Is there ever a day that mattresses are
not “on sale”? Securities
are always for sale. I love this kind of talk: "Agency MBS reversed
course
this week as much of the coupon stack underperformed against duration
hedges." That is what I received from a buddy who works for a large
investment bank. What the heck does that mean, and does it mean
anything to
some broker who has a client waiting for 4.875% to come back? Not
really.
On any given day, investors in fixed income
securities have a huge
number of options from which to choose. They can buy government
securities,
corporate bonds, municipal bonds, mortgage-backed securities, the list
is too
numerous to detail here. At the moment, agency MBS securities backed by
Freddie
& Fannie loans) are looking fairly priced versus Treasuries. And
speaking
of Treasury securities, the yields on two-year note yields rose above
1% for
the first time this month, and the 10-yr Treasury hit 3.50% this
morning.
The Fed's MBS program, which many mortgage
bankers believe is still the
only thing keeping mortgage rates as low as they are, still has the
capability
to absorb close to $15 billion a week through the end of the first
quarter. Whether or not this
is enough to soak up the current production
remains to be seen. Many banks, however, are selling their holdings of
mortgage
securities due to the large profits contained in them. Their profits
are
helped, but it doesn’t help current production, although they may go
out and
buy current production.
What about this new bond program, proposed a
week or so ago? Is it
going to help the broker or small lender? Probably not: most
housing
agencies use banks as direct lenders to get to these first time home
buyers.
So perhaps there will be some peripheral benefits, perhaps not. The
program (Homeowner
Affordability and Stability Plan, from February) HFA Initiative:
Support for
State and Local Housing Finance Agencies. How the program will work is
that the
government will provide temporary financing for HFAs to issue new
mortgage
revenue bonds. Housing Finance Agencies will originate the loans,
which pass
through Freddie & Fannie, and then the Treasury will purchase
securities
backed by these new housing bonds.
And it will take some time: each HFA that
desires to participate will
be asked to develop a program participation request in consultation
with
Treasury, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac, indicating their desired level
of
participation. I am not an expert in bond issuance, and it doesn’t
sound
simple. HFA’s at the state and local levels receive allocations based
on
previous issuance history and the submission of requests, and us the
money for
single or multi-family bonds. HFAs will pay the GSEs and Treasury an
amount
intended to cover both the cost of financing the newly issued bonds as
well as
a fee designed to cover risk posed by the HFA, and the rates are set on
newly
issued HFA bonds to equal a short-term Treasury interest rate for the
period in
which the proceeds are held in reserve before being drawn down by the
HFAs to
originate mortgages. Within 30 days of the proceeds being drawn down,
the interest
rate on the bond will increase to cover Treasury’s cost of financing
(set at
the 10-year Treasury rate) plus the additional fee designed to offset
risk to
the taxpayer.
Capmark Financial Group, formerly known as
GMAC Commercial Holding
Corp., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Owned by companies such as Goldman Sachs
and KKR, they are one of the
largest commercial real estate finance companies – but have $21 billion
in debt
versus $20 billion in assets. The plan is already in place to divvy up
their
assets: their $360 servicing portfolio may go to Berkshire Hathaway
and/or
Leucadia National, for example. The company owes billions to Citibank,
Deutsche
Bank, and Wilmington Trust.
On to things a little more boring. ING
changed up some guidelines,
starting 10/23. Namely, the “Trailing Spouse is no longer considered an
acceptable source of income”, “When used as reserves, the value of
stocks, bonds,
and mutual funds has been reduced from 100% to 70%”, “When used as
reserves,
the value of retirement accounts vested balance has been reduced from
70% to
60%”, and “a loan may not be refinanced for cash out until it has been
seasoned
for at least 6 months.”
GMAC Bank Correspondents should know that
for GMAC, all loans, except FHA non-credit qualifying streamline
refinances and
VA IRRRLs, must contain a completed and signed IRS Form 4506-T
in order
to obtain the borrowers' tax return transcripts for the two years prior
to the
loan application date. “The borrower must complete and sign IRS Form
4506-T at
time of application and at time of closing. An incomplete 4506-T will
prevent a
loan from moving into underwriting and eventually funding.” GMAC also
visited
their jumbo & condo guidelines. For jumbo loans, attached
condominium
property types are no longer eligible for jumbo products. Site
condominiums are
permitted and are subject to compliance with 1-unit property type
eligibility
guidelines spelled out by GMAC. (You should consult their guidelines
for
specifics.)
U.S. Bank Home Mortgage’s clients will feel
Freddie Mac’s additional subordinate financing fees, which are
applicable to
the HASP Streamline Refinance Open Access loans. After the 28th,
higher
LTV (90-95%) and lower FICO (below 720) loan prices will get dinged an
extra
.50, and .250 if above a FICO of 720.
Existing Home Sales on Friday looked pretty
impressive, better than
forecast. (And those forecasts already include the tax credit for
first-time
home buyers. Many are hoping the credit is extended, while others feel
that it
is just delaying the inevitable…) Sales are up almost 25% from the low
in
January, and 9% higher than a year ago. We’re walking into a very full
last
week of the month for economic news. Today there is zip, but tomorrow
we have
Durable Goods for September, the Case-Shiller Index which never seems
to go up,
and Consumer Confidence, which seems to be holding this economy up. On
Wednesday
we have New Homes Sales, Thursday we have Jobless Claims and GDP, and
then on
Friday Personal Income and Consumption, the Michigan Consumer survey,
and the
Chicago PMI. As I mentioned above, the 10-yr hit 3.50% but is now
back down
to 3.48% and 30-yr mortgage prices are worse by about .125.
Two blonde girls were working for the city
public works department.
One would dig a hole and the other would follow behind her and fill the
hole in. They worked up one side of the street, then down the other,
then moved
on to the next street, working furiously all day without rest, one girl
digging
a hole, the other girl filling it in again.
An onlooker was amazed at their hard work, but couldn't understand what
they
were doing. So he asked the hole digger, “I'm impressed by the effort
you two
are putting in to your work, but I don't get it - why do you dig a
hole, only
to have your partner follow behind and fill it up again?”
The hole digger wiped her brow and sighed, "Well, I suppose it probably
looks odd because we're normally a three-person team. But today the
girl who plants
the trees called in sick.”
Rob
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