moretrouble
LoanSafe Member
NewRez, a subsidiary of Rithm Capital Corp. has been acquiring subprime servicers (Shellpoint, Ditech, etc... on their website),. For a subprime trust like mine, It bought remaining bonds in whole, then use the trust name to foreclose, then paid itself off pocketing the difference for profit.
For example, they bought the remaining bonds in whole with a stated balance of 10M (balance in the trust) at discount at 75% (they stated that in their financial statement), paid 7.5M. the market value of those properties mortgaged by loans in the trust is about 60M (appreciation since 2005-2007 vintage). After the foreclosures (assuming they foreclose on all the loans). After all said and done, Rithm would make 60M-7.5M + 10M = 62M. That's how they 've been able to pay out 600M in dividends but producing nothing of value.
Here is a clue, if a trust is foreclosing on you but NOT on behalf of the certificate holders, more than likely the parry behind the scene is just using the trust name. And if a subprime loan, it is NewRez (Rithm). Very sophisticated strategy.
For example, they bought the remaining bonds in whole with a stated balance of 10M (balance in the trust) at discount at 75% (they stated that in their financial statement), paid 7.5M. the market value of those properties mortgaged by loans in the trust is about 60M (appreciation since 2005-2007 vintage). After the foreclosures (assuming they foreclose on all the loans). After all said and done, Rithm would make 60M-7.5M + 10M = 62M. That's how they 've been able to pay out 600M in dividends but producing nothing of value.
Here is a clue, if a trust is foreclosing on you but NOT on behalf of the certificate holders, more than likely the parry behind the scene is just using the trust name. And if a subprime loan, it is NewRez (Rithm). Very sophisticated strategy.