With or without the storm damage, here
in the U.S. there are 41 million potential trick-or-treaters (children
age 5 to 14; see joke at bottom) across the United States. And they can
be ringing doorbells or throwing toilet paper rolls at 115 million
occupied housing units across the nation in 2011 - thanks to the Census
Bureau for those numbers.
My wife said, "I think we should do something really scary for the
kids this Halloween." I said, "We could take them to your
mother's." Some think the future of our industry is scary - but it
isn't. Our industry continues to evolve. Companies are certainly
interested in moving into the void left by Wells wholesale, Bank of
America, and MetLife. We can look for Nationstar, which some
call "Wells-lite" due to the hiring of ex-Wells wholesale
employees, to be a presence in the correspondent channel in 2013. And not
the onesy-twosy best efforts business model, but an entire new
correspondent lending channel with 100% mandatory and AOT execution with
a goal (from what I've heard) of $24-30 billion in the first year. Redwood
Trust has signaled its intention to move into the agency channel in
addition to its success in jumbo securitization. And don't expect the
existing correspondent lenders to continue to watch their best clients
divert their pipelines to the agencies while doing nothing. We've
already seen Wells beef up their operations centers. We can expect 9 of
the top 10 correspondents (in the 2nd quarter: Wells Fargo, Chase, U.S.
Bank Home Mortgage, Flagstar Bank, BB&T, Franklin American,
Ally/ResCap (GMAC), SunTrust, CitiMortgage, and PHH) to lower their
margins, remind clients about sales caps, pay attention to rumors of
Fannie raising its minimum net worth to $5 million, increase operational
efficiencies, and watch clients retaining servicing to grapple with
capital issues. Are we having fun yet?
Housing advocates Bob Gnaizda and John
Hope Bryant first made names back for themselves in 2005 when they warned
of the impending housing crisis, but they've done something of a 180 and
are now in Washington, D.C. and Wall Street voicing their support of a
return to subprime lending. Granted, the prototype they're
promoting is billed as "a responsible, alternative mortgage for
less-than-prime borrowers," but it's the same general idea.
Unsurprisingly, the backlash against the word "subprime" has
been powerful, but the current regulatory climate has effectively
redlined low- and moderate-income borrowers, many of whom are
minorities. Data from 2011 shows that black and Hispanic borrowers
were not only more likely to be denied than white or Asian borrowers,
they were also more likely to receive pricier loans.
Enter Dignity Mortgage, which would provide an option for
"non-prime" borrowers who completed financial literacy
training. Borrowers would also have to have incomes at least 120%
below the regional poverty level and be looking to buy homes at 95%
or less than the median price in the area. The product would
provide lenders with built-in protection by allowing them to charge 1.25%
above the lowest prime for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, and, if
borrowers were to make timely payments for the next five years, lower the
rate and apply that premium to reduce the principal. All loans that
met those terms would be purchased by Fannie or Freddie with limited or
no recourse against the bank. Stay tuned!
"Uh, Eddie, watcha doin' this weekend?" "Nothing much,
boss, why, what's up?" "Well, could you send out these 10,000
refund checks to borrowers?" I doubt if that exact conversation took
place in the bowels of one of Wells Fargo's operations sites, but Wells
Fargo has issued thousands of refund checks to home loan customers who
paid unnecessary mortgage fees, according to a report from the Los
Angeles Times. The refunds have to do with FHA mortgages originated from
2009 through 2011. Bank officials told the Los Angeles Times that
borrowers who would have been able to get a conventional loan were
instead directed toward FHA loans that require higher insurance payments.
Apparently the issues were discovered after an internal review of loans
originated by Wells Fargo Financial and brokers in the wholesale channel
of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage. Here is the story.
Uh oh... you mean that borrowers who
defaulted aren't all beating down the door trying to obtain financing and
another house right away? Borrowers who default on mortgages return to
the mortgage market at extremely slow rates: only about 10% of
borrowers with a prior serious delinquency regain access to the mortgage
market within 10 years of their default. Borrowers who terminate
mortgages for reasons other than default return to the market about
two-and-a-half times faster than those who default. Renewed access to
credit takes even longer for subprime borrowers with a serious
delinquency on their record. "Evidence suggests that the process of
regaining creditworthiness is lengthy. Borrowers who terminated their
mortgages for reasons other than default returned to the market about
two-and-a-half times faster than those who defaulted. This has important
implications for the housing recovery. The improvement in the housing
market is often assumed to reflect significant pent-up demand. But an
estimated 4 million foreclosures have taken place since 2007. The
consumers who went through those foreclosures will return to
homeownership only gradually, suggesting that mortgage supply will also
be a factor in the housing recovery." Here you go, straight from
the SF Fed: NoSurpriseHere.
In case you haven't heard during the
last 3 years, we have an election coming up next week. What difference
does it make? Although the prospects of eliminating the CFPB are close
to zero, changes to its leadership structure are likely if Mitt
Romney wins the White House. Unfortunately the Republicans refused to
confirm an agency head until reforms were made, and so they may face gridlock
from obstinate Democrats - "payback's a b----"as they say. The
agency's director, Richard Cordray, may stick around through the end of
his 2013 term and then run for higher office in his home state of Ohio.
And the CFPB is not even the top priority: there are a large number of
slots at the Treasury Department, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and
Securities and Exchange Commission.
