Press Release

DBRS Finalizes Provisional Ratings on Freddie Mac Seasoned Credit Risk Transfer Trust, Series 2017-1

RMBS
May 03, 2017

DBRS, Inc. (DBRS) has today finalized the following provisional ratings on the Asset-Backed Securities, Series 2017-1 (the Certificates) issued by Freddie Mac Seasoned Credit Risk Transfer Trust, Series 2017-1 (the Trust):

-- $30.7 million Class M-1 at BB (high) (sf)
-- $47.4 million Class M-2 at B (sf)

The BB (high) (sf) and B (sf) ratings on the Certificates reflect 14.25% and 10.00% of credit enhancement, respectively, provided by subordinated Certificates in the pool.

Other than the specified classes above, DBRS does not rate any other classes in this transaction.

This transaction is a securitization of a portfolio of seasoned re-performing first-lien residential mortgages funded by the issuance of the Certificates, which are backed by approximately 4,361 loans with a total principal balance of $1,115,110,002 as of the Cut-Off Date (March 31, 2017).

The mortgage loans were either purchased by Freddie Mac from securitized Freddie Mac Participation Certificates or retained by Freddie Mac in whole-loan form since their acquisition. The loans are currently held in Freddie Mac’s retained portfolio and will be deposited into the Trust on the Closing Date.

The portfolio contains 100% modified loans. Each mortgage loan was modified under either GSE HAMP or GSE non-HAMP modification programs. Within the pool, 3,986 mortgages have forborne principal amounts as a result of modification, which equates to 22.3% of the total principal balance as of the Cut-Off Date. For 96.3% of the modified loans, the modifications happened more than two years ago. The loans are approximately 121 months seasoned and all are current as of the Cut-Off Date. Under the Mortgage Bankers Association delinquency methods, 92.1% of the mortgage loans have been zero times 30 days delinquent for at least the past 24 months. None of the loans are subject to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Qualified Mortgage rules.

The mortgage loans will be serviced by Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. There will not be any advancing of delinquent principal or interest on any mortgages by the servicer; however, the servicer is obligated to advance to third parties any amounts necessary for the preservation of mortgaged properties or real estate owned properties acquired by the Trust through foreclosure or a loss mitigation process.

Freddie Mac will serve as the Sponsor and Trustee of the Trust. Wilmington Trust, National Association will serve as Trust Agent. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A. will serve as the Custodian for the Trust. U.S. Bank National Association will serve as the Securities Administrator for the Trust and will act as paying agent, registrar, transfer agent and authenticating agent.

Freddie Mac will make certain representations and warranties (R&W) with respect to the mortgage loans. It will be the only party from which the Trust may seek indemnification (or, in certain cases, a repurchase) as a result of a breach of R&Ws. If a breach review trigger occurs, the Trust Agent, Wilmington Trust, will be responsible for the enforcement of R&Ws. The warranty period will only be extended through May 2, 2020 (approximately three years from the Closing Date), for substantially all R&Ws other than the REMIC R&W.

The mortgage loans will be divided into two loan groups: the Group M loans, which were subject to fixed-rate modifications, and Group H loans, which were subject to step-rate modifications. Principal and interest (P&I) on the Group M and Group H senior certificates (the Guaranteed Certificates) will be guaranteed by Freddie Mac. The Guaranteed Certificates will be backed by collateral from each group, respectively. The remaining Certificates, including the subordinate, interest-only, mortgage insurance and residual Certificates, will be cross-collateralized between the two groups. This is generally known as a Y-Structure.

The transaction employs a sequential-pay cash flow structure. Certain principal proceeds can be used to cover interest shortfalls on the rated Class M-1 and Class M-2 Certificates. Senior classes benefit from guaranteed P&I payments by the Guarantor Freddie Mac; however, such guaranteed amounts, if paid, will be reimbursed to Freddie Mac from the interest and principal collections prior to any allocation to the subordinate certificates. The senior principal distribution amounts vary subject to the satisfaction of a series of step-down tests. Realized losses are allocated reverse sequentially.

The ratings reflect transactional strengths that include underlying assets that generally performed well through the crisis (92.1% of the pool has remained consistently current in the past 24 months), good credit quality relative to other re-performing pools reviewed by DBRS and a strong servicer. Additionally, a third-party due diligence review, albeit on less than 100% of the portfolio, was performed on a sample that generally meets or exceeds DBRS’s criteria. The due diligence results and findings on the sampled loans were satisfactory.

Although improved from SCRT 2016-1, the transaction employs a relatively weak R&W framework that includes a 36-month sunset (as opposed to 12 months in SCRT 2016-1) without an R&W reserve account, substantial knowledge qualifiers (with claw back) and fewer mortgage loan representations relative to DBRS criteria for seasoned pools. DBRS increased loss expectations from the model results to capture the weaknesses in the R&W framework. Other mitigating factors include (1) significant loan seasoning and very clean performance history in the past three years, (2) stringent and automatic breach review triggers, (3) Freddie Mac as the R&W provider and (4) satisfactory third-party due diligence review.

The lack of principal and interest advances on delinquent mortgages may increase the possibility of periodic interest shortfalls to the Noteholders; however, principal proceeds can be used to pay interest to the rated Certificates, and subordination levels are greater than expected losses, which may provide for interest payments to the rated Certificates.

The DBRS ratings address the ultimate payment of interest and full payment of principal by the legal final maturity date in accordance with the terms and conditions of the related Certificates.

The full description of the strengths, challenges and mitigating factors are detailed in the related rating report. Please see the related appendix for additional information regarding sensitivity of assumptions used in the rating process.

Notes:
All figures are in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted.

The principal methodologies are RMBS Insight 1.3: U.S. Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Model and Rating Methodology, Unified Interest Rate Model for Rating U.S. Structured Finance Transactions, Third-Party Due Diligence Criteria for U.S. RMBS Transactions, Representations and Warranties Criteria for U.S. RMBS Transactions, Operational Risk Assessment for U.S. RMBS Originators, Operational Risk Assessment for U.S. RMBS Servicers and Legal Criteria for U.S. Structured Finance, which can be found on dbrs.com under Methodologies.

The rated entity or its related entities did participate in the rating process. DBRS had access to the accounts and other relevant internal documents of the rated entity or its related entities.

The full report providing additional analytical detail is available by clicking on the link to the right under Related Research or by contacting us at info@dbrs.com.

Ratings

  • US = Lead Analyst based in USA
  • CA = Lead Analyst based in Canada
  • EU = Lead Analyst based in EU
  • UK = Lead Analyst based in UK
  • E = EU endorsed
  • U = UK endorsed
  • Unsolicited Participating With Access
  • Unsolicited Participating Without Access
  • Unsolicited Non-participating

ALL MORNINGSTAR DBRS RATINGS ARE SUBJECT TO DISCLAIMERS AND CERTAIN LIMITATIONS. PLEASE READ THESE DISCLAIMERS AND LIMITATIONS AND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING MORNINGSTAR DBRS RATINGS, INCLUDING DEFINITIONS, POLICIES, RATING SCALES AND METHODOLOGIES.