When I talk to realtors in many parts of the
nation, they admit that
foreclosures and short sales continue to be a key part of the
housing activity
in their area. Many analysts feel that the pace of short sales is
likely to
increase, especially given market conditions and the opinion that short
sales
are an alternative to foreclosure that can benefit the borrower and the
lender.
The lender sees potentially lower losses on the loan, and the borrower
avoids
the stigma of having a foreclosure on their credit history. The
government continues
to use various tools, such as modifications or foreclosure moratoria
(moratoriums?) to prevent more loans from entering the REO market.
The short sale option is mostly offered to
borrowers who are ineligible
for or have failed to succeed in loan modifications, or just choose not
to be modified and are certain
to enter foreclosure (or are already there). The program can be
economically beneficial
to both parties involved. For the servicer, the four main costs
involved in selling the
house are possible further depreciation in a declining market, a
discount to
the overall market when sold, the cost of principal and interest
advanced to
the trust until the house is sold, and repair and maintenance costs.
Foreclosures which turn into REO situations typically take longer than
a short
sale, exposing the parties to more possible depreciation, and few banks
& institutions
are in the business of owning real estate (despite Fannie’s D4L
program). And in
a foreclosure, servicers find that the expenses associated with the
liquidation
and repair costs are significant, given that foreclosed upon borrowers
are
unlikely to maintain the property. Most of the benefits of a short sale
are due
to the shortened timeline and cooperation from the resident. The house
would
also
potentially attract better bids, as it is being actively maintained and
lived
in.
From the troubled borrower’s viewpoint, they
have to decide among a
foreclosure or short sale, staying in the house for free until evicted,
staying
in the house until it is sold in a short sale. A short sale will have a
lesser
hit on their credit history, and probably be able, if they really want,
to buy
a house after a few years. Of course there are emotional differences
between a
foreclosure and a short sale, potential deficiency judgment issues, the
stigma
of having been foreclosed upon, and tax implications of forgiven debt.
The
lender typically reports a successful short sale differently from a
foreclosure
to the credit bureaus although if the loan had gone deeply delinquent
prior to
completion of a short sale, the hit to credit history would already be
significant and, thus, not much different from foreclosure. The biggest
advantage to a borrower when opting for a short sale is the timeframe
within which
a new mortgage loan can be taken out: two years versus (I believe) five
for a
foreclosure.
Union Bank of California weighed in
with some broker changes. These
target condominiums and PUD’s, and follow Fannie Mae’s criteria for
approved
projects for conditional final project acceptance. In addition, UBOC
added some conditions to the disposition of a borrower’s current
residence when
there is a pending sale for the principal residence. Additionally,
information has been added for 2 – 4 unit properties.
Freddie announced a series of six critical
version updates for their
MIDANET software between 11/23 and 12/14. Anyone using MIDANET
needs to download
all six updates to ensure they do not experience reporting and loan
purchase transmission
delays beginning at midnight on December 11. “These updates will modify
the
Rate Spread rules in Form 11 and Form 13SF; add new Federal Housing
Finance
Agency (FHFA) Title V fields in Form 11 and Form 13SF so Sellers can
provide
detailed loan origination and appraiser information; update the
Exclusionary
List; and allow Servicers to report additional loan-level data for the
Home
Affordable Modification program (HAMP).” Freddie spells out exactly
what is
required for users, along with the precise schedule, and it best to
consult
their announcement for details.
Flagstar reminded clients that FHA
spot condo approvals have been
extended. “FHA has again extended the implementation date for the
condominium
approval process changes originally announced in mortgagee letter
2009-19.
The new processes are now effective for case numbers assigned on or
after
December 7, 2009. Until then, spot condominium approvals are
permitted by Flagstar. FHA has announced they will be publishing a
revision and
expansion of Mortgagee Letter 2009-19 ‘within the next two weeks.’”
Wells Fargo & Co. settled a $1.4
billion lawsuit brought on by
California Attorney General Jerry Brown, who also happens to be running
for
governor. The suit focused on Wells improperly marketing risky
investments (auction-rate
securities) as safe. The investments resemble corporate debt, except
that the
rate of interest they pay is frequently reset at auctions. In early
2008 the
market collapsed and the investors’ accounts were frozen. Wells has
agreed to
buy back the securities and pay a $1.9 million fine but not admit any
wrongdoing. To their credit Wells Fargo said that before any firm
agreed to buy
back such securities, it started lending money at favorable rates to
customers
who purchased the securities at until the issuers could refinance the
debt.
