Acceleration

Ocwen Financial: Q2 2019 Earnings Call Transcript

Ultimately, our vision for Ocwen is to be a leading mortgage servicer with a core competency in loss mitigation that creates positive outcomes for homeowners, communities and investors. Our objectives include roughly a 50-50 balance of owned servicing and sub-servicing excluding the potential impact of an MSR capital vehicle, diversified origination channels and product capability to replenish and grow our portfolio anchored by strong portfolio retention performance.

  • Reported a Net Loss of $89.7 million which was impacted by significant pre-tax items: $40.7 million of unfavorable interest rate and valuation assumption driven fair value changes and $10.1 million in re-engineering costs for the second quarter of 2019
  • Completed the final phase of our loan transfer process and transition from REALServicing® to Black Knight MSP®
  • Completed the merger of our two primary licensed legal entities Ocwen Loan Servicing and PHH Mortgage Corporation
  • Continued to execute on our cost re-engineering plan and realized annualized run rate cost savings ahead of our expectations through the second quarter of 2019
  • Closed a $300 million MSR financing facility on a fully committed basis on July 1
  • Ended the quarter with $288 million of cash and $423 million of total stockholders’ equity

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Aug. 06, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ocwen Financial Corporation (NYSE:OCN) (“Ocwen” or the “Company”), a leading non-bank mortgage servicer and originator, today reported a net loss of $89.7 million, or $0.67 per share, for the three months ended June 30, 2019 compared to a net loss of $29.8 million or $0.22 per share for the three months ended June 30, 2018.

Glen A. Messina, President and CEO of Ocwen said, “Through continued strong execution, we have made significant progress and achieved a number of important objectives of our key business initiatives.  I continue to be pleased with the results of our integration, cost re-engineering, MSR sourcing, and lending growth efforts. Despite a more challenging market and business environment to achieve MSR portfolio growth, we remain committed to strengthening the Company and returning to profitability in the shortest time frame possible while maintaining our capital allocation discipline.”

Second Quarter 2019 Results

Pre-tax loss for the second quarter of 2019 was $84.3 million, which compares to a $28.4 million loss in the second quarter of 2018. Pre-tax results for the quarter were impacted by a number of significant items, including but not limited to: $40.7 million of unfavorable interest rate and valuation assumption driven fair value changes and $10.1 million in severance, retention and other re-engineering costs in the quarter.

The Servicing segment recorded $59.0 million of pre-tax loss for the second quarter of 2019. The business was negatively impacted by portfolio runoff and loan boarding driven timing delay in default activity. We also recorded $48.7 million of unfavorable interest rate and valuation assumption driven MSR fair value changes, net of the NRZ financing liability fair value change in the quarter.

The Lending segment recorded $8.4 million of pre-tax income for the second quarter of 2019. Our reverse mortgage lending business recorded $11.9 million of pre-tax income, which included $8.0 million of interest rate driven favorable fair value changes. Our forward lending business incurred a $3.6 million pre-tax loss.

The Corporate segment recorded $33.7 million of pre-tax loss for the second quarter of 2019. The quarter included $10.1 million of severance, retention and other re-engineering costs.

Additional Second Quarter 2019 Business Highlights

  • We closed MSR acquisitions with $10.8 billion of unpaid principal balance (UPB) to date in 2019.
  • Completed 5,301 modifications in the quarter to help struggling families stay in their homes, 16% of which included debt forgiveness totaling $24 million.
  • Delinquencies decreased from 4.7% at March 31, 2019 to 3.7% at June 30, 2019, primarily driven by loss mitigation efforts.
  • The constant pre-payment rate (CPR) increased from 12.5% in the first quarter of 2019 to 15.2% in the second quarter of 2019. In the second quarter of 2019, prime CPR was 16.2%, and non-prime CPR was 14.3%.
  • In the second quarter of 2019, Ocwen originated forward and reverse mortgage loans with unpaid principal balances of $150.6 million and $142.1 million, respectively.
  • Our reverse mortgage portfolio ended the quarter with an estimated $60 million in discounted future gains from forecasted future draws on existing loans. Neither the anticipated future gains nor the future funding liability are included in the Company’s financial statements.

