I didn't plan on
yesterday's "Real words from a real agent" to incite such a firestorm
of e-mails. But first, some “GFE chatter”. The
grace period of the new GFE is set forth pretty clearly. But
lenders are
finding out that what HUD allows and what investors actually do can be
two
different things.
http://portal.hud.gov/portal/page/portal/HUD/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2009/HUDNo.09-215
The new Good Faith Estimate is still a
problem for agents
out in the field, along with title companies, Ops staffs, and investors. One experienced agent in California wrote,
“We
had a loan close that was initiated on the new GFE. We did not disclose
the
seller's county transfer tax to the buyer on the new GFE. The seller's
county
transfer tax in every county is paid by the seller. Although the city
transfer
tax is usually split 50/50, this property was not located in a city
that has
a transfer tax. When the official GFE is issued, it comes from
our company, they did not know at that time that the seller's transfer
tax
needs to be on the buyer's GFE either. When we initially asked title
for the
fees, the seller's transfer tax wasn't on their estimate as well. The
doc's go to title and bam the funder tells us "We are going to hit you
for
$737 for a tolerance cure." I respond, "What about HUD's 120 day
leniency policy?" "Sorry, the investor is not following the HUD
leniency policy" we are told. To add insult to injury our $737 went to
the
SELLER. We were not given an opportunity to re-disclose, which if you
think about it is so ridiculous because the re-disclosure would not
have
effected a change in cost for the borrower. This is an illogical
disclosure requirement in that the seller does not receive the GFE. Is
this what the government really had in mind? The new GFE is absurd.”
Another producer wrote,
“I just had an investor that wouldn’t allow me to collect for a 3rd
party credit report unless I could verify I had paid the bill. We are a
small
company pulling between 50-100 reports per month. The cost is charged
directly
to my Amex card at the end of each month as a lump charge. I can go
pull an
invoice per client but it has never reflected that the item was paid.
So
basically, RESPA allows us to charge for 3rd party charges.
Nowhere
in RESPA does it indicate we have to justify our business practices. If
I don’t
pay my bills, I’ll get cut off. This is really spiraling out of
control.”
“We are having to
guarantee fees we often have no control over. We just did a loan with
an
investor we haven’t used in a few years, as it was in the client’s best
interest. I ordered the appraisal on their blind website. I have no
idea about
the charge. Here’s a thought. The GFE has to be out within 3 days of
application. The appraisal can’t be ordered until 4 days. How do you
guarantee
a fee for an appraisal you haven’t ordered.”
Regarding yesterday’s “Real words from a real
agent”, one wrote, “My
response is "boo (expletive)
hoo." Yes, there's more work to do but it puts us closer to the process
and requires more contact with the borrower. This is a good thing.
Getting more
familiar with borrowers helps us develop the relationship more which
could lead
to continuing the relationship which could lead to keeping in touch
with
clients which could lead to more referrals. Hello! Isn't this what we
need? So
to those who have to work more and don't like it, I say "buh-bye."
Find another career and leave originating to those of us who will work
harder."
Another wrote, “’Real
Words from a Real Agent’ could have been me writing. Truer words have
never been spoken. That’s exactly what happens now and as an 18 year
originator I find nothing sadder than this. It’s a total shame. The
truth is this hurts the lending clients the most and the long time
originators
who have spent their entire career doing it right are right behind
them! The problem
is, I don’t see a good fix in sight." Another wrote, “This is a sign
that
our industry is cleaning up. This non-professional needs to go back to
selling cars. He is crying because he has to do his job. How
absurd that a loan officer should
have to actually key in correct information into a 1003. I say good
riddance to these folks who dimensioned the value of the great loan
officers
out there."
Someone else wrote, “My
American dream is to spend a long weekend with Carmen Electra,
but nobody
appears to care about that.....maybe I'd get a little more help if they
could
make 1 point doing it, uh?!? Seriously. Only a loan agent would
complain about having to actually do some work after spending 26 years
in the
business doing virtually nothing but returning
phone calls. Tell them ‘it was a good run, and that Reagan is out of
office now.’” Lastly, “Just wait until John Q. Public gets a load of
loans not
tied to commission compensation!!! The American public and Barney
Frank
deserve what they are about to get for expecting everything for free
(except
for their services of course… THAT costs!) and boy are they going to
see how
expensive and frustrating ‘free’ is going to be!”
The administration's Making Home
Affordable Program (HAMP)
is “gaining traction” based on figures released by the Treasury
Department and HUD.
As of the end of January, over 116,000 permanent loan modifications had
been
signed, nearly double the 66,000
reported at the end of December, and an additional 76,000 had
been
extended permanent modification offers but had not yet returned the
paperwork.
830,000 borrowers are still in some stage of the required three month
trial period required by the program guidelines. Mortgage News Daily
pointed
out, however, that over 57% of loan modifications have been borrowers
who are
out of work or are underemployed. If
those borrowers are unable to get work, those loans might end up
defaulting
anyway.
