I had a co-worker once tell me, “After a
holiday, the only thing that
makes me glad to see the people I work with is having just seen the
people I am
related to.”
Anyone looking for a job should go to www.jpmorganchase.com/careers.
According to the
San Antonio Business Journal, Chase Bank plans to hire 1,200
mortgage loan
officers in 23 states nationwide by the end of 2010. (Of course,
that
averages out to 100 per month, or four per state per month, but what
the heck –
they’re still hiring.) “The additional workforce will increase the
financial
institution’s sales force by 60 percent and will help more Chase
customers
finance home purchases or reduce their monthly payments through
refinances. The
new loan officers will be spread across bank branches in 23 states.
Chase
currently has 1,925 mortgage bankers nationwide.” Chase originates
loans
through their nearly 5,200 branches, as well as mortgage offices, call
centers,
and through retail correspondent lenders in all 50 states.
Brokers have a right to be confused. One the
one hand they are hearing
the "hard sell" by mortgage banks about the demise of the Yield
Spread Premium, and the argument that they should join up with an
originator
who has a warehouse line or two. On the other hand, brokers are
watching
existing mortgage bankers be squeezed by warehouse lenders, and by
large
investor net worth requirements.
The fact of the
matter is that the YSP is not dead quite yet, and in fact the
"commentary
period" goes until Christmas Eve. And no one
expects a major shift to be formulated during the week between
Christmas and
New Years. Even after that, it will take several weeks, if not months,
of
sifting through those comments until a verdict is reached, after which
the
implementation could take several more months. At this point the
implementation
of HUD's RESPA rules, which require brokers to disclose their YSP as a
credit
to the borrower, is expected to be delayed for a few months. The
Federal
Reserve proposed rule, with any comments due by Christmas Eve, seeks to
prohibit compensation based on any transaction's terms or conditions.
Brokers continue to point to the fact that they are a good variable
cost
business channel for loan origination, and that it’s hard and expensive
for
large investor to put "bricks and mortar" everywhere there's a
broker. It appears that the goal of Fed, in h is to remove the
incentive for a
broker or agent in a bank to sell something away from the rate sheet.
The
initial word went out via http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20090723a.htm
but to write a comment go to http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/FOIA/ProposedRegs.cfm
and scroll down a little to find the specific Reg. Z comment.
In a related, but not the same, issue, HUD
published final
regulations for RESPA that will have a considerable impact on all
mortgage loan
transactions beginning January 1, 2010. There is scheduled to be a
new
standardized Good Faith Estimate (GFE) and HUD-1 forms that are
mandatory for
all loan transactions, new required written list of Settlement Service
Providers
to be delivered with GFE, and new restrictions that limit the amount of
fees
collected to those provided on the initial GFE, except in very limited
circumstances.
Fortunately HUD has provided samples of the new forms and continues to
update a
Frequently Asked Questions page. Both are accessible from HUD’s RESPA
webpage
at: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/ramh/res/respa_hm.cfm
But while we’re on the updated HUD-1 usage, Flagstar
reminded
clients that “Unfortunately the usage of the new HUD-1 requires many
system enhancements
on Flagstar’s side and we are unable to accommodate the usage of the
new HUD at
this time. We ask that all customers please wait until January 1, 2010
until
submitting this updated form. Submitting the new form before then may
cause
underwriting and post closing delays.
Starting tomorrow Flagstar Bank will be
making changes to the Making
Home Affordable programs which impact the Fannie Mae DU Refi Plus,
Freddie Mac
Relief Refinance, and the Freddie Mac Open Access programs. It is
best to
check their announcement directly, but included in the DU Refi Plus
changes are
existing
loans that are not currently
serviced by Flagstar will be
limited to 105% LTV. (Existing loans currently serviced by Flagstar
will remain
to be eligible to 125% LTV, based on program parameters.) For Investment
and Second Home transactions, Flagstar-serviced loans will be limited to 105% LTV and non-Flagstar-serviced
loans will no longer be
eligible. Condos in Florida or Arizona will no
longer be eligible when the existing loan is not currently serviced by
Flagstar.
