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Huntington Bancshares Inc., Columbus, Ohio, has announced that it will take a fourth-quarter charge of up to $300 million that will produce a net loss for the company, citing a need to shore up loan-loss allowances in connection with about $1.5 billion in loans to Franklin Credit Management Corp.Franklin, a New York-based company that acquires, originates, and services residential mortgage loans, recently announced the suspension of loan acquisition and origination and a delay in reporting its third-quarter operating results. "We only recently learned of Franklin's actions to reassess the adequacy of their loan-loss reserves," said Thomas E. Hoaglin, Huntington's chairman and chief executive. "Franklin's mortgages represent the underlying collateral for our loans to Franklin. As a result of this new information, we needed to reassess the collectability of the Franklin loans." As a result of Huntington's announcement, Fitch Ratings downgraded the company's long-term issuer default rating from A to A-minus, while affirming its short-term IDR at F1.
November 19 -
Former alternative-A giant Impac Mortgage Holdings has revealed that it has been the subject of margin calls from Bear Stearns, noting that it cannot file its third-quarter financials on time and expects to report a larger-than-anticipated loss.Impac also revealed that it now has a "stockholders' deficit." At deadline time, its shares were trading down 10% to a new 52-week low of $0.68. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Impac -- a publicly traded real estate investment trust -- said Bear Stearns had seized $286 million in residential loans from the company because of unmet margin calls. It also said it was in "technical default" on several warehouse lines. In late September, the Irvine, Calif.-based company exited most origination markets, and closed its warehouse and commercial mortgage divisions. Impac can be found online at http://www.impaccompanies.com.
November 19 -
Freddie Mac could take an impairment charge ranging from $1 billion to $5 billion on its subprime mortgage investments, according to a Credit Suisse report released Monday morning.The government-sponsored enterprise is slated to report third-quarter earnings on Tuesday and was not commenting on the projections made by Credit Suisse analyst Moshe Orenbuch. Freddie owns roughly $120 billion in subprime-related asset-backed securities, which are triple-A rated. A spokeswoman noted that the investments have senior/subordinated enhancements and that for the government-sponsored enterprise to take a loss, all the subordinated pieces would have to be wiped out first. In his report, Mr. Orenbuch says Freddie's subprime investments "likely have substantial subordination." He refers to the anticipated writedowns as an "other-than-temporary" impairment charge. Credit Suisse also reduced its 12-month price target on the stock from $68 to $45. Credit Suisse can be found on the Web at http://www.credit-suisse.com.
November 19 -
The Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago reported net income of $24 million in the third quarter, down from $27 million in the second quarter (not down from $50 million, as a previous Wire item incorrectly reported). A spokeswoman for the FHLBank pointed out that a restatement has increased the FHLBank's first-half earnings upward by $2 million to $52 million.
November 16 -
Class B-5 of Sequoia Mortgage Funding Corp. mortgage pass-through certificates, series 2005-2, has been placed on Rating Watch Negative by Fitch Ratings.Fitch also affirmed the ratings on 17 classes from three Sequoia transactions issued in 2005. The negative rating action was attributed to a high balance of loans with serious delinquencies. The collateral consists of prime adjustable-rate mortgage loans indexed to the one-month and six-month London interbank offered rates.
November 16 -
Classes B-5 and B-6 of Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Trust mortgage pass-through certificates, series 2004-AR1, have been placed on review for possible downgrade by Moody's Investors Service.The actions are based on an analysis of the credit enhancement provided by subordination, overcollateralization, excess spread, and mortgage insurance relative to expected losses, Moody's said. The transaction is backed by adjustable-rate alternative-A mortgage loans.
November 16 -
Two tranches from Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Trust series 2006-AR3 have been downgraded by Moody's Investors Service.Class II-B-2 was downgraded from A2 to Baa1, and class II-B-3 was downgraded from Baa2 to B1. The downgrades were attributed to higher-than-expected rates of delinquency, foreclosure, and real estate owned in the underlying collateral relative to credit enhancement levels. The collateral classes consists primarily of first-lien, adjustable-rate alternative-A mortgage loans.
November 16 -
Five classes of notes (and their series 2 counterparts) issued by Duke Funding High Grade II-S/EGAM I Ltd., a collateralized debt obligation used to acquire mortgage-backed securities, have been downgraded by Fitch Ratings.The downgraded notes were as follows: class A2 and series 2 class A2, from AAA to BBB-minus; class B1 and series 2 class B1, from AA-plus to BB; class B2 and series 2 class B2, from AA-minus to BB-minus; class C and series 2 class C, from BB to B; and class D and series 2 class D, from B to CCC. All the classes remain on Rating Watch Negative. The downgrades were attributed to continued concerns about the availability of repo funding with terms similar to those now in place. Fitch said the proceeds of the notes are used to buy a diversified portfolio of triple-A rated, primarily private-label residential MBS. The rating agency can be found online at http://www.fitchratings.com.
November 16 -
Twelve tranches from three mortgage securitizations issued by Banc of America Funding Corp. in 2006 have been downgraded by Moody's Investors Service, and six tranches have been placed under review for possible downgrade.The negative rating actions were attributed to higher-than-expected rates of delinquency, foreclosure, and real estate owned in the underlying collateral relative to credit enhancement levels. The collateral consists primarily of first-lien, fixed- and adjustable-rate alternative-A mortgage loans.
November 16 -
The ratings of 62 tranches from 12 mortgage securities deals issued by Deutsche Bank in 2006 and late 2005 have been downgraded by Moody's Investors Service, and 18 tranches have been placed under review for possible downgrade.The negative rating actions were based on higher-than-expected rates of delinquency, foreclosure, and real estate owned in the underlying collateral relative to credit enhancement levels. The collateral consists chiefly of first-lien, fixed- and adjustable-rate alternative-A mortgage loans. Moody's can be found on the Web at http://www.moodys.com.
November 16