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Archive for March, 2010

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Is Alan Greenspan, famous for his libertarian leanings and hands-off approach to Wall Street, having some second thoughts?

After more than six decades as a skeptic of big government, the former Federal Reserve chairman, now 84, is gingerly suggesting that perhaps regulators should help rein in giant financial institutions by requiring them to hold more capital.

Mr. Greenspan, once celebrated as the “maestro” of economic policy, has seen his reputation dim after failing to avert the credit bubble that nearly brought down the financial system. Now, in a 48-page paper that is by turns analytical and apologetic, he is calling for a degree of greater banking regulation in several areas.

The report, which he is to present Friday to the Brookings Institution, is by no means a mea culpa. But in his customarily sober language, Mr. Greenspan, who has long argued that the market is often a more effective regulator than the government, has now adopted a more expansive view of the proper role of the state.

Friday, March 19th, 2010

The median home listing price declined 1.3% in the Altos Research 10-city composite, continuing a seven-month-long run of declining list prices in February. And even though the listing time is generally decreasing, for-sale houses still tend to go unsold for the first 100 days.

The 10-city home price composite index was $479,781 in February 2010, up from the January 2009 bottom of $470,017, but down 5.75% from last year’s peak of $509,030 in July. All of the 26 markets Altos Research studies experienced a month-over-month listing price decrease, ranging from a the smallest, a 0.2% decline in Miami, to a 4.4% decrease in San Francisco.

Early indicators of pricing show that monthly price declines will be somewhat abated by the normal spring selling season, Altos Research said, but due to the impending end of the Federal Reserve’s mortgage-backed securities (MBS) purchase program and the deadline to sign a contract to receive the homebuyer tax credit, Altos added that its price index may retrace its 2009 lows before it turns up in the spring and summer months. As HousingWire reported, there is some talk that the tax credit could be extended again if housing stalls.

Inventory was up 8.3% from January in the 10-city composite, as well as in 24 of 26 markets. In Salt Lake City, inventory was down 2.1%, Detroit was flat, and San Jose saw the biggest increase in listing inventory, up 18.6% from January to February. But the national inventory is still 10% lower than it was in February 2009.

All but two markets had a median listing time of 100 or more days. The 10-city composite had a median of 166 days, down 3.7% from 172 days in January. San Francisco’s median was 86 days, down from 94 in January and San Jose had a median of 99 days, down from 102 the previous month. Chicago, at 220 days, had the longest median. Every market except Las Vegas and Salt Lake City saw their median decrease from January to February. In Las Vegas, the median was up to 136 from 134 and in Salt Lake City, the median was 134, up from 132.

The Altos Research study includes existing single-family homes and does not measure condos, town homes or new construction. Each market measured uses results from Census Bureau Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA). The Altos 10-city composite gauges single-family homes in Boston, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Miami, Las Vegas, Washington D.C., Denver.

Write to Austin Kilgore.

Friday, March 19th, 2010

We have reached a hiatus; a moment to pause and reflect…just before impact. I’ve called this time-out as we enter a period which is likely to be the most influential for securitization markets since Ginnie Mae first sold securities backed by a portfolio of mortgage loans almost 40 years ago to the day.

The volume of work and level of coordination already undertaken by participants in the securitization industry, its working groups, regulatory bodies and government over the last two years has been staggering. The one constant during that period was the regularity with which industry bodies put forward this set of recommendations, or that set of proposed changes to regulation. The combined misgivings and failings of the market were quickly uncovered. Best practice guidelines and standards for originators and investors were soon put forward, both in the US and in Europe. There was momentum. The wave of stimulus packages has had varying effects on the broad stabilization of global securitization markets. The time has come to analyze the potential impact of all that has been proposed and the exit of government support before sweeping changes are finalized.

Proposals rapidly emerged to help shape the development of regulatory policy with the aim of improving the quality and amount of capital held by financial institutions and introducing rules and diligent risk management practices for portfolios of securitized assets. Recommendations tackled the issues of complexity and a lack of transparency by suggesting ways to standardize terms and structures. In September 2009, the culmination of much of this research, analysis and market consultation was presented to international leaders at the G20 in Pittsburgh with the goal of driving a globally viable, coordinated regulatory response.

