460 likes | 611 Views
Ginnie Mae. 2. . . Ginnie Mae's Mission. Ginnie Mae's mission is to support affordable housing in the United States by providing an efficient government-guaranteed secondary market vehicle linking the global capital markets to American homebuyers.Purposes: Provide a secondary market for gover
E N D
1.
Internal Controls in a Government Mortgage Securities Program
2. Ginnie Mae 2 Ginnie Mae’s Mission
5. Ginnie Mae 5 Benefits of a Ginnie Mae MBS Full Faith and Credit of the U.S. Government
Higher yields than Treasury yields
Highly liquid security instruments - Easily Bought and Sold on global capital markets
Monthly Cash Flow Guaranteed to Investors
Diverse Universe of Products (Pool types)
Uniform Quality
Less susceptible to adverse market events
6. Ginnie Mae 6 What’s behind the Ginnie Mae Guarantee? The Full Faith and Credit Guaranty of the U.S. Government
Benefits:
Investors benefit because the guaranty ensures zero credit risk to investor community -
Credit Risk is a financial risk that an obligation will not be paid and a loss will result
Mortgage lenders benefit due to high demand for Ginnie Mae MBS
Most importantly, low- and moderate-income homebuyers benefit from increased loan availability in the marketplace
7. What Ginnie Mae Does Raise capital for FHA and other government-insured Loans
Created and issued first ever MBS
Guarantee Issuer (servicer) specific performance
Ginnie Mae guarantees that a servicer will meet its obligations regardless of the cost or resources needed to do so 7
8. Secondary Market for Government and Conventional Loans 8
9. Difference Between Ginnie Mae and GSE 9
10. The Capital Raised by Ginnie Mae Impacts Housing Provides 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages
Expands affordable housing
Provides secondary market liquidity
Lowers financing costs
Provides affordable rental housing
Supports administration crisis efforts
Countercyclical to private sector 10
11. Contingent Risk: Issuer/Servicer Failure Financial safety and soundness of Issuer
Mitigation Tools
Net Worth Requirements – Ginnie Mae implemented increased net worth, capital, and liquid asset requirements for all Single-Family, Multifamily, HECM, and MH Issuers
Single-Family = $2.5 million
Multifamily = $1 million
HECM = $5 million
MH = $10 million
11
12. Ginnie Mae 12 Mortgage-Backed Securities MBS trade through the Capital Markets - Secondary Market
No new Credit Underwriting
Uniform Quality-a Ginnie Mae is a Ginnie Mae
Full Faith and Credit Guaranty gives MBS liquidity & highest rating in Bond Market
MBS Widely Accepted
13. Ginnie Mae 13
14. Ginnie Mae 14
15. The Secondary Market: Recycling Capital 15
16. Ginnie Mae 16
17. Ginnie Mae 17 Program Participants Mortgagor
Issuer
Document Custodian
Funds Custodian
Pool Processing Agent/Central Paying/Transfer Agent
Ginnie Mae
Clearance, Settlement and Payment Processing Institution (Depository)
Investors/Security Holders
Data Collection, Analysis and Risk Management Agent
Field Review Contractor
18. Ginnie Mae 18 General Issuer Eligibility Requirements FHA Approval
Primary Mortgage Market Lending as a Principal Business Activity
Management Capability
Quality Control Program
Lender is and remains in Good Standing with FHA, the GSEs and other Agencies
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Agreement
19. Ginnie Mae 19 Issuer Financial Eligibility Requirements Net Worth Requirements
Financial Statements and Documents
Fidelity Bond/Errors & Omissions (“E&O”) Insurance
20. Ginnie Mae 20 Ginnie Mae MBS I All loans hold the same interest rate in Security
Eligible Pools must contain at least 3 loans -$1,000,000
Monthly Remittance (Pass-Through to Investors) is on the 15th calendar day of each month.
