am spending a couple days in
Kansas before heading to North Carolina, and around here the old saying goes,
"The older the buck, the stiffer the horn." I am sure that this
applies to actual deer and not just men's over 50 softball team names. But what
the heck are companies doing about their aging populations - or do they even
care? For Realtors, the median age
is 57. For mortgage bankers, the median age is 78. Okay, I just made that up -
it is probably close to the Realtor number, although when I tried to find it on
the NMLS site, I had no luck. But next week's MBA conference will be collection
of mostly Caucasian, age 40-60, males wearing blue suits and ties, which is
indicative of the industry. Yes, I said it, and yes, there will be some folks
outside that generalization (thank goodness!), but bringing youth into lending,
given the public relations issue our industry has had, is an ongoing theme at
various meetings and conferences. Let's keep it up!
Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC
(CMS) is pleased to announce the addition of banks and credit unions as Third
Party Originators. Carrington has the service TPOs expect from a lender, and is
ready to work with TPOs on growing their business. Those interested
should contact Rey Maninang at Rey.Maninang@carringtonms.com.
For more information on participating, or to apply as a third party
originator, visit Carrington.
On the job front, New American
Funding, a large Inc. 5000 Orange County-based California mortgage banker in
its search for Several Area Vice Presidents for its growing Retail Division
Nationwide. Rated as one of America's Top 100 Mortgage Companies in
2011 and 2012 by volume, New American is
committed to its steady expansion. Reaching out to consumers nationwide from
a central location in Orange County, the company has grown to be an industry
leader in both the purchase and refinance markets for FHA, VA, Conventional,
HARP2 & Jumbo Loans. Please submit confidential resumes to NewAmericanRecruits@nafinc.com.
The strongest, collective voice
for community-based lenders in Washington is the Mortgage Bankers
Association (www.mba.org). "MBA is the place to be for your
business and our industry. Approximately 80 percent of MBA's membership
consists of independent mortgage banks and community banks, and MBA is laser
focused on offering membership services. In fact, MBA has been busy developing
education and compliance resources targeted at this important member segment,
while its advocacy team has been fighting for policies to protect the role
these lenders and servicers play in their local housing markets. In short, MBA
is the leading advocate for real estate finance on Capitol Hill, speaking with One
Voice on behalf of our diverse membership - especially community-based
lenders." MBA wants your company to be part of the voice of the real
estate finance industry: contact Tricia Migliazzo at tmigliazzo@mba.org to learn
more about how it pays to be an MBA member. Tricia will be at MBA's 100th
Annual Convention, which begins this Sunday in Washington, D.C.
By the way, congrats to Ms.
Migliazzo: Dave Stevens, President and CEO of the MBA, recently announced her
appointment as Vice President of Membership in MBA's Residential Policy &
Member Services Group. "Ms. Migliazzo brings to MBA nearly a decade of
management experience in the mortgage banking industry. She joins MBA
from Lenders One/Altisource Portfolio Solutions, where she most recently served
as Director of Business Development/Capital Markets/AFO, growing the
cooperative by recruiting members and investor partners while influencing
program and product utilization for increased revenue growth."
Yes, there are a lot of
opportunities to meet and catch up at the MBA Annual next week in DC - I know
I'll be there! And there are even opportunities to learn. STRATMOR
is offering a series of sessions to demonstrate their MortgageSAT product,
which helps lenders measure borrower satisfaction and be compliant with CFPB
requirements, benchmark their satisfaction compared to others, and figure out
how to improve borrower satisfaction. In this tougher climate it's
important to deliver high quality service to be competitive. Attendees
will also learn about early results. Go to MortgageSAT to learn more
and sign up.