The result was agreement and mutual recognition across the G20 on what must be achieved to restart the securitization markets on a sound basis. The ultimate goal of course is to revive the market and support the provision of credit to the real economy. Core reforms focusing on capital, liquidity, cross-border resolution and enhanced risk management have been given deadlines. The EU CRD II and III are good examples of this progress and regulatory convergence, with the directives due to be implemented by early 2011.

It becomes murkier when we start to look at how individual national responses to the myriad new capital and liquidity requirements and accounting changes gel together. This highlights how the combined impact of implementing changes on a national, uncoordinated basis would pose some tricky questions for institutions’ balance sheets, the economics for structured finance investors and in turn the overarching goals of the G20 to stimulate the flow of credit.

There is cause for optimism having come this far but there is a need to iron out the final creases before issuers and investors have the confidence to come flooding back. Before September there was a sense of momentum towards implementing international reform. Now, as more regulation comes through around the globe, it is natural that the framework for international coordination and reform is under stress and at risk of fragmentation.

Focus now is turning to the investor community and how it will react. Lots of work has been done on the ground by bodies like the American Securitization Forum (ASF) and its EU equivalent, the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), to bring transparency and standards to issuance, origination and servicing practices. Recommendations last year by organizations such as the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), facilitated a more coordinated response from the international regulatory community. Its reports included guidelines for increased disclosure and due diligence, the idea of “skin in the game” for issuers and the screening of investor suitability. Investors are sandwiched between changes being made to issuance standards, and top down reforms which will influence the extent to which they are able to participate in the market.

From the bottom up, we can see these recommendations filtering through in various market initiatives. Look at the operating requirements that were outlined for participation in the US Treasury Department Public Private Investment Program. They drew many parallels with the investor due diligence requirements outlined by IOSCO and clear wording in the Basel II Securitization Framework Enhancements regarding an investor’s need to understand the risk and performance characteristics underlying structured finance securities. Any investor in ABS or MBS assets will need to demonstrate these kinds of core competencies going forward to stand up to new mandates. We can also see good practices being pushed through by the ECB. It is looking to make loan-level disclosure a prerequisite to being eligible for central bank funding. Investors’ access to this valuable source of liquidity will be determined by their ability to provide full disclosure and transparency into the collateral they post.

Critical to a smooth transition is the effective convergence of different streams of regional reform and other market initiatives. It is the impact of these in combination that we must now focus on. Take the FDIC’s recent pre-implementation notice of its revised safe harbor rule as an example. The old safe harbor, an important safeguard against FDIC intervention in the event of a bank failure, was nullified with the introduction of new accounting standards FAS 166 and 167. Few securitizations now meet the off-balance sheet standards for sale accounting treatment and, as a result, do not comply with the preconditions for the application of the original FDIC safe harbor.

The revisions in the Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) introduced many elements of best practice guidelines we have seen elsewhere which are certainly welcome. New ideas, such as a 12-month seasoning period for loans prior to origination, seem sensible. This is a prime example of the challenge facing the regulatory community though; the conflict caused as regulation converges. The revisions stipulated a unilateral approach to transactions’ capital structures, disclosure requirements, documentation and asset retention. This has concerned investors and the professional bodies representing the industry. The initial result has been greater investor uncertainty. The regulatory screw was tightened.

The US government’s grip on mortgage securitization enabled it to exert a greater influence on the requirements originators and investors must comply with to benefit from the rule. Instead of a clear-cut safe harbor that rebuilds confidence, we are temporarily left with something more akin to a port in stormy waters. The FDIC has always listened closely to the market and in hearing its response has taken swift action to try to allay concerns, pushing out its original deadline of March, to September.

