Fannie Mae demonstrated measurable progress during 2011 while conditions at Freddie Mac neither worsened nor improved significantly but both GSEs have ample room for improvement, according to a report issued this week by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The FHFA’s fourth annual Report to Congress deemed the two GSEs “critical supervisory concerns” last year with “continuing credit losses” coming primarily from loans originated during the years 2005 to 2007. The report identified “key challenges facing each company, including the ongoing stress in the nation’s housing markets, the challenging economic environment and the uncertain future facing the enterprises,” noted the FHFA. “However, management and the boards were responsive throughout 2011 to FHFA’s findings and challenges and took appropriate steps to begin resolving identified issues.”
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should remain intact, albeit smaller, as a hedge against future market uncertainty and to ensure further destabilization does not occur, according to a white paper issued last week by the Community Mortgage Lenders of America. The CMLA, the first industry trade group to unambiguously endorse retaining the GSEs, made its recommendation in a letter sent to Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner as well as to senior Congressional Democrats and Republicans. “The CMLA believes that the housing industry and the public at large are best served through sensible and calculated reformation of the enterprises that reduces their footprint in the industry while at the same time allowing them to serve their historically critical functions,” said the letter.
A working paper authored by two Federal Reserve Bank of New York economists found that refinancing can be “fruitfully employed” as a tool for loss mitigation by investors and lenders. In their paper, “Payment Changes and Default Risk: The Impact of Refinancing on Expected Credit Losses,” Fed economists Joseph Tracy and Joshua Wright found that the relationship between borrowers’ monthly payments and future credit performance is important for the design of an initiative such as the Home Affordable Refinance Program. The authors used a competing risk model to estimate the sensitivity of default risk...
Although it has taken steps to mitigate risk related to advances and collateral at the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks, the Federal Housing Finance Agency needs to do more to strengthen its supervisory framework for the FHLBanks' risk management practices, according to a new report by the FHFA’s official watchdog. The FHFA Office of Inspector General found in an audit released late last week that the agency has not implemented a majority of its own examiners’ recommendations to effectively manage advances and collateral risks within the FHLBank system. “Although preliminary evidence suggests...
The Government Accountability Office has cited “opportunities for improvement” in the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s internal controls in a recent report, including a still pending recommendation to beef up the FHFA’s information security controls. Mandated by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, the GAO said its audit of the Finance Agency’s fiscal years 2011 and 2010 revealed that the FHFA had not fully implemented its information security program as per GAO’s recommendations in previous reports, resulting in “several new information systems vulnerabilities” over the last year.
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...
The government’s multi-billion dollar investment bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac allowed the two government-sponsored enterprises to avoid an insolvency that could have triggered the collapse of the U.S. housing finance system, concluded a new report by the official watchdog of the GSEs’ regulator. The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s Office of Inspector General’s report – “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – Where the Taxpayers’ Money Went” – noted that the U.S. Treasury had dropped some $185 billion into the two GSEs since early September 2008 through the end of last year. “The enterprises’ shareholders lost...
The Securities and Exchange Commission has given Royal Bank of Canada the green light to issue residential mortgage covered bonds registered in the U.S. The SEC granted permission through a no-action letter shortly after RBC submitted plans for a program through which covered bonds backed by U.S. home loans will be offered to U.S. investors. RBC is a “foreign private issuer” under U.S. securities laws and, as a Form S-3 issuer, has a registered shelf with the SEC through which it can offer multiple securities on an immediate, continuous or even on a delayed basis. Covered bonds are debt securities backed by cash...
The “scalability” of the nation’s 12 Federal Home Loan Banks as well as their demonstrated ability to access global markets could play a significant role in their favor as policymakers ponder the future of the FHLBank System in a post-Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac housing market, the FHLBanks’ chief regulator told bank directors and executives last week. During a speech at the annual Federal Home Loan Banks Directors Conference in Washington, DC, Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Edward DeMarco noted the banks already have strong relationships, including a cooperative ownership structure, with their nearly 8,000 front-line local lenders.