FRMs and other minor pools types-no ARMs
Includes Multifamily collateral
21. Ginnie Mae 21 Ginnie Mae MBS II Custom Pools and Multiple Issuer Pools (MIPs)
Custom-3 loan minimum and $1,000,000
Multiple Issuer-3 loan minimum & $250,000
Mixed Interest Rate Loan Collateral is Allowed within 25 BP to 75 BP Spread
ARMs or FRMs allowed
Pass Through is on 20th calendar day of each month
22. Ginnie Mae 22 Multiclass Products
REMICs are custom-designed securities that redirect MBS cash flows to different classes of investors
Examples:
Sell fixed-rate MBS as a floating rate security (floater & inverse floater)
Sell the principal to one buyer & interest to another
Platinums combine many small MBS positions into a single new security for ease of management and better pricing
23. CONTROLS Ginnie Mae 23
24. Ginnie Mae 24 Issuer Responsibilities Issuers must pay to investors monthly the principal and interest (P&I) due on the pooled mortgages, whether or not actually received from the borrowers
Issuers may be obligated to advance P&I funds from their own corporate funds for many months until, for instance, loan delinquencies are cured, foreclosures can be completed, and an insurance claim is received from FHA, VA or the RD
If an Issuer becomes unable or unwilling to fund any remittance shortfalls through advances, Ginnie Mae will default that Issuer, seize the portfolio and service the loans to ensure the government guarantee remains intact
Ginnie Mae’s guarantee fee of 6 basis points per pool monthly for single family and 13 basis points for multifamily provides adequate reserves for defaults and ongoing administrative expenses
25. Ginnie Mae 25 Issuer Reporting Obligations to Ginnie Mae Annual Audited Financials
Quarterly Financial Reporting
Monthly Reporting to Ginnie Mae on Pools
Monthly Loan Level Detail Reporting
Why all these Reports?
26. OVERVIEW: PPA/CPTA ROLE New Pool Issuance Agent
Maintain Central Registry
Transfer Agent
RPB Collection Agent
Central Paying Agent
Unclaimed Funds Monitor
Trustee and Administrator
Information Agent
Ginnie Mae 26
27. Ginnie Mae 27 Ginnie Mae’s Pre-pooling Requirements for Issuers Current Master Agreements on File
Sufficient Commitment Authority to Pool
Issuers must remain in “Good Standing” (No ‘stop codes’ which may preclude pooling).
28. ISSUER PRE-POOLING REQUIREMENTS
Enrolled as an authorized user of the GinnieNET System.
Have Sufficient Commitment Authority (CA) to cover the outstanding balance of collateral being pooled.
Be able to transmit a valid pre-assigned pool number.
Ginnie Mae 28
29. Web-based GinnieNET: Issuer Roles GinnieNET allows three types of users:
1. Enrollment Administrator
2. Data Entry Staff
3. Authorized Signer Ginnie Mae 29
30. Enrollment Administrator Enrollment Administrator: Adds users, assigns roles, verifies credentials for fingerprint enrollment and resets passwords. In-person enrollment is mandatory with PPA/CPTA. Typically the Enrollment Administrator is the Issuer’s security administrator, not a data entry user.
Ginnie Mae 30
31. Data Entry User Data Entry User: Performs pool data entry for the Issuer, whether through manual keystroke or through automated file upload; generates pool reporting.
Ginnie Mae 31
32. Authorized Signer Authorized Signer: Has network access and initiates communication with the network. Validates, biometrically, that pool transmissions are consistent with all Ginnie Mae rules and procedures. This staff member must be named on the form HUD 11702: Resolution of Board of Directors and Certificate of Authorized Signatures. Ginnie Mae 32
33. Pool Processing: IPMS IPMS – Integrated Pool Management System, New Pool Processing Module:
Confirms Issuer’s available Commitment Authority (“CA”) balance
Verifies Issuer’s pre-assigned pool number
Checks Issuer’s eligibility status (“good standing”)
Obligates (draws down) the outstanding balance being pooled from the Issuer’s commitment line balance
Ginnie Mae 33
34. Central Registry Holds all Ginnie Mae MBS certificates and certificate holders, which the CPTA updates and maintains for Ginnie Mae.
This file allows automatic validation of certificate transfers and posting of original issue securities.
The Central Registry also contains pool and issuer information.
The Ginnie Mae guaranty is based on records maintained in the Central Registry. Ginnie Mae 34
35. Ginnie Mae 35 Monthly Remittance (P&I) to Security Holders Vital to UpholdGinnie Mae Guaranty Issuers must make their “Pass Through” obligations to investors, as scheduled.
