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Putting Homeowners First

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64 M A R K E T P U L S E / S A N D R A L A N E Will the sale of residential mortgage- backed securities ever rebound? THE SLIPPERY SLOPE OF SECURITIZATIONS During the last several years, the creation and sale of residential mortgage- backed securities (RMBS) has almost gone the way of the passenger pigeon. e tremendous impact of the foreclosure debacle caused losses in this market and also diminished confidence in this type of investment. Now, securitizations are making a comeback, although not at the breakneck speed some analysts anticipated. AN INDUSTRY VET EXPLAINS Non-agency securitization, as it was once known, is just a memory, according to Dave Hurt, VP of global markets, data and analytics at CoreLogic. Although there will continue to be some new issuance of RMBS securities, it will not represent more than 15 percent of the secondary market, if that much. For the foreseeable future, the majority of the origination market will continue to focus on agency bonds issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. "Prior to 2008, there was a lot of enthusiasm among investors for purchasing RMBS offerings," Hurt said, "but now investors look at this type of investment with much more caution." At that time, Hurt explains, the sale of these securities was fueled by both investor exuberance and a sense that housing values would keep going up. "Even if a lender made a bad mortgage and it went to some sort of disposition, there was a perceived sense of security, which proved to be false," he continued. "What we know now is that housing values don't always go up, and they can drop drastically." Like a stack of dominoes, the disaster in the housing market had an adverse impact on

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