A decade after the nation’s subprime mortgage market came to a crashing halt, traditional Wall Street firms are now back in the game, offering repo lines and other forms of financing to a new breed of non-agency lender that plies its trade in the “expanded credit” mortgage sector.
Holdings of first-lien residential mortgages by banks and thrifts increased in the first quarter of 2018, according to a new ranking and analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. Banks and thrifts held $2.025 trillion of first-lien home loans as of the end of the first quarter, up 0.5 percent from December 2017 and up 4.8 percent from March of last year. Trends varied somewhat among the 10 largest holders of first liens, with some posting large gains on an ... [Includes one data chart]
Credit Suisse issued a large prime non-agency mortgage-backed security this week with an unprecedented lack of disclosure: the single lender that provided loans for the deal wasn’t identified in presale reports. Fitch Ratings and Morningstar Credit Ratings placed AAA ratings on the $1.60 billion CSMC 2018-J1 Trust. It is the second largest post-crisis non-agency MBS backed by new originations. All of the loans in the deal were “acquired from a single originator in a bulk purchase ...