About Ocwen Financial Corporation

Ocwen Financial Corporation (NYSE: OCN) is a leading non-bank mortgage servicer and originator providing solutions through its primary brands, PHH Mortgage Corporation (PHH Mortgage) and Liberty Home Equity Solutions, Inc. (Liberty). PHH Mortgage is one of the largest servicers in the country, focused on delivering a variety of servicing and lending programs. Liberty is one of the nation’s largest reverse mortgage lenders dedicated to education and providing loans that help customers meet their personal and financial needs. We are headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida, with offices in the United States and the U.S. Virgin Islands and operations in India and the Philippines, and have been serving our customers since 1988. For additional information, please visit our website (www.Ocwen.com).

 

Ocwen Financial (NYSE: OCN)

Q2 2019 Earnings Call
Aug 06, 2019, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Thank you for standing by. This is the conference operator. Welcome to the Ocwen Financial Corporation second-quarter earnings call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded.

After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator instructions]. I would now like to turn the conference over to Hugo Arias, managing director, investor relations, and treasury. Please go ahead, sir.

Hugo AriasManaging Director, Investor Relations, and Treasury

Good morning, and thank you for joining us for Ocwen’s second-quarter 2019 earnings call. Please note that our second-quarter 2019 earnings release and slide presentation have been released and are available on our website. Speaking on the call will be Ocwen’s chief executive officer, Glen Messina, and Chief Financial Officer June Campbell. As a reminder, the presentation and our comments today may contain forward-looking statements made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws.

These forward-looking statements may be identified by reference to a future period or by use of forward-looking terminology. Forward-looking statements by their nature address matters that are, to different degrees, uncertain. Our business has been undergoing substantial change which has magnified such uncertainties. You should bear these factors in mind when considering such statements and should not place undue reliance on such statements.

Forward-looking statements involve several assumptions, risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. In the past, actual results have differed from those suggested by forward-looking statements and this may happen again. Our forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and we disclaim any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. In addition, the presentation and our comments contain references to non-GAAP financial measures such as expenses, excluding MSR valuation adjustments net and notables; and pre-tax loss, excluding notables and amortization of NRZ, lump sum cash payments, among others.

We believe these non-GAAP financial measures provide a useful supplement to discussions and analysis of our financial condition. We also believe these non-GAAP financial measures provide an alternate way to view certain aspects of our business that is instructive. Non-GAAP financial measures should be viewed in addition to, and not as, an alternative for the company’s reported results under accounting principles generally accepted in the United States. For an elaboration of these factors I just discussed, please refer to our presentation and today’s earnings release, as well as the company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including Ocwen’s 2018 Form 10-K, and once filed its second-quarter 2019 Form 10-Q.

Now, I will turn the call over to Glen Messina.

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

Thank you, Hugo. Good morning and thank you for joining us. Today, I’ll provide an update regarding our progress in executing our key business initiatives and plans to achieve profitability. I will also discuss the actions we are taking to address evolving market conditions and to reposition Ocwen to deliver value creation for our shareholders.

Our CFO, June Campbell, will follow with a review of our second-quarter 2019 financial results. I will then close the call with some brief remarks before opening it up for questions. Please turn to Slide 4. Since our last earnings call, we have continued to make substantial progress with respect to our key business initiatives to position the company for profitability.

Our team is executing well, committed to delivering on the objective of our key initiatives and we’re energized by our accomplishments to-date and the opportunities ahead.

We completed the boarding of approximately 1 million legacy Ocwen loans to the Black Knight MSP pipeline, as well as the merger of Ocwen Loan Servicing and PHH Mortgage.

We are tracking ahead of expectations for our cost reengineering initiative, and have realized annualized run rate expense savings, excluding net MSR valuation adjustments and notable items, of $246 million in the second quarter of 2019 as compared to the second quarter of 2018 for the combined Ocwen and PHH.

We closed on MSR acquisitions with approximately $11 billion in UPB through the second quarter and are rebuilding our MSR acquisition pipeline after a lull of market activity.

We commenced origination through our correspondent forward lending channel and launched EquityIQ, our proprietary reverse mortgage product. We closed a committed $300 million MSR financing facility on July and borrowed an initial amount of $144 million. The facility provides us with the initial borrowing capacity to support our near-term MSR acquisition objectives. Since July 1st, we have repurchased approximately $29.4 million of our second lien notes which we expect to result in a $3.7 million pre-tax gain in the third quarter and approximately $2.5 million in annualized expense savings.

