Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are designing a securitization framework that will work for todays fully-guaranteed residential MBS as well as securities with a partial government guaranty or none at all, according to an update released this week by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Among the initiatives set for the government-sponsored enterprises by the FHFA is the development of a contractual and disclosure framework (CDF) designed to give MBS investors more clarity and confidence about what theyre buying. Along with the common securitization platform, the CDF project is a major component of the MBS architecture of the future that the GSEs are building. A lot of the CDF work involves...
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The fallout from last weeks trigger of the nuclear option by Senate Democrats, which is expected to lead to the confirmation of President Obamas choice to be the new director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has analysts worried about the possibility of expanded Home Affordable Refinance Program eligibility. The Senate voted to confirm most executive and judicial nominees by a simple majority vote, and it dramatically improves the prospects of Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC, to replace FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco. A career civil servant who has been the chief regulator of the government-sponsored enterprises for the past four years, DeMarco has resisted proposals to expand HARP and broaden the GSE loan-modification options to include principal write-downs. Expanding HARP has been...[Includes one data chart]
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Mortgages originated by brokers and correspondents, once a concern for MBS investors, have actually performed better in recent years than retail-originated loans, according to Moodys Investors Service. The rating service said risks from third-party originations will remain low if lenders continue to put an emphasis on retail-originated mortgages. Default rates on securitized mortgages have decreased significantly in recent years regardless of origination channel. However, Moodys noted that beginning in 2010, production from third-party originators started performing better than retail mortgages. From 2003 through 2009, third-party originations defaulted...
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Although the Federal Housing Finance Agency has said it wants more parity in the MBS guaranty fees paid by large and small lenders, observers say the playing field remains uneven. One trade group official, who spoke on the condition his name not be used, said as far as he can see there are still meaningful differences in what smaller lenders pay in g-fees compared to their larger competitors. He added...
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Commercial banks and savings institutions reached a record level of investment in non-mortgage ABS during the third quarter of 2013, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis and ranking. Banks and thrifts held a combined $173.12 billion of non-mortgage ABS as of the end of September, up 4.4 percent from the previous quarter. The industrys aggregate ABS portfolio was up 6.9 percent from the third quarter of last year. Banks and thrifts pushed...[Includes one data chart]
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Ginnie Mae is taking a go slow approach to merging its Ginnie I and Ginnie II MBS programs, noting in a new stakeholder letter that players in the market have voiced concerns about the logistics of how we get there, and in particular, what will become of the legacy Ginnie Mae I security. Ginnie officials declined to provide an update on the process this week. A spokeswoman issued a statement saying the agency is still studying the issue, adding that, We are currently evaluating what market participants want. Since 2010, Ginnie Mae II issuance has been increasingly outpacing...
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