Freddie Mac is offering $1.0 billion of its non-agency MBS holdings for sale, according to a spokesman for the government-sponsored enterprise, part of efforts to meet requirements set by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Fannie Mae also plans asset sales of some sort, but wouldn’t commit to selling its non-agency MBS holdings. Freddie held $70.28 billion in non-agency MBS at the end of the first quarter of 2013 and Fannie held $31.22 billion. The GSEs purchased the non-agency MBS before 2009 and have allowed the holdings to run off ever since. The FHFA recently required...
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 don’t even begin the rating process until the major loan originators in a transaction clear the “gating” process, said Kathryn Kelbaugh, a senior analyst at Moody’s Investors Service, during a panel session at last week’s 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...
Shellpoint Partners received approval last week for a $2 billion shelf registration from the Securities and Exchange Commission, paving the way for the company to issue non-agency mortgage-backed securities. “Funding the shelf with substantial capacity shows our commitment to bringing urgently needed private capital back into the housing market,” said Saul Sanders, co-CEO of ShellPoint. “We intend to be a significant issuer of new issue residential MBS and help define the new market standards and ...
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 don’t 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 ...
Investors in subordinate tranches of recently issued non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities have seen strong returns on the investments. Real estate investment trusts have focused on the assets, which are likely to be subject to risk-retention requirements going forward. “We like the loan assets and the ability to diversify our funding in this manner where we don’t have a duration gap, there is no margin risk, and the assets and liabilities amortize and prepay at the same rate, eliminating the need for ...
Redwood Trust has recently put an increased emphasis on acquiring purchase mortgages. The loans have higher loan-to-value ratios than refinances included in Redwood’s non-agency mortgage-backed security issuance, a potential concern according to Kroll Bond Rating Agency. Redwood said it acquired $955 million in purchase mortgages from its correspondent lenders in the first quarter of 2013, up from $550 million the previous quarter. The purchase-mortgage share of Redwood’s acquisitions is also increasing ...
After years of holding onto investments in non-agency mortgage-backed securities even as prices declined significantly, the government-sponsored enterprises are preparing to sell some of their $101.5 billion in non-agency MBS holdings. Freddie Mac is offering $1.0 billion in non-agency MBS for sale with plans to unload as much as $5.0 billion this year, if pricing for the securities remains strong. A spokesman for the GSE said the sales are part of an effort to meet goals set by ... [Includes one data chart]
A significant increase in the non-agency sector’s share of mortgage finance could be completed with a revised infrastructure for non-agency mortgage-backed securities, according to Edward DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. He said the model wouldn’t need to rely on a government guaranty to attract funding to the mortgage market, but would look to standardization and rules for enforcing contracts. While many housing finance reform proposals have called for a re-creation of ...
Activity in the non-agency jumbo market could play a big role in determining how to reform the government-sponsored enterprises, according to industry analysts. While policymakers consider what to do with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, some are calling for a larger role for the jumbo market as a test for GSE reform. Mark Willis, a resident research fellow at New York University’s Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, said the Federal Housing Finance Agency should increase the GSEs’ guaranty fees for ...
Is Onity Group eyeing a sale? Perhaps. And why not? Servicing values are approaching a 25-year high.
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