Six months back, CoreLogic was bullish on the outlook for due-diligence work tied to jumbo securitizations. But earlier this month, the publicly-traded mortgage vendor shuttered its due-diligence unit, giving layoff notices to almost 70 workers. Another 40 or so full-timers will likely lose their positions in the next few months as the division winds down. Although the firm declined to discuss the reasons behind the pullout, competitors say the anticipated boom in jumbo securitizations hit a brick wall in the spring when rates spiked and investors began to shy away from the AAA pieces of those securities. In other words, the sour short-term outlook for due-diligence firms scouring for work on non-agency loans is resulting...
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac picked the low-hanging fruit first and sold large chunks of their most liquid less-liquid assets during the third quarter of 2013 as the government-sponsored enterprises continued to shift their business away from retained investments. The GSEs reduced their combined holdings of commercial MBS by 32.1 percent during the third quarter, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis of their retained portfolios. The Federal Housing Finance Agency has directed the two companies to accelerate their portfolio trimming by focusing on less-liquid assets other than their own MBS. The commercial MBS market has been...[Includes one data chart]
Foreclosure timelines and servicers emphasis on loss mitigation has dampened improvements to loss severities on non-agency MBS, according to Fitch Ratings. The rating service said this week that while national average home prices have increased by 14 percent in the past year, loss severities on liquidated properties in non-agency MBS have improved by only 5 percent. In the third quarter of 2013, it took an average of 32 months to liquidate a mortgage included in a non-agency MBS, according to Fitch, more than twice as long as average liquidation timelines in 2008. Longer timelines translate...
A Manhattan district court judge dismissed a lawsuit against Bank of America in which shareholders accused the bank of hiding a $10 billion fraud case, saying the defendant and several of its top executives were not obliged to reveal the lawsuit in advance to shareholders. Filed in 2011, the shareholders alleged that CEO Brian Moynihan and other BofA executives knew as early as February 2011 that insurer AIG intended to sue BofA in connection with $28 billion of MBS it bought from the bank and its Countrywide and Merrill Lynch acquisitions. According to the shareholders, the bank knew...
Citigroup Global Markets Realty last week issued the first jumbo mortgage-backed security in more than a month and Redwood Trust is preparing a deal for next week. However, industry participants suggest that jumbo MBS issuance will remain limited through at least early 2014 due to a lack of demand from investors and strong portfolio appetite jumbos among from big banks. Citis $209.95 million jumbo MBS, its first in the new era of the non-agency market, wasnt met with strong demand, according to ...
The weak market for jumbo mortgage-backed securities has prompted Redwood Trust to look into other activities beyond a focus on jumbo mortgages. The real estate investment trust started aggregating agency mortgages in October. Martin Hughes, Redwoods CEO, said the conforming-mortgage activity allows Redwood to create mortgage-servicing rights to hold as investments and potentially participate in risk-sharing activities with the GSEs at the originator level. This market opportunity is many times ...
Real estate investment trusts working to build their jumbo mortgage-backed security operations note that while the environment is currently challenging, they are optimistic about the long term. What were trying to do is have an originator network in place so that we can take advantage of the opportunities, said Bill Roth, CIO of Two Harbors Investment. And it may not be in prime jumbo in the short run. The REIT issued a $434.17 million jumbo MBS in August, its first. Two Harbors said it ...
With qualified-mortgage underwriting requirements set to take effect Jan. 10, the rating services are beginning to detail the role QM status will play in ratings for non-agency mortgage-backed securities. Fitch Ratings appears to be the furthest along in adjusting its ratings process to account for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus ability-to-repay rule and QM standards. The rating service this week released its initial perspective for rating non-agency MBS with loans originated in a QM world ...
While many lenders say they intend to stick to originating safe-harbor qualified mortgages, some are taking a long look at the non-QM market or even building their strategy on it. Attorneys speaking at the recent annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers Association said rigorous underwriting, documentation and a solid track-record are prerequisites to competing safely in the non-QM space. And though the challenges are substantial, so are the potential rewards. A number of lenders are likely to test the water ...
Servicing of subprime mortgages almost appears to be on autopilot as performance improves and the amount of mortgages outstanding dwindles. Servicers that once competed to handle subprime mortgages have focused their pursuits on other assets, including agency mortgages and other unspecified financial services sectors. An estimated $418.0 billion of subprime mortgages were outstanding as of the end of the third quarter of 2013, according to a ranking by Inside Nonconforming Markets ... [Includes one data chart]