It was a tough weekend for me. On Friday I
received an e-mail from "Bank of America" saying that my account was
locked, and
that "During our regular update and annual scheduled maintenance of
Bank of America Online Services, we could not verify your current
information.
As a result of this, your access to use our online services has been
limited.
You are hereby advised to immediately update your information by using
the
attached website." What was I going to do? I wouldn't be able to
shop
for Christmas presents, buy food or gas, and care for my kids! Then I
remembered that I don't even bank with BofA, and certainly
don't use any
of their online services. Phew! I wonder if this was a scam...
Wanna buy a bank? Now is a good time to give
that someone special a little something special - like a failed bank. Seven
U.S. banks were taken over on Friday, and the FDIC could not find
buyers for
three of them. It brings the total to 140 for the year, the most
since '92.
Heck, even ex-IndyMac (now OneWest Bank) picked up the assets and
39
branches of First Federal Bank after it was closed Friday. OneWest
was
formed by a group of private equity and hedge fund investors to take
over IndyMac's
assets earlier this year. Added to the list of banks this year who have
experienced deteriorating loan portfolios and related liquidity and
capital
issues are Imperial Capital Bank of La Jolla CA, Peoples First
Community Bank
of Panama City FL, New South Federal Savings Bank of Irondale AL,
Independent
Bankers' Bank of Springfield IL, RockBridge Commercial Bank of Atlanta
GA, and
Citizens State Bank in New Baltimore MI. City National Bank bought
assets of
Imperial Capital, Beal Bank bought the assets of New South, and Hancock
Bank
bought the assets of Peoples First Community Bank. The other three: zip.
PMI,
well-known mortgage insurance company, tweaked their “Distressed
Markets List”,
although it doesn’t take effect until February. PMI removed 11
MSA/MSD’s
including the thriving metropolises of Colorado Springs, Kalamazoo,
Toledo, and
Chattanooga. Unfortunately they added 12, including Pocatello,
Indianapolis,
Spokane, and Greenville. For PMI loans in Maryland and Rhode Island
“will be
eligible under the standard distressed market requirements (minimum 700
credit
score)”, and Delaware will be eligible under PMI’s special state
requirements
(minimum 720 credit score).
In
a related story, the Wall Street Journal reported that “Some mortgage
insurers
and lenders are beginning to relax their down-payment requirements, in
a sign
of increased confidence in the housing market” on a market-by-market
basis.
This means instead of coming up with 10% down they can come with only
5% down
and still be covered by MI. MGIC made some recent changes, as did
Genworth
Financial. Of course, appraisals and underwriting guidelines are
still
tight, and whether or not investors follow the MI company guidelines
remains to
be seen. The article discusses how MI companies are seeking to
regain market
share from the FHA, since new insurance written by private mortgage
insurers dropped by nearly 60% in the first nine months of 2009.
Fannie Mae
announced "that it is suspending all foreclosure evictions from
December
19, 2009 through January 3, 2010. All owner-occupants and tenants
living in
foreclosed properties the company holds will not be subject to
evictions during
the holiday time frame. The company will also support the efforts of
the servicers
it works with that are taking similar actions – most recently Chase
and Bank
of America.
AmTrust
came back into the lending arena late last week just as quickly as they
left it
less than a month ago. The “suite” of products being offered by
AmTrust,
however, apparently has been cut back. I have not seen a rate
sheet, but
have been told that AmTrust cut their Fannie Mae My Community Mortgage
and
Fannie Mae's Flex 97 programs, 1/1 & 2/1 Conforming Standard
ARM’s, all
prepayment penalty options, all convertible ARMs, all non-conforming
jumbo fixed
programs, and all portfolio ARM programs. Any broker/borrower who had
ponied up
money for an appraisal for any of those programs may be faced with it
being
non-portable…
Is your shop up to speed on FHA Streamline
Refinances? U.S. Bank Home Wholesale Division summarized their
employment
verification requirements. “Amount of income must be shown on the
application and supporting documentation but does not need to be
evaluated for
non-credit qualifying Streamline Refinances. USBHW also reminded their
clients
that loans destined for the FHA program requires lenders to “verify
employment
status of all applicants as of the application date and that each
employed
applicant has income. At least one applicant must either be employed or
have
non employment income. Regular employment can be documented in one of
three
ways (paystub and verbal VOE, a signed and dated VOE, or obtain a
paystub that
is dated on or after the date of application.” And in certifying
employment
they, and everyone else, require that the borrower is employed and has
income
at the time of loan application. If the loan is underwritten by a USBHM
Underwriting Center, USBHM will execute the certification form, but for
loans
underwritten by a Direct Endorsed Correspondent the direct endorsed
lender “must
include a signed and dated certification form, on their Company
letterhead,
certifying that the borrower is employed and has income at the time of
application. The form must be included in the loan package submitted
for
purchase by USBHM.”
U.S. Bank Home Mortgage also eliminated their
FHA
2.0 Margin 1 Year ARM and the 2.75 Margin 1 Year ARM. Apparently they
don’t
even have any in the pipeline, and all other FHA products will remain
as part
of their eligible program offering, including the FHA 3/1 ARM.
Modifications aren’t going so well. Why not? Well, getting to the essence of things, from
someone in the trenches, most people do not qualify income-wise on
paper. Self-employed
borrowers write off a lot on taxes, and many wonder if the government
should
help a tax cheater. Others experience the loss of spouse’s income
(divorce,
death, joining the circus, etc.), loss of job, overtime hours, or
second job.
Folks dealing with borrowers in this sector report that most borrowers
are
angry with their servicer because they cannot pay their mortgage, and
that this
“feud” prevents an open dialogue especially when there is huge amount
of
paperwork to be filled out. Lastly, sometimes servicers do not have
rights to
the loans when the MBS holders own the rights – often the servicer is
just the
administrator of the pools.
What is going on with the economy as we head
into year end, and which way are rates going? If I knew that, I’d be on
a beach
in Hawaii instead of sitting here in my basement at 4:30AM in my boxer
shorts.
In spite of some volatility last week, mortgage rates started the week
about
where they began. Overnight rates are also unchanged, and appear to be
going to
stay there for at least a few more months. It should be of no surprise
that the
$1.25 trillion mortgage-backed securities purchase program is slated to
cease
at the end of the first quarter.
What’s on tap this week besides half of your
e-mails receiving “Out of
Office” replies?
Today is quiet, tomorrow we have Existing Home Sales and the final GDP
numbers
for the third quarter (do we care anymore?), Wednesday is Personal
Income and
Consumption, New Home Sales, Consumer Sentiment, and Building Permits –
along
with the announcement of the size of next week’s Treasury auction. The
morning
of Christmas Eve we have Durable Goods and Jobless Claims that come out
at
8:30AM EST, about 10 minutes before everyone on Wall Street heads home.
Friday?
If your company isn’t closed on that day, you should look to make a
change.
This morning, given the potential rally in stocks, we find the
10-yr at
3.59% and both the 5-yr Treasury and mortgage prices worse by about
.250.
Grandpa Chrisman was reminiscing about
the good old days several years ago.
"When I were a lad, Momma would send
me down to t'corner store wi' a dollar, and I'd come back wi' five
pounds o' potatoes,
two loaves o' bread, three pints o' milk, a pound o' cheese, a packet
o' tea,
an' 'alf a dozen eggs. Yer can't do that now. Too many damn security
cameras.”
Rob
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