It is a sign that while reforms are crucial they can work against the long term goal of enticing players back to the market unless carefully evaluated. The impact of such changes must be analyzed in conjunction with market participants and other legislation. The introduction of mandates must continue to be done in a coordinated way to ensure a level playing field for the industry and to see that the right incentives are in place for all parties involved in securitization. Timing of implementation is always crucial of course and any possibility for regulatory arbitrage must be avoided.

During this phase of reflection the market and those that oversee it are asking how the proposals on the table can best work in unison. Impact analyzes being carried out by The Financial Stability Board and Basel Committee, due to be announced in coming weeks, should bring more clarity and can hopefully provide the next stepping stones for reform. Investors need more information about the effect regulatory proposals will have on their future involvement in structured finance. There is much they can and are already doing to implement best practices.

From a practical perspective, the one overriding theme investors are being reminded of is the need to have the infrastructure, culture and operations in place to fully understand the underlying risk characteristics of the deals in their portfolio – from initial investment, through ongoing analysis, risk oversight and disclosure. Whatever happens next, that is a necessity and will be vital in preparation for regulatory impact.

Douglas Long is the executive vice president of business strategy at structured finance software firm Principia Partners. He provided this commentary at the request of HousingWire editorial.

Friday, March 19th, 2010

The US Treasury Department initially planned to spend $75bn on the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), but in a recent report to Congress, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected the Treasury will spend a total $22bn on the program. This figure represents total expenditures from day one of HAMP until the program expires in 2012.

The CBO is required to submit a report on the transactions under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) 45 days after an analysis by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The CBO reported the cost of present and future TARP transactions will cost $109bn.

At the outset of HAMP, the Treasury planned to disburse $50bn through TARP with the remaining $25bn to come from Fannie Mae (FNM: 0.00 N/A) and Freddie Mac (FRE: 0.00 N/A).

According to the latest TARP transaction report, the Treasury has adjusted the total cap amount to $36.9bn for HAMP servicers.

The CBO reported something different. According the report, TARP will disburse no more than $20bn to servicers for permanent loan modifications. Through February, the 113 servicers provided 170,000 permanent modifications. Another $1.5bn will come from the Hardest Hit Fund for select state Housing Financial Agencies (HFAs).

The HFAs of California, Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, and Florida are already planning to spend the money to help underwater borrowers reduce their principal balance.

The OMB estimated the Treasury will disburse $49bn under HAMP. The difference between the CBO $22bn estimate and the OMB projection “stems primarily from disparate outlooks on the number of eligible households and the participation rate among those households.”

At the outset of HAMP, the Obama Administration set a target to reach 3-to-4m homeowners. While the Treasury maintains the program is on track to reach that goal, critics of the program are already pointing out its failure, and watchdogs are taking a closer look at the rising volume of complaints.

Write to Jon Prior.

Friday, March 19th, 2010

In the San Francisco Bay Area, home sales improved from January to February, but remained below last year’s level. However, the median price paid continued a five-month-long run of year-over-year increases, according to MDA DataQuick.

There were a total of 4,987 new and resale houses and condos sold in the nine-county Bay Area in February. That’s up 2.8% from 4,853 in January and down 0.9% from 5,032 in February 2009, DataQuick said.

In addition, February’s total was 22.2% below the February average of 6,413 sales, going back to 1988. Since 1995, the February sales total is second lowest only to 2008, when 3,989 were sold.

The median price paid for all new and resale houses and condos was $354,000, up 1.1% from $350,000 in January and up 20% from $295,000 in February 2009.

Last month’s median was 22.1% higher than the apparent bottom of the Bay Area’s price drop, $290,000 in March 2009, but 46.8% lower than the $665,000 peak median reached in June and July of 2007.

The significant increase in median price this year was due to more foreclosure and lower-cost home sales, along with fewer high-end sales last years.

“The sales and price data remain choppy, with more ups and downs and inconsistencies than we’d typically see. It’s partly the season — January and February are often atypical and don’t serve as good barometers. But it’s more than that. The market remains fundamentally off kilter,” said MDA DataQuick president John Walsh.

