The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), U.S.Securities and Exchange Commission; Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) have released a proposal to define Qualified Residential Mortgages (QRM). QRMs are home loans that will be exempt from the requirement that mortgage lenders retain a 5 percent share of each loan they originate that is packaged for securitization - keeping "skin in the game."
The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill already identified loans guaranteed or originated through FHA, VA, and USDA as qualified for exemption but left other products, including loans written by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, up to federal regulators to determine. Under the proposed definition released today, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will indeed be exempt from risk retention regs at least while the GSEs are under government control. When/If Fannie and Freddie are released from conservatorship their exemption status will be revisited. For non-agency loans to meet the QRM definition and avoid being subject
to risk retention regs, they must have down
payments of 20% or more and DTI of 28% / 36% or less. Also, QRMs will not include products that add complexity and risk to
mortgage loans, such as terms permitting negative amortization, interest-only
payments, or programs with significant payment shock potential.
FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair delivered the following statement at the FDIC's Board Meeting today:
"This morning we are proposing to address a key driver of the housing crisis: misaligned economic incentives arising from the widespread use of private securitization to fund mortgage lending. Almost 90 percent of subprime and Alt-A originations in the peak years of 2005 and 2006 were privately securitized. During that period, the separation of originating and securitizing loans from the risk of loss in the event of default fed a massive amount of lax, unaffordable lending which fueled the housing bubble. Since neither lenders nor securitizers appeared to hold any real risk in the transaction, the "originate-to-distribute" model of mortgage finance misaligned incentives to reward the volume of loans originated, not their quality. The consequences for our economy have been severe.
Today, the market is trying to find a new model. Title IX of the Dodd Frank Act seeks to address the defects of the prior model of securitization by imposing requirements for transparency, due diligence, representations and warranties, and retention of credit risk. The SEC has already proposed rules to address transparency.
The rule before the Board today proposes new standards for retention of credit risk to help ensure that securitizers will hold "skin in the game" which will align their interests with those of bondholders. This will encourage better underwriting by assuring that originators and securitizers can not escape the consequences of their own lending practices. Fundamentally, this rule is about reforming the "originate-to-distribute" model for securitization, and realigning the interests in structured finance towards long-term, sustainable lending. If we are truly interested in restarting securitization, then we must restore investor confidence and the soundness of the securitization model. As required by Dodd-Frank, the proposed rule creates a comprehensive framework for risk retention
The general rule set out in Dodd-Frank is to require issuers of securitized loans to retain a 5 percent interest in the risk of loss. The law provides an exception to that rule and directs the agencies to set a standard for underwriting and product features that, as shown by historical data, result in a lower risk of default such that risk retention is not necessary. The QRM is the exception, not the rule, and as such, I believe should be narrowly drawn. Properly aligned economic incentives are the best check against lax underwriting. Because QRM loans are exempt from risk retention, the proposed QRM definition sets appropriately high standards regarding documentation of income, past borrower performance, a low debt-to-income ratio for monthly housing expenses and total debt obligations, elimination of payment shock features, a maximum loan-to- value or LTV ratio, a minimum down payment, and other quality underwriting standards. This does NOT mean that under the rule, all home buyers would have to meet these high standards to qualify for a mortgage. On the contrary, I anticipate that QRMs will be a small slice of the market, with greater flexibility provided for loans securitized with risk retention or held in portfolio.
Many have expressed concern that imposing a specific LTV standard, such as 80 percent, or a specific down payment standard, such as 20 percent, will impair the access of low- and moderate-income borrowers to mortgage credit. As a consequence, we are seeking comment on the impact of the QRM standards on low- and moderate income borrowers as we consider the comments on the NPR and work towards a final rule. We take these concerns very seriously and want to make sure they are fully addressed. In particular, I would welcome comment on how and whether we can assure that the unique needs of LMI borrowers can be met through FHA programs as well as appropriately underwritten portfolio lending and risk retention securitizations.
