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Jan. 26, 2010: More lenders cut from FHA program; GFE as a marketing tool? News from Wells, Fannie, FAMC; rates improving
Rob Chrisman
On the
possibility of Fannie and Freddie going away, one clever rep wrote to
me and
asked, “Do we really need FNMA, FHA, and FHLMC when it is all
government run
anyway? They could start a new entity named “Federally Regulated
Committee
to Normalize Mortgage Securities”, or “FRCNMS” - pronounced “FRICKEN
MESS”.
In fourth
grade, at Hoover Elementary School, Mark Pipes goofed off one too many
times.
Mrs. McDaniel made Mark bend over, grab his ankles, and she proceeded
to beat
his rump with a wooden pointer. The rest of us in the class didn't
quite know
how to react seeing one of our brethren disciplined this way. "The herd
was spooked", and needless to say I remember it over 40 years later. I
wonder if the FHA herd is spooked out there, hearing more news of the
FHA
Mortgagee Review Board (MRB) permanently withdrawing FHA approval
for Strategic
Mortgage Corporation, ProMortgage, Americare Investment Group,
which does
business as Premier Capital Lending and TopDot Mortgage.
The MRB
suspended FHA approval on Home Mortgage Inc. (HMI) for six
months. In
addition to losing its FHA approval, TopDot faces action from
Ginnie
Mae.
You know it's
a slow news day when I start dredging up IRS forms, and put a great
joke at the
end. But in this case, these might be worth a gander, as they are the
instructions for reporting points paid to the IRS, and the definition
of points.
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1098.pdf
Are some companies using the new GFE as
a marketing tool? Sure they
are, although exactly how HUD will view them remains to be
seen. “If another lender rejected your loan because the GFE was filled
out wrong,
come to XYZ Mortgage! As long as your borrower cancels that loan, you
do not
have to wait to submit it to XYZ. We’ll help you fill out the GFE
correctly,
and get your loan funded fast. We’re 48 hours from receipt of your
complete
file to a decision! For personal assistance completing your GFE,
contact your
Account Executive ...” And from another company: “If a loan is rejected
due to
not meeting the new GFE requirements, the new loan needs to be created
the same
day the old one is cancelled. Then an email needs to be sent to PQR
Mortgage
with the old and new loan numbers asking for the lock to be
transferred.
If it is past 24 hours since the loan was rejected then you must create
a new
loan and lock at current market pricing.”
Although this
news only impacts servicing companies, it does have potential
ramifications for
smaller lenders. The FHA has issued guidance to its approved servicers
on how
to assist borrowers facing "imminent default." Previously, these
homeowners were ineligible for such assistance until after they had
missed
payments. Servicers will now have additional options for those
borrowers who
seek help before they go delinquent, which hopefully increases the
likelihood
that the borrower will be able to retain their home, and servicers
can use forbearance
and the FHA's Home Affordable Modification Program (FHA-HAMP) to assist
borrowers facing imminent default.
Wells wholesale made a series of announcements to their clients.
These
included FHA Condominium Approval Changes (effective Feb. 1, FHA
Condominium
Project Approvals are no longer allowed for conventional loans, and
spot
approvals will not be allowed – you’ll need either: HRAP -HUD Review
and Approval
Process - Approval, or DELRAP - Direct Endorsement
Lender Review and Approval Process – Approval). Wells also addressed
HVE
expiration dates for the Freddie Mac Relief Refinance Mortgage Program,
a few
VA policy clarifications, etc.
Franklin American issued an update
for their clients. Following other lenders, and Fannie, “FHA-approved
condo projects
(Type U) are no longer allowed on conventional mortgage
loans” after February 1, and any loans in the pipeline must be
purchased by the
Ides of March." “FAMC will
continue to require that all loans receive a Limited Review on the DU
Findings
or are approved via Fannie Mae’s Condo Project Manager (CPM); DU Refi
Plus
loans are excluded from this requirement.” FAMC also clarified the LTV
and maximum
entitlement for VA loans (the maximum entitlement available to a
veteran for
“Other” refinancing loans is $36,000 which results in a maximum loan
amount of
$144,000, unless the veteran has additional equity to equal 25% of the
loan
amount when added to the available entitlement), discussed how the
underwriter
must determine that the gift funds were the donor’s own funds (sourced
with a
bank statement) and were provided by an acceptable source, and reminded
clients
that FAMC loan terms are limited to 15, 20, 25 or 30 years. (The policy
is that
the maximum loan term of an FHA streamline is the lesser of 30 years,
or the
unexpired term of the existing mortgage plus 12 years, rounded down to
15, 20,
25 or 30 years. The maximum loan term of a VA IRRRL is the lesser of 30
years,
or the unexpired term of the existing mortgage plus 10 years, rounded
down to
15, 20, 25 or 30 years.)