But foreclosure resales are still playing a dominant role in the Bay Area market. Homes that had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months accounted for 36.6% of all resale transactions in February, the fourth consecutive month of increased foreclosure sales. However, last month’s share of sales is below the February 2009 share, when foreclosure resales peaked at 52% of all resales transactions.

“Despite the widening stability seen in the housing market in recent months, the outlook remains murky,” Walsh said. “Whether prices will firm, or remain firm, will depend largely on three factors: The market’s response as the government reduces its housing stimulus, the economy’s ability to gain traction, and the decisions that lenders and borrowers will make in countless distress cases. The key question is how much more distressed inventory is coming, and when.”

Sales of homes priced at more than $500,000 accounted for 31.9% of all February transactions, up from 23.6% last year. An increase of distressed sales for luxury homes has helped that segment of the market pick up activity, DataQuick said.

Hurting the upper end of the market, however, is the lack of available financing. Mortgages above $417,000 — the former definition of a jumbo loan — made up 26.3% of all home purchase loans last month. That was down from 27.3% in January but up from 18.3% a year ago. Before the credit crisis took hold in August 2007, more than 60% of purchase loans were over $417,000.

Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) lending also remains constrained. ARMs accounted for 7.8% of Bay Area purchase loans, up from 7.5% in January and 3.9% in 2009. But from January 2000 to August 2007 ARMs on average, accounted for 61% of all purchase loans.

On the lower end of the spectrum, government-insured Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans accounted for 26.9% of Bay Area purchase loans in February, up from 23.3% last year and only 1.4% two years ago.

“There’s still relatively little lending going on in the upper price ranges, and little adjustable-rate financing, which had been vital to the Bay Area,” Walsh said. “Investor and cash-only deals remain well above normal, as does the level of sales involving distressed property.”

Absentee buyers purchased 19.4% of all Bay Area homes sold in February, equal from January and up from 18.4% last year. Buyers who appeared to have paid in cash — meaning there was no corresponding purchase loan found in the public record — accounted for 27.1% of all February sales, up from 25.7% in January and 24.4% last year.

House flipping is also up from last year. Homes that sold in February that had previously been sold between a three-week and six-month period accounted for 2.6% of all sales, down from 2.9% in January, but up from 1.5% last year.

Write to Austin Kilgore.

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Despite anticipated higher rates and wider spreads, investment opportunities will likely remain after the government exits the agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) market this month, according to research-driven institutional global asset management firm Smith Breeden Associates.

The Federal Reserve is on track to wind down purchases of $1.25trn of MBS by the end of the month. MBS bond yield spreads to Treasurys tightened to historic levels during the program, and investor uncertainty lingers over whether spreads will blow out again in the the post-Fed agency MBS market.

Credit-rating agency Fitch Ratings sees signs both mortgage rates and loan loss severities will likely rise following the Fed's exit from the agency MBS market. Going a step further, economists warn the Fed's withdrawal will trigger a rapid decline in the monetary base and, ultimately, a resurrection of the asset-purchasing program.

“Since the peak of government purchases in the spring of 2009, the Fed has been tapering their purchases with the intent of having an orderly exit from the market," said Smith Breeden principal and senior portfolio manager Dan Adler, in commentary e-mailed to HousingWire. "While this slow exit should lessen the Fed’s overall impact, it’s difficult to envision their exit having no impact, as they’ve been the majority buyer of MBS for much of the last 13 months."

Adler anticipates spreads will widen somewhat and mortgage rates will increase in the wake of the Fed's exit. But instead of the 70-100bps increase commonly expected, Adler said spreads will likely widen around 25-30bps.

A drop in net issuance of MBS and a reduction in the supply of new mortgages will keep supply low, which will ease the widening pressure on spreads, he said. But the Fed's exit will likely add some volatility to the market.

"[W]hile it’s safe to assume we’ll see some short-term widening resulting from the Fed’s exit from the MBS market, we believe there will only be a limited amount of cheapening, which suggests investment opportunities will remain and investors need not abandon the agency mortgage market entirely," Adler said.