Also included in the QRM standards are loan servicing requirements. Continued turmoil in the housing market caused by inadequate and poor quality servicing underscores the need to make sure that future securitization agreements provide appropriate resources and incentives to mitigate losses when loans become distressed. Servicing standards must also provide for a proper alignment of servicing incentives with the interests of investors and address conflicts of interest. The servicing standards included as part of the QRM requirements address many of the most significant servicing issues. I am particularly pleased that the servicing standards require that there be financial incentives for servicers to consider options other than foreclosure when those options will maximize value for investors. The proposed standards also require servicers to act without regard to the interests of any particular tranche of investors; to disclose any second-lien interests if they service the first lien; and to workout and disclose to investors in advance how second liens will be dealt with if the first lien needs to be restructured. I welcome comment on the proposed servicing reforms, whether they can be strengthened, and whether they should apply more generally to all private securitizations, not just QRMs."
Risk Retention Proposed Rule:
I. Section 941(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
- Section 941(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act1 creates section 15G of
the Securities Exchange Act. New section 15G requires the OCC, FRB, FDIC, and SEC2
to issue joint regulations requiring securitizers of asset-backed securities (ABS) to
retain an unhedged economic interest in a portion of the credit risk (not less than 5%)
for assets that the securitizer packages into the securitization for sale to others, except
where those assets are underwritten according to underwriting standards established
by regulation.
- Where these regulations address the securitization of
residential mortgage assets, HUD and the FHFA also are part of the joint rulemaking group.
The Treasury Secretary, as Chairperson of FSOC, is directed to coordinate the joint
rulemaking.
- The agencies are directed to define the appropriate form
and amount of risk retention interests, to consider circumstances in which it might be
appropriate to shift the retention obligation to the originator of the securitized assets, and
to create rules addressing complex securitizations backed by other asset-backed
securities.
- The agencies also must implement the statutory exemption
from the risk retention requirements for "qualified residential mortgages" (QRMs)
with underwriting and product features that historical loan performance data
indicate result in a lower risk of default. Securities backed entirely by QRMs are not subject
to any risk retention requirement.
- Section 15G also requires the agencies to establish
underwriting standards indicative of low credit risk for other asset classes used in
securitizations, including auto loans, commercial loans, and commercial real estate loans.
Securitizations backed by assets that meet these standards may be subject to less than 5% risk
retention.
II. Overall Approach
- The proposed rule prescribes underwriting criteria for
QRMs and certain other asset classes, and provides that sponsors of securitizations
comprised of these "qualified assets" are not required to retain risk under section 15G.
Consistent with the statutory purpose of requiring "skin in
the game" for all but the least risky assets, the QRM underwriting standards are
conservative. The proposed standards also are designed to be unambiguous; they draw "bright lines" in
order to facilitate transparency and enable verification by securitization sponsors and
investors.
- While the risk retention exemptions under the proposal
area conservative, the proposal also contains various options for how the risk retention
requirements can be satisfied for non-exempt assets. A securitizer may then chose, based on
the type of asset involved and market and investor expectations, which form of risk
retention to use. The agencies intended that these options would provide flexibility so
that the risk retention requirements not impede the reemergence of robust
securitization markets for nonexempt loans.
- Comments received during the public comment process will
be vital to the agencies in evaluating the appropriate stringency of standards for QRMs
and other categories of assets exempt from risk retention, and whether the
flexibility of the multiple risk retention options proposed would achieve the agencies'
objective of not impeding securitization activities for non-exempt asset classes.
III. Description of the proposal
A. Underwriting Standards
1. Qualified Residential Mortgages (QRMs)
Historical Data. The proposed rule establishes the terms
and conditions under which a residential mortgage would qualify as a QRM. As required by
the statute, the agencies developed these underwriting criteria through evaluation of
historical loan performance data, which is described, in detail, in the preamble to the
proposal.
Nontraditional Product Features. The proposed rule
generally would prohibit QRMs from having product features that add complexity and risk to
mortgage loans, such as terms permitting negative amortization, interest-only
payments, or significant interest rate increases.
