My 86-year old Dad caught me taking a nap
over the weekend. Not one to
miss an opportunity, he said, "You practically invented lazy. People
should have to call you and ask for the rights to the word "lazy"
before they use it." That’s my Dad…
Lock Desk personnel are seldom lazy, and in
fact are often the unsung
heroes of mortgage banking since they are in the frontline on pricing
and
program issues. Last week they had a little more time on their hands,
since the
volume of mortgage applications filed last week fell a seasonally
adjusted 2.5%
from the week before. Refinancing was down 1.4%, and purchases were
down
4.7%. The MBAA survey, which covers about half of all US retail
residential
production, supports the Wall Street belief that origination, and loan
sales,
have decreased lately.
The Fed and mortgage servicers continue to
buy mortgages, and the
originators, Asia, hedge funds and money managers are doing the
selling. Among
all applications, refi’s currently account for almost 73%! This
leads to
a question: What is the difference between $1.4 trillion and $1.3
trillion?
Well, besides $100 billion, it is the difference between what Fannie
thinks the
residential mortgage market is going to be in 2010 versus Wells Fargo’s
estimate. Either number is down significantly from this year’s $2
trillion+
year. Are mortgage companies, vendors, etc. planning for this? Or
ignoring it
and being ever hopeful?
With all of the talk/conjecture/rumors about HUD delaying the mandatory
use of
the new GFE for 120 days, it is a good opportunity to recall what a
Good Faith
Estimate actually covers: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/ramh/res/resindus.cfm
Yesterday I had a paragraph dealing with
Google’s Comparison Ads. (“Would
you like to give your client free access to a pricing engine, similar
to what
agents use with Optimal Blue? Even if the answer is "no", that's too
bad. In Google, a user can type in “mortgage” and up pops a comparison
device…It
is rumored to be powered by Mortech.”) As it turns out, actually the
comparison
is powered by Optimal Blue. Other vendors may be involved in
the future.
Remember when our parents used to talk about,
around the campfire, how
one day we would have a "paperless society"? And we scoffed? Wells
Fargo Wholesale is encouraging their clients to use their image upload
process
through their broker website, thus eliminating the need to send
paper
documents. “The image upload process is available for all delivery
locations
for both Government and Conventional loans and is the best way to
deliver loan
documentation.”
I imagine that whatever paper is saved by Wells Fargo will be partially
used up
by the trustee for Indy Mac Bank's former parent company. The
trustee is
suing Indy’s ex-chairman and board of directors, claiming they
recklessly
mismanaged the company and contributed to its collapse last year. The
trustee
claims that former chairman and CEO Mike Perry and his board wasted
corporate
assets, rebuffed investment offers that could have saved the thrift and
ignored
numerous red flags about its financial problems.
How are the FHA’s reserves doing? Not very
well, and in fact they’ve
fallen below the 2% level mandated by Congress. The reserves have been depleted much faster
than the agency
and analysts had expected, and are down 72% from a year earlier,
leaving
reserves at just 0.53% of the $685 billion in total loans insured by
the FHA.
Definitely time to take a look at the premiums!
Many borrowers receive a letter
when their
servicing is transferred. You know, instead of sending their payment to
Ace
Home Loans, they’ll be sending it to Bank of America. The Federal
Reserve Board
has stepped in and said, “The
purchaser or assignee that acquires the loan must provide the
required disclosures in writing no later than 30 days after the date on
which
the loan is sold or otherwise transferred or assigned. The Board is issuing this interim rule,
effective immediately upon
publication, so that parties subject to the statutory requirement have
guidance
on how to comply. However, to allow time for any necessary operational
changes,
compliance with the interim final rule is optional for 60 days from the
date of
publication; during this period, covered persons would continue to be
subject
to the statute’s requirements.”
It is a good time to remember some numbers,
since where US rates go is,
in part, determined by factors outside of the US. Today, about half
of all
US Treasury debt outstanding is held by foreigners, with China
dominating
that contingent with nearly $800 billion of US Treasury debt (10%).
