Servicing

  • Security Capital Assurance, a bond insurer that has faced ratings pressure as a result of mortgage market woes, has indicated that it is involved of a review of its "strategic options" and will be delaying the filing of its annual report with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Hamilton, Bermuda-based SCA is working with Goldman Sachs as a financial adviser, assisted by Rothschild Inc., on the review of its options. The company can be found online at http://www.scafg.com.

    March 3
  • Ambac Financial Group Inc., New York, plans to suspend all new structured finance business for six months and reduce its quarterly dividend from 7 cents per share to 1 cent per share to offset problematic mortgage-related exposures. The company plans to "discontinue writing business in a number of sectors in the global structured finance markets where the risk dynamics are not aligned with our vision of the future of Ambac," according to a written statement released by chairman and chief executive officer Michael Callen. He said the company remains "optimistic" about its municipal business, but will be selective about structured finance and international business.

    March 3
  • Fannie Mae estimates that it could securitize $200 billion in jumbo loans by the December expiration date of its temporary authority to purchase higher-balance mortgages that exceed the $417,000 conforming loan limit. However, the government-sponsored enterprise cannot use the "to-be-announced" market to securitize these higher-balance loans. So secondary-market executives are fretting that investors will demand higher yields and the interest rate on the GSE jumbo loans might not be low enough to get homeowners to refinance. But researchers at Friedman Billings Ramsey Investment Management point out that the differentials between GSE mortgage interest rates and nonagency mortgage interest rates are the "highest ever." And they say they expect the GSE jumbo programs to "inspire active refinancing of eligible nonagency mortgage loans." Meanwhile, Freddie Mac is gearing up to launch its jumbo program. The GSE wants to provide lenders with 90-day forward pricing and credit terms so that eligible borrowers can lock in rates as early as April. "That is the goal we are working towards," said Freddie spokeswoman Sharon McHale. The two mortgage giants can be found online at http://www.fanniemae.com and http://www.freddiemac.com.

    March 3
  • Hope Now servicers modified 45,000 subprime loans in January, up 16% from December's level, and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said he expects the numbers to increase now that all the servicers have adopted the American Securitization Forum's protocol for fast-tracking subprime borrowers into loan modifications and refinancings. "I am pleased to announce that as of today, all of the Hope Now members that service subprime mortgages have the protocol in place, ahead of the rising volume of resets in the coming months," Secretary Paulson told the National Association of Business Economists. The Treasury secretary stressed that government-led efforts to prevent foreclosures should be focused on borrowers struggling to make their payments or facing a reset they cannot afford. And he threw cold water on a proposal to restructure "underwater" mortgages so the borrowers have an incentive to stay in their homes. "Any homeowner who can afford their mortgage payments but chooses to walk away from the underwater property is simply a speculator -- and one who is not honoring his obligation," Mr. Paulson said.

    March 3
  • The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency will require large national banks that service mortgage loans to provide comprehensive monthly data about their portfolios. The OCC said the reporting requirement will build upon the efforts of the Hope Now alliance, a cooperative initiative among investors, mortgage servicers, and counselors to help distressed homeowners. In a letter to nine large national banks that account for the overwhelming majority of mortgages serviced by national banks, Comptroller John Dugan said the data will help the OCC assess the banks' servicing activities in light of rising loan defaults and foreclosures. The OCC said its data collection includes all mortgage loans, not just subprime loans.

    March 3
  • Defaults on securitized subprime mortgage loans jumped to 23.3% in December, up 200 basis points from the level of the previous month and more than double the 10.1% rate of a year earlier, according to a Friedman Billings Ramsey Investment Management report. The credit performance of private-label securities backed by subprime, alternative-A, and prime mortgages is "deteriorating more rapidly and more broadly than previously," said FBRIM managing director Michael Youngblood. He attributes the acceleration in defaults to "weakening labor market conditions and falling house prices." In the 25 metropolitan statistical areas with the highest default rates, the average unemployment rate was 6% and the MSAs had a net loss of 104,240 jobs over the previous year, according to the monthly credit performance report. Meanwhile, the default rate on alt-A loans rose to 7.2% in December, up 153 bps from that of the previous month and 555 bps from the rate in December 2006. (The default rate includes loans 90 days or more past due, loans in foreclosure, and real estate-owned.)

    March 3
  • Thornburg Mortgage has met a $300 million set of margin calls related to deteriorating mortgage-backed securities market conditions, but was still working to meet about $270 million more as of deadline time Monday. The company said it was in default with one reverse-repurchase counterparty involved in the second set of margin calls but that it was working to repay that counterparty, which had not yet exercised its right to liquidate collateral. The company said collateral liquidations could have a material effect on its finances if they occur, and stressed that the repayment difficulties are linked to market conditions rather than credit quality. The company's stock was trading at about $4.00 per share late Monday morning, a drop of more than 50% from its previous close of $8.90 per share, according to Yahoo Finance.

    March 3
  • Losses on mortgage securities in the current financial crisis may total roughly $400 billion, resulting in "much larger" decreases in lending and balance sheet shrinkage topping $1 trillion, according to a recent report by Wall Street and business school experts. The report indicates that the losses, combined with the effects of leverage of mark-to-market accounting, could lead to "just under a $2 trillion contraction in intermediary balance sheets" and reduce growth in gross domestic product over four quarters by "roughly 1 to 1.5 percentage points." Authors of the report have affiliations with Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, the University of Chicago, the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and Princeton University.

    March 3
  • More than 350 additional classes of first-lien subprime mortgage pass-through certificates were downgraded by Fitch Ratings on Feb. 28 as a result of changes to its subprime loss forecasting assumptions. Fitch also affirmed the ratings on classes with outstanding balances of $6 billion. The securities affected by the latest downgrades were 208 classes from 19 J.P. Morgan deals and 150 classes from 12 First Franklin deals. The rating actions were attributed to changes to Fitch's subprime loss forecasting assumptions that "better capture the deteriorating performance of pools from 2006 and late 2005 with regard to continued poor loan performance and home price weakness." Fitch can be found on the Web at http://www.fitchratings.com.

    February 29
  • Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has placed 1,887 classes of alternative-A, first-lien residential mortgage-backed securities on CreditWatch with negative implications. The classes are from 404 RMBS transactions issued in 2006 and the first half of 2007, and they have a current balance of $12.9 billion, S&P reported. The actions "reflect a persistent rise in the level of delinquencies among the alt-A mortgage loans supporting these transactions," S&P said. The rating agency said it is also reviewing the affected transactions in the light of its revised assumptions for the surveillance of U.S. RMBS. The affected alt-A transactions are collateralized by negative-amortization (payment-option adjustable-rate mortgage), short-reset hybrid ARM (2/28 and 3/27), and fixed-rate and longer-dated hybrid ARM loans. S&P can be found online at http://www.standardandpoors.com.

    February 29