Thursday, September 2, 2010

THE PLAY ON ALT-A SECURITIZATIONS – LET THE GAMES BEGIN (AGAIN)

In an article today in the Wall Street Journal by Prabha Natarajan, it looks like there is a renewed interest and demand for previously issued Alt-A securitization paper. While unclear, it appears these non-agency bonds include the sub-prime variety (there is some distinction between Alt-A and true sub-prime, which appears to have been lost in the recent financial hurricane).

As reported, in was stated by Jesse Litbvak, head of non-agency trading and Jefferies & Co in Stanford, CT (an MBS trading powerhouse?) that these trades are occurring because investors believe that the credit risk of continuing defaults are already priced into the bonds. That, together with the prospect of early redemption, as noted in the article by Matt Toms, head of U.S. public fixed income investment at ING Investment Management, means that the bonds have up-side potential.

Well, as we have seen from our recent past, that is anything but a sure thing. Of significance to this analysis of the value of the bonds is the redemption of the bonds before their maturity date. Currently, due to the refinance boom (or really, bubble), the bonds can be redeemed at their face value due to the early payment of the underlying mortgages. Where in the past, early redemption was something to be avoided (when the investor was paying 105 for the bond), now at the discount of 60-80, a redemption at face would be a good thing. And since in most securitizations, early payments are covered in the cash flow waterfall as a payment to the most senior bonds first, the AAA stand in line to get theirs before the rest.

Right now, with interest rates at historic lows, there has been an increasing portfolio of mortgages being paid off in the refinance market. However, this is still just a limited and decreasing pool of applicants. Beyond the fact that there are only a decreasing percentage of homeowners that will qualify for a refinancing over time, there is also the issue of whether the underlying mortgages are still tied to those ugly prepayment penalties that were the rage in the latter part of the Alt-A and sub-prime boom. And the only way to know that fact is to have loan level detail of the pool. So, while redemptions may be occurring today, do not expect this trend to continue strongly into the future.

The article discusses the fact that the play now is on the AAA bonds off the securitizations – yes those same AAA bonds that now everyone is questioning how the rating agencies reached that rating. More problematic will be the coming tsunami of realized losses on the securitization pools due to short sales and foreclosures that are then liquidated. With the failure of HAMP, HAFA, HALA and all the other programs to stem the tide, foreclosure still seems to be the outcome for a significant number of borrowers. Even Fannie is starting to put pressure on servicers to quicken the pace of foreclosures, as discussed in an article today entitled “Excessively Delaying Fannie Mae Foreclosures Will Now Cost Servicers” by Jacob Gaffney in HousingWire. And once the property is thereafter sold (at a loss to the unpaid principal balance of the loan plus costs and reimbursed advances), these “Realized Losses”, as defined in the securitization trust agreements, could press the losses beyond the mezzanine tranches and into the AAA bonds.

So, while the yields on these bonds may be double that of corporate paper and triple that of Treasurys, it looks like Wall Street is selling investors on stepping up to the tables and laying down money to roll the dice again. Let’s hope we don’t crap out (again).

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