After hearing about Fannie D4L’s program
(Deed for Lease), my
cousin made sure that Fannie owned his loan
(http://loanlookup.fanniemae.com/loanlookup/),
and then called them because he was having trouble with his water
heater’s
pilot light. As you can imagine, the call didn’t go very far up
Fannie’s org
chart. Many are viewing the program somewhat skeptically, saying that
Fannie
and banks can’t manage the properties that they own now. The program is
meant
to allow some homeowners facing foreclosure to hand the deed back to
their
lender but remain in the home as a renter - the servicer has to decide
that the
borrower qualifies for a "deed in lieu of foreclosure." The rent
can't exceed 31% of their monthly gross income, the borrower cannot
have 12 or
more past-due payments on their mortgage and they must have made at
least three
payments since the loan was first taken out. Primary residence only –
and no
non-Fannie loans please! The borrower’s credit score is indeed
impacted, but
not as badly as a foreclosure.
Freddie Mac reported /quotes/comstock/13*!fre/quotes/nls/frea
third-quarter net loss of $5.01 billion versus a loss of $25.3 billion
in the
same quarter a year earlier.
After payment of $1.3 billion dividend on its senior preferred stock
to the Treasury Department, Freddie Mac's net loss came in at $6.3
billion. Freddie has had over
$63 billion in net losses over the seven quarters
ended in March, and has used over $50 billion in government/taxpayer
capital in
the last year (which pay us a 10% dividend).
PennyMac
Mortgage Investment Trust, run by several ex-Countrywide executives,
posted a
net loss of $730,000 for its
first two months of business (ending
9/30). The company had raised $335 million in an IPO, but apparently
has found
out that the bidding pool for distressed assets has become pretty
competitive
and limited PennyMac’s purchases to about $73 million of so- called
non-agency
mortgage bonds. The price of the stock hit a new low, and is down about
11%
from PennyMac’s $20 IPO price.
How about that
tax credit extension!? I have
seen nothing that it will be
retroactive, so the “go” date is Dec 1. People buying a home for
the first time in three years would receive an $8,000 tax credit if
they sign a
contract by April 30 and close by June 30. Homeowners who are buying a
new
primary residence would be eligible for a $6,500 tax credit beginning
Dec. 1 if
they owned their home for five consecutive years in the previous eight.
The
income caps are $125k for individuals and $225 for couples. Anyone who
collects
the tax credit but sells the home within three years of buying it must
return
the refund. Check out this site for more details: http://money.cnn.com/2009/11/06/real_estate/tax_credit_extended/?postversion 09110615
The California Mortgage Bankers
Association reports that here in
California the State Regulatory Registry has released the new updated
disclosure forms to be used by companies and individuals when applying
for
S.A.F.E. Act licensing. These forms can be found on the site listed
below. If you’d like some pre-license education, contact the CMBA! I
spoke to
one seasoned retail agent who told me that he was surprised how hard
the test
was, and that if someone expects just to show up and take it, and do
well, that
they are mistaken! http://mortgage.nationwidelicensingsystem.org/Pages/default.aspx.
What are lenders using for HPML (Higher
Priced Mortgage Loan) tests
that must be performed based on the date the rate lock is agreed upon
between
borrower and lender? By now the list is fairly standardized, so I will
steal
Franklin American's, who views any one of the following documentation
options
as acceptable: executed and dated rate lock agreement between
borrower(s) and
lender, completed FFIEC calculator screen print reflecting the rate
lock date,
screen print from lender’s loan origination system which clearly
details rate
lock date, screen print from lender’s loan origination system which
clearly
reflects loan officer or processor notes detailing the date on which
the
borrower(s) accepted lock terms, any other hard copy and validated
information
that correctly reflects the rate lock date. And don't forget to keep it
in the
loan file!
If loans are
paying off early, which investor wants to pay a premium for them? The speed at which pools of mortgages have
been
paying off early was noticed by traders. Fixed-rate prepayments were up
17% in
October, mostly attributable to improved rates and thus refinancing - speeds for 2008 and 2009 loans picked up the
most! Freddie Mac prepayment
speeds were up 14%, although they are still slower than Fannie Mae
prepayments
due to differences in buyout policies. If rates stay steady, or creep
up,
investors expect prepayments to level off, although the Treasury
department
extended the timeframe for borrowers to submit all the necessary
documents
needed to make the trial modification permanent and had also simplified
the
documentation process. Therefore some of the borrowers who could not
successfully complete the trial modification in the required 3-month
period
might be able to complete the modification process in November.
How about the markets? Well, both bonds
and stocks were up (rallied)
Friday despite the unemployment data. Mortgages have been doing
especially
well, all things considered and in spite of the prepayment information
mentioned above, but with volumes down a little, and Fed demand still
brisk,
the laws of supply and demand take over. There is virtually no
scheduled news before
Thursday – and don’t forget that Wednesday is a holiday (and, I
believe, not
even counted as a rescission day for docs). On Thursday we have Jobless
Claims,
and on Friday we have some Trade Balance figures along with some import
and
export price measures, and the preliminary University of Michigan
Consumer
Sentiment survey. But don’t forget our auctions this week! Get your
checkbooks
ready, as a record $81 billion
refunding package will be up for bid this week. Sales include $40
billion in
3-year notes today, $25 billion 10-year notes tomorrow, and a $16
billion 30-year
bond sale Thursday. Currently there is not much change in rates from
Friday, with
the 10-yr at 3.50% and mortgages about
unchanged.
A client bought a new home and the broker wanted to send flowers for
the
occasion.
The flowers arrived at the home and the owner read the card; it said
"Rest
in Peace".
The owner was angry and called the florist to complain.
After he had told the florist of the obvious mistake and how angry he
was, the florist said, "Sir, I'm really sorry for the mistake, but
rather
than getting angry you should imagine this: somewhere there is a
funeral taking
place today, and they have flowers with a note saying, "Congratulations
on
your new home".
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.)