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OCC and OTS Mortgage Metrics Report

First Quarter 2009

About Mortgage Metrics

The OCC and OTS Mortgage Metrics Report presents key data on first lien residential mortgages serviced by national banks and thrifts, focusing on credit performance, loan modifications, payment plans, foreclosures, short sales, and deed-in-lieu-of-foreclosure actions.  The OCC and OTS collect these data from the nine national banks and four thrifts8 that have the largest mortgage servicing portfolios among all national banks and thrifts.  As a result of mergers and acquisitions, these 13 depository institutions are now owned by nine holding companies.9  The data represent 64 percent of all first lien residential mortgages outstanding in the country.  More than 91 percent of the mortgages in the portfolio are serviced for third parties as a result of loan sales and securitization by government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), the originating banks, and other financial institutions.  At the end of March 2009, the reporting institutions serviced more than 34 million first lien mortgage loans, totaling more than $6 trillion in outstanding balances.

The loans reflected in this report represent a large percentage of the overall mortgage industry, but they do not represent a statistically random sample of all mortgage loans.  The characteristics of these loans differ in notable ways from the overall population of mortgages.  This report does not attempt to quantify or adjust for known seasonal effects that occur within the mortgage industry.

In addition to providing information to the public, the data support the supervision of national bank and thrift mortgage practices.  For example, the data provide an additional tool to help examiners assess emerging trends, identify anomalies, compare servicers with peers, evaluate asset quality and loan loss reserve needs, and evaluate loss mitigation actions.

The report promotes a common reporting framework using standardized reporting terms and elements, which allow better comparisons across the industry and over time.  The report uses standardized definitions for prime, Alt-A, and subprime mortgages based on commonly used credit score ranges.

The OCC, OTS, and the participating institutions devoted significant resources to validating the data to ensure that the information is reliable and accurate.  Steps to ensure the validity of the data include comparisons with institutions' quarterly call and thrift financial reports and internal quality reviews conducted by the banks and thrifts as well as the external vendor who compiled the data.  Data sets of this size and scope inevitably suffer from a degree of inconsistency, missing data, and other imperfections.  This report notes cases in which data anomalies may have affected the results.  The OCC and OTS require prior data submissions to be adjusted as errors and omissions are detected.  In some cases, data presented in this report reflect resubmissions from institutions that restate and correct earlier information.


8 The nine banks are Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, First Horizon, HSBC, National City, USBank, Wachovia, and Wells Fargo. Countrywide FSB, previously reporting as a separate institution through March 2009, was acquired by and merged into Bank of America in April 2009. The thrifts are Countrywide, OneWestBank (formerly IndyMac), Merrill Lynch, and Wachovia FSB.
9 The holding companies are Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, First Horizon, HSBC, OneWest (formerly IndyMac), PNC, US Bancorp, and Wells Fargo Corp.

Contents

Executive Summary

About Mortgage Metrics

New in this Report

Definitions and Methods

PART I: Mortgage Performance

Overall Mortgage Portfolio

Overall Mortgage Performance

Performance of Government-Guaranteed Mortgages

Performance of GSE Mortgages

Seriously Delinquent Mortgages, by Risk Category

Mortgages 30-59 Days Delinquent, by Risk Category

PART II: Home Retention Actions

A. Loan Modifications and Payment Plans

Newly Initiated Home Retention Actions

Newly Initiated Home Retention Actions Relative to Newly Initiated Foreclosures

Types of Modifications

Types of Modifications, by Risk Category

Types of Modifications, by Investor

Changes to Monthly Payments Due to Modification

Changes to Monthly Payments Due to Modifications, by Quarter

B. Modified Loan Performance

Status of Modified Loans

Re-Default Rates of Modified Loans: 60 or More Days Delinquent

Re-Default Rates of Modified Loans: 30 or More Days Delinquent

Re-Default Rates of Modified Loans: 90 or More Days Delinquent

Re-Default Rate, by Investor (60 or More Days Delinquent)

C. Modified Loan Performance, by Change in Monthly Payments

Modified Loans 60 or More Days Delinquent, by Changes to Monthly Payments: Re-Default Rate at Three, Six, Nine, and 12 Months after Modification

Modified Loans Delinquent after Six Months, by Changes to Monthly Payments: Re-Default Rates Using Varying Definitions

Part III: Home Forfeiture Actions: Foreclosures, Short Sales, and Deed-in-Lieu-of-Foreclosure Actions

Completed Foreclosures and Other Home Forfeiture Actions

Newly Initiated Foreclosures

Foreclosures in Process

Completed Foreclosures

Home Retention Actions Relative to Forfeiture Actions, by Risk Category

Appendixes

Appendix A-New Loan Modifications

Appendix B-New Payment Plans

Appendix C-Breakdown of Individual and Combined Modification Actions

Appendix D-Short Sales and Deed-in-Lieu-of-Foreclosure Actions

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The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency was created by Congress to charter national banks, to oversee a nationwide system of banking institutions, and to assure that national banks are safe and sound, competitive and profitable, and capable of serving in the best possible manner the banking needs of their customers.

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