“It’s not a money problem, there’s 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. Garrett’s “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 ...
Wall Street has unveiled policy proposals calling for premium and guaranty fee adjustments and reduced loan limits for FHA and the government-sponsored enterprises to jump start the return of private capital to the U.S. housing market. The American Securitization Forum said the current level of government activity in the mortgage market is neither sustainable nor advisable. The government, through FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, directly or indirectly guarantees 90 to 95 percent of new mortgage originations in the country, the trade association said. While everyone agrees the government’s role in housing should be reduced over the long term, there is ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has announced plans to consolidate multifamily hubs nationwide and close a number of its smaller field offices. The plan would result in an estimated $61.9 million in annual costs savings for HUD after completion and affect approximately 900 of the department’s 9,300 employees. No employee will be laid off as a result of the restructuring, according to HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. Donovan said the changes are part of a broader, long-term effort that will allow HUD to continue to deliver high-quality services by adapting modern best practices. The decision to ...
The Treasury Department strongly defended the Home Affordable Modification Program this week after criticism and calls for changes from the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program. The Obama administration is also considering extending HAMP, which is currently set to expire at the end of this year. “Data show that the majority of homeowners who receive assistance from HAMP have a high likelihood of long-term success to avoid foreclosure, and that HAMP modifications continue to outperform private industry modifications,” said Andrea Risotto, Treasury’s spokesperson for HAMP. She was responding...
“The private-label market is showing new signs of life,” according to Standard & Poor’s, which predicted that banks are likely to increase their securitization of jumbo mortgages. In a report released late last week, S&P projected $14 billion in non-agency jumbo MBS in 2013. Redwood alone set a goal of issuing $7 billion in non-agency MBS this year and is on pace to exceed that volume, helped by a pending $425 million deal, its sixth of the year. PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust is also aiming to issue a non-agency jumbo MBS in the Redwood mold in the third quarter of 2013. JPMorgan Chase and EverBank Financial issued...[Includes one data chart]
Many people in the mortgage lending and securitization sectors thought the controversial eminent domain plan pushed by Mortgage Resolution Partners was graveyard dead after suffering a few high-profile defeats in various locales throughout the country. They were wrong. Now, a number of interested industry parties are back on the defensive, trying to convince city officials in Richmond, CA, to abandon a new advisory arrangement with MRP and to discourage local government representatives in North Las Vegas, NV, to not reach a similar agreement with the firm. In both instances, the plan being advanced by MRP would involve...
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners recently proposed changes to modeling values of insurance company holdings of non-agency MBS and commercial MBS. The proposal could increase loss forecasts and prompt some sales of the securities, according to analysts. The NAIC proposed using the Treasury strip curve as the discount rate in determining the net-present value of expected loss for modeled securities, as opposed to using each security’s coupon rate to determine expected losses. The standard-setting group governed by state insurance regulators noted that the Treasury strip curve is a risk-free curve. “Using a consistent risk-free rate for all modeled securities in calculating the expected loss reflects...
Securitization of income-property mortgages jumped 23.0 percent from already strong levels during the first three months of 2013, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS market analysis. A total of $47.61 billion of commercial MBS were issued during the first quarter, including a variety of non-agency deals as well as multifamily MBS issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae. That was the strongest level since structured finance markets tanked in 2008. The previous post-crash high was...[Includes one data chart]