Despite changes by the Financial Accounting Standards Board in March that were expected to stem fallout caused by other-than-temporary impairment charges at the Federal Home Loan banks, the system is continuing to suffer massive losses on its portfolio of mortgage backed securities. Many FHLB representatives praised the FASB after it amended its rules concerning OTTI to limit them solely to credit risk. But it has become clear that the credit risk embedded in the system's portfolios of private-label mortgage-backed securities is significant. During the third quarter alone, the system's credit-related OTTI charges totaled $1.042 billion. That is more than half of the $1.995 billion in OTTI charges the system has taken all year. The impact of the charges has been painful; the system said last week it lost $165 million during the quarter. "This is an indication of the magnitude of their exposure to these kinds of securities," said Brian Harris, an analyst at Moody's Investors Service. "The credit pieces are becoming larger." Home Loan Bank representatives acknowledged that, even with the FASB's change, OTTI charges will remain a big challenge for the system. "The private-label mortgage-backed securities market continues to be a weight on the Federal Home Loan banks' earnings," said John von Seggern, president of the Council of Federal Home Loan Banks.
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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.
42m 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.
42m 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 -
ICE launched a fraud detection tool for underwriters, Newrez partnered with Matic and Rate announced a free home equity monitoring tool this month.
June 26







