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Residential servicing firms could reap rewards of up to $2,000 per year (per loan) under the White House's new initiative to help struggling homeowners. Under the "stability" portion of the Obama administration's $75 billion Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan, servicers will receive an upfront payment of $1,000 per loan for each eligible modification. As long as the borrower stays current on his modified loan the same servicer can receive a second payment of another $1,000 at year-end. The White House/Treasury/HUD program also is offering a $2,000 incentive to lenders and mortgage holders if they modify "at risk" loans before the borrower actually goes delinquent. Under this clause the servicer can make $500 and the investor $1,500 per loan. Roughly $75 billion in taxpayer money will be used to help 3 million to 4 million homeowners that might lose their homes to foreclosure.
February 18 -
The Fitch Commercial Real Estate CDO Delinquency Index increased by 111 basis points in January as 20 newly delinquent loans pushed the index to 3.83% for January 2009, compared to 2.72% in December 2008. "The inherently transitional nature of CREL CDO collateral has resulted in an increasing number of these assets becoming delinquent or failing to meet expectations in this stressed economic environment," said Fitch senior director Karen Trebach. Fitch said it anticipates that delinquencies on loans backed by land for development, turnaround projects and construction properties will continue to increase as interest reserves burn off and sponsors become unable or unwilling to come out of pocket to cover debt service payments. Meanwhile, defaults on three 2007 vintage loans ranging in size from $130 million to $225 million led to a 27 basis point increase for January U.S. commercial mortgage-backed securities loan delinquencies to 1.15%, according to Fitch. "High-profile loans secured by larger properties, which were often not stabilized at transaction issuance, have begun to default," said Susan Merrick, managing director and head of the U.S. CMBS group. Fitch said it expects that performance defaults on larger loans will push up the loan delinquency index in coming months, to approximately 3% by year-end 2009. With pools consisting of many larger assets, the 2006 and 2007 vintages are likely to be the largest contributors to delinquencies.
February 17 -
Freddie Mac said there will be no change to its business relationship with three mortgage insurance firms recently downgraded by Moody's Investor Service. The GSE clarified that there is no change to the "Type I" mortgage insurer status it has assigned to Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp., Radian Guaranty Inc., or PMI Mortgage Insurance. All three were downgraded by Moody's Investors Service on Feb. 13 to below investment grade. The share price of all three fell sharply Tuesday, along with the overall market. Moody's also downgraded United Guaranty Inc., Genworth Mortgage Insurance Corp. and Republic Mortgage Insurance - but maintained investment grade ratings on all three of those firms. A call to Fannie Mae to confirm if that company was still treating these firms as Type I insurers was not returned by deadline. In a statement, Radian Group chief executive S.A. Ibrahim said Moody's action did not reflect the company's "substantial claims-paying resource and the improving quality of our mortgage insurance portfolio." He added the move should not affect Radian's ability to insure loans sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. MGIC and PMI said they had no comment about the downgrade.
February 17 -
PHH Corp., which owns the nation's ninth largest residential servicer, said its ability to borrow money under existing lines of credit will not be impacted by a ratings downgrade on its debt taken by Standard & Poor's. S&P lowered its ratings on the company, including its counterparty credit rating, to BB+/B from BBB-/A-3 and maintained a negative outlook on the company. PHH Mortgage of Mount Laurel, N.J. services roughly $144 billion in residential mortgages. Its credit facility, struck back in early 2006, is for $1.3 billion. PHH Mortgage is the nation's largest private label funder and servicer.
February 17 -
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have joined several major banks in declaring a foreclosure moratorium, a move designed to give the Obama administration a few weeks to roll out its homeowner retention plan. During the Christmas holiday season the two GSEs put a foreclosure moratorium in place but it expired at the end of January. Fannie Mae said it is suspending all foreclosures and evictions of owner-occupied properties through March 6 in anticipation of the administration's national foreclosure prevention and loan modification program. President Obama, Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner and Housing secretary Shaun Donovan will present their plan to address the foreclosure crisis at a Feb. 18 event in Mesa, Ariz. Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Citigroup have all suspended foreclosures. Citigroup said its moratorium will extend until President Obama has finalized the details of the loan modification program or March 12, whichever comes first.