And in spite
of the HUD waiver on flipping properties, FAMC’s property flipping
requirements
remain unchanged at this time, but have followed FHA’s guidelines on no
longer
limiting the origination fee to 1% of the mortgage amount. “HUD
continues to
require that fees charged are fair, reasonable, and customary for the
area. The
1% fee limitation in the closing cost section of the FHA Product
Description
has been removed.” VA’s retention of the 1% maximum origination fee,
however,
remains in effect, and VA loans using the new Good Faith Estimate (GFE)
and
HUD-1 no longer require the Interest Rate and Discount Disclosure
Statement.
Fannie Mae successfully
implemented the release of DU for government loans last weekend, so
that they
will now support the new 2010 FHA and VA county loan limits.
On to the market, where it was pretty quiet yesterday, which is
often
normal ahead of an FOMC meeting. Stocks rebounded a tad, and bond
prices were
down a touch, with $118 billion of supply coming this week “in the
belly of the
curve” as they say: 2-yr, 5-yr, and 7-yr Treasury notes. We did have
Existing
Home Sales released yesterday, which showed a drop of almost 17% in
December,
far worse than expected. Inventories were up, although home prices rose
slightly. For 2009 the median house price is down by 12.4%, worse than
the 9%
decline in 2008 and in fact the worst performance on record.
Overnight Chinese
banks ordered to raise their reserve ratios, which effectively slows
down their
lending, and thus the economy, which helps lower rates. Besides the $44
billion
sale of 2-year notes today, we do have some chain store information,
the S&P
Case-Shiller Home Price Index, and Consumer Confidence numbers. The
10-yr is
down to 3.58% and mortgage prices, along with the 5-yr Note, are better
in
price by about .250.
Upset about
disclosures? Some feel strongly that the appraisal and disclosure
process have become
immensely more complicated in the past year. Well, not that a US
Senator
or Congressman necessarily knows exactly what a disclosure is, but if
you’d
like to complain and give specific feedback on problems you’ve
experienced, you
can always contact
Andrew
Cuomo http://www.ag.ny.gov/contact.html
(Appraisal issues only)
Nancy Pelosi
http://www.speaker.gov/contact/
Barney
Frank http://www.house.gov/frank/
A man was
waiting for his wife to give birth. The doctor came and informed the
dad that
his son was born without a torso, arms, or legs. The son was just a
head!
But the dad
loved his son and raised him as well as he could.
Eighteen
years later, the son was old enough for his first drink. The dad took
him to a
bar, tearfully told him he was proud of him, and ordered the biggest,
strongest
drink for his boy. With all the bar patrons looking on curiously, the
boy took
his first sip of alcohol. Swoooop! A torso popped out!
The bar was
dead silent, and then burst into a whoop of joy. The father, shocked,
begged
his son to drink again. The patrons chanted, "Take another drink! Take
another drink!" The bartender shook his head in dismay.
Swoooop! Two
arms popped out!
The bar went
wild. The father, crying and wailing, begged his son to drink again.
The
patrons chanted, "Take another drink! Take another drink!" But the
bartender ignored the whole affair.
By this time,
the boy was getting tipsy. With his new hands, he reached down, grabbed
the
drink, and guzzled the last of it.
Swoooop! Two
legs popped out.
The bar was
in chaos. The father wept with joy. The boy stood up on his new legs.
He
stumbled to the left. He stumbled to the right. Then he stumbled
through the
front door and into the street, where a truck ran him over.
The bar fell
silent. The father moaned with grief.
The bartender
merely sighed and said, "He should have quit while he was a head."
Rob
(Check
out http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/channels/pipelinepress/default.aspx.
For archived commentaries, check www.robchrisman.com,
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