- Regulator says programs allow advancing payments to investors
- Step could help servicers cope with wave of missed payments
A top U.S. regulator is working to provide a lifeline for mortgage servicers stressed by the coronavirus pandemic through programs meant to address natural disasters.
To prepare for an expected wave of missed payments as borrowers deal with the economic fallout from the virus,
The plan under discussion would help mortgage servicers, companies that perform the critical task of taking payments from borrowers and distributing them to bondholders and others. If big servicers were to collapse as payments dry up, federal regulators would have to find other companies to take over their business.
“Ginnie Mae has the authority to make changes to the requirements of our program, and we are using those powers to tailor the existing disaster pass-through assistance programs to more suitably scale to the needs of this national emergency,” Principal Executive Vice President
President
Liquidity Shortage
Even if borrowers never resume loan payments, servicers eventually get reimbursed by federal programs that backstop the mortgage market. In the meantime, however, firms can face a severe liquidity shortage as they continue to advance payments. Since economists expect that the virus could temporarily push the unemployment rate as high as 25%, servicers are expecting a surge of missed payments.
Ginnie Mae, which is part of the
The disaster-relief programs -- historically used for localized disasters rather than national epidemics -- let Ginnie Mae advance payments to mortgage bondholders at the request of a servicer. A key difference in the case of the current crisis is that payments made through the program will not be considered an event of default, Appleton said.
The need for relief is especially acute among nonbank servicers, which don’t have deposits or other readily available sources of cash. After the 2008 financial crisis, banks pulled back from the programs that feed into Ginnie Mae, and nonbank firms now dominate that market.
Mortgage-industry lobbyists unsuccessfully tried to get Congress to include some sort of liquidity facility for servicers in the stimulus legislation. Still, many servicers expect the
Treasury Secretary
Any move that Ginnie makes would likely supplement rather than replace any lending facility created by Treasury and the Fed.
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Gregory Mott, Jesse Westbrook
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