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Nov. 5, 2009: Fed Funds unchanged; results from GMAC, Radian; news from Fannie, UBOC, USB
Rob Chrisman
Yesterday was a special day. In the late
afternoon I visited Costco,
which some people feel simultaneously represents everything that is
both bad
and good about the retail channel. The change in time over the weekend
had made
it so the setting sun shone through the front entrance, illuminating
the
Samsung 46 inch plasma, the flannel shirts, AND the pre-lit Christmas
tree
boxes all at once. It was a tender moment.
What are Fed
Funds? These are cash
balances held by banks with
their local Federal Reserve Bank, typically involved in an “inter-bank
sale” of
a Fed fund deposit for one business day - overnight. And the Fed Funds
Rate is
the overnight interest rate charged by those banks with excess reserves
on
hand. Why would this impact the mortgage rate that James & Jen
Borrower pay
on their mortgage? They don’t, directly, since the credit profile
of a
borrower, or house, is more complicated and riskier than a bank with
excess
funds, and an overnight rate is obviously different than a 30 year rate.
As was
expected, the FOMC kept its central message and the Fed Funds rate
unchanged,
noting that "economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally
low
levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period." Of course the current economic conditions
are low rates of resource
utilization, subdued inflation trends, questionable housing situation,
a weak
labor market, and stable inflation expectations. The FOMC (Federal Open
Market
Committee) reduced the size of their Agency debt (bonds issued by the
agencies,
not directly backed by mortgages) purchase program to "about" $175
billion from $200 billion, but is still set on purchasing $1.25
trillion of
agency mortgage-backed securities. Even with this adjustment the
Fed
balance sheet should peak above $2.6 trillion at the end of March 2010.
Yesterday Wall Street dealers reported that mortgages have maintained
their bid
all session as sellers have been few and far between.
The Fed sees some signs of life, just like all of us do, in certain
parts of
the economy, and inflation not being an issue. Conditions in financial
markets
were roughly unchanged, but activity in the housing sector has
increased over
recent months. “Household spending appears to be expanding but remains
constrained by ongoing job losses, sluggish income growth, lower
housing
wealth, and tight credit.”
Fannie Mae will never be accused of not giving clients enough
notice on
changes. Instead of starting March 1, and now starting July 1, 2010,
Fannie will
“require the submission of electronic appraisal reports and their
addenda in an
acceptable XML format for all loans requiring an appraisal report. In
support
of electronic appraisal delivery, Fannie Mae is updating the
2000-Character
Loan Delivery File Format.” Fannie letter goes on to list the fields
and
identifiers in question.
GMAC,
to whom some lenders sell loans and warehouse with, reported a
third-quarter loss tied to mortgage defaults. The net loss from
continuing
operations was $671 million, compared with $2.5 billion a year earlier,
and was
the eighth loss in nine quarters. Their Residential Capital LLC unit
was
specifically mentioned. GMAC received $13.5 billion in two rounds of
taxpayer bailout
funds and was negotiating a third infusion last month with federal
regulators –
expected to be announced on Monday. Res Cap’s loss narrowed to $747
million
from $1.95 billion a year earlier. GMAC is boosting deposits at its
Ally Bank
unit to help fund new loans.
Radian Group, one of the top MI companies, reported a net
loss for the quarter ended September 30 of about $70 million versus net
income
of about $37 million a year ago. Their chairman said, “We are
encouraged by
Radian’s lower-than-expected claims activity again this quarter, and
the
consistently high-quality, lower-risk mortgage insurance business we
added to
our book." The mortgage insurance provision for losses of $376.5
million
reflects higher delinquency counts and the continued aging of
delinquencies. (Radian
expects delinquencies to continue to rise during the fourth quarter.)
MI paid
claims were $243.2 million, which again were lower than the company’s
forecast,
and consisted of $210.1 million of first liens and $33.1 million of
second
liens and Radian has reduced its claims-paid expectations from the $1.1
billion
range, to a current estimate of $940 million, which includes $87
million of
second-lien termination payments. And their current book of business
($3.4
billion in the last quarter) for new mortgage insurance written
includes 99.9%
prime credit quality and 74.6% with FICO scores of 740 or above.
