Mortgage-industry veteran John Robbins has launched a new mortgage cooperative that plans to bundle mortgages for sale into the secondary market and eventually form a conduit through which it hopes to securitize non-QM loans. Were going after best execution, Robbins told Inside MBS & ABS. Of course, the venture aptly titled The Mortgage Collaborative is...
Stakeholders continued to express concern over certain provisions in a draft model law that would be used as an overlay to, rather than a replacement of, existing state foreclosure laws. While many provisions of the current draft of the Home Foreclosure Procedures Act are right on track, several other provisions would raise the cost of lender compliance and make the origination and servicing of residential mortgages more difficult, warned stakeholders. Sensible reform of the foreclosure process should not include...
Although some regulators have anxiety problems with nonbank servicers, Fannie Mae apparently does not. Meanwhile, a large mortgage vendor M&A deal could be revealed late Friday.
The SEC was poised to issue a final rule with loan-level disclosure requirements for non-agency MBS earlier this month. The SFIG said it expects the SEC will issue a final rule on the so-called Regulation AB2 in the near future.
Lenders are more cautious in the post-subprime era and they no longer practice risk layering on loans to borrowers with less-than-stellar credit histories as they did in the past.
So much has been said in recent days about a possible yet cautious return to subprime mortgage lending as lenders lowered their credit-score requirements for FHA mortgages and other agency loans with certain limitations. Industry participants, however, say todays subprime is a misnomer and certainly not the same toxic subprime mortgage product that pushed the U.S. financial system to the brink of collapse. Lenders are more cautious in the post-subprime era and they no longer practice risk layering on loans to borrowers with less-than-stellar credit histories as they did in the past, industry observers say. In the past, lenders combined risk layering with low credit scores, said Brian Chappelle, a mortgage industry consultant. Today, I would be shocked if any lender used Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or the FHA as a vehicle for traditional subprime because they would be ignoring the possibility of repurchase or indemnification. Lenders today are...
Two nonbanks among the top five servicers now control almost 9 percent of the residential receivables market. Should regulators be worried? Should the MBA?