Fannie Purchases Fell in January

Fannie Mae purchased $54.9 billion of mortgages from its seller/servicers during January, a 23% drop from December but a significant improvement over the same month last year. In December the GSE bought $71.8 billion in loans, while in January 2009 - with the credit markets still reeling - it purchased just $28.8 billion. Fannie's purchase volume is a reflection of origination activity in the primary market. Mortgage and housing economists anticipate that residential loan volume will total anywhere from $1.2 trillion to $1.7 trillion this year, depending on where interest rates and employment wind up. Meanwhile, in its most recent activity report, Fannie noted that the serious delinquency rate on its single-family loans rose only 9 basis points in December to 5.38%, after jumping 135 bps over the previous five months. (The GSE's delinquency figures lag by one month.) It is the smallest monthly increase since July 2008 when the percentage of Fannie loans 90 days or more past stood at 1.45%. The GSE expects its serious delinquency rate will remain high in 2010, but the growth of that rate will moderate. "We anticipate that the pace of loans transitioning out of serious delinquency status will increase as the number of foreclosures and problem loan workouts that we complete increases," Fannie said in a recent earnings statement. The monthly activity report also shows that delinquency rates on Fannie multifamily loans fell 3 bps in December to 0.63%. Fannie issued $47.6 billion in mortgage-backed securities in January, down from $55.4 billion in the previous month. In 2009, Fannie MBS issuance totaled $807.9 billion, compared to $542.8 billion in 2008.

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