We're all seeing the industry
scale back, and companies looking to weather the storm over the next six months
are becoming more efficient or scaling back dramatically. Bloomberg had an
article noting that CashCall Inc., a lender run by Paul Reddam (remember
DiTech Funding?) is cutting its office space by 40% in Orange County,
California. "The company has almost doubled its office presence in the
past three years to more than 400,000 square feet (37,000 square meters). Now
it is seeking to sublet about 40 percent of its space as rising interest rates
start to hurt lenders, said Jay Carnahan, founder of Orion Property Partners
Inc., the Irvine, California-based brokerage representing CashCall...Wells
Fargo & Co., the country's biggest mortgage lender, has eliminated more
than 5,700 jobs in its home-loan unit since midyear, and JPMorgan Chase &
Co. plans to reduce its mortgage-banking employees by 11,000 this year. PNC
Financial Services Group cut at least 7 percent of its residential-mortgage
workers this month."
(Mortgage originations probably
will drop to $1.1 trillion next year, down 31 percent from the forecasted 2013
total, with refinancings likely to plunge 61 percent to $388 billion, per the
MBA.)
But hope springs eternal out
there - we have a new cooperative: The Mortgage Collaborative. It is
based in San Diego (maybe it can find some office space to the north in Orange
County from CashCall) and is founded by John Robbins and David Kittle,
former chairmen of the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), Gary Acosta, CEO of
the National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals (NAHREP), and
Jim Park, former chair of the Asian Real Estate Association of America (AREAA).
Acosta and Park co-founded a San Diego-based REO asset management company, New
Vista Asset Management. The independent, member-owned cooperative will be
comprised of mortgage lenders initially, but may incorporate mortgage brokers
at some point, and is "designed to help members compete more effectively
by using their collective buying power to lower costs for third-party
services, such as settlement services and title insurance, and getting
better deals when selling loans to an investor in the secondary market,
including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, or when obtaining warehouse lines, which
are lines of credit that mortgage companies use to fund loans at closing
and before they receive funds from investors." One can read all about it.
And we have a new entrant in
the wholesale lending arena. Skyline Financial Corp., a direct lender and
technology developer, has announced the launch of NewLeaf Wholesale, a
wholesale lender servicing mortgage brokers and bankers in the Western United States.
Part of the NewLeaf family of mortgage companies introduced by parent Skyline
in Q4 2013, NewLeaf Wholesale marks
the return of CEO Bill Dallas to wholesale lending. "NewLeaf Wholesale is
a direct-to-agency lender presenting a large portfolio of loan products
enhanced by clear credit parameters and prompt decision making and closing, a
business model suited for the emerging purchase market. In Q1 2014,
NewLeaf Wholesale will integrate with NewLeaf Lending's proprietary mortgage
technology, the Intelligent Marketing Platform (iMP), designed to reduce loan
production times and improve information flow from loan shopping through
closing, streamlining the mortgage experience for Brokers' clients."
Things aren't so rosy in the non-agency/jumbo world, however. The Wall Street Journal carried a story about how Shellpoint Partners LLC, the mortgage finance firm controlled by mortgage bond pioneer Lewis Ranieri, pulled its second bond issue from the market after finding bids were too low relative to the price it could get for underlying loans. "The firm just last week restructured its issue backed by jumbo residential mortgages too large for government backing, removing some riskier loans in return for better outlook on losses by debt-ratings firms.
Things aren't so rosy in the non-agency/jumbo world, however. The Wall Street Journal carried a story about how Shellpoint Partners LLC, the mortgage finance firm controlled by mortgage bond pioneer Lewis Ranieri, pulled its second bond issue from the market after finding bids were too low relative to the price it could get for underlying loans. "The firm just last week restructured its issue backed by jumbo residential mortgages too large for government backing, removing some riskier loans in return for better outlook on losses by debt-ratings firms.
