Real estate investment trust Walter Investment Management Corp. announced late last week its closing of a $102 million private placement of non-agency MBS. The purpose of the transaction is to help pay for Green Tree Credit Solutions, which Walter Investment acquired in March for $1.065 billion. Green Tree carries a $37 billion servicing portfolio, mostly for other investors, according to Inside Nonconforming Markets, an affiliated newsletter. The notes were issued by WIMC 2011-1, which is a recently-formed statutory trust sponsored by Walter Investment. As we near our anticipated early third quarter completion of...
Although the dollar volume of MBS and ABS deals rated by Standard & Poors in the first quarter was down from the same period in 2010, the company ranked as the top rating service in both markets, according to a new analysis by Inside MBS & ABS. S&P rated $5.80 billion of non-agency MBS during the first quarter, down 61 percent from its volume in early 2010. But that amounted to 66 percent of total issuance in the market more than any of its competitors. Overall non-agency MBS issuance was down 50 percent from year-ago levels. Moodys Investor Services ranked second with $4.5 billion in rated MBS, just over half of the market in... [Includes one data chart]
It was a bad litigation week for MBS issuers after a federal regulator and a federal judge filed lawsuits and certified a class action, respectively, on behalf of institutional investors that lost billions of dollars when the collateral underlying the securities dropped in value. On June 20, the National Credit Union Administration, acting as liquidating agent for five failed credit unions, filed lawsuits against JPMorgan Securities and RBS Securities for allegedly misrepresenting the risks of MBS investments and systematically disregarding underwriting guidelines. The NCUA is seeking to recover more than $800 billion in MBS losses that led to...
Mortgage servicers are being squeezed by inadequate compensation, intense scrutiny and a surge of new regulation, but Fannie Mae and the Treasury Department say they are trying to even the score. Servicers no longer see their job as financially rewarding and have been leaving their positions accordingly, claimed Diane Pendley, managing director of Fitch Ratings, during a panel session at this weeks annual meeting of the American Securitization Forum. Were seeing them fighting theyre coming out swinging, just really to get some balance, echoed Gwen Muse-Evans, vice president and chief risk officer at Fannie Mae. Theres definitely a perception that...
The problems of high defaults and softening asset prices that have afflicted the housing market have so far not affected other consumer credit products, according to experts at the American Securitization Forums annual meeting in Washington, DC, this week. The market conditions are actually quite good, said Mary Kane, head of global securitized products research at Citi Global Markets. Were pricing a lot of auto asset-backed securities, and a lot of the autos that are produced in this country are being financed in this market. Its extremely critical that were able to ...
A bill that would create a legislative framework for a covered bond market in the U.S., as well as a potential competitor for the Federal Home Loan Bank system, cleared committee this week following some fine-tuning by its sponsors and is headed to the full House for consideration.The House Financial Services Committee voted 44-7 in favor of H.R. 940, the U.S. Covered Bond Act of 2011.
The proposed rule on risk retention for MBS and ABS needs to be re-drafted and published again for another round of public comment because many definitions are unclear and, as it stands now, the proposal is a viable threat to the securitization market, according to industry groups. Although federal regulators recently extended the comment period on the proposal, both the Se-curities Industry and Financial Markets Association and the American Securitization Forum submitted detailed critiques of the plan late last week. SIFMA has described...
Ginnie Mae has raised the servicing fee compensation for its Home Equity Conversion Mortgage-Backed Securities (HMBS) program. Currently issuers receive either a flat 6-to-75 basis points monthly servicing fee or a 25-75 bps servicing fee based on a portion of the mortgage interest rate. Effective for HMBS with an issue date on or after July 1, 2011, issuers must select a servicing fee margin of at least 36 bps and not exceeding ...
Although federal regulators this week gave the industry more time to comment on their controversial proposal on risk retention in non-agency MBS and ABS transactions, some industry experts have already suggested that the concept fails to address its fundamental purpose of strengthening deal quality by aligning the interests of securitizers and investors. Risk retention is an intellectually appealing idea, but its not clear that it provides...
Bank executives expect it will be a tall order for their firms to address the various tax implications of the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as the Basel III liquidity standards, particularly with regard to securitizations, according to a recent survey by audit, tax and advisory firm KPMG. KPMG reported that 48 percent of respondents said their firms were still trying to figure out the tax implications of Dodd-Frank and Basel III, while 49 percent said...