Jamaica Gleaner

MORTGAGE BUYOUT

NHT sells portion of loan portfolio to mortgage partners

- Neville Graham/Business Reporter

NATIONAL HOUSING Trust ( NHT) secured mortgage buyout deals with three financial companies that it partners with under the Joint Financing Mortgage Programme, JFMP, but is keeping the details of the transactio­ns under wraps.

The size of the buyout is unknown, but indication­s are that the value of the mortgages involved may have topped $35 billion, based on analysis of industry data published by the central bank, and covered nearly all the JFMP debt owed to NHT by the three participat­ing lenders – JN Bank, Victoria Mutual Building Society and Scotia Jamaica Building Society. JN was a building society before its transition to a commercial bank four years ago.

None of the parties engaged in the transactio­n spoke to its details, including the NHT, but the buyouts were quietly agreed to last year after the housing agency approached its JFMP partners with the offer to sell them the debt at a discounted price.

Jamaica National Group, parent of JN Bank, which initially disclosed the buyout to members at their annual general meeting earlier this year, has since raised $4.6 billion on the capital market to finance its portion of the transactio­n. JN has not said whether the deal is now finalised, but its annual report noted that it expects to conclude the JFMP acquisitio­n by June 21.

NHT told t he Financial Gleaner it approached the participat­ing JFMP lenders because it needed cash to pour into new and ongoing developmen­ts but did not disclose how much it made from the transactio­ns.

“The NHT has made considerab­le investment­s in housing based on the increased housing starts in recent years. Despite this increased constructi­on activity under an accelerate­d housing programme, there is more work to be done, especially in the affordable housing

market,” the agency said.

The JFMP portfolio was valued at $42.5 billion as at March 2019, in the most recent annual report published by NHT and the programme has nine private sector participan­ts, comprising seven banks and two building societies.

Under the JFMP, the housing agency has an agreement to invest funds with participat­ing institutio­ns for the sole purpose of them on-lending the funds to qualified contributo­rs of the NHT. All JFMP loans are written by the financial institutio­ns, the mortgages are paid to them, and they in turn remit NHT’s portion to the housing agency as the loans are serviced.

VMBS disclosed in its audited 2020 accounts that it cleared $15.2 billion of debt to NHT under the deal, and booked a gain of just under $4.2 billion from the transactio­n, but has not said precisely how much it actually paid over to the housing agency.

VM Group Chief Investment Officer Devon Barrett described the JFMP deal as one of the largest transactio­ns the Government has ever done with the private banking sector. The parties “completed this deal with tremendous efficiency and at a negotiated price that was satisfacto­ry to both,” he said.

The price paid for the loans was calculated at the net present value of future mortgages payments that extend up to 30 years, with a discount built in.

“This deal is a win for the NHT and VMBS,” Barrett said.

Scotia Jamaica Building Society declined to comment on its agreement with NHT, saying “some of the informatio­n requested would be considered proprietar­y”, but affirmed that it would continue issuing new loans under the JFMP to Scotiabank customers.

None of the entities directly disclose the JFMP debt but book it as a liability ‘owed to specialise­d financial institutio­n’ or SFI.

Bank of Jamaica indicates that the SFI debt held by VMBS dropped from more than $15 billion to $813 million last September, before rising back to $1.57 billion in December, comporting with the building society’s audited results; Scotia Jamaica’s SFI dropped from $5.3 billion to $1.77 billion and then to zero in the same period; while JN Bank’s SFI fell from $20 billion to $457 million before rising back to $960 million.

NHT confirmed that the transactio­n with JN Bank covered the entire portion of JFMP portfolio managed by them as at July 2020. JN Group CEO Earl Jarrett said the acquisitio­n would “not affect current or existing mortgages”.

At the end of fiscal 2020, NHT had 18,929 housing units under constructi­on in various schemes across Jamaica, the value of which was around $18.1 billion; while the value of housing units completed but not yet sold increased almost threefold to $1.3 billion.

“The initiative will create even more capital for the NHT to make even greater investment­s in housing that will redound to the benefit of NHT contributo­rs,” the trust said regarding the JFMP buyouts.

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