And lastly, we believe we are meeting all requirements of the conditional approval for the PHH acquisition and continue working to improve our regulatory relationships. As detailed on Slide 21, our actions to date have reduced the annualized pre-tax loss, excluding notable and amortization of NRZ lump sum cash payment by approximately $92 million from the combined Ocwen and PHH level of $322 million in the second quarter of 2018. Now please turn to Slide 5. Since the start of the year, we have seen significant changes in market conditions, including the 10-year treasury yield has dropped by approximately 75 basis points, driving faster run-off in our interest rate sensitive MSR portfolio and along with other valuation assumptions, an unfavorable net fair value change of approximately $54 million.

We experienced sub-servicing terminations of approximately $23 billion in UPB by legacy PHH clients due to the change in relationship resulting from our merger. Unlevered investment returns for larger MSR bulk acquisitions have drifted below our minimum target of 9%, and we are seeing returns for smaller to midsized portfolios at the low end of our target returns. We chose not to close a sizable bulk MSR acquisition we had been awarded as the reduction in interest rates resulted in investment returns that no longer met our minimum requirements. We are seeing increased forward lending refinancing opportunity, higher forward lending margins, increased reverse lending opportunity, lower funding cost and increased opportunities to exercise call rights.

We are taking decisive action to address the evolving market conditions, including: continuously aligning our cost structure to enable us to operate profitably at the MSR investment returns available in the market; making changes to people, processes and technology to improve our recapture performance; building a balanced approach to MSR sourcing to limit our dependency on the large bulk market and provide a macro hedge to help offset the effective interest rates on our servicing portfolio. Maintaining strict collateral quality standards on new MSR investments to limit the potential for future loss events; accessing more cost effective capital for MSR investment through structured financing alternatives and evaluating a MSR capital vehicle; and deploying capital opportunistically to enhance returns through early debt retirement and potential service our early call rights transactions. Based on current market conditions, we believe enough opportunities exist to source MSR volume that meets our return requirement through the combination of smaller MSR acquisitions for arrangements, corresponding lending and portfolio retention to replenish our servicing portfolio, excluding the UPB impact of sub-servicing client terminations. However, given the low volume of large bulk MSR acquisitions with attractive return profile, we now expect more gradual ramp up of MSR acquisition activity to achieve our portfolio replenishment objectives.

To allow for the necessary adjustments to offset the impact of the current market environment, we have decided to extend the upper end of our time range for return to profitability on a pre-tax basis, excluding notable items and the impact of the amortization of NRZ lump sum payment by three months. As a result, we believe we can return to profitability in the next seven to 13 months assuming there are no adverse changes to current market and industry conditions or legal and regulatory matters. I will now address our objectives for the company and provide a detailed update on each of the initiatives to transform and strengthen our business. Please turn to Slide 6.

During the first half of 2019, we acquired MSR with the total UPB of approximately $11 billion. Following a lower market activity in the second quarter, we are rebuilding our MSR acquisition pipeline. In the second quarter, we also completed the build out of our forward correspondent lending platform and commenced originations. We have achieved our initial timeline, cost, compliance and risk management goals.

We’ve concentrated on building an efficient, scalable platform that would deliver a consistent quality service experience for our clients. We are excited about the potential of this new channel and expect to ramp up volume in a disciplined manner consistent with our return and customer service objective. We expect this platform will provide a significant amount of our portfolio replenishment beginning in 2020. We also launched EquityIQ, our proprietary reverse mortgage product.

We believe this product will offer meaningful value to borrowers through higher overall LPDs, compared to existing proprietary offerings, eliminating FHA mortgage insurance to drive lower cost so borrowers can realize more proceeds for their use and loan amounts up to $4 million which allows borrowers with higher home values an opportunity to access equity above FHA limits. Considering the expectation for consistently low interest rates over the foreseeable future, we are taking several actions to improve customer experience and recapture rate in our portfolio retention platform. We have completed the integration of the legacy Ocwen and PHH operations, hired an entirely new leadership team, implemented new operating sales and pricing systems, changed our telephony platform and implemented new portfolio segmentation and targeting strategies. We’re evaluating sales underwriting and operating processes and the performance management framework for our frontline and management talent.

