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2009:Freddie Mac's
New Products to Include Single-Loan Securitization
- 08/06/09
By Jerry Ascierto
Freddie Mac is working on a single-loan securitized product for a
rollout later this year, an outgrowth of its Capital Markets
Execution (CME) program.
The CME program—which bundles loans into a pool that is sold as
securities—has worked somewhat like a traditional conduit execution.
But this single-financing program would be similar to Fannie Mae’s
Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) program, which sells one individual
loan as securities.
Freddie's program would give borrowers a new option while further
diversifying its securitized product line.
“We’re close. I’d optimistically say that we’re looking at having
something in 2009,” says David Brickman, vice president of
multifamily CMBS/capital markets for the McLean, Va.-based
government-sponsored enterprises (GSE). “We intend to come through
with single-financing pass-through securities, and we’ll be moving
in that direction in the near term.”
Freddie's program won’t exactly mirror the MBS product, however.
Freddie Mac would set a certain threshold on the loan size of the
product, and that figure will be a pretty substantial number.
The first adopters of Freddie’s new program would likely be the
largest deals by the largest borrowers. Fannie Mae’s MBS product, on
the other hand, is available for loans of more than $5 million. “If
we did a $300 million financing with a large REIT, say, it could be
multiple loans or one loan that’s cross-collateralized—that might
lend itself to a pass-through securitization,” Brickman says.
For borrowers, the advantage in the as-yet-unnamed product would
likely be a more customizable loan structure, though borrowers would
still find the best pricing in the conventional CME execution. “A
little more flexible structure, a slightly higher price maybe, would
go to the single-loan securitization,” Brickman adds.
Freddie Mac continues to build out its CME program in other ways.
The company is still mulling a seniors-housing securitized loan,
which may lead to seniors housing-only pools. And the firm continues
to work on securitizing its Targeted Affordable Housing as well as
manufactured housing loans.
Freddie Mac is also thinking about introducing a securitized
floating-rate product, though Brickman said that was further down
the line. The company’s current floating rate deals are all held on
their portfolio. Meanwhile, Fannie Mae is also working on making its
structured ARM product available for an MBS execution later this
year.
Both of the GSEs are under a federal mandate to shrink their
portfolio holdings, necessitating this focus on securitized
products.
Freddie Mac lenders applaud the move as further evidence of the
company’s creativity. “That would give them the best of both worlds,
to have a single transaction execution and a pool,” says Trent
Brooks, a managing director at Boston-based CWCapital. “If you’re
not going to grow your portfolio, you’re going to find alternative
executions, which Freddie has proven to be very good at.”
HousingFinance.com