Both CitiMortgage and Bank of
America Home Loan echoed Fannie &
Freddie’s extension of the 2009 loan limits into 2010, saying that the
conventional conforming loan limits are unchanged, the permanent loan
limits
are unchanged, and that the temporary loan limits are unchanged. Sounds
like
unchanged to me!
Citi also stated that they are
changing the way that they look at
income certification for FHA loans. In addition to, per FHA, loans
including “a
cover letter on letterhead, signed and dated by a lender
representative,
certifying that the borrower is employed and has income at the time of
loan
application”, CitiMortgage will also require the following items. For
wage earner
borrowers, the most recent year-to-date pay stub must be obtained
showing
income on the date of application. For self-employed or “other income
borrowers”,
documentation as determined by the underwriter to certify income on the
date of
application. And for their FHA Streamline program, starting Friday, FHA
“Purchase
and Refinance loans must receive an Approve/Accept through TOTAL
Scorecard.
Findings of “Refer” are no longer eligible, even for manual
underwriting.”
And Bank of America followed HUD’s
new FHA Streamline Refinance
transactions: “A minimum 640 credit score is now required on all FHA
Streamline
transactions. FHA Streamline loans with scores less than 640 must close
by
December 31, 2009 and be purchased by Correspondent Lending by January
31,
2010. All FHA Streamline guidelines contingent upon whether Bank of
America is
servicing the loan being refinanced have been eliminated.”
I swear I am not making this up. Comptroller
of the Currency John C.
Dugan called on regulators around the world to adopt minimum mortgage
standards
to address the ongoing mortgage crisis. Apparently he feels that since
the US
is having a crisis, the entire world is having one. (Germany, to name
one, may
have a different opinion.) He noted that each country has its own
“unique
credit culture” and “different approaches to mortgage financing,” but
that
every country should establish a set of standards and periodically
report on
their performance. Here in the US he believes that mandatory
requirements
include verification of income and assets, meaningful down payments,
and
qualifying borrowers on the fully indexed interest rates tied to the
mortgages
they choose. Maybe we are going to adopt China's lending standards...
Today the only news out is scheduled to be
the usual Jobless Claims
number, along with the Philly Fed Survey. After Tuesday and Wednesday
the
markets can use a little break. (We also find out the auction amounts
for next
week’s 2-yr, 5-yr, and 7-yr note sales on Monday, Tuesday, and
Wednesday –
Thursday being a holiday and Friday being a throw away work day.)
Besides the
economic news yesterday, the market was cogitating on Federal Reserve
Bank of
St. Louis President James Bullard’s comments that past experience
suggests
policy makers may not start to raise rates until early 2012, while
facing a
“too low for too long” argument that may “weigh heavily” on the central
bank.
Although they may be taken out of context slightly – remember that
typically
the Fed does not start raising overnight rates until a recovery is well
under way - the market does that on its own.
Anyway, Claims were unchanged last week, but
the four-week moving
average of claims dropped to its lowest in almost a year. Initial
claims for
state unemployment benefits were flat at 505k, and new claims have been
grinding lower in recent weeks, indicating a slowdown in the pace of
layoffs. The
four-week moving average for new claims is the lowest they’ve been in a
year.
After the news we find the 10-yr at 3.34% and mortgage prices
roughly unchanged.
A Harley biker is riding by the zoo in Washington, DC when he sees a
little
girl leaning into the lion's cage. Suddenly, the lion grabs her by the
cuff of
her jacket and tries to pull her inside to slaughter her, under the
eyes of her
screaming parents.
The biker jumps off his Harley, runs to the cage and hits the lion
square on the nose with a powerful punch.
Whimpering from the pain the lion jumps back letting go of the girl,
and the biker brings her to her terrified parents, who thank him
endlessly. A
reporter has watched the whole event.
The reporter addressing the Harley rider says, “Sir, this was the most
gallant and brave thing I've seen a man do in my whole life.”
The Harley rider replies, “Why, it was nothing, really, the lion was
behind bars. I just saw this little kid in danger and acted as I felt
right.”
The reporter says, “Well, I'll make sure this won't go unnoticed. I'm a
journalist, you know, and tomorrow's paper will have this story on the
front
page... So, what do you do for a living and what political affiliation
do you
have?”
The biker replies, “I'm a U.S. Marine and a Republican.” The journalist
leaves.
The following morning the biker buys the paper to see if it indeed
brings news of his actions, and reads, on the front page:
“U.S. MARINE ASSAULTS AFRICAN IMMIGRANT AND
STEALS HIS LUNCH”
Rob
(Check out http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/channels/pipelinepress/default.aspx. For
archived
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