Mortgage industry participants support a new proposed definition of subprime consumer loans for banks with more than $10.0 billion in assets. However, some raised concerns that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.s proposal could unnecessarily impact holdings of nontraditional mortgages. In March, the FDIC proposed a revised definition of higher-risk consumer, commercial and industrial loans and securities for the large bank pricing model, which determines deposit insurance rates. Instead of defining subprime loans based ...
Moodys Investors Service announced last week that it is reviewing $47.5 billion in outstanding non-agency mortgage-backed securities for possible rating action. In a change of pace, however, most of the securities are being reviewed for potential upgrades. A whopping 78.3 percent of the combined subprime, Alt A, option ARM and jumbo MBS in question could potentially be upgraded. The upgrade reviews are due to significant improvement in collateral performance and/or faster-than-expected pay-down on ...
Most major non-agency servicers met the June 1 deadline for the start of Tier 2 of the Home Affordable Modification Program, according to the Treasury Department. While overall HAMP performance has improved, some non-agency servicers have more improvements to make. HAMP Tier 2 was designed to help borrowers with debt-to-income ratios below 31 percent as well as those with rental properties. The Treasury this week revealed the HAMP Tier 2 progress for 18 servicers. Bank of America, Green Tree Servicing and ...
If investors in non-agency mortgage-backed securities had easy access to the addresses of mortgages included in non-agency MBS, the sectors market share would increase, according to a new proposal by the Reason Foundation, which promotes libertarian principles. Ignorance of the borrowers address and identity is a major disadvantage for the residential MBS investor or anyone trying to analyze residential MBS deals, according to Marc Joffe, a research associate at the Reason Foundation and Anthony Randazzo ...
BDO Consulting wa selected this week to serve as the primary professional firm to help oversee the recent $25.0 billion servicing settlement. More than 30 BDO professionals will work with the settlements monitor to oversee the settlement. BDO is a professional services firm providing assurance, tax, financial advisory and consulting services. The company has worked with large retail mortgage lenders and financial institutions, and conducted related assessments and investigations ... [Includes four briefs]
In a move intended to maintain the integrity of data that helps guide the decisions of MBS investors, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority last week fined Citigroup Global Markets $3.5 million for allegedly providing inaccurate mortgage performance information, supervisory failures and other violations in connection with subprime residential MBS. Citigroup posted data for its RMBS deals that it should have known was inaccurate; and even after they learned that the data was inaccurate, Citigroup did not correct the problem until years later, said Brad Bennett, FINRA executive vice president and...
Improved subprime performance and a lack of new originations have prompted major nonbank firms involved in subprime servicing to expand their portfolios with acquisitions of nonperforming agency mortgages. Ocwen Financial, Nationstar Mortgage and Walter Investment Management, among others, have all recently acquired large volumes of nonperforming agency mortgages. An estimated $525.0 billion in subprime mortgages were outstanding as of the end of the first quarter of 2012, according to an Inside Nonconforming Markets analysis ... [Includes one data chart]
There are a number of developments that are reflective of a more mature and fully functioning securitization market, Brett Nicholas, president of Redwood Trust, said last week. Among other issues, he noted the recent jumbo mortgage-backed security issuance by a subsidiary of Credit Suisse Group. Nicholas remarks at the JMP Securities research conference last week were some of the first by Redwood officials regarding competition on jumbo MBS issuance. Until the $741.94 million issuance by Credit Suisse ...
Residential Capitals bankruptcy filing last week was part of an effort to settle repurchase claims sought by non-agency mortgage-backed security investors. In conjunction with the bankruptcy, 17 institutional investors agreed to an $8.7 billion claim that will need approval by the court and is unsecured, suggesting that the final settlement payout could be much lower. ResCap is a subsidiary of Ally Financial. Michael Carpenter, CEO of Ally, said the bankruptcy gives Ally further distance from very large rep and warrant claims ...
While non-agency mortgage-backed security investors did not file a formal challenge to the $25.0 billion servicing settlement, they remain concerned with the implementation of principal forgiveness loan modifications. The latest qualms were raised last week in a letter to Shaun Donovan, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, from Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-OH, and Bob Corker, R-TN. Because any settlement could dramatically affect [pension funds and retirement funds], their managers should ...