Underwriting Standards. The proposed definition of QRM
would establish conservative underwriting standards designed to ensure that QRM loans are
of very high credit quality. These standards include:
- Maximum front-end and back-end borrower debt-to-income
ratios of 28% and 36%, respectively;
- A maximum loan-to-value (LTV) ratio of 80% in the case of
a purchase transaction (with a 75% combined LTV for refinance
transactions, reduced to 70% for cash-out refis);
- A 20% down payment requirement in the case of a purchase
transaction;Borrower credit history restrictions, including no 60-day
delinquencies on any debt obligation within the previous 24 months.
Mortgage Insurance. The LTV ratio must be calculated
without considering mortgage insurance. Although mortgage insurance protects investors
from losses when borrowers default, and thus lessens the severity of the loss, the
statute directs the agencies, in developing the QRM criteria, to consider whether mortgage
insurance reduces the risk that default will occur in the first place.
Servicing Requirements. The proposal includes in the
criteria for a QRM a limited set of servicing requirements that may lower the risk of default on
residential mortgages The proposal requires that the originator of a QRM incorporate
in the mortgage transaction documents certain requirements regarding servicing policies
and procedures for the mortgage, including procedures for loss mitigation actions,
and procedures to address subordinate liens on the same property securing other loans
held by the same creditor.
- The servicing requirements focus on establishing a process
for the creditor to take loss mitigation activities into account in servicing QRMs,
but they do not dictate particular types of actions to be undertaken, and they
factor in consideration of the relative estimated economic impacts on the QRM of loss
mitigation versus other approaches in dealing with distressed loans.
- The servicing requirements included in this proposal
cannot supplant the ongoing interagency effort to develop national mortgage servicing
standards. Those national mortgage servicing standards would apply to residential
mortgages regardless of whether the mortgages are QRMs, are
securitized, or are held in portfolio by a financial institution. The primary objective
of this separate interagency effort is to develop a comprehensive,
consistent, and enforceable set of servicing standards for residential mortgages that all
servicers would have to meet. Also, the separate interagency effort is taking into
consideration a number of aspects not included in the QRM servicing standards,
including the quality of customer service provided throughout the life of a mortgage;
the processing and handling of customer payments; foreclosure processing;
operational and internal controls; and servicer compensation and payment obligations.
- The proposal also requests comment on whether this
national approach is a more effective way to address problems of servicing than the
proposed QRM criteria.
Alternative Approach. The preamble also requests comment
an alternative approach that would apply less conservative underwriting standards to
QRMs, including lower down payments and the use of private mortgage insurance, and
would increase the risk retention requirements for non-QRM mortgages.
2. Other "qualified assets"
The proposed rule also would not require a securitizer to
retain any portion of the credit risk associated with a securitization transaction if the ABS
issued are exclusively collateralized by auto loans, commercial loans, or
commercial real estate loans that meet underwriting standards included in the proposed rule.3 The
underwriting standards proposed under this provision of 15G have been designed to
be robust and ensure that the loans backing the ABS are of very low credit risk. They were
developed by the Federal banking agencies based on supervisory expertise.
Auto Loan Asset Class. Given the highly depreciable nature
of the collateral for auto loans, the underwriting standards associated with the auto
loan asset class focus primarily on the borrower's ability to repay the loan, comparable to
industry standards for unsecured lending.
Commercial Loan Asset Class. The underwriting standards
associated with the commercial loan asset class are designed to assure that the
borrower's business is in, and will remain in, sound financial condition and maintain the
ability to repay the loan.
Commercial Real Estate Loan Asset Class. The underwriting
standards associated with the commercial loan asset class are designed to ensure that
the property securing the loan is stable and provides sufficient net operating income to
repay the loan, and recognize the relatively lower risk presented by stabilized properties and
multi-family properties with established tenants.
Residential Mortgage Asset Class. Section 15G also contemplates
a residential mortgage asset class with reduced risk retention comparable to the
proposed rules for auto loans, commercial loans, and commercial real estate loans. The
agencies are not proposing a different set of residential mortgage underwriting standards
than the QRM standards at this time. One issue that would be raised by an additional
residential mortgage asset class is whether the risk retention requirement should be higher
than zero, and whether such a retention level would provide adequate incentive for
underwriting mortgages meeting the underwriting standards for the class.
