PubFinCriteria_2006_part1_final1.qxp

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

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atings on tax-exempt housing bonds rely on the
following factors:
■Credit quality of mortgage collateral, including
credit quality of mortgage insurers and guaran-
tors, property insurers, and rent subsidy
providers;
■Credit quality of other income streams, such as
federal, state and local funding sources.
■Adequacy of reserve levels needed to provide a
safety net for interruptions in debt service attrib-
utable to delinquency, default, and foreclosure;

■Credit quality of investments of all funds held for
the benefit of bondholders;
■Sufficiency of cash flow to make bond payments
under expected, as well as stress, scenarios;
■Ability of legal provisions to protect the flow of
funds to bondholders under all circumstances;
and
■The ability of an issuer, obligor and trustee to
administrate its programs effectively.■

Introduction To


Tax-Exempt Housing Bonds


230 Standard & Poor’s Public Finance Criteria 2007

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tandard & Poor’s Ratings Services rates single-
family mortgage revenue bonds backed by whole
loans or loans securitized by the Government
National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae), the
Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae), and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.
(Freddie Mac). Please refer to, “Public Finance
Criteria: Single-Family Mortgage-Backed Securities
Programs,” for criteria specific to these MBS pro-
grams. Standard & Poor’s approach to rating whole
loan MRBs focuses on six areas of analyses: quality
of mortgage loans, insurance, cash flow analyses,
reserves and investments, legal provisions, and pro-
gram management.

Quality Of Mortgage Loans
The primary factors used to assess asset quality
include property type, type of loan, loan-to-value
(LTV) ratio, portfolio size, and economic conditions
within the lending area. These factors indicate a
portfolio’s vulnerability to delinquencies, defaults,
and possible deterioration in market values. In addi-
tion, due to anti-predatory lending legislation now
in place in many states, Standard & Poor’s will look
for possible risk exposure in the loan portfolio
based on the specific issuer’s potential liability.

Property type
Historically, MRB issuers have restricted their port-
folios to single-family, owner-occupied detached
dwelling units. The targeting of money for other
types of homes such as two-to-four unit homes, co-
ops, and condominiums may occur to address the
specific housing needs. Standard & Poor’s rating
analysis factors in the increased risks associated
with these product types.
Types of loans
The standard high quality, least risky loan portfolio
consists of 30-year level-pay, fixed-rate, first-lien,
fully amortizing mortgages on single-family residen-
tial properties. Standard & Poor’s considers rehabil-
itation loans, construction loans, second-or
third-lien mortgages, bought-down mortgages, and
tiered-payment mortgages to be significantly riskier.
More recent product lines such as interest-only
loans, 40-year mortgages, second loans and piggy-
back loans also have a higher risk profile.
LTV ratio
LTV ratios are an important determinant of the
likelihood of default. Higher LTV loans will have
a higher assumed foreclosure frequency (FF)—a
critical determinant of loss coverage. Programs

Single-Family Whole Loan Programs ................................................................................


Housing

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