February 17 -
The pace of new home sales continued to slow in California - the nation's largest housing market - in December, according to new figures released by the California Building Industry Association. The latest sales and pricing report from the CBIA, in conjunction with Hanley Wood Market Intelligence, found that a paltry 1,117 units were sold in projects of 10 or more units in December. That's 59% fewer than the 2,695 units sold in December 2007. No sector of the for-sale market prospered: Sales of single-family homes were down 55%, townhouse sales were off 73% and condos were down 60%. "December is always slow for new-home sales," said Jonathan Dienhart, director of published research for HWMI, "but the problems with credit, consumer confidence and plummeting resale values made it an especially bad month." Mr. Dienhart said the December sales figures "should be close to the lowest absolute monthly sales number we see during this downturn." But he also warned that "the next couple of months are not likely to be much better."
February 17 -
The nation's top five residential servicing firms, as a group, now control almost 67% of all housing debt in the U.S., another sign that consolidation in the struggling industry is rampant, according to exclusive survey figures collected by National Mortgage News. The group of five < Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Chase Home, CitiMortgage and Residential Capital Corp. < owned $6.513 trillion in servicing rights at year-end, a 27% increase from the same period 12 months earlier. At year-end 2008 the top five had a combined market share of 66.94%, compared to 55.93% 12 months earlier. Twelve months prior to that, the five had a 52.92% share, which might have indicated that consolidation was not picking up much speed. (For the complete story and rankings see the print edition of National Mortgage News.)
February 17 -
Fitch Ratings has removed IndyMac and reverse mortgage lender Financial Freedom from its "rating watch evolving" list and upgraded its servicer ratings on IndyMac. Fitch raised IndyMac's servicer ratings for alt-A, subprime, prime and special servicing to a "2" level from a previous rating of "3." Fitch also affirmed Financial Freedom's "3" rating as a primary servicer of reverse mortgages. IndyMac Mac serviced 725,000 loans with an outstanding principal balance of $179 billion as of Sept. 30, 2008. Financial Freedom, a wholly-owned subsidiary of IndyMac, serviced 161,375 loans with an unpaid principal balance of $22.3 billion as of November 30, 2008. Over 90% of the Financial Freedom portfolio consists of reverse mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration. IndyMac was seized by the FDIC last summer. At the end of last year, the FDIC signed a letter of intent to sell IndyMac to a consortium of private equity investors controlled by IMB Management Holdings.
February 13 -
Office of Thrift Supervision director John Reich said he is leaving his post as the chief supervisor of 800 federally chartered thrift institutions at the end of this month. OTS senior director Scott Polakoff will serve as acting director until President Obama nominates a new director to run the agency. During his four-year tenure at OTS, Mr. Reich witnessed the demise of some of the largest savings and loans in history. Washington Mutual, IndyMac Bank and Countrywide failed on his watch. The OTS director was the most reluctant of federal banking regulators to tighten subprime and Alt-A lending underwriting guidelines. He generally insisted on giving thrifts the most flexibility in setting their lending polices. Mr. Reich was a Sarasota, Fla., banker before he came to Washington to work on the staff of former Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fla. President Bush nominated Mr. Reich to run OTS in 2005.
February 13 -
National banks and federally chartered thrifts will have to provide more information about loan modifications to their regulators and indicate whether they reduced the borrower's monthly payment, left it the same or actually increased the burden. The Office of Comptroller of the Currency and Office of Thrift Supervision are concerned that so many modified loans are re-defaulting. And they want to find out why. "This information is important on banks' efforts to modify loans and will help inform lenders and policymakers as to what kind of modifications work, with particular focus on the effect of significant changes in monthly payments," Comptroller John Dugan said. Servicers will be able to indicate if they reduced the borrower's monthly payment by more than 10% or less than 10%. They will also have to report if the borrower's payment has been increased or remained the same.
February 13