Ginnie Mae’s efforts to clamp down on rapid refinance schemes and realign prepayment speeds with the conventional mortgage-backed securities market appear to be paying off. Securities analysts say the crackdown on issuers suspected of loan churning combined with increasing primary mortgage interest rates have reduced the prepayment-speed gap between conventional and Ginnie-backed collateral. Ginnie/Fannie Mae price swaps have improved greatly since Ginnie issued warnings to nine issuers in February to address churning in its MBS program and faster prepayments on loans backed by VA, said Kevin Cavin, head of mortgage strategy at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. Ginnie required the issuers to submit a plan to bring prepayment speeds in line with market peers. They were warned that failure to comply would result in temporary debarment from the agency’s multi-issuer pools and ...