Servicing

  • EMC Mortgage Corp., Lewisville, Texas, has announced an emergency response and crisis management plan to assist customers affected by the catastrophic wildfires in Southern California.The company said it will cease all foreclosure and bankruptcy proceedings for the next 30 days, as well as negative credit reporting activity, the imposition of late fees, and the placing of collection calls. "Automatic adjustable-rate mortgage resets may be modified as needed," EMC said. The company said it will contact customers deemed likely to have been affected by the fires, encourage affected borrowers to contact EMC on its customer service line, and assess whether customers need further assistance when the fires have been extinguished. EMC, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Bear Stearns Cos., can be found online at http://www.emcmortgagecorp.com.

    October 24
  • Stewart Lender Services Inc., Houston, has announced the introduction of the Pre-Foreclosure Report, which is designed to help attorneys and lenders determine the condition of a property title when the borrowers are in financial distress.The new report provides a quick "snapshot" of the subject residential property, including a two-owner search, vesting information, open liens, judgments, pending lawsuits, tax information, and other data, the company said. Stewart Lender Services, a subsidiary of Stewart Information Services Corp., can be found on the Web at http://www.stewart.com.

    October 24
  • Personal computer giant Dell Inc. has cut off credit to a small mortgage banking firm in New Jersey, citing what it calls "the overall creditworthiness of the mortgage lending industry."Fred Catelli provided MortgageWire with a copy of a letter sent to him by Dell Financial Services, the financing arm of the computer firm. Mr. Catelli, who runs a small net-branch mortgage firm called Diamond Mortgage Services, told MortgageWire that, "We had a $35,000 credit limit with them. We had it for years." He said his firm currently owes Dell nothing. He said when Dell Financial sent him a letter about cutting off credit, he called Dell in disbelief. "They confirmed that they have suspended issuing credit to all companies listed by Dunn and Bradstreet as a mortgage company," he told MW. At deadline time, a Dell spokesman could not be reached for comment. (See the actual Dell letter by visiting: http://www.nationalmortgagenews.com/documents/dell2diamond.html.)

    October 24
  • Wall Street giant Merrill Lynch & Co. took a stunning $7.9 billion writedown on subprime and collateralized debt obligation assets in the third quarter -- 75% more than it forecast just a few weeks ago.Announcing its earnings before the market opened on Wednesday, Merrill -- at one time a major financer of subprime mortgage firms -- hinted that more writedowns are to come. "We expect market conditions for subprime mortgage-related assets to continue to be uncertain, and we are working to resolve the remaining impact from our positions," said company chairman and chief executive Stan O'Neal. Even though Merrill took $7.9 billion in mortgage/CDO writedowns, its overall loss for the quarter was a more modest -- but still awful -- $2.3 billion. Merrill said its fixed-income (mortgage) revenues were a negative-$5.6 billion in the quarter. This includes trading positions, warehouse lines, and other businesses tied to the asset-backed market. In February National Mortgage News broke the news that Merrill was conducting margin calls on several nondepository subprime clients, eventually driving some of those mortgage firms into bankruptcy. Merrill Lynch can be found online at http://www.ml.com.

    October 24
  • Fitch also downgraded three classes from Securitized Asset Backed Receivables series 2005-FR3 as a result of changes in the rating agency's subprime loss forecasting assumptions.The downgrades were as follows: class B-2, from A-minus to BBB-plus (and placed on Rating Watch Negative); class B-3, from BBB-plus to BB-plus; and class B-4, from BBB-minus to B-plus. Fitch also placed classes M-3 and B-1 on Rating Watch Negative and affirmed the ratings on three other classes in the deal. The revised assumptions in Fitch's subprime loss model "better capture the deteriorating performance of pools from 2006 and late 2005 with regard to continued poor loan performance and home price weakness," the rating agency said.