- The agencies are requesting comment whether a residential
mortgage asset class should be created, whether private mortgage insurance should
be included, what other appropriate underwriting criteria might apply, and
what level of risk retention would be appropriate.
Other Asset Classes. The agencies have the authority to
develop underwriting rules for more asset classes, but the agencies are not proposing to do
so at this time. Although there are additional asset classes in the ABS market, they
exhibit significant differences among underwriting factors for different loans within the
class, or tend to be higher risk assets. As a practical matter, this makes it difficult to
establish robust underwriting standards for an entire class through regulation. Moreover,
the agencies' proposed risk retention alternatives present a great deal of flexibility
that should facilitate securitization activities in these other asset classes.
3. Quality Control
The proposal contains two provisions to guard against
abuse of the QRM and other qualifying asset exemptions.
- First, the process of selecting and assembling the assets
for securitization must be performed according to adequate internal supervisory
controls to ensure they were underwritten in accordance with the rule, and the sponsor
must provide a selfcertification as to the adequacy of these controls to potential investors
in the securitization.
- Second, if any of the loans are subsequently determined
not to have been underwritten in accordance with the standards, the sponsor
must buy them back from the pool for cash (at unpaid principal balance plus
accrued interest) within 90 days.
4. Other exempt assets
Federal and State Guarantees. Consistent with section 15G,
the proposed rule also exempts government-guaranteed securitizations and assets
from the risk retention requirements.
Pass-through Re-securitization Transactions. The rule also
exempts single class resecuritizations providing for the pass-through (net of expenses) of
principal and interest received on underlying asset-backed securities for which
credit risk already has been retained in accordance with section 15G (or which were
exempt).
B. General Risk Retention Requirements
1. Scope of Application.
Sponsor. The proposed rules generally require that a
securitization "sponsor," or one of its consolidated affiliates, hold the required risk
retention. Practically speaking, of all the various parties involved in a typical securitization
transaction, the "sponsor" is the true decision-maker behind the securitization transaction and
determines what assets will be securitized. In light of this, the proposed rule provides
that a sponsor of an ABS transaction is the party required to retain the risk under
the rule. The proposed rule defines the term "sponsor" in a manner consistent with the
definition of that term in the SEC's Regulation AB.
Originator. The proposed rule would permit a
securitization sponsor to allocate a proportional share of the risk retention obligation to the
originator(s) of the securitized assets, subject to certain conditions. This would have to be
voluntary on the originator's part, however, through a contractual agreement with the
sponsor.
- The proposed rule defines "originator" as the person that
"creates" a loan or other receivable. This only covers the original creditor-and not a
subsequent purchaser or transferee.
- To ensure the originator has "skin in the game," the
proposal requires the originator to be the originator for at least 20 percent of
the loans in the securitization, take on at least 20 percent of the risk
retention, and pay up front for its share of retention, either in cash or a discount on the
price of the loans the originator sells to the pool.
2. Acceptable Forms of Risk Retention.
Consistent with the statute, the proposed rule generally
would require a sponsor to retain an economic interest equal to at least 5% of the aggregate
credit risk of the assets collateralizing an issuance of ABS (the "base" risk
retention requirement). The agencies have sought to structure the proposed risk retention
requirements in a flexible manner that will allow the securitization markets for non-qualified
assets to function in a manner that both facilitates the flow of credit to consumers and
businesses on economically viable terms and is consistent with the protection of
investors.
