose details on findings by third-party due diligence providers, among other issues. Moody’s Investors Service noted...
DBRS and Standard & Poor’s separately issued revised criteria for rating non-agency mortgage-backed securities in recent weeks. DBRS will give slightly more credit to jumbo MBS due to strong performance in recent years, while S&P adjusted modeling relating to home price trends. DBRS noted that from 2010 through the end of April, $32.1 billion in jumbo MBS had been issued, with only one deal taking any losses to date, a 0.04 percent loss. “Positive loan attributes ...
A final rule issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding third-party due diligence providers and rating services takes effect on June 15. The rule is set to prompt a number of changes in the non-agency mortgage-backed security market, largely targeting transparency. For MBS that receive ratings, public disclosure of results from third-party due diligence reviews will be required before a deal is priced. The disclosure requirement even applies to deals issued as private placements, which is the current practice for jumbo MBS ...
Ocwen Financial’s servicing of certain mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities remains at risk due to a downgrade watch issued last week by Standard & Poor’s. Officials at Ocwen said they were surprised by the announcement while noting that Moody’s Investors Service upgraded various ratings relating to the nonbank. S&P said it placed servicer ratings for Ocwen on watch for downgrade last week due to regulatory scrutiny of the company, results from ...
June 15 marks a new era for issuers and underwriters of MBS and ABS as a new rule from the Securities and Exchange Commission takes effect. For rated securities, even private placements, public disclosure of results from third-party due diligence reviews will be required before a deal is priced. Industry analysts suggest that the rule will prompt a number of changes in the market. “Many in-scope third-party due diligence services will have to be completed...
Fitch Ratings this week put out a new report detailing the latest updates to its criteria for monitoring U.S. residential MBS for possible ratings changes and to analyze re-securitizations of real estate mortgage investment conduit deals. Among the most significant revisions is a loss severity adjustment for newly-issued re-REMIC transactions. Fitch will adjust the model-projected loss severity assumption for pools backing newly issued re-REMIC transactions by as much as 10 percent to account for differences between model projections and recently observed loss severity trends, according to the report. Fitch’s RMBS loan loss model “assumes...
Morningstar Credit Ratings may increase its presence in the residential MBS market after rating its first re-securitization last week and revising its rating criteria for new non-agency MBS. The push follows Morningstar’s initial effort to rate non-agency MBS in 2012, which didn’t generate any business. The company has rated commercial MBS and single-family rental securities. Last week, the rating service published...
Servicing on four non-agency mortgage-backed securities will be transferred from Ocwen Financial to Select Portfolio Servicing, according to Moody’s Investors Service. Investors in the MBS voted to transfer servicing on the 3,490 mortgages in the deals. The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Ocwen and potentially other servicers regarding the use of collection agents. In a quarterly report filed last week, Ocwen said it received a letter from ... [Includes five briefs]
A unique stop-advance feature included in the jumbo MBS issued by Redwood Trust late last week was viewed favorably by investors, according to officials at the real estate investment trust. “We are pleased not only with the pricing execution on this transaction, but also with the level and depth of AAA investor interest,” Marty Hughes, Redwood’s CEO, said this week. The $356.45 million Sequoia Mortgage Trust 2015-2 included...
New capital requirements for private mortgage insurers are a positive for the industry and should not cause a big change in MI premiums, high loan-to-value prepayments or net issuance of conventional MBS, according to a new analysis from Barclays Research. The reason for analysts’ optimism is that the effective rate for conventional conforming mortgages with private MI has been more attractive than on an FHA loan for borrowers with FICO scores above 700 and original LTVs of 80-95 percent. The opposite has been true for borrowers with low FICO scores. Consequently, issuance of conventional loans over the past year has largely favored...