Non-US
interests also hold corporate bonds (25% of outstanding issues), and
Agency and
MBS (17%). And one quick way to move the dollar, which has been
doing poorly
lately, is for foreign central banks to buy or sell dollar-denominated
securities. Currently most investors and economists feel that rates
will be
higher in a year than where they are now, so…
Few want to see the continued plunge in the
value of the dollar. But is
the government allowing the dollar to free fall in an attempt to make
US
exports more competitive? Or is the decline due to the natural ebb and
flow given
our imbalances in global trade? On the trade desk everyone found it
somewhat
amusing, in the old days, if a country stepped in and tried to support
one
currency or another: the foreign exchange market is far larger than
any
central bank or combined resources of any central banks to control the
dollar’s
slide. If any investor out there in the world can borrow funds in
the US at
rates between zero and 0.25% and then reinvest in countries with higher
rates
and faster growing economies, this puts more downward pressure on the
dollar. But
the inexpensive dollar is the prime support for the US stock and bond
markets
right now, and this includes mortgage rates.
Yesterday, after the PPI number, the market
grappled with the
Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization numbers. IP was up .1%,
less
than forecast, but CP was up .2% - nice to see since economists use
these rates
to gauge factories’ ability to produce goods with existing resources.
The
numbers have lost a little of their significance, given how our economy
has been
transitioning to services, but nonetheless are watched. So we had
another day
of a decent bond market and a decent stock market – you were happy if
you had
money in either.
Today may be a different story, maybe not.
Housing Starts in October
unexpectedly fell to their lowest level in six months. The Commerce
Department
said housing starts dropped 10.6%, whereas “experts” had predicted an
increase.
Single-family home starts were down almost 7%. Multifamily starts were
down
almost 35%! On the flip side, unfortunately, U.S. consumer prices rose
more
than expected in October due to energy and motor vehicle costs. The CPI
jumped
0.3%, more than the 0.2 percent increase analysts expected and at a
slightly
faster pace than the +.2% in September. Core CPI was +.2%. After
this news
the 10-yr yield is at 3.33% and mortgage prices are worse between
.125-.250.
Moishe, a Jewish actor is so down and out,
he's ready to take any
acting gig that he can find.
Finally, he gets a lead, a classified ad that says, "Actor needed to
play an ape."
"I could do that," says Moishe.
To his surprise, the employer turns out to be the Central Park Zoo in
New York .
Owing to the mismanagement, the zoo has spent so much money renovating
the
grounds and improving the habitat, they can no longer afford to
import an
ape to replace their recently deceased one. Until they can, they
plan to put an actor in an ape suit.
Out of desperation, Moishe takes the offer.
At first, his conscience keeps nagging him, that he is being dishonest
by
fooling the zoo-goers. Moishe also feels undignified in the ape suit,
stared at by the crowds who watch his every move.
But after a few days on the job, he begins to enjoy all the attention
and
starts to put on a show for all the zoo-goers. Moishe hangs upside down
from
the branches by his legs, swinging about on the vines, climbing up the
cage
walls and roaring with all his might, while beating on his chest. Soon,
he's
drawing a sizable crowd.
One day, when Moishe is swinging on the vines to show off to a group of
school kids, his hand slips and he goes flying over the fence into the
neighboring cage, the lion's den.
Terrified, Moishe backs up as far from the approaching lion as he can,
covers his
eyes with his paws and prays at the top of his lungs, "Shama Yisroel
Adonoi Elaheinu, Adonoi Echud!"
The lion opens his powerful jaws and roars the response, "Baruch Shem
K'vod Malchuso L'olam Va'ed"
>From a nearby cage, a panda yells, "Shut up you schmucks, or you'll
get
us
all fired!!!"
Rob
(Check out http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/channels/pipelinepress/default.aspx. For
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