We had some
very sad news recently. The founder of Taco Bell passed away at the age
of 86.
There is still no word on whether he's going to have a funeral or a
funeral
supreme.
Some FHA
lenders out there had feared that the potential changes that HUD and
FHA could
make to their program would be their funeral. That turned out not to be
the
case, and there has been a good amount of analysis of the changes. The underwriting changes by the
FHA include increases in the MI
premium, an increased down-payment requirement for low FICO borrowers,
a
reduction in the ability to roll closing costs into the loan, and
increased
lender recourse to FHA lenders. What they
don’t include, of course, is a program-wide minimum FICO, or
program-wide increase in the down payment. Generally speaking, most agree that the changes
announced to FHA underwriting seem to be less restrictive than
anticipated and
more supportive of mortgage credit availability and the housing market
at the
expense of minimizing losses to the MI fund.
There continues to be confusion on broker
compensation. One lender
in California, Reunion Mortgage, sent out their policies, set
to match
regulatory changes, which will hopefully clear things up for their
clients. “The
maximum broker compensation allowed is: The broker's origination Fee
(including all broker fees): < 3.5% for Conventional, 4.5% for FHA;
the
broker's Origination Fee (including all broker and lender fees): <
4% for VA;
the total of all fees paid to broker if the loan amount is greater than
$500,000,
the greater of < 2% or $22,500; YSP is capped at 3%, unless
otherwise indicated
on rate sheet.” Reunion goes on to say that “all fees must be
reasonable and
customary, all fees must comply with State, Federal and agency
requirements, individual
loan programs may have additional restrictions, and broker funds are
sent to
title for disbursement at funding.” There you have it!
Originators are still grappling with the
GFE and RESPA changes. One
wrote and said, “This week we sat down with a borrower that is
doing an FHA loan. The seller is paying all of the closing costs and as
usual
the borrower is financing the upfront MIP. Essentially the borrower is
coming
in with their 3.5% down payment. Our GFE was filled out correctly
and yet
it showed that the borrower needed $13,850 for closing. Unfortunately
the
new form does not take into account the fact that the borrower is
financing the
MIP or the seller credit of $10,000. When we arrived at the bottom
line on the GFE form, the client saw they needed $13,850 to
close; they were shocked to say the least. They looked us right in the
eye and
said, ‘You want us to sign this official looking form, and you're
telling us to
trust you that what is written here is not correct?’ We were speechless
and
must have looked equally as shocked as the borrower seeing a number
that was
not part of the discussion. All we could think about was HUD put us
in this very uncomfortable position. Ultimately we had to show the
borrower a
version of the old GFE that shows the seller credit and the upfront MIP
being
offset by the loan amount. The only benefit for the consumer on this
new form
is the information on the lock expiration; otherwise we have taken
about two
steps backward with respect to making the closing process more
understandable.”
Well said.
Fifth Third Bancorp’s fourth-quarter
loss “narrowed more than analysts expected” to $98 million, with deposits rising 2.7%
and
the results coming after big year-earlier charges, which is good news,
right? (Frankly,
I thought Wells Fargo’s earnings were good, but their stock sank with
the rest
of the market yesterday.) Their CEO believes that "Our current
expectation
is for full-year 2010 net charge-offs to decline from those realized in
2009." This is nice to hear given that Fifth Third has a reputation for
having a large exposure to commercial loans in depressed markets.
Chase released a
series of bulletins to their correspondent clients. For example,
clients were
reminded that “Chase requires that all loans applied for and closed on
or after
January 1, 2010 use the new version of the GFE and the HUD-1.” Watch
for loans
being suspended for this reason, and for loans applied for in 2009 but
closed
in 2010 it is best to check with Compliance. (More on Chase’s changes
tomorrow!)
GMAC
correspondents were notified about some
underwriting guideline clarifications that only an underwriter would
love. The
changes involved adjustments to occupancy, borrower eligibility,
non-permanent
residents, etc., etc. It would be best for clients to go directly to
their
guidelines.