"Issuance of non-agency debt
has suffered since the Federal Reserve began hinting it may cut its financial
stimulus efforts, a move that investors expect will increase bond yields and
consumer interest rates. Investors worry that the loans taken out near
record-low interest rates will be refinanced at slower rates, extending the
life of a bond and reducing principal repayments that can be reinvested at
higher rates." CSFB's Peter Sack, a managing director in the
structured-products group, said that he expected little, if any, issuance
through year-end. "Pricing on jumbo mortgage bonds 'is terrible because
investors have concerns on both credit and extension risk,' said John
Kerschner, global head of securitized products at Janus Capital Group" per
the WSJ. "Meantime, a new type of debt security developed by Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac that appeals to investors who want to bet on mortgage
credit--rather than only interest-rate risk in standard Fannie and mortgage
Freddie bonds--has also taken demand from jumbo issues, Mr. Kerschner
said."
The article goes on to say,
"Fannie Mae's deal that pushes some credit risk onto private investors
drew so much demand this month that the firm reduced some yields by a full
percentage point before pricing. Most investors stood by their orders even as
yields were cut, according to one investor who bought the deal. Last month,
PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust had to cut prices at least twice on its
debut non-agency mortgage bond to draw demand. Shellpoint's issue saw better
pricing than the PennyMac issue but still fell short, said a person familiar
with the deal."
But
switching back to agency products, yesterday Freddie announced, "To make
our eligibility requirements more transparent to borrowers, effective October
27, 2013, we will use the note date of the mortgage being refinanced, instead
of the Freddie Mac settlement date, to determine eligibility for our Freddie
Mac Relief Refinance Mortgages offering. As a result of this change, the
mortgage being refinanced must have a note date on or before May 31,
2009. This revised requirement applies to both Relief Refinance Mortgages -
Same Servicer and Relief Refinance Mortgages - Open Access, including those
originated under the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). Loan Prospector®
and the Freddie Mac Loan Look-Up Tool will be updated by October 27, 2013, to
support this change."
And here is Fannie's announcement of the same.
Why would rates go any higher
with our economy limping along? European concerns seem to have
disappeared, Asia is cruising along, and there is no way that the Fed is going
to scale back QE III with the U.S. economy where it is. Yesterday we were given
a reminder of that when Non-Farm Payrolls climbed less than projected. (Few
serious analysts even care that the jobless rate fell to an almost four-year
low, given that it doesn't include people without jobs who have given up
looking for work.) And the financial press will be talking about the partial
shutdown's impact on GDP for months - at least until the next possible shutdown
in January.
So the Fed will keep buying
billions of MBS every day, as will hedge funds, REITs, money managers and other
"real money" (investors). And with demand solid and supply still
languishing, prices will go up and rates down. Agency MBS prices were better,
depending on coupon, by .5-.75 - and whatever rate sheets didn't reflect that
yesterday will probably catch up today.
For news today, we've had the
MBA's application index reflecting what lock desks already knew: apps were down
.6%, refis -1.3%, purchases were +.7%. At 8:30AM EDT is the delayed September
Import Prices (+0.2 expected from flat), and at 9AM EDT is Augusts FHFA House
Price Index (+8.8 last). The
10-yr closed yesterday at a yield of 2.51% and in the early going is down to
2.50% and MBS prices are better a smidge.
Planning for the
fall football season in the South is radically different from up north.
For those who are planning a football trip south, here are some helpful
hints, part 3 of 4:
Game Day:
NORTH: A few students party
in the dorm and watch ESPN on TV.
SOUTH: Every student wakes up,
has a beer for breakfast, and rushes over to where ESPN is
broadcasting "Game Day Live" to get on camera and wave to
the idiots up north who wonder why "Game Day Live" is
never broadcast from their campus.
Tailgating:
NORTH: Raw meat on a grill, beer
with lime in it, listening to local radio station with truck tailgate
down.
SOUTH: 30-foot custom
pig-shaped smoker fires up at dawn. Cooking accompanied by a live performance
by "Dave Matthews' Band," who comes over during breaks and asks
for a hit off bottle of bourbon.
Getting to the Stadium:
NORTH: You ask
"Where's the stadium?" When you find it, you walk right in.
SOUTH: When you're near it,
you'll hear it. On game day it becomes the state's third largest city.
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