The four major banks reclassified $6.0 billion in home-equity loans to nonperforming status this month due to guidance from federal regulators. While the holdings have been seen as an impediment to loss mitigation efforts, the banks said the accounting change was essentially cosmetic. Bank of America classified $4.36 billion in HELs as nonperforming as of the end of the first quarter of 2012, up from $2.45 billion at the end of 2011. The increase was due to ...
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Invesco liquidated its fund in the Public-Private Investment Program this month, earning a strong 18.2 percent cumulative net internal rate of return on $2.3 billion in capital. The PPIP program has resuscitated the private-label mortgage-backed securities market and, at least in our case, resulted in a handsome profit to the Treasury Department, said Wilbur Ross, chairman of the Investment Committee of the fund and chairman and CEO of WL Ross & Co. We are proud to have participated in it. Among the seven non-agency public-private investment funds that were participating in the PPIP ... [Includes one data chart]
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Repurchase requests on mortgages in non-agency mortgage-backed securities increased for major banks during the first quarter of 2012 compared with the end of 2011, according to a new analysis by Inside Nonconforming Markets. However, the lenders have challenged the vast majority of the claims and a significant court decision appears to be heading toward ...
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Facing a deadline set by the Dodd-Frank Act for the beginning of 2013, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is working on an ability-to-repay rule to define qualified mortgages. While industry participants have warned that few non-QMs will be originated, Raj Date, deputy director of the CFPB, said the regulator hopes to ensure that prudent loans will benefit from sufficient investor appetite and a competitive market. We want to avoid any inappropriate disincentive that would prevent lenders from making ...
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Continuing financial problems at Ally Financials Residential Capital have prompted speculation among industry analysts that Ally will agree to sell at least a portion of ResCaps $10.9 billion legacy portfolio within the next two months. Nationstar Mortgage has been mentioned as a front-runner to acquire ResCaps non-agency mortgage servicing rights, although other servicers have also considered the acquisition. In light of ResCaps liquidity and capital needs combined with volatile conditions in the marketplace, there is substantial doubt about ...
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The company formerly known as Option One reached a $28.2 million settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission this week regarding issuance of subprime mortgage-backed securities in early 2007. The SEC said Option Ones MBS operated as a fraud or deceit against non-agency MBS investors. The offering documents misled investors about Option Ones precarious financial condition and, hence, its inability to fulfill its obligations on its own to repurchase ...
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Regulatory scrutiny of lender-placed insurance is increasing, but non-agency servicers claim that they are compliant with existing and impending regulations for such insurance coverage. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is focusing on lender-placed insurance, provisions were also included in the recent $25.0 billion servicing settlement, Fannie Mae recently updated its policies and a number of state investigations are underway. There appear to be a number of very significant problems with ...
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Short sales on mortgages included in non-agency mortgage-backed securities have increased sharply in the past year, as a percentage of total distress property dispositions, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank Securities. The loss mitigation technique is seen as beneficial for borrowers, portfolio servicers and non-agency MBS investors, especially compared with foreclosure costs and timelines. Short sales typically result in faster resolution and significantly higher principal recovery, the analysts said. Short sales accounted for about ...
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DBRS this week said seven firms are approved to provide third-party due diligence on non-agency mortgage-backed securities rated by the company. The companies are Allonhill, American Mortgage Consultants, Clayton, Digital Risk, Opus, RMG and R.R. Donnelley. Meanwhile, CoreLogic announced last week that Standard & Poors has approved the company as a third-party due diligence provider for non-agency MBS ... [Includes four briefs]
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