Who doesn't enjoy a good
lawyer joke? You may have even read one or two in this commentary. A good
friend of mine, who happens to be an attorney, likes to say, "That joke
would be slanderous.....if it wasn't true." So when, a few months back,
I came across a Bloomberg article regarding
the attorney fees banks have racked over the past few years, I had to forward
it along to him. He replied back with a "cease and desist" letter,
God bless him. Of the six largest banks, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of
America have piled up $103 billion in legal costs since the financial crisis,
more than all dividends paid to shareholders in the past five years.
According to the article, around 40% of the legal and litigation outlays
arose since January 2012, and banks are warning the totals may surge
as regulators, prosecutors and investors press new claims. They write, "The
prospect is clouding outlooks for stock prices, and by some estimates the
damage could last another decade. JPMorgan and Bank of America bore about 75
percent of the total costs, according to the figures compiled from company
reports." JPMorgan devoted $21.3 billion to legal fees and
litigation since the start of 2008, more than any other lender, and added
$8.1 billion to reserves for mortgage buybacks - and this doesn't even
include the last several months.
Moving on to something more
fun to talk about, as others abandon the mortgage broker and exit wholesale
lending, an aggressively growing company is expanding its traditional
broker and correspondent business in the Northeast. The
Southern California-based FNMA Direct Seller-Servicer, approved GNMA Issuer
and VA Automatic lender, continues to expand its footprint across the
country. The company is currently hiring experienced Wholesale
Account Executives in Ohio, Maryland, D.C., Virginia, Massachusetts and New
Hampshire. The company offers wide open territories, competitive
compensation and best in class service. Qualified Account
Executives with a minimum two year proven track record of success can
forward their confidential resumes to me at rchrisman@robchrisman.com.
And congrats to Dean Miller,
the new president of the retail division of Benchmark Bank and Affiliated
Mortgage. "Dean brings over 30 years of knowledge and experience
to his new role with Affiliated Mortgage, most recently serving as Dallas
Market Manager for F&M Mortgage Group. In that role, he worked
closely with the team of loan officers to maximize their potential and
efficiency while helping to build a strong retail platform operationally. In
his new position, Dean, a UT grad (hook 'em!) will manage day to day
operations and sales of the Retail Division and will report directly to the
Executive Team. His objective is to methodically grow the division while
refining processes and maintaining Affiliated's customer-centric philosophy.
And speaking of Affiliated, due to its continued expansion the company
is looking for successful operational staff and account executives to join
its team. Please contact www.affiliatedtpo.com if you wish to learn more. (Affiliated is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Benchmark Bank, which has been a banking leader since
1964. Affiliated is a direct Seller/Servicer for FNMA and Issuer/Servicer for
GNMA and offer a wide spectrum of programs, including Conventional, Texas
Cash- Out, FHA, VA, USDA and Texas Veterans Land Board, and also
offers warehouse lines.)
The commentary noted that in August
2015 there will be a change to the mandatory waiting period ("effective
August 2015 a home BUYER will now have a MANDATORY 3 day waiting period
before the loan can fund, like a refinance now"). Those "in the
know" say that the new regulation does not address loan funding, only
loan closing. The 3 day requirement is prior to closing. A purchase can
close and fund the same day. And the new rule did not make any
modifications to the rescission requirements.
But
things are not that easy. Some use the term "when your loan
closes" and others use "when your loan funds." The first
problem is that there is no definition of "closing date" in
RESPA/TILA. Therefore are companies are forced to define the closing date for
themselves. In the East, it is often assume that the note date is the closing
date because the note date is when all the parties come together to sign and
close the transaction - called a table closing. In Western states, closing is
done via an escrow process and all the parties do not come together and
instead the two parties visit the escrow agent for signing. The escrow agent
does not "close" the loan by recording it until three things have
happened: all parties signed, all money is in, and all escrow instructions
have been met. A borrower could sign on a Tuesday, but not fund & record,
and therefore close, until Friday. Even the agencies don't "get
this" and even they sometimes use note date and closing date
interchangeably.