Although investor uncertainty casts doubt on the return of the buy-to-hold investor, researchers from global financial services firm Credit Suisse are looking ahead to an expected strength of bank and foreign investor demand for agency MBS in 2010.

The Fed's exit from agency MBS, however, combined with the wind-down of the first-time homebuyer tax credit and government-led loan modifications — which so far have shown underwhelming results — will also have the knock-on effect of raising loss severities on distressed US residential mortgages this year, according to Fitch Ratings market commentary.

The expiration in the coming months of both the homebuyer tax credit and the Fed's MBS purchase program will increase negative pressure on home prices and loss severities, Fitch said. An increase in the liquidation of loans with unsuccessful loan modifications is expected to add to the supply of distressed inventory in the housing market.

Write to Diana Golobay.

Friday, March 19th, 2010

The clock is ticking as the days remaining under a government purchase program of agency mortgage securities draw to a close.

The New York Federal Reserve Bank bought another $10bn of agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) in the week ending March 17 as the $1.25trn program, now 99% complete, winds down to a scheduled completion by the end of the month.

The Fed bought a total $10.6bn MBS this week — $4.8bn of Freddie Mac (FRE: 0.00 N/A) MBS, $5.4bn of Fannie Mae (FNM: 0.00 N/A) MBS and $400m of Ginnie Mae MBS. The Fed also reported $601m of Fannie MBS sales in the same week, bringing net purchases to $10bn, level with last week.

The latest week of reporting brings total net purchases to $1.24trn — or nearly 99% of the Fed's $1.25trn purchasing power — according to weekly research by Barclays Capital. The majority, or 57%, of net purchases so far were of MBS issued by Fannie. Freddie MBS came in second, accounting for 34% of net purchases, while Ginnie MBS took the remaining 9%:

The Fed has $14bn left to spend under the program and 10 business days of purchases remaining.

The Federal Reserve this week decided to exit the program at the end of March, despite earlier consideration of a possible expansion and extension of government-led initiatives to buy MBS.

The Fed's exit from agency MBS has sparked investor fears MBS bond yield spreads to Treasurys may blow out again from recent historic tights, when the government withdraws its significant demand for securities.

Bond dealers see positive signs, however, that high prepay speeds in the midst of delinquent loan buyouts by the agencies are keeping spreads tight, as bondholders reinvest in Fannie and Freddie collateral.

Write to Diana Golobay.

Disclosure: The author holds no relevant investment positions.

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

The mortgage-finance alternative to securitization, covered bonds, came one step closer to larger acceptance in the US secondary markets with the introduction of the highly-anticipated United States Covered Bond Act by Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.).

In the February issue of HousingWire magazine, Garrett is featured in a lengthy Q&A on his push to get legislative and regulatory recognition for covered bonds, products that are collateralized typically by prime mortgages. Covered bonds are so named for the dual recourse provided, where the issuer is on the hook to pay out regardless of whether or not the collateral performs as expected.

Usually, covered bonds hedge this risk by using over-collateralization as credit enhancement. This allows for non-performing mortgages to be pulled from bonded pools and replaced with performing mortgages.

The platform is Europe's oldest form of structured finance and has yet to see triple-A defaults. So in that sense, covered bonds remain to be vigorously tested. However in an e-mail to reporters, Garrett, along with support from co-sponsors Rep. Paul Kanjorski (D-Pa.) and Financial Services Committee Ranking Member Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.), says the bill will establish regulatory oversight of covered bond programs, includes provisions for default and insolvency of covered bond issuers and subjects covered bonds to appropriate securities regulations by federal regulators.

Alberto Basu, the head of the US (dollar-denominated) covered bond trading at JP Morgan (JPM: 37.21 -0.75%) remarked that such legislation is necessary to show support for the product in the market place. And the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), a secondary market trade group, agrees.

"SIFMA's US Covered Bond Council is pleased to see the increased momentum for a dedicated legislative framework for covered bonds that is fundamental to building a vibrant US covered bonds market," said Sean Davy, managing director at SIFMA, in a statement. "We thank Congressman Garrett for his leadership on this issue and are pleased to see Reps. Kanjorski and Bachus join him in this effort.”