We are committed to making portfolio recapture a core competency. We have seen and bid on several modest size RFPs for sub-servicing, mainly from banks and others who have been self servicing and concluded that servicing aging portfolios is more complicated and expensive than anticipated. Lead time for these opportunities tend to be longer. We continue to target unlevered returns on MSR acquisitions of at least 9% and we intend to remain disciplined in our capital allocation decisions to ensure we achieve an appropriate level of risk adjusted returns.

Based on our recent experience in the bulk MSR market, we believe certain market participants are going to accept lower returns, assume substantially higher than market average recapture rates and assume collateral and legacy operating risks. We also believe that the market for GNMA MSRs continues to misprice the potential credit risk associated with this asset class. We expect to have greater bidding success and the potential to achieve our target returns with MSR portfolios into $1 billion to $3 billion UPB range, which likely means a more gradual ramp up of MSR acquisitions. We expect that the returns for smaller to midsized servicing portfolios will persist at the lower end of our investment requirements.

We are anticipating a higher rate of ordinary portfolio run-off due to the reduction in market interest rates particularly relating to the 45% of our portfolio that is interest rate sensitive. The remainder of our portfolio is more credit sensitive in nature and less sensitive to changes in interest rates. We continue to experience legacy PHH sub-servicing client terminations resulting from clients taking the view that our merger resulted in a significant change in the historical sub-servicing relationship. Although these sub-servicing client terminations have a substantial impact on servicing UPB, they only have a modest impact on future servicing margins.

While there are material differences in the capital requirements and economics for owned servicing versus sub-servicing, we estimate that the contribution margin for owned servicing is at least four times that of sub-servicing assuming a stable delinquency environment and owned MSR returns of at least 9%. Therefore, we believe the loss margin from our sub-servicing client terminations and the run-off of our NRZ portfolios can be largely offset to investing roughly one quarter of the loss of servicing UPB in relatively more profitable owned MSRs, line driven expense reductions and/or other investment actions. We also believe there are sufficient opportunities for us to replenish the portfolio excluding the UPB impact of sub-servicing client terminations through our flow MSR channels complemented by both MSR acquisitions. In the long term, we are targeting approximately 50% of our total servicing portfolio in owned servicing, excluding any potential impact on mix from the implementation of MSR capital vehicle.

This shift in servicing composition is expected to have a positive impact on our future profitability while providing the additional benefits of revenue diversification. We are taking a balanced approach to MSR sourcing, including correspondent lending, flow MSR purchase agreements and portfolio recapture to complement bulk acquisitions. We believe these actions are necessary to enable a more sustainable source of MSRs to meet our return and replenishment requirements and to have a natural offset to the runoff and earnings impact of interest rate changes on our servicing portfolio. In addition, we intend to evaluate M&A opportunities for origination channel growth if they become available as a potential way to enhance and complement our organic growth initiatives in the lending channel.

Lastly, due to the decline in interest rates, we are seeing attractive alternative investment opportunities such as exercising call rights on loans and our private loan servicing portfolio which we intend to pursue.

As of June 30th, we controlled call rights to approximately $21 billion of mortgage collateral of which approximately $8 billion is currently callable. Based on various factors, especially interest rates and delinquency rates in the underlying yields, we believe that less than 20% of the callable population currently has sufficient economic value to execute. Please turn to Slide 7.

On July 1st, we closed a $300 million committed MSR funding facility that provides borrowing capacity against agency MSRs at a 60% advance rate. At closing, we borrowed an initial amount of $144 million under the facility collateralized by existing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac MSRs. We expect to have the ability to borrow up to an additional $80 million under the facility against Ginnie Mae MSRs at the same 60% advance rate subject to the receipt of an acknowledgment agreement. As a result of closing this facility our liquidity position has been strengthened and we’ve enhanced our near-term financial flexibility.

We believe our stronger liquidity position should be a positive factor in our eventual efforts to refinance our senior secured term loan due December 2020. As previously indicated, we view the closing of the MSR facility as an initial step in a more diversified funding strategy for owned MSRs. The facility is expected to provide the primary funding vehicle until we can achieve a sufficiently large owned MSR portfolio to transition to term ABS issuance complemented by a bank funded variable funding note. We believe this approach should provide us with certain benefits including longer tenor, higher advance rates, lower funding costs and diversification of funding source.