    October 23
  • Eleven classes of Securitized Asset Backed Receivables mortgage pass-through certificates have been downgraded by Fitch Ratings. The downgrades came in SABR series 2004-DO1 and series 2004-NC3. Fitch also placed two of the downgraded classes on Rating Watch Negative and affirmed the ratings on three classes in the deals. The downgrades were attributed to the release of overcollateralization and principal payments to the subordinate classes, which have put pressure on the capital structure for both series. The collateral consists primarily of first-lien subprime mortgage loans.

    October 23
  • The residential servicer ratings of Option One Mortgage Corp. have been downgraded by Fitch Ratings, and they remain on Rating Watch Negative.Option One's residential primary servicer rating for subprime products was downgraded from RPS1 to RPS2-plus, and its residential primary special servicer rating was downgraded from RSS1 to RSS2-plus. Fitch said the actions reflect the corporate rating of Option One's parent, Block Financial Corp, and its ultimate parent, H&R Block Inc., whose senior debt was recently downgraded to A-minus and placed on Rating Watch Negative. The rating actions also reflect the effect on Option One's servicing platform of decreased loan originations, changes in credit lines, and uncertainties regarding the sale of the servicing platform to Cerberus Capital Management LP, the rating agency said. The Rating Watch placement indicates that further downgrades are possible, depending on the outcome of the proposed sale. Fitch said the actions were also based on the operational challenges facing Option One in the subprime market. Fitch rates residential servicers on a scale of 1 to 5, with 1 being the highest rating.

    October 23
  • Unrated commercial real estate loans represent a growing proportion of U.S. CRE collateralized debt obligations, and the key to promoting transparency in such transactions is "consistent, enhanced, ongoing loan-level reporting," Derivative Fitch says in a new report."By providing more standardized information, asset managers can increase the transparency and, consequently, the liquidity of their transactions," said Fitch senior director Karen Trebach. In the report, Fitch describes the information it requests from asset managers and explains the value of each report. Enhanced reporting provides early warning signals to alert asset managers when to step in to modify a loan or pursue other remedies, the rating agency said. One advantage of a CRE CDO structure over commercial mortgage-backed securities REMIC structures is that the CDO "allows asset managers more flexibility to modify loan terms even prior to an actual default," Fitch said. The rating agency can be found online at http://www.derivativefitch.com.

    October 23
  • Countrywide Financial Corp., Calabasas, Calif., has unveiled a $16 billion effort to help ailing mortgage customers -- subprime and prime alike -- to refinance out of loans that are either delinquent or run the risk of going bad over the next 15 months.As a share of subprime loans Countrywide services, the effort represents 13% of its A-minus to D portfolio, according to the Quarterly Data Report. The company, which is scheduled to report earnings on Oct. 26, said it hopes to refinance $10 billion in subprime loans (52,000 Countrywide customers), offering its clients a Federal Housing Administration or Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac loan. Additionally, it hopes to refinance $4 billion in prime and subprime loans where the borrower is current but unable to refinance or might have difficultly making the payment once the loan rate resets. On $2.2 billion in subprime loans where the borrower is actually delinquent because of a recent reset, Countrywide said it will implement what it calls a "simplified loan modification process" that reduces the interest rate. National Mortgage News recently reported that nonprofits ACORN and the National Training Information Center are increasingly finding it difficult to work with the loss mitigation staff of Countrywide. The company has a 20% delinquency rate on its subprime portfolio. It can be found online at http://www.countrywide.com.

    October 23
  • Moody's Investors Service also issued a flood of negative rating actions Oct. 19, downgrading over 30 classes of mortgage-backed securities and placing over 50 MBS classes on review for possible downgrade.Among the securities affected by the downgrades were: 16 classes of Nomura Asset Acceptance Corp. Alternative Loan Trust certificates; 11 classes of Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust certificates; and six classes of Morgan Stanley Mortgage Loan Trust certificates. Among those placed under review were: 13 classes issued by Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust; and 11 classes issued by Credit Suisse. The rating actions were attributed to an analysis of the credit enhancement provided by subordination, overcollateralization, and excess spread relative to expected losses. Moody's can be found online at http://www.moodys.com.

    October 22