The United States Covered Bond Act is the legislative follow-up to Garrett’s original legislation, The Equal Treatment for Covered Bonds Act, first introduced in 2008. The US Treasury also lists the options on Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) policy concerning what investors can expect if the bank that 'covers' the bonds itself goes out of business.

Garrett's Act list eligible assets for covered bonds as residential property, home equity assets, as well as auto, commercial and student loans. Credit cards, public sector assets and small business assets are also eligible. The established regulator, if passed, will be required to approve all covered bond platforms, and list on a single website, and establish over-collateralization minimums.

As Garrett discussed in his Q&A, obstacles to introducing the legislation included not only getting co-sponsors, but also satisfying some concerns of the FDIC. One solution seems to be that, in the case of bank failure, the FDIC will have 15 days to shift the platform to another issuer. Thereby disallowing investors from seeking recourse from the FDIC.

Write to Jacob Gaffney.

The author holds no relevant investments.

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

National home prices were down less than 1% in January compared to one year earlier, and down 1.9% from the previous month, according to First American CoreLogic’s monthly home price index (HPI).

The 0.7% year-over-year decline in January was better than the 3.4% decrease in December. January’s narrowed decline comes exactly one year after the CoreLogic HPI took its biggest annual decline in the 30-year history of the index.

Excluding distressed sales, prices declined 0.4% year-over-year in January, CoreLogic said. That’s better than 3.3% in December 2009.

CoreLogic projects house prices will continue to decline another 3.7% into the spring before bottoming out in April. After prices begin to stabilize, there will be a modest recovery for the balance of 2010. Excluding distressed sales, prices are projected to decreased only another 0.9%.

“The cumulative loss in home prices of 28% is more severe than the next worst housing recession of 24% cumulative decline which began in Louisiana in the mid-1980s,” said First American CoreLogic chief economist Mark Fleming. “It took Louisiana five years to recover from the bottom, we expect this recovery to take at least as long.”

Michigan, Oregon, Nevada, Maryland and Arizona are expected to see the largest future price declines for the balance of 2010, ranging from 3.5% to 4.5%. On the opposite end of the spectrum, Alabama, South Dakota and Kansas are projected to see price appreciation ranging from 0.5% to 1.5% through the end of 2010.

During the next 12 months, CoreLogic projects national price will increase 4.5%. Excluding distressed sales, that appreciation grows to 5.6%.

Nevada experienced the worst year-over-year price decline in January at 16.9%, followed by Idaho (12.9%), Florida (9.3%), Oregon (8.9%) and Arizona (8.9%).

Excluding distressed sales, the worst five states for year-over-year price declines were Nevada (15.1%), Idaho (9.4%), Florida (8.5%), Arizona (8.2%) and Wyoming (6.8%).

Write to Austin Kilgore.

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Applications for FHA-insured mortgages climbed 31.1% in February, according to a report from the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).

More than 165,000 applications came in February, up from 126,000 in January. Applications for mortgage purchases increased the most. More than 97,000 FHA purchase applications came through in February, an increase of 37.4% from January. Applications for refinances picked up 23.9% to 61,425 in February, and reverse mortgage applications increased 14.4% to 6,643.

Of the refinance applications, 79.7% were converted from conventional mortgages to FHA, and 20.2% were previous FHA mortgages. There were 46 applications for HOPE for Homeowners (H4H) refinances in February. Borrowers completing the H4H program become re-equified and refinanced into a new FHA-insured mortgage.

Some analysts say H4H could be a “powerful alternative” to the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). However, February numbers for the program are down from 209 in the same month in 2009.

The FHA report also covers completed endorsement and delinquency numbers. FHA insured 16.8% fewer mortgages in February from the previous month – totaling 131,978 mortgages.

In the single-family insurance system at FHA, there are more than 6m mortgages worth $786.5bn. In February, 9.2%, roughly 550,000, were more than 90 days delinquent. It’s a decrease from 9.4% in January but still above the 7.3% level in February 2009.

Write to Jon Prior.



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