The National Credit Union Administration filed a lawsuit this week against Barclays Capital alleging misrepresentations in the sale of non-agency mortgage-backed securities to credit unions that subsequently failed. The NCUA said U.S. Central Federal Credit Union and Western Corporate Federal Credit Union paid more than $555 million for the non-agency MBS in question. Debbie Matz, chairman of the NCUA Board, said Barclays issued faulty disclosures on non-agency MBS it underwrote ... [Includes two briefs]
A trio of industry trade groups is asking a federal appeals court to uphold a nearly century-old law that grants federal-court jurisdiction to civil lawsuits against any U.S. corporation in which claims arise from international banking or banking transactions in a U.S. territory. Last week, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, New York Bankers Association and California Bankers Association filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals on behalf of Bank of America in its MBS lawsuit with American International Group. AIG filed...
Originations of non-agency jumbo mortgages through two quarters in 2012 were 35.8 percent above the pace set in 2011, according to affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance. Almost all of the major jumbo lenders are increasing production and the vast majority of originations continue to be held in portfolio. An estimated $37.0 billion in non-agency jumbos were originated during the second quarter of 2012, up 5.7 percent from the previous quarter and up 60.9 percent from the ... [Includes one data chart]
Redwood Trust is set to issue its fourth non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed security of the year, according to presale reports released this week. The $313.22 million non-agency jumbo MBS includes only slight changes to improve on securities previously issued by the real estate investment trust. Sequoia Mortgage Trust 2012-4 is set to receive triple-A ratings from Fitch Ratings, Kroll Bond Rating Agency and Moodys Investors Service, with 7.30 percent credit enhancement on the highest-rated ... [Includes one data chart]
The eminent domain proposal from Mortgage Resolution Partners will either painlessly help thousands of non-agency borrowers or severely harm the non-agency market, according to industry participants. The newly expanded plan could even hinder efforts to revive the non-agency market going forward, according to MRPs opponents. Eminent domain is an important method for mitigating losses to investors, Graham Williams, CEO of MRP, said in a comment letter last week to the Federal Housing Finance Agency ...
A California-based lender that had a $400,000 minimum loan amount policy agreed to a settlement with the Department of Justice this week regarding alleged discrimination. Luther Burbank Savings will spend $2.0 million as part of the settlement and is prohibited from implementing a $400,000 minimum loan amount policy. The lender denied the discrimination allegations, did not admit any wrongdoing as part of the settlement and claimed the loan amount policy was tied to its focus on nontraditional mortgages ...
Two Harbors Investment Corp. announced this week that it plans to contribute the real estate owned properties it started acquiring this year to a new affiliated company, Silver Bay Realty Trust. The new company is seeking up to $287.5 million from an initial public offering announced this week and plans to operate as a real estate investment trust. The move from Two Harbors, also a REIT, is somewhat abrupt as the company only started acquiring REO properties to offer for rent in the first quarter of 2012 ...
The Treasury Departments recent announcement on the next steps to wind down the government-sponsored enterprises will have little immediate impact on the non-agency market, according to industry analysts. The Treasury will require Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to contribute all future profits to the government, reduce their investment portfolios at a quicker pace and submit annual plans to reduce mortgage credit risk. [The changes] will help expedite the wind down of Fannie ... [Includes one chart]
A lawsuit filed last week by Bank of New York Mellon against WMC Mortgage and GE Mortgage Holdings is the latest sign that repurchase issues on non-agency mortgage-backed securities are increasing. After years of resistance, trustees are starting to act on behalf of non-agency MBS investors seeking repurchases. Three of the four major banks reported increases in non-agency repurchase requests in the second quarter of 2012 compared with the previous quarter, according to an analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets ...
The five servicers participating in the $25.0 billion national servicing settlement have taken vastly different approaches to loss mitigation, according to a report released this week by the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight. Short sales dominated early activity and Bank of America, the servicer with the largest obligations under the settlement, accounted for a small amount of initial loan modifications completed by the servicers. Combined, the five servicers granted non-agency borrowers ... [Includes one chart]