LegendKiller
Lifer
- Mar 5, 2001
- 18,256
- 68
- 86
You're not thinking this through, bfdd. The vast majority of bunk loans were already securitized before the crap hit the fan, and banks who securitized those loans to investors are the servicers, with all kinds of stipulations as to the fees paid by investors for that service.
When any particular loan goes bad, the bank charges the investors for foreclosing and reselling at a loss. Investors eat the fees and the loss. The bank makes more money in the short run from foreclosure than they do from people who actually pay their mortgage, beat the cash out of what they'd necessarily have to pay to the investors otherwise.
It's easy to tell if the bank still holds the mortgage- they'll negotiate. If it's part of a securitized mortgage package they service, they're merciless.
Capische?
Servicing delinquent loans or loans going into foreclosure isn't a winning game. Overall, servicing fees for your "average" securitization will run 50bps/yr. That ain't much money.
As far as foreclosure fees, they are netted out of recoveries to the trust, not as a "fee plus" service. Servicers can't "make" money off of this, as cost structures are pretty well known.
Do keep in mind that Servicers are usually also the banks that held the mortgages originally and, often times, also hold the residual overcollateralization/equity tranche, not to mention they also have the I/O strip from gain on sale accounting. Many still hold those pieces, or mezzanine stuff they couldn't toss out into CDOs, or they hold sub/mezz on CDOs.
Nobody's making money on this stuff.