The proposed rule provides several options for the form in
which a securitization sponsor may retain risk. These include:
- A 5% "vertical" slice of the ABS interests, whereby the
sponsor or other entity retains a specified pro rata piece of each class of
interests issued in the transaction (that is, the sponsor must hold 5% of each
tranche);
- A 5% "horizontal" first-loss position, whereby the sponsor
or other entity retains a subordinate interest in the issuing entity that bears
losses on the assets before any other classes of interests;
- An "L-shaped interest" interest whereby the sponsor holds
at least half of the 5% retained interest in the form of a vertical slice and half
in the form of a horizontal first-loss position;
- A "seller's interest" in securitizations structured using
a master trust collateralized by revolving assets whereby the sponsor or other entity
holds a 5% separate interest that participates in revenues and losses on the
same basis as the investors' interest in the pool of receivables (unless and until the
occurrence of an early amortization event);
- A representative sample, whereby the sponsor retains a 5%
representative sample of the assets to be securitized, thereby exposing the
sponsor to credit risk that is equivalent to that of the securitized assets; or
- For certain "eligible" single-seller or multi-seller
asset-backed commercial paper conduits collateralized by loans and receivables and covered
by a 100% liquidity guarantee from a regulated bank or holding company, a 5%
residual interest retained by the receivables' originator-seller. This option
would not be available to ABCP programs that operate as SIVs or securities
arbitrage programs.
- The rule also provides that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
will be able to satisfy the risk retention requirement through their guarantees (which
cover 100% of principal and interest) as long as they continue to operate
under the conservatorship or receivership of the FHFA and with direct
government support through the Treasury Department's Senior Preferred Stock
Purchase Agreement.
Premium capture cash reserve account. In addition to the
base credit risk retention requirement, the proposed rule would prohibit sponsors from
receiving compensation in advance for excess spread4 income to be generated by
securitized assets over time. The proposed rules accomplish this by imposing a "premium
capture" mechanism designed to prevent a securitizer from structuring an ABS transaction in
a manner that would allow the securitizer to take an up-front profit on a
securitization (before any unexpected losses on the securitized assets appeared) that would pay the
sponsor more up front than the cost of the risk retention interest it is required to retain. o If a sponsor structures a securitization to monetize
excess spread on the underlying assets-which is typically effected through the
sale of interest-only tranches or premium bonds-the proposed rule would "capture"
the premium or purchase price received on the sale of the tranches that
monetize the excess spread and require that the sponsor place such amounts into a
separate "premium capture cash reserve account" in the securitization.
- The amount placed into the premium capture cash reserve
account would be separate from and in addition to the sponsor's base risk
retention requirement under the proposal's menu of options, and would be used to
cover losses on the underlying assets before such losses were allocated to any
other interest or account.
("Excess spread" is the difference between the gross yield
on the pool of securitized assets less the cost of financing those assets (weighted average coupon paid on the investor
certificates), charge-offs, servicing costs, and any other trust expenses such as insurance premiums, if any.)
3. B-Piece Buyers in CMBS transactions.
As contemplated by section 15G, the agencies propose to
permit, for certain securitizations of commercial mortgage-backed securities
(CMBS), a form of horizontal risk retention in which the horizontal first-loss position
initially is held by a third-party purchaser (known as a "B-piece buyer") that specifically
negotiates for the purchase of the first-loss position and conducts its own credit analysis
of each commercial loan backing the CMBS.
- Since B-piece buyers also typically serve as the special
servicer of troubled assets in the pool, investors have sometimes complained that they
manipulate their servicing powers to benefit the residual interest they hold
(offsetting the consequences of poor underwriting for the firs-loss piece)
To address this concern, the agencies are proposing to require appointment
of an independent Operating Advisor to oversee servicing.
4. Prohibition Against Hedging or Transferring Required Risk
Retention
As a general matter, the proposed rule prohibits a
securitizer from hedging its required retain interest or transferring it, unless to a consolidated
affiliate.
- The rule would permit hedging of interest rate or foreign
exchange risk; pledging of the required retained interest on a full recourse basis;
and hedging based on an index of instruments that includes the asset-backed
securities, subject to limitations on the portion of the index represented by the
specific securitization transaction or applicable issuing entities.
D. Disclosure Requirements
The proposed rule also includes disclosure requirements
specifically tailored to each of the permissible forms of risk retention. The disclosure
requirements are designed to provide investors with material information concerning the
securitizer's retained interests, such as the amount and form of the interest
retained, and the assumptions used in determining the aggregate value of ABS to be issued
(which generally affects the amount of risk required to be retained). Further, the
disclosures are designed to provide investors and the agencies with an efficient mechanism to
monitor compliance.