Arrange for ACH of Ginnie Mae I payments to FRB and Ginnie Mae II payments to CPTA
Establish and have Proper Funds in Ginnie Mae I and II sweep account
RPB REPORTING IS KEY- Initial RPB activity due NLT 2nd BUSINESS DAY of each month with corrections due NLT 4th BD of each month
36. Final Certification Issuers are required, within one year of pool issuance, to provide Ginnie Mae with a “Final Pool Certification” from the Document Custodian Ginnie Mae 36
37. The Reporting and Feedback System (RFS) allows Ginnie Mae to monitor their Issuers’ performance and monthly reporting progress. Access is provided to Issuer submitted data, control reports, and query/search screens which aid in the monitoring of each Issuer
Additional modules such as those listed below allow Ginnie Mae to effectively monitor the other operational aspects of the MBS programs:
Service members Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
Custodial Account Verification System (CAVS)
Independent Public Accountant (IPA)
Matching and Suspense (MAS)
Data Disclosure (DD)
Ginnie Mae Portfolio Analysis Database System (GPADS)
E-Notification (eN)
Contact Management (CM)
RFS Overview
38. Overview of Single Family Loan Matching Loan Matching is an “Operations and Data” process
Monthly process run each reporting period
Matches loans in new pools
Matches loans In existing pools---“Recycles” any non matched loans from previous period
Inputs are Issuer reported loan data and agency (FHA, VA, RHS) “Master File” data
Internal Ginnie Mae systems and data processing
Objective is to match Ginnie Mae loan record to Agency loan record on specific pre-established criteria
39. Overview of Loan Matching FHA Monthly Originations Match
Case Query (CHUMS) Loans in New Pools
VA Monthly Originations Match
RHS Monthly Originations Match
Monthly FHA Match
Monthly VA Match
Monthly RHS Match
Match to Terminated – FHA Only
40. RFS – monthly reporting system with live data, which is used to identify inconsistencies with issuer reporting, as well as monthly matching results.
Ginnie Mae Portfolio Analysis Database System (GPADS) – risk analysis tool that provides Ginnie Mae with a variety of information on its MBS portfolio, summarized at the issuer, lender, and overall program levels. Used to support Ginnie Mae’s issuer monitoring efforts as well as broader information and analytical needs, GPADS enables Ginnie Mae to monitor portfolio performance at the lender, issuer, and program levels.
Standard Monthly / Quarterly Reports – include analysis on program, issuer, and portfolio levels that track recent activity and trends with regard to a variety of topics, such as issuance activity, delinquency performance, early payment defaults, and liquidation volume. Risk Analysis Tools
41. GPADS is a management tool that allows Ginnie Mae to monitor risk using portfolio statistics, and to benchmark issuers’ portfolio performance against broader Ginnie Mae and peer group trends.
Enables Ginnie Mae to assess risk at the following levels:
Lender Analysis
Lender origination volumes and subsequent delinquency performance
Compositional characteristics and identification of servicers purchasing from each lender
Issuer Analysis
Portfolio trends, composition, geographic location, delinquency performance and benchmarks, issuance and liquidation volumes/breakouts, and related portfolio analysis
Includes scored risk models : portfolio, compliance, financials, and insurance
Programmatic Analysis / Management Queries
Overall Ginnie Mae portfolio statistics and norms
Lists of issuers meeting different criteria
Drill-down to specific loans with various risk characteristics
Ginnie Mae Portfolio Analysis Database (GPADS)
42. Standard Monthly / Quarterly Reports
43. Standard Monthly / Quarterly Reports
44. Monthly Loan Level/Pool Level Data After pool has been issued, Issuers are required, on a monthly basis, to provide Ginnie Mae with updated loan level and pool level information.
Data provided is used by Ginnie Mae to continually monitor portfolio activity. Ginnie Mae 44
45. Office of Finance Assessing risk is a major part of the Finance Office in an organization.
Financial Statements
Fiscal Year Financial Statement Audit
A-123 Review
The CFO must also use assessing risk as a major part of the organization’s strategic decisions.
Ginnie Mae 45
46. Ginnie Mae 46