The timing of this next phase of our owned MSR financing strategy will be dependent on the growth in our owned MSR portfolio. As part of our disciplined approach to capital allocation, we repurchased $29.4 million of our 8 and three-eighths percent second lien notes due in 2022 during the early part of July. We believe this was a prudent use of capital due to the level and certainty of available returns, as well as the positive impact on our leverage and debt service costs. We are continuously evaluating opportunities to lower our cost of capital and optimize our capital structure.

We are currently evaluating alternatives for MSR capital vehicle that could provide us with the ability to grow our servicing UPB with significantly lower capital requirements, compared to MSR acquisitions. We’re excited about the prospect of having a new source to fund our growth and support our financial objectives. The next phase of our agency MSR financing strategy and the MSR capital vehicle will be an area of focus over the next six to 12 months. Please turn to Slide 8.

We completed the system conversion from the old servicing to MSP in early June. In total, approximately 1 million loans were transferred to MSP as part of our multi-phased process. We are now in a strong position to realize significant cost and operational benefits during the second half of 2019 and into 2020. We also completed the merger of our two primary licensed legal entities on June 1st.

We now have a more simplified legal entity structure that should facilitate the elimination of duplicative licensing and regulatory activities and other legal entity related support cost. Throughout the integration we have remained focused on operating excellence and compliance as key components of our strategy, as well as the foundation for minimizing the liquidity needs of the business and preserving long-run assets and franchise value. We have and continue to monitor multiple dimensions of our operating performance to ensure our integration activities and general operations are performing as expected. Please turn to Slide 9.

We are highly focused on executing actions to achieve a competitive cost structure that allows us to operate profitably at market MSR return levels and our portfolio composition profile. Our cost reduction initiatives consist of three categories of actions; integration-related cost reengineering including merger synergies with annual expense saving targets of at least $340 million relative to our second-quarter 2018 baseline that we’ve previously outlined based on certain lending volume and assuming MSR UPB of at least $260 billion. Ongoing expense reductions based on expectations for lending volume and the size of our MSR portfolio; continuous cost reengineering based on innovation, digitization and other technology-enabled productivity enhancements. Our team is demonstrating strong execution and we’re now running ahead of our expectations for cost reductions at this stage of our efforts.

At this time, we continue to target at least $300 million as annualized run rate cost reengineering savings by the fourth quarter and at least an additional $40 million by the second quarter of 2020. These cost savings exclude net MSR valuation adjustments and notable items and are measured against our baseline second-quarter 2018 annualized total adjusted expenses for the combined Ocwen and PHH. We are in the process of carefully evaluating our progress to make any upward adjustments to our cost reduction target. Our targeted cost reengineering spent savings are based on certain assumptions of lending volume and MSR portfolio size.

Therefore, we would expect our cost reengineering efforts to be complemented by volume-driven cost adjustments if actual volumes differ materially from our original expectations. We estimate incurring approximately $65 million of upfront cost to execute our reengineering actions in 2019. Through the end of the second quarter, we have incurred $32 million of this amount with $24 million resulting from employee-related expense. Based on what we are learning as we execute our cost reengineering actions, we believe we have meaningful opportunities for additional benefits from reengineering and process innovation.

We’re commencing our second phase of business reengineering focused on continuous improvement in speed, cost, compliance and customer experience. Every function is engaged in its initiative with committed resources who are supported by centers of excellence in lien process design, strategic sourcing, global operations optimization and automation. Our global team is experienced, engaged, energized and committed to our long-term success. We believe our global operations are a distinct competitive advantage in achieving our cost, operating and technology objectives.

We believe further automation opportunities exist by optimizing the capabilities of our new core operating system and through the application of robotics, optical character recognition, machine learning and digital workforce. Now that we have completed loan-boarding and are fully operating in the MSP environment, we can apply lien processing to simplify business processes and strategically refine our vendor usage. Please turn to Slide 10. Our fifth initiative is to fulfill regulatory commitments and resolve remaining legacy matters.

We continue to proactively engage our reg leaders on a consistent and frequent basis and track our progress as it relates to regulatory commitments. The completion of the servicing system conversion to MSP was another positive step in meeting our regulatory commitments. This was one of the requirements under most of our settlements of the April 2017 regulatory matters and a requirement from the states of New York and Massachusetts for the removal of the remaining restrictions on servicing portfolio growth for loans in their respective states.

