I usually try to keep my opinions out the
daily commentary. But I am really becoming irked by the press. One day
they
complain about our industry having foreclosure problems and the credit
crisis
here in the US and in the world. And then the next day they complain
about the
declining rate of mortgage approvals and fewer people qualifying for
home loans
in the US. And then on the third day they will have some story about
how it
makes sense for a borrower to walk away from their home loan
obligation. Geez! (I’d
read on the web that one guy, who was forcefully complaining about his
parking
ticket in front of his dad, got this response from the father: " Just
pay
the parking ticket. Don't be so outraged. You're not a freedom fighter
in the
civil rights movement. You double parked.")
Besides worrying about capital reserves and
RESPA, the FHA has not been idle. The FHA imposed $512,000 in
penalties on
Lend America for allegedly violating FHA requirements, including
failing to
document borrowers' income and creditworthiness, and for submitting
false
certifications. The move prohibits the company, owned by Ideal Mortgage
Bankers, from making new mortgages insured by the Federal Housing
Administration or issuing mortgage-backed securities insured by Ginnie
Mae. No
word yet on a counter action by Lend America, based in Long Island.
The parent company of AmTrust Bank (AmTrust
Financial - Cleveland) has
filed for bankruptcy, but
the filing does not include the bank's 66 branches in Northeast Ohio,
Florida
and Arizona. All of AmTrust Bank's branches are open as normal, the
company
said. The request for bankruptcy protection, filed in Cleveland, comes
less than two weeks after its third-quarter financial report showed its
financial strength fell nearly in half in a year when regulators
ordered
the bank to improve its finances. Instead, the numbers went the other
way.
Last week Bank of America Home Loan
correspondent’s channel told patrons that effective the day before
Thanksgiving
the maximum total price, for Conventional and Government loans, will
increase
for all loan programs to 105.00 for Best Efforts and Mandatory locks.
(If
they’re paying 105, originators had better hope that the loan stays on
BofA’s
books for a while!)
SunTrust reminded clients that “the deadline for loans currently
in the
pipeline that reflect DU Refi Plus eligibility; but will close as a
‘Standard
Limited Cash Out Refinance (Rate/Term)’ transaction must have been
locked by
November 18, 2009 (instead of November 16, 2009) and delivered to
SunTrust BY
December 31, 2009. Lock-in extensions and relocks will not be granted.”
And loans
delivered after December 31 with DU Refi Plus eligibility and processed
as a
Standard Limited Cash-out Refinance (Rate/Term) transaction, must be
submitted
to DU exercising the Opt Out Option. Lock-in extensions and relocks
will not be
granted.
Wells Fargo’s
wholesale group announced that their “External Contract Underwriting”
will be
discontinued on 12/15, and any of these loans in process should be
received by
Wells by 12/14. (They will continue to allow this type of loan for
enhanced
warehouse transactions.) They also reminded clients of their maximum
DTI ratio
requirements (no exceptions please): “For all conventional conforming
loans, the
DTI cannot exceed: 41.00% for LTVs greater than 80%, or 45.00% for LTVs
less
than or equal to 80%.” Lastly, in spite of HUD holding off taking the
hard line
on enforcing the RESPA changes starting 1/1, Wells’ wholesale (and thus
their
clients) is staying with the effective date.
Flagstar’s
clients, and most everyone else, know that during the weekend of
December 12,
2009, Fannie Mae will implement Desktop Underwriter (DU) Version 8.0.
New
requirements will apply to loans on the Fannie Mae High Balance
Program, and
their eligibility grid, lock deadline and delivery requirements have
been
updated. “Flag’s” clients should know that Fannie High Balance loans
that do
not meet the new requirements must be locked on or before 12/11, broker
loans must
be closed and funded by 2/26, and correspondent loans must be delivered
and
purchased by 2/26 also.
How has our friend the Fed been lately in
buying production (old and new)? For the week ending on November 25th,
the Federal
Reserve's MBS program was a net buyer of $16 billion agency MBS,
which was
the same as the previous week. The YTD purchases of agency MBS is now
at $1,039
billion.
Overseas, the Dubai situation continues to be watched carefully. Dubai
World,
it seems, has $59 billion of debt out of $80 billion in total Dubai
debt. In
a world-wide economic crisis, can a struggling borrower (with no oil)
missing
their payments be a shock? One trader asked, “Did S&P and the
creditors
really not see this coming?” The trader went on to liken this situation
to the
speculative overbuilding/overcapacity in Las Vegas and Phoenix.
Yesterday it was estimated that originators
sold about $2 billion of new production (so if the Fed is buying $3
billion a
day…), and mortgage prices are pretty much tracking the 5-yr Treasury
note’s
price movement. Analysts are pouring over the shopping numbers. At this
point
it seems that there were 13% more shoppers but each shopper spent 8%
less than
last year. And online shopping continues to grow – why battle the
crowds to buy
Uncle Milton’s Ant Farm?
We had a little surprise from the Chicago
Purchasing Manager’s Index, announced on Monday, which shot up
expectedly to
its highest level in over a year. Sales were up and inventories were
down, and
“New Orders” were at their highest level since May 2007. Today we have
three
10AM EST numbers. (Not to be confused with the typically-more-important
8:30AM
EST numbers.) We have Construction Spending, the ISM Services survey,
and
Pending Home Sales. Ahead of those it was quiet overnight, and we
find the
10-yr at 3.22% and mortgages roughly unchanged from Monday afternoon.
They were bound to come…
Tiger Woods is so rich that he
owns lots of expensive cars. Now he has
a hole in one.
What's the difference between a car and a golf ball? Tiger can drive a
ball 400
yards.
Tiger Woods wasn't seriously injured in the crash, but he's still below
par.
What were Tiger Woods and his wife doing out at 2.30 in the morning?
They went
clubbing.
Tiger Woods crashed into a fire hydrant and a tree. He couldn’t decide
between
a wood and an iron.
Perhaps Tiger should be using a driver?
This is the first time Tiger’s ever failed to drive 300 yards.
After a wayward drive, Tiger Woods found water before nestling behind a
tree
Apparently, the only person who can beat Tiger Woods with a golf club
is his
wife.
Apparently, Tiger admitted this
crash was the closest shave he’s ever
had. So Gillette has dropped his contract.
Rob
(Check
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