Five classes of Asset Backed Securities Corp. mortgage pass-through certificates have been downgraded by Fitch Ratings, and two have been assigned Distressed Recovery ratings.The downgrades were as follows: series 2001-HE1, class M-2, from BBB-plus to BBB-minus, and class B, from BB to B-plus; series 2002-HE2, class B, from BB-minus to CCC; and series 2003-HE1, class M-3, from BB to BB-minus, and class M-4, from BB-minus to C. Class B of series 2002-HE2 was assigned a Distressed Recovery rating of DR2, and class M-4 of series 2003-HE1 was assigned a rating of DR5. (The ratings range from DR1, the highest, to DR6 to designate a transaction's recovery prospects.) In addition, Fitch upgraded two classes and affirmed the ratings on four classes in four ABSC deals. The rating agency attributed the downgrades to a deterioration in the relationship between loss expectations and credit enhancement. The transactions consist of fixed- and adjustable-rate subprime mortgage loans on one- to four-family properties. Fitch can be found online at http://www.fitchratings.com.
-
Foreclosure prevention actions supported homeowners, with loan modifications being the majority.
14m ago -
AnnieMac CEO Joe Panebianco has navigated a broad range of risks, from cash buyer competition to shifts in the market's loan product mix, with a unique leadership style.
4h ago -
A consumer was moving to certify a class of thousands of borrowers who paid the telephone mortgage payment fees to a subsidiary the servicer acquired.
4h ago -
JPMorganChase and Bank of America raised concerns about the proposed removal of risk-weighted assets from the denominator of the short-term wholesale funding component of the GSIB surcharge — changes backed by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
June 26 -
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., reportedly plans to send the recently passed housing bill to the White House on Monday, starting a 10-day clock for the president to sign the bill.
June 26 -
The national delinquency rate rose 15 basis points to 3.5% last month due to a calendar anomaly, marking a 4.5% month-over-month incline and 9.4% annual change.
June 26