The next step and final step with respect to New York is to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the New York Department of Financial Services that all loan serviced on the Real Servicing system have been successfully migrated to the MSP system and that we have developed a satisfactory compliance, risk management and internal control infrastructure to onboard sizable portfolios of MSRs.

With respect to Massachusetts, the MSR growth restrictions will be lifted when we complete the second phase of a three-phased data integrity audit which will be conducted by an independent third party. Although the restrictions in New York and Massachusetts have not been a constrained to date on our ability to acquire MSRs at our minimum investment return target, we are working with the respective state regulators to satisfy their requirements. We continue to believe we have meritorious defenses in the CFFB and Florida matters and we are vigorously defending ourselves. We have no updates currently with respect to these matters.

I will now turn it over to June who will discuss the results for the quarter.

June CampbellChief Financial Officer

Thank you, Glen. My comments today will focus on our second-quarter results as compared to the prior quarter. As previously noted our second-quarter investor presentation includes more details on our results and is available on our website. Please turn to Slide 12.

Our second-quarter 2019 reported net loss of $90 million compares unfavorably to the net loss of $44 million in the first quarter of 2019. Our second quarter was impacted by $41 million of pre-tax unfavorable net fair value changes, driven by changes in interest rates and valuation assumptions and $10 million of pre-tax severance, retention and other reengineering cost.

As a reminder, our first-quarter results included the $31 million pre-tax recovery of amounts previously expensed from a service provider. The positive pre-tax earnings impact from the amortization of the lump sum cash payments received from NRZ in 2017 and 2018 was $31 million in the second quarter and $16 million in the prior quarter.

The amortization of these lump sum cash payments will have an $88 million positive impact to our pre-tax income over future quarters through April of 2020. Revenue of $274 million decreased by $30 million from the prior quarter, servicing revenue of $243 million decreased $17 million primarily due to continued portfolio run-off. Offsetting this, servicing fees remitted to NRZ were down $13 million, compared to the prior quarter and were recorded in interest expense. Revenues net of fees remitted to NRZ was down $4 million partially due to the timing of loan modification processing associated with the final MSP loan-boarding in June.

To the extent we are unable to replenish our volume due to unfavorable market conditions, we intend to offset negative revenue trends through higher cost reductions. Lending revenue of $29 million declined $12 million from the prior quarter due to the $12 million favorable financing cost assumption update to our reverse mortgage portfolio in the first quarter. The second quarter included $8 million of favorable valuation on the reverse mortgage portfolio due to a decrease in interest rates, compared to $5 million of favorable valuation in the first quarter. Non-MSR expenses of $184 million was $13 million higher than the prior quarter primarily due to the $31 million recovery of amounts previously expensed from a service provider in the first quarter.

This was offset by progress in our savings initiatives and lower severance, retention and other reengineering expenses. With respect to the $147 million unfavorable MSR valuation adjustments in the second quarter, a 45-basis point decline in the 10-year swap rate and valuation assumption updates drove a $95 million reduction in the value of our forward MSRs. You may recall the PHH portfolio is primarily comprised of agency MSRs, which are more sensitive to changes in interest rates. The remaining $52 million resulted from portfolio run-off.

A portion of the $95 million unfavorable MSR valuation adjustment resulting from interest rate changes and valuation assumption updates was offset by $46 million of favorable NRZ financing liability valuation change which was recorded in interest expense and previously noted $8 million of favorable fair value change on the reverse mortgage portfolio. We have provided additional information related to the MSR valuation impacts on Slide 26. I would now like to provide comments on our servicing and lending segment results. As outlined on Slide 13, our servicing segment recorded a $59 million pre-tax loss, compared to a $58 million pre-tax loss in the prior quarter.

The business was impacted by continued portfolio run-off, unfavorable MSR fair value changes and timing of loan modification processing associated with the final MSP loan-boarding. The servicing business remains focused on providing sustainable loan modification solutions to qualifying borrowers in need. We completed approximately 5,300 modifications in the quarter, 16% of which resulted in some type of debt forgiveness totaling $24 million. As of June 30th, the total UPB of our servicing portfolio stood at $229 billion which is down from $251 billion at March 31.

