It would be wholly inappropriate for the Treasury Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency to permit Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to pursue a potential role in a new yet-to-be-launched $2 billion bond program, according to the top Republican members of the House Financial Services Committee.In an effort to shut down thoughts of potential expansion of the two government-sponsored enterprises into a new line of business, Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus, R-AL, Vice Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-TX, and four of the committees subcommittee chairman dispatched a letter last week to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco to express their concern.
Another bipartisan bill to overhaul the federal mortgage finance system introduced by two House members this week would eliminate but effectively merge Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, replacing the two GSEs with a secondary market facility that would issue and guarantee mortgage-backed securities.The bill, H.R. 2413, the Secondary Market Facility for Residential Mortgages Act of 2011, would create a single entity, owned by the federal government, that would issue MBS. The MBS would have an explicit government guarantee paid for by a guarantee fee set by the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
There have been only a few non-agency MBS securitizations in 2011, and the remainder of the year is not expected to be any more fruitful, according to panelists at the American Securitization Forum annual conference held last week in Washington, DC. Fitch Ratings has rated only one RMBS transaction, said Douglas Murray, group managing director at Fitch Ratings, but there have been...
Lawmakers on the House Financial Services Committee this week approved by a wide bipartisan margin a bill that would create the legislative framework for a covered bond market in the U.S., but not before some haggling regarding the role of the federal regulators. The committee voted 44-7 in favor of H.R. 940, the U.S. Covered Bond Act of 2011, clearing the way for the bills consideration by the full House of Representatives. Rep. Scott Garrett, R-NJ, chairman of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises, said H.R. 940 sets up legal certainty that is a core element of...
The challenges confronting the recovery of the non-agency MBS market are many, but legacy issues, such as representations and warranties, are the cause of huge frustration in the industry, according to panelists at the American Securitization Forum this week. Some of these legacy issues have very far-reaching tentacles, observed Mani Sabapathi, principal at Prudential Fixed Income. The housing finance world has been bracing for the coming risk-retention rule with great apprehension, he said, raising the possibility that reps and warrants could be included as a part of it. I think it can be an important aspect to the extent that if you have these loans that dont meet...
The securitization industry is largely supportive of fails-charge recommendations by the Treasury Markets Practice Group to help reduce fails in the agency debt securities and agency MBS markets, but did offer a number of constructive considerations for the group to review. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association told the TMPG, an advisory group of market representatives sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, that its members share concerns about elevated levels of settlement fails in MBS markets, which the TMPG is trying to address in the recommendations it released in late April. SIFMA members agree that...
The governments top securities industry regulator rejected some of the pushback against the huge volume of new regulations for the MBS and ABS market, while reporting that officials are working to address some major concerns as they finalize the rules. Efforts to implement the reforms that would bring investors back to the markets are being met with strong and what I believe to be short-sighted resistance, said Mary Schapiro, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, during a speech at this weeks American Securitization Forum annual meeting. In the aftermath of the crisis, would-be investors are waiting for needed reforms in...
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...