Union Bank of California, owned by the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, adjusted their
broker guidelines. More specifically, “two-unit condominium
projects, where the HOA is inactive or “dormant”, are generally
acceptable as
long as the master documents allow for unit owners to obtain their own
insurance, and there are no common elements other than common walls.”
And for
their “Portfolio Express Refinance” product, the maximum loan amount is
$4,000,000 for one Portfolio Express loan but when the borrower has
multiple
Portfolio Express, Low Doc, Hassle Free or Fast Track loans, the
$3,000,000
maximum applies. In addition, following other investors, the IRS Form
4506-T
must be completed for the applicable tax years and executed by the
borrower at
time of application and again at closing.
Although it is rumored to be delayed, some
time this month the FHA
is to release the findings of its annual audit, which is expected
to show
that the projected value of the agency's reserves has fallen below a
federally
mandated level of 2%, raising concerns that the FHA may need taxpayer
money for
the first time in its 75-year history. The price to pay for being a
rescue
agency? FHA officials say the agency has enough capital to withstand
expected
losses. Cynics say that the FHA (which doesn't make loans but insures
lenders
against losses if a borrower defaults) is guaranteeing half of all
home-purchase loans in some pretty badly hit areas, and delinquencies
on
refinance loans have risen faster than those on new loans in the past
three
years. Granted, practically all investors have overlays in place that
improve
the credit quality of the loans, but still many view an FHA loan as a
substitute for the now-extinct popular subprime loan (although hard
money
lenders have also stepped in).
Speaking of them, the FHA has made
substantial
changes to their guidelines pertaining to Streamline Refinance
Transactions. U.S.
Bank Home Mortgage Wholesale Division is the latest to outline the
most
crucial changes in regards to FHA Streamline Refinances. After November
18, FHA
loans will require the borrower to have made at least 6 payments on the
FHA-insured mortgage at the time of application. And at the date of
loan
application, the borrower must have an acceptable payment history which
for
mortgages with less than a 12 months payment history, the borrower must
have made
all mortgage payments within the month due, or for mortgages with a 12
months
payment history or greater, the borrower must have experienced no more
than one
30 day late payment in the preceding 12 months and made all mortgage
payments
within the month due for the three months prior to the date of loan
application. In addition, there are other standard criteria regarding
net
tangible benefit, moving from a fixed rate loan into an ARM loan, and
reducing
the term.
For economic news we had Jobless Claims.
Yesterday, however, in addition
to the Fed announcement, Treasury officials announced a record $81
billion refunding
package for next week. Sales include $40 billion in 3-year notes, $25
billion 10-year
notes, and a $16 billion 30- year bonds to be held on Monday, Tuesday
and
Thursday. (Wednesday is a holiday.) Claims for jobless insurance hit a
10-month
low. Are things improving or are the unemployed, or under-employed,
just going
off the radar screen? Initial claims for state unemployment benefits
dropped
20,000 to a seasonally adjusted 512,000 in the week ended Oct. 31, the
lowest
since early January. The four-week moving average for new claims
dropped for
the ninth week in a row. Tomorrow, of course, the Labor Department is
expected
to report that the decline in employment is slowing and that payrolls
fell
175,000 in October, compared with a decline of 263,000 in September. Currently
the yield on the 10-yr stands at 3.54% and mortgage prices are a shade
better
than yesterday afternoon.
A guy was sitting quietly reading his paper
when his wife walked up
behind him and whacked him on the head with a magazine.
“What was that for?” he asked.
“That was for the piece of paper in your pants pocket with the name
Laura Lou
written on it,” she replied.
“Two weeks ago when I went to the races, Laura Lou was the name of one
of the
horses I bet on,” he explained.
“Oh honey, I'm sorry,” she said. “I should have known there was a good
explanation.”
Three days later he was watching a ball game on TV when she walked up
and hit
him in the head again, this time with the iron skillet, which knocked
him out
cold.
When he came to, he asked, “What the heck was that for?”
She replied...”Your horse called.”
Rob
(Check out http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/channels/pipelinepress/default.aspx. For
archived
commentaries, check www.robchrisman.com, or to subscribe/unsubscibe write to rchrisman@robchrisman.com.)
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