Agency issuance of single-family MBS declined modestly in July, according to a new analysis by Inside MBS & ABS, with most of the decline coming in Freddie Macs business. The three government MBS agencies issued a total of $144.26 billion in single-family MBS last month, down 2.5 percent from Junes level. It was the lowest monthly production level so far in 2013, and issuance has generally drifted lower since peaking in January. July did push the year-to-date total for 2013 over the $1 trillion mark, up 17.9 percent from the first seven months of last year. The biggest shift was...[Includes one data chart]
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The Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission filed similar lawsuits this week against Bank of America regarding an $855.67 million non-agency jumbo MBS issued in January 2008. The lawsuits claim that BofA failed to disclose key facts regarding one of the last jumbo deals to be issued before the securitization market essentially closed in 2008. BofA counters that the securities were sold to sophisticated investors that had ample access to the underlying data. BofA was the issuer of the security in question Banc of America Mortgage 2008-A Trust as well as the originator, servicer, sponsor and depositor, and affiliated entities managed the transaction. The regulators allege...
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. would be prohibited from repudiating covered bonds when resolving a failed banking institution under the provisions of a controversial housing reform bill put together by the Republican leadership of the House Financial Services Committee and passed out of committee last week. That prohibition would go a long way toward resolving the long-standing hurdles that have thwarted development of a covered bond market in the United States. But it also amps up the level of controversy associated with H.R. 2767, the Protecting American Taxpayers and Homeowners Act of 2013, introduced by Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-TX, and Rep. Scott Garrett, R-NJ, the architect of a covered bonds bill introduced in the 112th Congress. The relevant provisions in the PATH Act are...
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The Federal Housing Finance Agency, after months of interviewing executive search firms, has hired the Washington-based Spencer Stuart to find a chief executive to man the helm of the common securitization platform project being developed by the two government-sponsored enterprises. According to sources familiar with the regulators plans, the starting salary for the job is in the range of $450,000, plus benefits. Sources say FHFA has handed...
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Some servicers have retroactively applied losses to non-agency MBS from principal forbearance completed long ago even after suggesting that such losses were unlikely. Analysts warn that further losses are likely, at the expense of investors in the senior tranches of non-agency MBS. In May, some 170 non-agency MBS serviced by Ocwen Financial took combined losses of more than $1.0 billion due to accounting for principal forbearance that occurred before July 2012. The retroactive losses should have been reported at the time of the loan modification, according to guidelines for the Home Affordable Modification Program. The losses were included in remittance reports for May after servicing on the deals transferred from Homeward Residential to Ocwen. Later, 231 non-agency MBS serviced by Nationstar Mortgage took...
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac this week reported a combined $15.1 billion in net income during the second quarter of 2013, as the two government-sponsored enterprises came closer to having paid the government as much in dividends as they have taken in bailout funds. Fannie reported $10.1 billion in net income, the companys sixth consecutive quarterly profit. During the first quarter, Fannie posted $58.7 billion in net income, boosted by its release of $50.6 billion in deferred tax assets. Under the revised conservatorship arrangement, any GSE net worth exceeding $3.0 billion is forked...
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