This reduction was driven by a termination of a legacy PHH sub-servicing client relationship representing approximately $21 billion of UPB and certain smaller terminations, all of which totaled approximately $5 million in annual revenue. We currently expect an additional sub-servicing client termination in the third quarter representing $6 billion of UPB but had no anticipated material adverse impact on our financial results. These legacy PHH sub-servicing terminations are the result of clients taking the view that our merger resulted in a significant change to their historical sub-servicing relationship. Excluding the impact of the second quarter sub-servicing client terminations, our total portfolio UPB would have been close to flat quarter over year, while our owned MSR portfolio UPB increased by almost $5 billion over the prior quarter.

Sustained profitability in the business will largely be driven by our ability to successfully execute the integration, reengineer our operating cost and pursue opportunities to replenish portfolio run-off excluding the impact of sub-servicing terminations. Please turn to Slide 14. Our forward lending business recorded a pre-tax loss of $4 million which was slightly favorable to the prior quarter due to cost reductions. Revenue was $1 million unfavorable to the prior quarter, driven by lower volumes.

We reentered the forward correspondent channel in the second quarter and expect to ramp up in a disciplined manner. We are focused on improving portfolio retention and pull-through rates. Our reverse lending business recorded pre-tax income of $12 million which included $8 million of favorable net fair value changes related to interest rate changes. Unrecognized value related to future draw commitments on loans purchased or originated prior to January 1, 2019 is estimated to be $60 million on a present value basis and will be recognized over time as future draws or securitized or sold.

We also launched our proprietary reverse lending product in the quarter as part of our initiative to grow our lending volume and achieve a more balanced revenue mix.

In our reverse business, over 85% of our portfolio consists of loans originated after March 2014, which conformed to the new initial disbursement limits in more stringent underwriting criteria for Hecom mortgages. In addition, 84% of our portfolio is LIBOR-based arm with lower initial disbursement loans than the traditional fully drawn fixed rate Hecom. We had only $22 million of Hecom buyouts on our balance sheet as of June 30th and our current projected peak outstanding for Hecom buyouts is approximately $175 million in August of 2025.

We maintain adequate levels of funding for Hecom buyouts and can typically fund up to 360 days with advanced rates of 89 to 98% depending on the active or inactive status and whether the property resides in a judicial versus non-judicial state. As you can see on Slide 15, we ended the quarter with available liquidity of $311 million. This included $288 million of unrestricted cash and $24 million of available liquidity on our servicing advanced facilities. We view available liquidity as cash on hand plus available borrowing capacity on advanced facilities and warehouse lines that can be drawn based on eligible collateral.

At quarter end, the available liquidity came from our committed servicing advanced facilities as we were fully funded on our warehouse lines. Our liquidity was $107 million lower than prior quarter, driven by $51 million of cash used for MSR acquisitions and $56 million of other cash uses which includes at least 25 million of working capital use that we expect to reverse in the third quarter. We ended the quarter with corporate debt outstanding of $789 million. Excluding the $98 million in PHH unsecured notes maturing in September, our corporate debt to book equity ratio would have been 1.6 times.

I’ll now turn it back over to Glen.

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

Thank you, June. Please turn to Slide 16. Since our last earnings call, we have continued to make substantial progress with respect to our key business initiatives to position the company for profitability. Our team is executing well, committed to delivering on the objectives of our key initiatives and we’re energized by our accomplishments to date and the opportunities ahead.

We’re taking decisive actions to address evolving market conditions by strengthening our portfolio recapture capability, diversifying our MSR sources, taking incremental cost reduction actions, reducing our cost of capital and exercising discipline and prudent allocation of capital. We expect continued dynamic industry and business conditions while operating with a largely predetermined revenue structure in a highly competitive rules-based environment. As a result, we believe sustainability, profitability and competitiveness will be driven by advantages in cost structure, operational execution, reputation of customers and regulators, recapture performance and ancillary income generation capabilities. Chasing tides per economies of scale to gain the competitive advantage will lead to subpar returns and what we thought were challenges is still tough and underperforming operating platform, loans with poor collateral quality and/or poor legacy service and practices.

We believe Ocwen is well-positioned to lead in each of the capabilities critical for long-term success. We have replatformed our operating systems to establish a technology foundation for future automation and technical innovation, so our technology balance are being implemented in the areas of robotics, optical character recognition, machine learning and digital workforce. We have global operations that provide us access to highly skilled, energized and experience talent pool who are committed to creating positive outcomes for consumers, investors and communities. We’ve commenced our second phase of business reengineering focused on consumers improvement in speed, cost, compliance and customer experience.

