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]
Bank of America and MBIA announced a settlement this week of a long-running dispute regarding representations and warranties on mortgages securitized by Countrywide Financial. The settlement benefits non-agency MBS wrapped by MBIA, according to industry analysts. The settlement applies to all outstanding rep and warrant claims and all other claims between the bank and bond guarantor. BofA agreed to pay MBIA approximately $1.6 billion in cash and remit to MBIA all of the outstanding notes in the firm that BofA acquired in December. BofA also will terminate...
Standard & Poors, along with Moodys Investors Service, last week settled a lawsuit involving their pre-financial crisis securities ratings before it got to a jury trial, but S&P suffered a setback with another ratings challenge lawsuit brought by Connecticut state officials. Experts predict a pickup in MBS litigation ahead of pending filing deadlines for legal challenges. S&P and Moodys reached the confidential settlement with a group of 14 plantiffs led by Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and King County, WA. Abu Dhabi and the over investors filed suit in 2008 and 2009 in Manhattan federal court claiming that the defendants misled them by allegedly inflating ratings on two structured investment vehicles they purchased. By settling the investors lawsuit, which claimed $638 million in losses, S&P and Moodys were able...
Issuance of securities backed by servicer advance receivables has increased significantly recently and is expected to continue to grow, fueled by nonbank servicers and demand from investors. However, analysts at Standard & Poors warn that servicers are increasing their use of unconventional features and product types, which could increase risks for investors. S&P rated $7.8 billion in servicer advance securities from the second quarter of 2012 through the end of the first quarter of 2013, up from $7.7 billion from the two-year period ending in the first quarter of 2012. S&P said issuance is expected to increase as more and more servicing assets trade hands and servicers use securitization to fund their collateral acquisitions. Recent issuance has been driven...
Federal regulators said they will collectively work with Congress to reduce the agency market share of MBS issuance. The members of the Financial Stability Oversight Council said completion of the qualified-residential mortgage rule will also help increase non-agency activity. The council recommends that the Treasury Department, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Federal Housing Finance Agency continue to work with Congress and other stakeholders to develop and implement a broad plan to reform the housing finance system, the FSOC said in its 2013 annual report, released late last week. Tobias Adrian, a vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and contributor to the report, said...
Issuance of non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities continues to increase along with the number of issuers participating in the market. Issuers acknowledge that spreads on AAA non-agency MBS are widening, causing margins to decline, but they suggest that a significant increase in non-agency MBS production will help tighten spreads, benefitting issuers. Credit Suisse issued its third non-agency jumbo MBS of the year this week. The $393.77 million deal received AAA ratings from DBRS and ...
While originations included in non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities in recent years have been of high-quality, significant differences exist among originators, according to a new analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. The average credit score on mortgages included in Redwood Trusts non-agency jumbo MBS from 2011 through the first quarter of this year was 771.2, largely driven by First Republic Bank, which accounted for 47.0 percent of originations securitized by Redwood ... [Includes two data charts]
Its not a money problem, theres plenty of money out there, Martin Hughes, president and CEO of Redwood Trust, said last week at a hearing by the House Financial Services Committee. The difficulty now is the uncertainty of investors that need to be waved back into the water. Hughes said non-agency mortgage-backed security issuers need to make adjustments for investors. I believe we need to first address investors demands for better risk mitigation, transparency, and alignment of interests ...
The American Securitization Forum proposed a number of regulatory and legislative changes last week to increase non-agency activity. The proposed changes were prompted by recent meetings with members of Congress. The proposals can be implemented in the short term to expedite the process of bringing private capital back to the mortgage market by incrementally reducing the government-guaranteed market well below the current 90 percent share, the ASF said. The ASF called for reform of the ...
A bipartisan group of members of the House Financial Services Committee is coming to agreement on portions of pending legislation to increase non-agency activity. Rep. Scott Garrett, R-NJ, is set to introduce legislation shortly that has some support from Rep. Maxine Waters, D-CA, the ranking Democrat on the committee. Garretts Private Mortgage Market Investment Act was approved on a party-line vote by the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises ...