Time
seems to fly in the mortgage banking business. Here we are, less than a
week
until the national conference in San Diego. Heck, here we are
approaching
Halloween! And I know that I am getting old when I wake up with that
“morning-after
feeling” and I didn't do anything the night before. Or people call at
9PM and
ask, "Did I wake you?"
Speaking
of time flying, loan modifications, which seem to have more of an
impact on
the larger investors than on the smaller brokers, have come a long way
since
earlier this year. An assortment of modification programs have been
almost entirely
replaced by HAMP, now the industry standard for first liens, and
servicers have
streamlined, to a much greater degree, their operations departments.
With that,
and given the continued political pressure to do them, look for the
number of
loan modifications to increase significantly in the next few quarters.
The most
recent data shows that there is a slight moderation in the pace of
re-defaults
as compared with a few months back. Overall the re-default numbers
remain
high, but it is very dependent upon the amount of payment reduction,
the number
of payments missed at time of modification and original credit score.
For
those servicers who sell to Freddie and who are modifying their loans, Freddie
notified clients that their Workout Prospector is now available “to
use
when evaluating eligible borrowers for a modification under the Home
Affordable
Modification program (HAMP). “ In fact, starting on 11/1 “all Freddie
Mac
Servicers will be required to evaluate and process mortgages for HAMP
in
Workout Prospector or to transmit data when using your own proprietary
or
third-party system, and the Borrower Qualification Worksheet will be
retired.”
As
I mentioned yesterday, Freddie pushed out their data requirement
roll-out. Fannie
is also changing the roll-out date of their new loan data requirements
to July
1 instead of January 1. This is to comply with the Federal Housing
Finance
Agency (FHFA) requirements, specifically on loan origination
identifiers and
appraiser data elements. Beginning March 1 Fannie Mae's systems will be
ready
to capture this data at the time of delivery should the lender be
prepared to
send the data prior to July 1, 2010, and the updated Uniform
Residential
Loan Application (Form 1003 ) is available now, but not required
until July.
May-as-well start using it now!
And
while we’re talking about appraisals, Chase Correspondent clients
were told
that Chase is making changes to their Collateral Policy which became
effective
October 2. They are eliminating Chase Approved Appraiser status,
establishing
minimum appraiser requirements, validating review and ineligible
appraiser status,
and eliminating First American Appraisal Services (eAppraiseIT) as a
Chase-approved
Appraisal Management Company (AMC). In fact, the Chase Appraiser
Web site
has been updated to remove all Chase Approved Appraisers.
Correspondents
can immediately take advantage of the revised minimum appraiser
requirements
and validation of Chase Ineligible status. Chase Home Lending will no
longer
approve, suggest or dictate the use of any specific appraisers. All
appraisers
with one of the valid state appraisal license/certifications (state
license,
state certified residential, state certified general) are permitted to
complete
appraisal services for loan transactions sold to Chase based on loan
amount &
complexity parameters. (A field review by a State Certified Appraiser
is still
required when the original appraisal is prepared by an appraiser in a
Chase
Review status.)
Bank
of America Home Loan correspondent clients should note that starting
10/15, the
BofA 4506-T IRS Transcript Policy “will require delivered loan files
include
IRS transcripts dated prior to the closing date. In all instances,
the
transcript requirements apply to borrower personal returns (1040s).This
policy
applies to all conventional and government loans except for non-credit
qualifying FHA Streamline refinances.”
Although
it has a long way to go (through the house and senate, and then to the
president) a bill has been introduced in Congress which increases
the minimum
down payment for Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured mortgages
from
3.5% to 5%. Titled “The FHA Taxpayer Protection Act of 2009” HR
3706 would
also prohibit financing appraisals, initial service charges,
inspections, or
other fees or closing costs with any part of an FHA mortgage.
Lock
desks all over the nation seem to be busier. And it turns out that mortgage
applications filed last week were up 16.4% compared with the week before.
Refinancing apps are over 66% of all the applications, and were up 18%
from the
prior week. Purchase applications were up 13%, hitting their highest
mark since
January. The MBAA's four-week moving average for all mortgages was up a
seasonally adjusted 4.2%.
Are
we having fun yet? At least rates are behaving! Yesterday’s 3-year note
auction
was decent, coming in at a yield of 1.445% with a bid/cover of 2.76,
which
compares with an average of 2.84 in the four most recent auctions and
2.62 in
all of 2009. Indirect bidders took down 49.1% of the auction, which
compares
with an average of 53.6% for the prior four 3-year note auctions. With
no
news today except for the $20 billion10-yr auction (currently yielding
3.23%),
mortgage security prices are a shade better than yesterday afternoon.
A
crusty old Marine Sergeant Major found himself at a gala event hosted
by a
local liberal arts college. There was no shortage of extremely young
idealistic
ladies in attendance, one of whom approached the Sergeant Major for
conversation.
“Excuse
me, Sergeant Major, but you seem to be a very serious man. Is something
bothering you?”
“Negative,
ma'am. Just serious by nature.”
The young lady looked at his awards and decorations and said, “It looks
like you
have seen a lot of action.”
“Yes,
ma'am, a lot of action.”
The young lady, tiring of trying to start up a conversation, said, “You
know,
you should lighten up a little. Relax and enjoy yourself.”
The
Sergeant Major just stared at her in his serious manner. Finally the
young
lady said, “You know, I hope you don't take this the wrong way, but
when is the
last time you made love?”
''1955,
ma'am.''
“Well,
there you are. You really need to chill out and quit taking everything
so
seriously! I mean, none since 1955?!”
She
took his hand and led him to a private room where she proceeded to
'relax' him
several times.
Afterwards, panting for breath, she leaned against his bare chest and
said, “Wow,
you sure didn't forget much since 1955.”
The Sergeant Major, glancing at his watch, said in his serious voice,
“I hope
not; it's only 2150 now.”
Rob
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