I
received this stab at things from an escrow officer west of the Mississippi:
"Those terms are not necessarily universal. On the east coast
the 'closing' is when everyone sits down to sign, and often times the lender
funds the loan at that time. In California, for example, 'closing' means the
transfer of ownership (i.e. recording the grant deed at the county). The
funding of the loan is when the lender releases the loan funds to the closing
agent and authorizes the disbursement of those funds. We usually request loan
funding the day prior to closing. However, often times funding can occur in
the morning and we are able to close the same day in the afternoon. It all
depends on timing since we have to comply with specific recording times at
the county."
And
Andrew Liput, president of Secure Settlements,
writes, "Sounds like they want three days with a final HUD-1 to avoid
last minute term and price changes. The definition of a 'closing' depends
upon your perspective. The funding date is the date that the money
leaves the lender or their warehouse bank and is wired to the settlement
agent. This starts the clock ticking on interest and other costs of
funds. For a lender that is the key date. From a legal
perspective, the transfer of property takes place when consideration is
exchanged for the property transfer instrument (deed). Recording is not
necessary to effectuate the transfer...once you have the original deed and
consideration has passed (funds are transferred to the seller or their
agent), then the transaction is 'closed.' Recording puts the world on notice
of the transfer and amends the title, but the deed date establishes the date
of ownership. In this regard I see no real difference between East and
West Coast transactions, except that the settlement or escrow agent may take
longer to disburse funds. In both instances the document dates control
the legal definition of when the property transferred (i.e. the closing). In
my opinion the CFPB is considering the closing date to be the document
date...the date of the deed and the note reflect the date of the transaction.
I think it is more likely that this will play out that there will be a three
day PAUSE between final documents and the closing date...essentially freezing
the rate and other terms as set forth in the disclosures and the HUD-1.
Once that period passes the parties can proceed to the table for the closing,
regardless of whether it is wet or dry. Here is the
problem....what happens if a buyer chooses to exercise the right to rescind?
It will create chaos for sellers and a whole lot of litigation by attorneys
regarding the motive for a seller to back out of the financing.
Supposedly in the recent comment period for RESPA/TILA
modification, I have heard that various lenders have requested clarity on the
closing versus funding event issue from the CFPB. I hope so - it would be
nice to have the same definition for the same event across the nation.
There continues to be some measure
of uncertainty in the residential lending industry about affiliated
relationships, and how they factor into the points and fees test. Not
helping the confusion have been some verbal comments which vary somewhat from
the written comments, or those put forth in various presentations, regarding
the affiliate provision of the points and fees test (as a refresher, page 37
of ATRQM). It is my
understanding after doing a little research, and a discussion with Paul
Mondor, Managing Counsel in the Office of Regulations at the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, that just the portion of the fees that is
paid to the affiliate and kept by the affiliate is counted in the 3% points
and fees calculation. Often times a title company and a lender/creditor,
or an appraisal management company and a lender, are in
"affiliated" relationships, with shared ownership. The title agent,
for example, may receive money at closing but then pass on a portion of that
money to other entities - those portions that are passed on are not included.
The portion that is counted in the points and fees threshold is the amount
paid to the affiliate and kept by the affiliate.
So the only part of the
charges from an Affiliate that are included in the points and fees
calculation is that portion of the charges that are retained by the Affiliate. In
the regulations, title services are excluded from the finance charge, for
example. But then, in the "3rd step" in determining what is
included in the points and fees calculation, items that were previously
excluded are brought back in unless the charge is "reasonable," the
creditor receives no portion of it, and the money is not paid to an affiliate
of the creditor. At that point, the money that is paid for title services to
an affiliate may be included in the calculation- but the question then turns
to how much of the payment? As an example that I used in Saturday's commentary,
a reader wrote, "For example, an Insurance Agency is an Affiliate of a
creditor and the charge on the HUD is to that insurance Agency for $1,000 for
the Homeowner's Policy. The Agency passes through $900 to the Insurance
Company, e.g. AETNA, and retains $100 as their brokerage fee. Only the
portion retained by the affiliate, i.e. $100, is included in Points and Fees.
Accordingly, if the Affiliate is a Title Company, and the affiliate retains
the Escrow and Notary Fees those fees are included in Points and Fees.
And when it comes to Title Insurance premiums, again only that portion of a
premium retained by a Title Company as commission, for example, is included
in the Points and Fees, not the portion passed through to the Insuring
Company for the Title Insurance coverage.
