For years, Union Bank of San Francisco has made a name for itself as a top-ranked portfolio lender of jumbo mortgages but all that could soon change. No, Union Bank isnt leaving the space not by a long shot but the $94 billion asset commercial bank is in the midst of making a major push into conventional lending where its footprint has been quite small. Its...
Nationwide, mortgage originations fell by 4.8 percent during the first quarter of 2013, but a lot of that decline took place at the industrys biggest lender, Wells Fargo, according to a new market analysis and ranking by Inside Mortgage Finance. Mortgage originations totaled an estimated $500.0 billion during the first three months of the year, down from $525.0 billion during the fourth quarter of 2012. It still ranked as the fourth strongest quarter in new loan production since the mortgage market tanked back in 2008, and originations in early 2013 were up 19.0 percent from the same period last year. But most of the indicators are...[Includes two data charts]
Bank of America earlier this year finally settled its long-running dispute with Fannie Mae over buyback demands, an agreement that may help open a window to the government-sponsored enterprise that has been limited to refinance loans. During the first quarter of 2013, BofA sold $6.52 billion of mortgages to Fannie all of them refinance loans. The company hasnt sold purchase-money mortgages to the GSE since early 2012, when the two broke off new transactions that didnt involve refinancing of existing Fannie loans serviced by the bank. In fact, BofA only sold...
It stands to reason that with non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security issuance reviving to some degree, prices paid in the secondary market for jumbo whole loans are rising. Traders and jumbo consultants who play in the sector tell Inside Nonconforming Markets that prices for quality product are now above par, at 103. As recently as last fall, prices were in the 101 and 102 range, depending on the lender and the underlying collateral. The market for whole loans is alive and well for ...
Non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities issued by Redwood Trust in 2010 and 2011 have been subject to scrutiny by the Securities and Exchange Commission in recent months. The SEC looked into Regulation AB compliance issues on the deals, largely seeking increased disclosures. The SECs inquiries generally related to deal participants other than Redwood. And in some cases, the SEC sought disclosures related to actions beyond the firms participation in non-agency MBS issuance ...
California Capital Real Estate Advisers of Pasadena, CA, could quadruple its hard-money production volume this year, according to Mark Mozilo, a principal in the firm. The rehab business is going crazy here, Mozilo said. He estimated that 80 percent of CALCAPs business is in the rehabilitation category. Theres a lot of fix-it-up and flip it activity, he said. Although the quadruple estimate sounds impressive, the firms overall production volume is tiny compared to conventional lenders ...
Performance on home-equity loans is improving, with industry participants optimistic about future performance. Bank and thrift holdings of HELs continue to decline, based on a new ranking and analysis from the Inside Mortgage Finance Bank Mortgage Database. Delinquencies on HELs fell to 4.03 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012 from 4.20 percent the previous quarter, according to the American Bankers Association. We saw the first inkling of improvement for that sector, said ... [Includes one data chart]
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week proposed changes to a final rule issued in January to remove an inadvertent gap in protections for borrowers receiving higher-priced mortgages and tweak the definitions of rural and underserved areas. The proposed changes relate to a final rule on escrow requirements for higher-priced mortgage loans. Lenders are currently required to establish escrow accounts for certain HPMLs for a minimum of one year. The CFPBs final rule generally ...
A former managing director and global head of structured credit in the investment banking division of Credit Suisse Group pled guilty last week to a scheme to hide losses on non-agency mortgage-backed securities. Kareem Serageldin faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a maximum fine of the greater of $250,000 or twice the gross gain or loss from the offense. The Department of Justice had charged Serageldin with fraudulently inflating the prices of non-agency MBS and ... [Includes four briefs]
Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan this week reiterated his agencys request for additional legislative authority to regulate the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program by mortgagee letter so that much-needed changes can be implemented immediately. Rather than go through the tedious legislative process of amending HECM legislation to improve the program and reduce HECM losses, expanding HUDs authority would enable the department to undertake immediate reforms, such as restricting lump sum payments, requiring financial assessments of HECM applicants and requiring borrowers to ...