Friday I made the mistake to saying that I
thought down payment assistance programs had vanished, going
the way of
the Ivory Billed Wood Pecker or the lavish mortgage banker Christmas
party. It
turns out that seller-funded DPA’s are a thing of the past
(i.e.
Nehemiah, Ameridream, etc.) but some programs are very alive and well.
One originator wrote and said, “In my
opinion,
those DPA’s were deceitful and enabled a seller to give money to a 3rd
party to give to an unqualified borrower to get the problem off the
hands of
the seller. In essence, they were creating smoke and mirrors for the
seller to give the down payment to a buyer for 100% financing.” Another wrote, “As far as I know, the only
acceptable DPA’s allowed today are government (local, state) or
charitable
organizations (i.e., Chase sponsored redevelopment projects) that do
not allow
for seller funded deposits.” And “DPA’s have not disappeared. They are
on
our rate sheet but these programs are not the ones of yesteryear. Many
programs are allowed – they are NOT the Nehemiah types with seller
contributions, but rather government charity types.”
Lastly, “Housing assistance programs are
being
used widely and are not seller funded, but money available to FTHB thru
the
national stabilization program. They are used with FHA loans and are
purchased by Chase, BofA, and GMAC's correspondent lending channel.
$15k - 20k
of free money in the form of a silent second at zero interest rate, and
a
maximum DTI of 41% makes the risk attractive to loan servicers.
Homebuyers go through an education process required by the program, and
the
money must be paid back if the house is sold or converted to a rental
property.”
The SAFE Act - some folks wish that
it
would just go away. But it won't. A check of HUD’s website (and
remember that
HUD is responsible for enacting licensing standards) shows a proposed
rule that
sets minimum standards for state licensing of loan officers and
mortgage
brokers. “To comply with the Act, states must put in place a Loan
Originator
Licensing program that requires originators to take an education
course, pass a
test, and undergo civil, criminal and financial background checks.
States
have until July 31, 2010, to have their loan originators licensed under
the
SAFE Act criteria, unless they already have them licensed under a
different
system. If already using a different licensing system, they have until
December 31, 2010, to bring them in line with the Act’s requirements.”
Anyone
interested should visit HUD's site: http://portal.hud.gov/portal/page/portal/HUD/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2009/HUDNo.09-231
Who says that no one is doing the 125%
program? Not me! Well, maybe I did. Anyway, Kinecta Federal Credit
Union
(Southern California) offers them to their brokers, as does Fifth Third
Bank, and
Just Mortgage.
What is the latest on how Freddie and Fannie
will look going forward? Talk
of blending the two has been out of the
press recently, although that may be changing. According to a story in the Wall
Street Journal, “a
consensus appears to be growing that the U.S. should retain a role in
the
mortgage market and that the public-private partnership that has
defined Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac should continue in some form.” Unfortunately this
means the new structure would keep some of the public-private conflicts
that
upset critics in the past, conflicts like the tension between
shareholders'
desire for dividends and political pressure on the companies to support
the
housing market.
Is anyone out there predicting lower rates?
Probably, but most seem to believe that rates are heading higher in
2010.
Recently the yield curve (a graph of the yields of Treasury securities
measuring the difference between short term and long term rates, most
often
quoted as the difference between 2-yr and 30-yr yields) hit 373 basis
points,
the most in at least 29 years. Short term rates are pretty flat, but
bonds went
above a yield of 4.50%. At the end of 2008 it was only 191 basis
points, and
the spread between 2-yr and 30-yr rates has averaged 132 basis points
over the
last five years. About a month ago Treasury officials announced a
long-term
target of six to seven years for the average maturity of Treasury debt,
and a
cut back of issuance of bills and two- and three-year notes. Given what
we know
about supply and demand, the shift to longer- maturity debt has raised
concern
that investors will demand higher yields to offset the risk of
inflation.
Lock volumes didn’t change much last week. Applications were up .3% last week with
refi’s
+.9% and purchases -.1%. Refinance mortgages made up a 75.2% share of
all
mortgage activity last week, the highest it has been since late April.
And in
spite of the steep yield curve, ARM’s are only about 4% of applications
– maybe
because 1-yr ARM rates are averaging about 6.5% versus less than 5% for
a 30-yr
fixed rate mortgage.
With rates moving higher yesterday, and
prices lower (stocks were also
lower), Wall Street traders saw a decent amount of selling. 30-yr Treasury rates hit their highest
levels
since August. Obviously volatility picked up, which tends to make
mortgage
prices a little worse. The news that inflation at the producer level
was worse
than expected did not help. After that we saw Industrial Production
rise .8% in
November (the fourth gain in five months) and Capacity Utilization rise
also.
(CU has average 80% in the last 20 years, and some economists feel that
if we
are below that, excess capacity is one reason inflation will remain
low.)
This morning we’re off to the races with
Housing Starts. Starts were up 8.9% but were still lower than
expected. This
is the largest percentage increase since May, which is nice to see, and
although housing starts are still down over 12% versus a year they are
much
better than the 54.9% drop seen in January. Single family numbers were
up about
2%, but the volatile multifamily segment was up over 67%. New building
permits,
which give a sense of future home construction, rose 6% to 584,000
units, the
highest since November 2008.
We also had the Consumer Price Index, which
rose
in line with expectations in November. The CPI was +.4%, but the
core rate
(ex-food & energy for those of us who don’t eat or drive) was flat.
Prices rose 1.8% over the last 12 months, as
expected, the first year-over-year gain since February, and core prices
rose
1.7%. At 11:15AM PST, 2:15PM EST, we have the Fed announcement, so look
for
some potential volatility around then. But for now, fixed income
prices
(including mortgages) are about unchanged from Tuesday afternoon, with
the
yield on the 10-yr at 3.59%.
Blonde Diary & Cookbook:
It's fun to cook for Tom. Today I made angel food cake. The recipe said
beat 12
eggs separately. The neighbors were nice enough to loan me some extra
bowls.
Tom wanted fruit salad for supper. The recipe
said serve without dressing. So I didn't dress. What a surprise when
Tom
brought a friend home for supper.
A good day for rice. The recipe said wash
thoroughly before steaming the rice. It seemed kind of silly but I took
a bath
anyway. I can't say it improved the rice any.
Today Tom asked for salad again I tried a new
recipe. It said prepare ingredients; lay on a bed of lettuce one hour
before
serving. Tom asked me why I was rolling around in the garden.
I found an easy recipe for cookies. It said
put the ingredients in a bowl and beat it. There must have been
something wrong
with this recipe. When I got back, everything was the same as when I
left.
Tom did the shopping today and brought home a
chicken. He asked me to dress it for Sunday. I don't have any clothes
that fit it, and for some reason Tom keeps counting to ten.
Tom's folks came to dinner. I wanted to serve
roast but all I had was hamburger. Suddenly I had a flash of genius. I
put the
hamburger in the oven and set the controls for roast. It still came out
hamburger, much to my disappointment.
GOOD NIGHT DEAR DIARY. This has been a very
exciting week! I am eager for tomorrow to come so I can try out a new
recipe on
Tom. If I can talk Tom into buying a bigger oven, I would like to
surprise him
with a chocolate mousse.
Rob
(Check
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