http://globalhomefinance.com
"Do you mind if we dance
with your dates?" There is a
lot of dancing that goes on in Congress; by many accounts there is not much
in the way of compromise like "in the old days" but and certainly a
lot of fluff and posturing - which brings up the question, "Of the
number of bills that are introduced, or in process, how many are actually
passed into law? If you're ever asked that question, you can refer to GovTrack - we're at
5%, and the rest are just fluff to help get someone re-elected, or genuinely
not good. At the MBA conference, someone mentioned the number of bills out
there now that have the word "mortgage" in them - well into the
hundreds. It is hard to keep track, or even want to, given the passage
percentage.
Regardless of what happens in
DC, Flagstar Bank has spread the word that Flagstar is adding an
option for "VA IRRRL Other Servicer" to use AVM rather than an
appraisal up to 100% LTV. In addition Flagstar removed its overlay on FHA
loan limits for 3-4 unit properties. The broker and correspondent
investor has recently put in place many enhancements to its government
lending suite, so contact your Flagstar AE for more information at FlagstarWholesale -
prospective clients should click on "Search" to find their state,
and contact information for AEs.
On the job front, "Join
a dynamic team! VITEK Mortgage Group is a leading Northern CA retail
mortgage banking firm, with a strong history of purchase-focused business and
we have exciting opportunities for customer-centric professionals. In
order to support our strategic growth initiatives, we are adding the
following positions: Corporate Underwriter & Processing Manager. Both
positions are based in our Sacramento headquarters. Visit VITEK for further
information about VITEK Mortgage Group and these exciting opportunities,
and/or send resumes directly to Libby Feyh, VPHR at lfeyh@teamvitek.com.
And private mortgage
insurance company Genworth Financial is seeking candidates for an Account
Manager position in North Carolina. The person hired will be expected to
provide the highest level of internal and external customer service, manage
customer relationships and develop growth strategies for assigned accounts,
develop calling plans to cover all assigned accounts, monitor branch volume
and calling activity and take necessary actions to achieve account volume
goals, execute and lead implementation of Genworth products and initiatives,
identify and communicate new opportunities to provide solutions to customer
needs, etc. The ideal candidate will have 4+ years of experience in a
regional or territorial sales role, have a college degree or equivalent industry/sales
experience, great presentation and communication skills, and have the ability
to work flexible hours with occasional overnight travel. Candidates should
contact Jen Phillips at jen.phillips@genworth.com and for more information on the
company visit Genworth.
In another private mortgage
insurance company, other events are unfolding. The Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau took action recently against RMIC for allegedly paying
kickbacks to lenders in exchange for business. (Kickbacks: if you can't do
the time, don't do the crime.) Per the CFPB, Republic Mortgage Insurance
Company had been paying kickbacks to lenders for years, and under a proposed
consent order, RMIC has agreed to pay a fine and put an end to the practice.
But unlike the other fines (Castle & Cooke, $4 million out of $13
million) or Chase (in the billions), the CFPB is requiring "RMIC to pay
a $100,000 penalty" due to providing kickbacks to more than 100 mortgage
lenders by purchasing captive reinsurance.
Under the consent order, RMIC
will be prohibited from entering into any new captive mortgage reinsurance
arrangements with affiliates of lenders or obtaining captive reinsurance on
any new mortgages for 10 years. As already-existing reinsurance arrangements
end, the company will forfeit any right to funds "not directly related
to collecting on reinsurance claims." RMIC will also be subject to CFPB
monitoring and will have to make regular compliance reports to the agency.
(Followers of RMIC know that it's currently under administrative supervision
by the North Carolina Department of Insurance after the state found the
company's finances "in such a condition as to render the continuation of
its business hazardous to the public or to holders of its policies or
certificates of insurance," according to a report by the state's
commissioner of insurance.) For the CFPB's take on it, visit Kickbacks.
A week or two ago this
commentary mentioned that the CFPB is expected to use today's field hearing
to announce the new disclosure form. Very little that comes out of government
these days is much of a surprise, and sure enough Bloomberg is
reporting that CFPB's Director, Richard Cordray, will use the occasion to
unveil the long-awaited new mortgage disclosure form. Bloomberg
says the CPPB will not provide a carve-out exempting small lenders from using
the form. Mortgage News Daily reports that, "The supposedly simplified
form has been on the drawing boards since before CFPB was formed and is
intended to replace forms mandated by the Truth in Lending Act
(TILA) and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA). A
simplified format for these disclosures was first suggested by Elizabeth
Warren in 2011 and was among the requirements of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act which consolidated responsibilities for
the disclosures from two separate agencies into CFPB." Here is the
Bloomberg story.
Ask anyone in Columbus, OH or
St. Louis, MO what they have in common with Boston, MA or Newark, NJ and you
may be met with blank stares (no, it's not fabulous chowder, or Soprano
Tours). As a reminder, the CFPB recently announced new partnerships with the
two mid-west cities. The new partnerships allow consumers to call a local
hotline in order to reach the CFPB. A consumer who calls the local hotline
with a question or complaint about consumer financial products or services
will be transferred directly to the CFPB by city representatives. In an
attempt to curtail the concern of long distance charges to whistle blowers
the agency has stated that "Our mission at the CFPB is to make it
easier for consumers to navigate the complex consumer financial markets, and
we are always looking for new ways to connect with consumers, and we are
happy to work with Mayor Slay to better serve the residents of St.
Louis." Press 1 for Building Permits, 2 for
the CFPB.