Wells Fargo wholesale clients also received a large number of
changes to
their program. Topics included enhancements to the HVCC Appraisal
Process (will
now allow certain forms to be e-mailed rather than faxed), Guidance on
Disclosure
of YSP, Broker Credits, and Going from a Float to a Lock (disclosure of
YSP on
the GFE – “Box 2 of the GFE should reflect the total YSP associated
with the
loan’s rate according to Wells Fargo rate sheets, regardless of what
the broker
expects to earn on the loan. Box 1 of the GFE should reflect the total
compensation the broker expects to earn - plus the Wells Fargo
underwriting fee
and other fees required to be disclosed in Box 1 - the broker's total
compensation should include any broker fees, plus
any portion of YSP the broker expects to receive as; "If a GFE is
issued
on a loan in “float” status, and later that loan is locked with
different
pricing, a redisclosed GFE will be required, and only certain boxes on
the
redisclosed GFE may change. While Box 1 cannot increase based solely on
going from
a float to a lock, the YSP in Box 2 and the Adjusted Origination
Charges in Box
A may change, depending on the circumstances.") Clear about all
that?
Wells’ wholesale goes on to update their mortgage broker/originator fee
disclosure, and discuss some changes to their Home Equity program.
Wells Fargo correspondents also had
material to chew on. They are now accepting High Balance FHA Streamline
Refinances, made some changes to Conforming Extended Lock Fees which
will be available
with High Balance (“Effective with Best Effort Locks on and after
January 25,
2010, Wells Fargo will begin offering extended locks up to 180 days for
High
Balance Conforming transactions. 1.50 for 180 days, 3.50 points for a
year with
certain products”), changed their conventional underwriting fees
(“Effective
with all Wells Fargo Prior Approval and Third Party Contract
Underwritten loans
registered on and after February 15, 2010, Wells Fargo Funding will
begin
charging a $200 underwriting fee. This fee will apply to all loans
underwritten using our Prior Approval and Third Party Contract
Underwriting
process, whether purchased by Wells Fargo or not”), updated their
market
classification list (no change to policy, just shuffling counties
around).
In the markets, volatility has been very low, which tends to favor
mortgage
prices relative to Treasury prices. Dealers continue to report low
origination,
and the usual buying from the Fed, hedge funds, and money managers. “Steady
as she goes” one trader wrote. Gold was in the spotlight yesterday,
dropping almost $30 an ounce, which doesn’t directly impact mortgage
rates, but
at least makes my 86-yr old Dad not as anxious to replace some of his
fillings.
Today we’ve already
had Jobless Claims, soon will have the Philly Fed, and later will have
next
week’s Treasury auction announcement. (The Fed also meets next week.)
Jobless
Claims unexpectedly rose last week as claims delayed from the year-end
holidays
were pushed through. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits
rose 36,000
to a seasonally adjusted 482,000 in the week ended Jan. 16, up for a
third
straight week. Goldman Sachs Group reported fourth-quarter net
income of
$4.95 billion compared with a loss of $2.12 billion a year earlier.
Goldman
also reduced its fabled 2009 bonus pool as it posted this
better-than-expected
fourth-quarter profit. Overall the markets are quiet, with the
10-yr
unchanged at 3.66% and mortgage prices unchanged.
(Normally I
try to stay away from political jokes, but in this case humor won out.)
Father O'Malley rose from his bed. It was a fine spring day in his new
Washington DC parish. He walked to the window of his bedroom to get a
deep
breath of air and to see the beautiful day outside. He then noticed
there was a
jackass lying dead in the middle of his front lawn.
He promptly called the US House of Representatives for assistance.
The conversation went like this: "Good morning. This is Speaker Pelosi.
How
might I help you?"
"And the best of the day te yerself. This is Father O'Malley at
St.Brigid's. There's a jackass lying dead in me front lawn. Would ye be
so kind
as to send a couple o' yer lads to take care of the matter?"
Speaker Pelosi, considering herself to be quite a wit, replied with a
smirk,
"Well now father, it was always my impression that you people took care
of
last rites!" There was dead silence on the line for a long moment.
Father O'Malley then replied: "Aye, that's certainly true, “but we are
also obliged to first notify the next of kin."
Rob
(Check
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