Switching topics to FHA Compare
Ratios, Chrystal H. writes, "Personally I think the compare
ratio should only include loans that had a deficiency in
underwriting. If we met all guidelines and the transaction appeared
to be a good credit risk (per FHA standards) why should we be penalized or
our numbers look bad if it was something out of our control that resulted
in the delinquency/default. Too bad this thought process isn't used when
determining the compare ratio." (I have heard that from many.)
And regarding Freddie & Fannie making profits, Brian B. from
NJ wrote: "On your comment about F&F trying to post a 'profit'
is the term many have a dispute. I guess the misconceptions in the one
fostered by the FHFA. Is F&F an independent corporation in a state of
bankruptcy, or was/is it an independent corporation that was nationalized
by the government. Yes there are arguments for both sides. However, the
weight for the second concept is the FHFA's ability to continually
utilize the Treasury at will is the public perception that causes
confusion. To further throw a wrench in the works is the 'Independent
Agency' shell that FHFA operates under. The FHFA seems to allow
F&F to continually jump from government agency to independent company
as the winds of Sandy blow - whatever seems politically expedient."
On to some agency & investor news,
some from today and some within the last few weeks. As always, it is best
to read the actual bulletin for complete details.
Last week I told my two cats that I was
exploring "strategic alternatives" for them - the SPCA is only
a short drive away if they didn't start paying attention to my commands.
As has happened countless times before, they didn't seem to care and went
back to napping. But it carries a lot more weight when Ally Bank
announced it has launched a "process to explore strategic
alternatives for its agency mortgage servicing rights (MSR) portfolio and
its business lending operations."
Every investor and lender has reminded clients of their disaster
policies, and those policies are usually based on FEMA announcements.
FEMA issued Major Disaster Declarations for New Jersey and New York along
with the Emergency Declarations for New Hampshire, Virginia, West
Virginia, Delaware, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, D.C., and
Massachusetts that were published on the 28th and 29th. See the FEMA
website for the full releases (http://www.fema.gov/disasters). No one yet
knows what happened to the tens of millions of rats living in the
now-flooded New York subway system, but they most likely survived.
As an example, Plaza Home Mortgage
spread the word to clients that "Due to Hurricane Sandy, all loan
funding and purchasing will be temporarily suspended in the following
states: CT, DC, MD, MA, ME, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VA, and VT.
Appraisal professionals, take note: Comergence
is launching its new Eagle Eye due diligence and surveillance service,
which can be used to conduct and maintain background checks for
appraisers. The program employs the same format as Comergence's
third party originator compliance service and lets lenders and AMCs keep
their approved appraisers in a central repository. Appraisers, for
their part, can use it to apply to lenders and AMCs and to keep their
profile information current.
In Oregon Pacific Continental
($1.3 billion) will acquire Century Bank ($87mm) for $13.4mm or
about 1.09x tangible book. And Talmer Bancorp, backed by W.L. Ross
($2.2 billion) will buy Ohio's First Place Bank ($2.8 billion!) for
$45mm. Talmer will recapitalize First Place with $200mm in capital, after
First Place exits bankruptcy.
Congrats to Genworth Financial as
it posted a third-quarter profit, compared with a loss a year earlier.
The net operating loss at Genworth's U.S. mortgage insurance unit more
than halved to $38 million. New flow delinquencies -- a measure of how
many new loans were in default -- fell 19 percent. For the company net
income for the quarter ended September 30 was $34 million, or 7 cents per
share, compared with a loss of $16 million, or 3 cents per share, a year
earlier.
Going to the markets and economic news, there is continued good news
about home prices from the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices.
Remember that there is a two month lag in the numbers, but both the
10-City and the 20-City Composites increased 0.9 percent in August
compared to the previous month. Nineteen of the 20 cities also
increased month-over-month. Seventeen of the 20 cities posted
positive annual returns.
But this morning the industry learned
what lock desks everywhere knew: applications for home mortgages fell
last week as demand for refinancing tumbled for the fourth week in a row,
an industry group said on Wednesday. Apps fell last week almost 5%, with
refi's down 6% and purchases up .5%. The refinance share of total
mortgage activity slipped to 80% of applications from 81%. Conventional
refi's were down 6.1% and GNMA refi's were down 5.5%.
The good news for today is that
the markets are back trading, and it appears in the early going that
rates are pretty much unchanged from Friday's close/early Monday. Last
week ADP announced a change to its methodology (RelevanceIsGood) although
its release is delayed due to the storm. In the early going the 10-yr
is at 1.74% and MBS prices are roughly unchanged.
You know you are too old to Trick or
Treat when:
10. You keep knocking on your own front
door.
9. You remove your false teeth to change your appearance.
8. You ask for soft high fiber candy only.
7. When someone drops a candy bar in your bag and you lose your balance
and fall over.
6. People say, "Great Boris Karloff Mask." And you're not
wearing a mask.
5. When the door opens you yell, "Trick or..." and you can't
remember the rest.
4. By the end of the night, you have a bag full of restraining orders.
3. You have to carefully choose a costume that doesn't dislodge your
hairpiece.
2. You're the only Power Ranger in the neighborhood with a walker.
And the number one reason Seniors should not go Trick or Treating...
1. You keep having to go home to piddle.
If you're interested, visit my
twice-a-month blog at the STRATMOR Group web site located at www.stratmorgroup.com. The current
blog discusses some of the considerations facing the FHFA regarding
Fannie and Freddie. If you have both the time and inclination, make
a comment on what I have written, or on other comments so that folks can
learn what's going on out there from the other readers.
Rob
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