34 business days until
Qualified Mortgages are the new paradigm, and, potential
future liabilities aside, capital markets personnel are concerned about hedging
non-QM loans. Or should they be? Bob Gundel of Compass Analytics writes,
"Those lenders contemplating originating Non-QM loans should consider
how pricing and hedging such loans differs from pricing and hedging vanilla
agency production and take steps to prepare for these differences...How will
non-QM loans sold in the secondary market? Since FHFA directed Fannie and
Freddie to comply with QM in regards to term, amortization, and points and
fees limits, and FHA-insured loans must adhere to the CFPB restrictions on
points and fees, loans originated outside the QM guidelines would be sold to
private Investors (non-agency execution), and thus would be priced as a whole
loan or structured cash flow product." Mr. Gundel goes on to describe
some of the considerations prior to originating non-QM loans. "What
investors are buying non-QM loans? Does the lender have more than one outlet
for non-QM loans? Are investors providing daily pricing indications for
non-QM product? (Many investors only provide daily best efforts pricing for
non-agency, but will buy non-agency loans via mandatory bulk delivery). Do
mandatory price spreads over best efforts (net of expected hedge cost)
justify taking on interest rate, fallout, and basis risk? Will servicing be
retained or released at execution? Are investors buying servicing? Does the
lender have the ability to retain servicing? How will servicing be valued for
rate sheet/MTM/book value? (What prepayment model to use?)"
The write up, which is
relatively in-depth, continues. "Since investors may be spotty, and
pricing unpredictable particularly in the early days, pricing loans to rates
sheets, while attributing non-agency security duration to non-QM loans is the
preferred method for modeling gain/loss, pullthrough, and hedge ratios."
He concludes with, "Early non-QM product will likely entail volatile prices
and large profit margins. In a similar manner to the current jumbo market, a
few securitizers/aggregators will emerge and the bulk of the industry will
sell best efforts to those aggregators. As the market matures, pricing will
become more stable, mandatory programs will open up and margins will
contract." (If you have questions about Compass or hedging, contact Bob
at bgundel@compass-analytics.com.)
If you are a reverse mortgage
lender, you don't want to look up and see the Gray Panthers picketing your
office. If you're an elected official, you probably don't want to see that
the NAR, and practically anyone "in the know", is accusing
you of making mistakes. But indeed, that happened to Maxine Waters with
recent flood legislation. NAR wrote, "Homeowners across the
country should not be forced to pay for the sudden and dramatic flood
insurance premium increases that are the unintended consequence of the
Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2012, insisted the National
Association of Realtors today in testimony before the U.S. House Financial
Services Subcommittee on Housing and Insurance...NAR was a vocal advocate
for the Biggert-Waters legislation to extend the program for 5 years and
end the uncertainty of shutdowns that were stalling 40,000 home sales each
month. However, due to the unprecedented scope of premium increases and other
unintended consequences, NAR recommends that Congress seize the opportunity
to pass the 'Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act.'" (This
legislation would delay further implementation of major rate changes until
the Federal Emergency Management Agency completes an affordability study
required by Biggert-Waters; creates an office of the Advocate to investigate
flood insurance rate increases; and reports to Congress with proposed
solutions to any identified problems.)
Missouri
knows a thing or two about floods. It has modified certain provisions
regarding financial institutions in House Bill No. 329. The bill replaces
various statutes relating to financial institutions. Under 361.160, the
director of finance "must arrange to visit and examine bank and trust
companies annually." The amendment creates an exception for a
"private trust company", defined as "one that does not engage
in trust company business with the general public or otherwise hold itself
out as a trustee or fiduciary for hire by advertising, solicitation, or other
means and instead operates for the primary benefit of a family, relative of
same family, or single family lineage, regardless of whether compensation is
received or anticipated." These sections and modifications are effective
immediately.
(For a quick bit of trivia
about another state that starts with "M", 22% of Mississippi's
residents receive food stamps, officially known as the
"Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program," the highest
percentage of any US state.)
Here in Colorado that
saw its share of flooding a few months ago, the state recently repealed
various provisions and has adopted new amended provisions regarding
professional standards of mortgage loan originators and companies. Under the
new legislation, individuals who take residential loan modification
applications or offer loan modifications are required to be licensed as a
Colorado mortgage loan originator. The new law requires mortgage loan
originators to have all borrowers describe, in writing, the reason they are
seeking a mortgage loan, modification or refinance. The law demands that a
mortgage loan originator only recommend appropriate products after making a
reasonable inquiry, in order to understand a borrower's current and
prospective financial status.
Shifting gears to the
markets, rates slid slightly higher Tuesday, with agency MBS prices worse
about .125-.250. The only reason I could discover for the increase was
that "they just didn't want to go lower." Yes, there was some
chatter about "heavy global supply" or nervousness about a Ben
Bernanke speech last night. Regardless, the fact remains that at this point
mortgage banker supply is about $1 billion a day and the Fed is buying more
than that. The risk-free 10-yr T-note closed with a yield of 2.71%, and in
the early going is basically unchanged from that level.
We do have some news coming
out, like the Mortgage Bankers Association's mortgage application indexes
(w/e 11/15), followed at 8:30 a.m. with October Retail Sales (+0.1 for both
headline and ex-autos) and October CPI (+0.0 and +0.1 for headline and core).
Last at 10 a.m. are October Existing Home Sales (-1.9 percent to 5.15
million) and September Business Inventories (unchanged at +0.3).
For "lexophiles"
(lovers of words - part 2 of 3)
He had a photographic memory
which never developed.
The short fortune teller who escaped from prison was a small medium at large. Those who get too big for their britches will be exposed in the end. When you've seen one shopping center, you've seen a mall. If you jump off a bridge in Paris, you are in Seine. When she saw her first strands of grey hair, she thought she'd dye. Santa's little helpers are subordinate clauses. Acupuncture is a jab well done. The roundest knight at King Arthur's round table was Sir Cumference, Who acquired his size from too much pi.
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.) |
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Rob Chrisman's Mortgage Industry Update
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