Servicing

  • The California Department of Real Estate has granted a license to originate and service first mortgage loans to iServe Servicing Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of National Asset Direct, a purchaser of distressed residential assets and loans. With this approval, iServe is now qualified to service first mortgage loans in 29 states, including Florida, Illinois and Texas, and exempt from qualification in 10 additional states, qualifying iServe to service first mortgage loans in a total of 39 states. iServe's "high-touch" servicing system is designed to correctly diagnose a borrower's unique conditions, match creative solutions to meet the best interests of the borrower, and encourage resolutions that provide immediate relief, near-term stabilization, and promote long-term viability of retaining homeownership. Louis Amaya, chief investment officer and chief operating officer of NAD, said, "We are particularly pleased to be able to offer our solutions to borrowers in California, which continues to represent a disproportionate share of the foreclosure starts in the country. In an environment where third-party servicers have been inundated with a growing number of nonperforming mortgages, being able to service our portfolio of loans provides NAD with a critical competitive advantage."

    May 16
  • Ten classes from four scratch-and-dent mortgage-backed securities transactions issued by Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust have been downgraded by Fitch Ratings. Fitch also placed four classes of securities on Rating Watch Negative and affirmed the ratings on more than $340 million of scratch-and-dent MBS.

    May 16
  • REOTrans LLC, Hawthorne, Calif., which automates the default management process, has reported that its e-commerce marketplace handles more than 100,000 transactions daily. The marketplace tracks and provides detailed performance report cards on the entire industry. This allows sellers to select the best performing agents and vendors. "This is an incredible volume of transactions per day," said Chris Saitta, CEO of REOTrans. "The high volume of transactions assures a current and fair assessment of performance." He said the marketplace is a vibrant e-commerce exchange that allows everyone in the default servicing industry to connect and do business electronically. There are currently 4,090 sellers (asset managers), 6,025 vendors and 254,874 real estate agents nationwide handling 110,115 transactions each day. With no software to install or hardware to maintain, this platform creates an efficient and seamless system for the default industry. In addition to the marketplace, REOTrans also provides a highly configuration workstation. The workstation is easy to adopt, highly configurable and provides dramatic process efficiency gains making it easy to handle higher volumes, according to the company. Together the marketplace and workstation provide everything and everyone needed to efficiently automate the default process and sell REO in a safe and transparent online environment.

    May 16
  • Don Henig, former president of third-party lending at American Home Mortgage, Melville, N.Y., has found a new career after mortgages, investing in foreclosed properties at public auctions. Since the end of November, Mr. Henig has been involved in 30 home purchases. His goal is to buy the homes at a deep discount for cash, fix them up and resell them quickly. He is out raising capital through his firm, First Light Capital, Farmingdale, N.Y. He works with another company, Island Properties, also of Farmingdale, to fix up the homes and then find investors that eventually will buy what he acquires. For now, he is concentrating on buying homes in New York and New Jersey but not the five boroughs of New York City. American Home, a publicly traded REIT that specialized in both prime and nonprime lending, filed for bankruptcy protection last summer after being margin-called by its lenders on Wall Street. Most of the company's assets have been liquidated.

    May 16
  • Hanover Capital Mortgage Holdings lost $23.3 million, or $2.71 per share, in the first quarter, as $21.2 million in declines to the fair value of its subordinate mortgage-backed securities portfolio weighed heavily on results. The company also faced an increase in interest expense under its new repurchase agreement with Ramius Capital Group. As of March 31, seriously delinquent loans in the company's subordinate MBS portfolio totaled 0.83% of collateral balances, up from 0.55% at Dec. 31, 2007. Chairman and CEO John Burchett said the company is continuing efforts to raise capital "sufficient to enable the company to return to profitability and to provide a positive return for our shareholders."

    May 16
  • Under pressure from industry groups, Fannie Mae is retreating from its policy of requiring higher downpayments in markets where house prices are declining. Starting June 1 the mortgage giant will begin purchasing 97% LTV loans again in declining markets, provided the loans are processed through Desktop Underwriter, its automated underwriting system. Fannie also said it will accept manually underwritten single-family loans with 95% loan-to-value ratios under its new policy that will equalize downpayment requirements nationwide. "We are able to adopt his new, national downpayment policy requirement, even in markets where home prices are declining, because our new automated underwriting risk assessment model DU Version 7.0 will limit risk-layering and assess each loan more precisely," Fannie senior vice president Marianne Sullivan said. The National Association of Realtors recently complained to Fannie and Freddie Mac that their declining market policies are contributing to price declines and "stigmatizing" entire metropolitan areas as declining markets. By dropping the extra 5% downpayment requirement, Fannie's "new policies will help stabilize the credit markets," said NAR president Dick Gaylord, and "encourage buyers to come back into the housing market." Freddie recently clarified its policy and urged lenders and appraisers to be more vigilant in assessing local market conditions before determining a property is located in a declining market.

    May 16
  • Nonperforming assets at Downey Financial of Newport Beach, Calif., climbed to 13.24% at the end of April, a 45% increase over the past three months. At month's end, Downey had $13.15 billion in assets on its balance sheet which means $1.74 billion are in some stage of delinquency. Roughly 4.6% of its assets fall into a category it calls "performing trouble debt restructurings." During the month Downey originated $281.7 million in new one-to-four family loans, compared to $232.1 million in March. The thrift services $5.44 billion in loans for others.

    May 16
  • Senate Banking Committee leaders were still negotiating late Thursday afternoon on GSE regulatory reform and Federal Housing Administration refinancing bills after furious negotiations Thursday morning had prompted some to predict that an agreement was near. At the request of Sen. Richard C. Shelby, R-Ala., committee Chairman Christopher J. Dodd, D-Conn., postponed a 10 a.m. mark-up session as the two sides tried to come to terms on the foreclosure prevention bill, which uses the FHA to refinance struggling borrowers with "underwater" mortgages. Sen. Dodd said Thursday afternoon that an agreement had not been reached. "We are getting closer, but we aren't there yet," the committee chairman said. Sen. Shelby says he is concerned about using taxpayer funds to refinance speculators and others who made bad decisions. "We shouldn't bail out people who probably shouldn't have bought a home to begin with and probably won't pay if they are refinanced," he said on CNBC-TV.

    May 15
  • In a recent item, MortgageWire overstated the mortgage impairment charges for HSBC North America Holdings. According to a spokeswoman for the company, its U.S. subprime division, HSBC Finance Corp., had impairment charges of approximately $2.2 billion in the first quarter, reflecting charges on subprime mortgages, unsecured consumer loans, and automobile notes. The company would not provide a specific impairment figure for subprime mortgages for the quarter. The entire company (HSBC NA) booked total loan impairment charges of $3.2 billion in the quarter, the figure that MortgageWire reported. This figure also includes credit-card-related charges, the spokeswoman said.

    May 15
  • Ninety-two classes from 30 scratch-and-dent mortgage-backed securities transactions issued by Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities have been downgraded by Fitch Ratings. Fitch also placed six classes of securities on Rating Watch Negative and affirmed the ratings on $2.2 billion of scratch-and-dent MBS. Fitch can be found on the Web at http://www.fitchratings.com.

    May 15