Nationstar's Stock Drops 10% After Capital Raise

Investors punished Nationstar Mortgage, sending shares down more than 10% Wednesday, down $3.15 a share to $27.96 a share, after the nonbank servicer announced a capital raise of roughly $500 million that will dilute existing shareholders.

Nationstar, in Lewisville, Tex., said in a Securities and Exchange filing Wednesday that underwriters Citigroup, Barclays and JPMorgan Chase have a 30-day option to buy up to an additional 2.625 million shares.

Ocwen said it planned to use the proceeds from the sale of 17.5 million shares for "future acquisitions, transfers of servicing portfolios, funding of advances and repaying of obligations, including corporate indebtedness," according to the Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

The acquisitions of mortgage servicing rights include $60 billion in unpaid principal in MSRs that are "in process or under letters of intent," pending regulatory approval.

In the past month, Nationstar has agreed to buy $35 billion in servicing rights alone from Ocwen Financial. On Tuesday, Ocwen said it was selling a $25 billion portfolio to Nationstar. In February, Nationstar agreed to buy a $9.8 billion portfolio of performing loans from Ocwen that are backed by Freddie Mac.

This article originally appeared in American Banker.
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