Chase
announced a “Special
Approval Designation for Established Florida Condominium Projects”
which are ineligible
for delivery to Chase. Although in
Lender Letter 2010-01, Fannie Mae announced the availability of a
Special Approval Designation for certain established Florida
condominium
projects, Chase notified correspondents that “Special Approval
Designation
project approvals” are not eligible for delivery to Chase at this time,
including on DU Refi Plus and LP Open Access transactions. The investor
reminded customers that “Chase does not purchase loans on condominiums
in the
state of Florida, with the exception of eligible DU Refi Plus and LP
Open
Access transactions that are not located in Special Approval
Designation
projects.”
Yesterday I published the
first half of a good list that CitiMortgage
provided clients: a list of tips for processing FHA loans. It is a
long
list, so I put in about half yesterday with the next half today:
Qualifying Ratios
Document compensating
factors to justify the loan approval for borrowers with high ratios on
the Loan
Underwriting and Transmittal Summary.
Use factors accepted by
HUD and include supporting documentation.
Income and Employment
Documentation
Verify the borrower’s
employment for the most recent two full years, and explain any
employment gaps.
Income must be
separated and entered accurately—self-employed, commission, over-time,
rental,
retirement, etc.
AUS PITI should include
the taxes, insurance and HOA fees, as applicable. Include even if not
escrowed.
If less than two years
at current position, verify past employment for two years.
Document all income
sources and the likelihood of continuance.
Obtain required
documentation for self-employed borrowers – tax returns, profit and
loss
statements.
Maximum Mortgage
Amounts
Calculate the loan
amount and ensure that it is within the product guidelines.
Look for seller concessions
in excess of 6% and other inducements to purchase which require
dollar-for-dollar reductions in the sales price.
Seller paid closing
cost & prepaids must be detailed on the HUD-1 and may not be
applied as a
lump sum credit.
Cash back to borrower for
repairs to be completed after closing is not acceptable
General Data Integrity
Analyze all file
documentation to ensure consistency.
Question and document
the resolution of any inconsistencies.
Double-check accuracy
of AUS information
Fully Insurable Loans
Deliver a complete case binder to FHA in a timely manner
Follow through to make sure the loan is fully insured within 60 days of
origination as required by HUD.
As the fixed-income
markets worsened yesterday, dealers continued to see heavy selling days
by
originators. As usual, the only substantive buying has come from the
FED
(lighter than Wednesday apparently) and a little from servicers and
money
managers. The lack of interest in mortgages led to them “widening out”
a little
versus Treasury prices. The 10-yr hit 3.80%, and Fannie 4.5’s
(4.75-5.125%
mortgages) were worse by over a half a point in price in spite of
Jobless
Claims going up. But stocks were
rallying, inflation was stronger than expected, Leading Economic
Indicators and
the Philly Fed survey were stronger than expected, there are continued
worries
about the Fed exiting buying securities, and we have another $118
billion in Treasury
auctions next week (2’s, 5’s, and 7 year instruments).
But thirty minutes
after the stock markets closed here in the US yesterday, the
Fed raised its discount rate by a quarter percentage point to
0.75%, which was a bit of surprise. (It is the rate of interest set by
the
Federal Reserve that member banks are charged when they borrow money
through
the Federal Reserve System.) One analyst said, “Even though the Fed
wanted to
say this has no real implications for monetary policy it is a
relatively clear
signal that the Fed is scaling back quantitative easing and it's
happening
faster than perceived in the markets."
The only news out this
morning was the Consumer Price Index, which showed that consumer prices
rose
less than expected in January: +.2%. The core rate, excluding food and
energy,
was -.1%, falling for the first time since 1982. (Energy costs were
+2.8% last
month, and food prices were +.2%.) After
the news the 10-yr is basically unchanged at 3.80% and mortgage prices
are
worse by about .125 from yesterday afternoon.
In the small Texas town of Mount Vernon,
Drummond's bar began
construction on a new building to increase their business in the town.
The local Baptist church started a campaign to block the bar from
opening with petitions and prayers.
Work progressed right up till the week
before opening when lightning struck the bar and it burned to the
ground.
The church folks were rather smug in their outlook after that, until
the
bar owner sued the church on the grounds that the church was ultimately
responsible for the demise of his building, either through direct or
indirect
actions or means.
The church vehemently denied all responsibility or any connection to
the
building's demise in its reply to the court. As the case made its way
into court, the judge looked over the paperwork.
At the hearing he commented, “I don't know how I'm going to decide this
case, but as it appears from the paperwork, we have a bar owner who
‘believes
in the power of prayer,’ and an entire church congregation that does
not.”
Rob
(Check out http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/channels/pipelinepress/default.aspx. For archived commentaries, check www.robchrisman.com, or to subscribe/unsubscibe write to rchrisman@robchrisman.com.)