If you have questions, they
are easy to submit to the CFPB through its industry-dedicated interpretive
guidance email address: CFPB_RegInquiries@cfpb.gov. Also, the CFPB has put a lot
of industry-focused compliance resources here: RegulatoryImplementation. Seek
and ye shall find. And if ye can't find it, shoot them an e-mail!
Yesterday the commentary
discussed the use of gift funds for various programs. Dean Dardzinski,
Pacific Northwest Sales Manager for MGIC writes, "In regards to
your comment about agency loans and the ability of a borrower to receive a
gift for the down payment and closing costs, this was something FNMA began
allowing nearly three years ago when they released DU version 8.4. MGIC
allows the use of gift funds in the transaction when you receive a DU
Approve/Eligible, no overlays or additional requirements; just follow your
findings and the Agency's donor requirements. For those loan officers
and companies who have been aware of this guideline, they've been able to
increase their borrower's purchase power by upwards of 10%. As loan
officers search for topics to discuss with Realtors, I'm sure they would get
a lot of attention with this one. Contact your local MGIC account
manager to learn more."
And Rob Arnaud with HomeBridge
writes, "I just wanted to let you know that HomeBridge now is
offering 5% down Conventional with all gift funds."
Turning to the markets, and
the fixed-income markets (which include bonds like mortgage-backed
securities), the National Association of Realtors confirmed something real
estate agents have known about: although conditions were mixed across the
country, pending home sales continued to move lower in October, marking
the fifth consecutive monthly decline. The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking
indicator based on contract signings, slipped 0.6 percent to 102.1 in October
from an upwardly revised 102.7 in September, and is 1.6 percent below October
2012 when it was 103.8. The index is at the lowest level since December 2012
when it was 101.3; the data reflect contracts but not closings. The reasons
were the government shutdown (waiting for IRS income verification for
mortgage approval), limited inventory, and falling affordability conditions.
But the markets stayed in a
tight range Monday - who needs the volatility heading into the holiday? And
the financial press doesn't seem to have much talk about, although today the
Housing Starts & Building Permits duo is due out, and Consumer Confidence
will be released. The results from the 5-yr Treasury auction will come out
around 1PM EST. So far rates aren't doing much: the risk-free US T-note
closed Monday at a yield of 2.74% and this morning it is...2.73%.
A
logician's wife is having a baby. The doctor immediately hands the newborn to
the dad.
His
wife asks impatiently: "So, is it a boy or a girl"?
The
logician replies: "Yes".
If you're interested, visit
my twice-a-month blog at the STRATMOR Group web site located at www.stratmorgroup.com. The current blog is, "A
Primer on Swaps, and the Implications of Change in the Secondary
Markets". 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 (Check out http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/channels/pipelinepress/default.aspx or www.TheBasisPoint.com/category/daily-basis. For archived commentaries or to subscribe, go to www.robchrisman.com. Copyright 2013 Chrisman LLC. All rights reserved. Occasional paid job listings do appear. This report or any portion hereof may not be reprinted, sold or redistributed without the written consent of Rob Chrisman.)
Today's
Rate Volatility: HIGH
What happened yesterday?
Mortgage backed
securities (MBS) closed UNCHANGED (+0 basis points) from Friday's
close which caused 30 year fixed rates to move sideways.Our benchmark FNMA 3.5 December coupon made a run at a rally but simply couldn't sustain it. Pending Home sales came in at -0.6 vs market expectations of a gain of 1.3. Certainly a miss. But the prior period was revised upward from -5.3 to -4.6 which is actually good news. Plus, when you take into account that this is from the period of the government shut down that put all IRS tax verifications on hold....this is not a bad report all. As a result, MBS could not sustain their levels above our 10 day moving average. We had a 2 year Treasury note auction at 1:00EST. Results: $32 billion with a yield of 0.3%. The bid-to-cover ratio was very strong at 3.54 which shows increased demand compared to the average ratio of 3.28. But as we have discussed, the 2 year note is too short of a term to impact longer term rates like mortgages. So...a weaker than expected Pending Home Sales is supposed to be reflective of weakness in our economy which is why bonds temporarily rallied but then failed. The stock market which is supposed to sell off with weak economic data (because it is supposed to lead to reduced earnings) rallied! The stock market, as measured by the DJIA, hit a new intra-day record high.
What is on the agenda for today?
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Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Funding VS Closing
http://globalhomefinance.com
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