For the Freddie Mac Open Access programs existing
loans that are not currently serviced by Flagstar will be limited
to 105% LTV but existing loans currently serviced by Flagstar will
remain to be
eligible to 125% LTV, based on program parameters. For investment
and second home transactions Flagstar serviced loans will be limited to
105%
LTV and non-Flagstar serviced
loans will no longer be
eligible.
And for Freddie’s Relief Refinance program,
Flagstar states that investment
and second home transactions will be limited to 105% LTV, loans with an
LTV exceeding 90% must use a Home
Value Explorer (HVE) – ordered by Flagstar
Bank (value must not be more than 90 days old), property must receive a
confidence score of Medium (M) or High (H), etc. Lastly,
Flagstar reminds clients that effective for all loans currently
funding they will be requiring a Verbal VOE to be submitted with all
requests
for funding. “We strongly suggest that the verbal verification of
employment be
completed the day of, or the day prior to closing in order to ensure an
accurate verification.”
Fannie’s DU
Version 8.0, which is slated
to be implemented in exactly
one month, will an update to the DU credit risk assessment, an update
to the
maximum allowable total expense (DTI ratio to 45% (which aligns with
their manual
underwriting requirement), with flexibilities up to 50% for certain
loan
casefiles with strong compensating factors (except for DU Refi Plus
loan
casefiles), the retirement of EA-II and EA-III recommendations (except
for DU
Refi Plus loan casefiles), the implementation of the high-balance
mortgage loan
eligibility guidelines, and the ending of HomeStyle
Construction-to-Permanent loans.
Whew!
Fannie is also
going to increase the minimum representative credit score requirement
to 620
for both DU and manually underwritten loans (including government
loans). “A loan-level price
adjustment (LLPA) will apply when the minimum MI
coverage level option is chosen. This change is intended to help MI
companies
preserve capital and potentially increase their capacity to insure
conventional
loans with LTVs above 80%. In addition, we are simplifying standard MI
to be
uniform across all products including Flexible Mortgages and
manufactured
housing, and are retiring the Reduced and Lower-Cost MI options.”
Move over Wells, BofA, Chase, and Citi, here comes... PennyMac? PennyMac
Mortgage, known as a buyer of troubled housing debt and run by
ex-Countrywide employees, expects to start purchasing newly issued
loans and
packaging them into bonds. Recently Private National Mortgage recently
started
making home loans directly to consumers. “The so-called conduit
business that
will buy new mortgages to resell as securities will focus on loans
eligible to
be bundled into bonds guaranteed by government-supported Fannie Mae and
Freddie
Mac or U.S. agency Ginnie Mae, and potentially prime loans larger than
the limits
of those entities if the market for related bonds revives, Kurland
said.”
According to the MBAA, applications rose
about 3% last week. Apps to
refinance were up about 11%, but apps to purchase properties fell
almost 12%.
But since refinancing now accounts for 71.5% of all applications,
total
apps rose slightly.
Back to the fixed-income markets, which were
closed yesterday in spite
of the equity markets being open. The results of the 10-year note were
“solid”.
The auction came in at a yield of 3.47% and a bid/cover ratio of 2.81 –
slightly below average. The Indirect bidders bought 47.3% of the
auction, also
slightly below average. Putting the Treasury market aside for a moment,
mortgages
rates did very well on a relative basis Tuesday. There is a very good
demand
for mortgage servicing right now, and with volumes light prices rose.
The FED
continues to buy mortgages regardless of price performance on a day to
day
basis.
Today we will have a $16 billion 30-yr bond
auction (currently at a
yield of 4.40%). We have already found out that Jobless Claims fell for
the second
week in a row and the four-week moving average of claims was the lowest
in
nearly a year. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits dropped
last week
to a seasonally adjusted 502,000, the lowest since January, from a
revised
514,000 the prior week. And the four-week moving average dropped to
519,750,
the lowest since a matching level in the week ended Nov. 29, 2008.
After the
news we find our friend the 10-yr at 3.47% and mortgages roughly
unchanged.
When Love Fades…
A man was sitting on the sofa watching TV
when he heard his wife's
voice from the kitchen.
"What would you like for dinner, Love? Chicken, beef or
lamb?"
He said, "Thank you, I'll have chicken."
“Screw You. You're having soup. I was talking to the cat."
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.)