The strength of our operational execution had earned optimum servicing, a Tier 1 servicer rating for Ginnie Mae servicing and we expect to achieve a Tier 1 rating for PHH mortgage in 2020. Our operational execution has enabled lower, unrecoverable advances and allowance for unrecoverable advances was just under 2% of our total servicing advances as of June 30th. We are highly focused on preserving the collateral value of newly acquired MSRs through rigorous diligence to validate compliant service and practices and complete loan files. We have a profitable, high-quality reverse mortgage business with a lower credit risk profile compared to other industry participants.

We have incurred limited buyout activity to date and our projected peak outstanding balance of buyouts is expected to be at manageable levels.

Ultimately, our vision for Ocwen is to be a leading mortgage servicer with a core competency in loss mitigation that creates positive outcomes for homeowners, communities and investors. Our objectives include roughly a 50-50 balance of owned servicing and sub-servicing excluding the potential impact of an MSR capital vehicle, diversified origination channels and product capability to replenish and grow our portfolio anchored by strong portfolio retention performance.

A lower cost capital structure utilizing cost efficient structured financing solutions and an MSR capital vehicle to create synthetic sub-servicing, industry top quartile cost structure enabled through our offshore platform, automation, lean scalable processes and operating execution, strong customer satisfaction demonstrated by high net promoter scores and low levels of consumer complaint and diversified revenue sources for compliant ancillary income sources.

I want to thank the Ocwen board of directors, all our associates and our key vendor partners for their hard work and enduring commitment through our transformation. And with that, we’re ready to take questions. Operator?

Questions & Answers:

Operator

Certainly. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions]. Our first question comes from Bose George with KBW.

Please go ahead, sir.

Bose GeorgeKBW — Analyst

Hi. Good morning. Actually, first on the sub-servicing portfolio that was moved, are there any other portfolios that you think are at risk of being moved? You noted the 6 billion in the third quarter, but just anything else that we need to think about?

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

Good morning, Bose. The $6 billion portfolio is the only thing that we are aware of.

Bose GeorgeKBW — Analyst

OK. And in terms of – so this was really a client that was acting based on – obviously, the transfer has kind of been in the works for a while, so was there something incremental that caused it or was this I guess sort of in line with expectations? Like how would you characterize what happened?

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

Yes. Bose, I’d say it was in line with expectations. On a previous earnings call I had said that we would expect sub-servicing run off to exceed sub-servicing replenishment. So we did have advance notice of this client termination.

At the end of the first quarter, we had a large $20 billion servicing acquisition award, which were to nearly offset the UPB and more than offset the revenues. But again, the revenue impact here of the sub-servicing termination is about $5 million, relatively small.

Bose GeorgeKBW — Analyst

OK, great. Thanks. And then actually can you just remind me what happens when – after the amortization of the NRZ cash goes away, is the impact largely one of optics or is there anything – is there an operating impact that we should think about?

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

There’s no operating impact, Bose. The amortization of lump sum payment is purely an accounting event. The cash has already been received and we’re amortizing that cash balance over the original term of the contract. Once the amortization stops, the economics in our P&L will look like an additional sub-servicing arrangement.

Bose GeorgeKBW — Analyst

OK, great. Thanks. And then actually the 31 million impact that you mentioned, the non-MSR expenses, the change related to the previously expense numbers. Can you just go over what happened there just from an accounting standpoint?

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

I think you’re referring to a notable item we reported in the first quarter related to a settlement with a service provider which were a positive $31 million, that did not recur in the second quarter.

Bose GeorgeKBW — Analyst

So let me just make sure. Actually I was looking at – OK, so that was in the first quarter, you’re right. Thank you. Thanks for clarifying that.

So, OK, thanks. That’s all for me.

Operator

[Operator instructions]. This concludes the question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Glen Messina for any closing remarks.

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

Thank you, operator. To all those who joined the call, thank you very much for being with us and for your support of Ocwen and look forward to talking to you next quarter.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 47 minutes

Call participants:

Hugo AriasManaging Director, Investor Relations, and Treasury

Glen MessinaChief Executive Officer

June CampbellChief Financial Officer

Bose GeorgeKBW — Analyst

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