Fannie Mae on Tuesday priced its fifth Connecticut Avenue Securities deal structured as a tax-advantaged
The return to this market has become a more pressing initiative for Fannie and another government-sponsored enterprise, Freddie Mac, recently because their regulator has renewed its interest in
The Federal Housing Finance Agency
Other than deciding to
Fannie’s single-family credit risk transfer activity fell to a rate roughly one-fourth of Freddie Mac’s issuance level in 2020 and 2021, according to calculations of reference loan-pool volume at issuance by the two GSEs and their regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency. That contrasts a period between 2014 and 2019, when Fannie’s issuance generally ran well ahead of Freddie’s. Most recently, in 2021, Fannie’s issuance totaled $206 billion, compared with $846 billion at Freddie, an FHFA progress report issued earlier this week shows.
In the transaction announced Tuesday, Fannie Mae offered two mezzanine and two subordinate tranches of the $952 million note offering, CAS Series 2022-RO5, which priced at basis-point spreads above the one-month Secured Offered Financing Rate. The offered amounts and spreads (with rounding applied) were as follows: class 2M-1, $292.94 million, 190; 2M-2, $219.7 million, 300; 2B-1, $146.47 million, 450; and 2B-2, $292.94 million, 400. Ratings for the classes ranged from low-end investment grade to speculative. Fannie retained a portion of each offered class as well as 2B-3H, a tranche that positions the GSEs to absorb certain first-losses from the deal.
The reference pool of approximately 127,000 loans for Fannie’s most recent CAS deal has an outstanding unpaid principal balance of approximately $38.5 billion and transfers some of the risk from mortgages originated between May and July of last year. All the mortgages in the reference pool had less than the ideal 20% down payment. However, none of those mortgages had a loan-to-value ratio higher than 97%.
Whether the differences between Trump and Biden administration approaches to credit risk transfers are politically motivated or stem from different perceptions of their risk, or a little of both, is a matter of debate.
Critics say the reference pool structure could dangerously magnify market risks in the way that some mortgage derivative vehicles did during the Great Recession. However, advocates of credit insurance risk transfers, Connecticut Avenue Securities and Freddie’s equivalents have argued that having the flexibility to use both is beneficial in that it ensures risk is not concentrated in one particular vehicle. The GSEs also use traditional mortgage insurance to share risk with the private market.