Ginnie Mae announced changes to the minimum size for loan pools backing reverse mortgage securitizations, as it attempts to reduce
The government corporation, which backs securitizations of loans insured or guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration and other public entities, reduced the required minimum size of securities pools by 75% from $1 million to $250,000.
The new minimum-size guidance for Home Equity Conversion Mortgages securitizations goes into effect on April 1, and a pool must contain at least three participations, with each tied to a particular loan.
Ginnie Mae cited the acceleration of interest rates and
"Ginnie Mae is responsive to the market conditions our counterparties face in the reverse mortgage segment. This step allows [a] quicker path to HMBS securitization and supports issuer liquidity," said Ginnie Mae President Alanna McCargo in a press release.
The rule change comes following the
The bankruptcy threw into the spotlight concerns surrounding liquidity risks in the HECM program, which is overseen by the FHA.
On a broader scale, recent consolidation on top of the exit of depository banks from mortgage banking after the Great Recession have increased worries about the
RMF's bankruptcy occurred amid a volatile 2022 for reverse mortgage lenders. After HECM endorsements hit an
In December, reverse mortgage business slowed even further. New HECM endorsements fell 14.8% on a
The monthly number represented a plunge from 5,214 endorsements in the same month a year earlier, a 46.6% drop.
Full-year endorsements increased by 11%, though, totaling 58,776, up from 52,945 in 2021. Retail channels accounted for 32,952 or 56% of 2022's volume, while wholesale lenders issued the remaining 44%, or 25,824 endorsements.
The top two originators, American Advisors Group and Finance of America Reverse, who recently agreed to a
In December, American Advisors Group saw the largest number of endorsements with 551. Longbridge came in with 492, followed by Mutual of Omaha Mortgage at 471, with both lenders among the few companies reporting monthly volume growth despite the wider industry slowdown.