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Apache is functioning normally

September 18, 2023 by Brett Tams
Apache is functioning normally

HELOC, Manufactured, Technology, Marketing, and Digital Tools; Central Banks and Inflation

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HELOC, Manufactured, Technology, Marketing, and Digital Tools; Central Banks and Inflation

By:
Rob Chrisman

7 Hours, 56 Min ago

If you want something sobering, almost mesmerizing, here’s a short drone video of the flood damage in Libya (at the 15 second mark you can see how it tore through the city). Fortunately not so sobering are some stats out of the United States. The U.S. homeownership rate in 2022 was even higher than before the COVID-19 pandemic at 65.8 percent compared to 64.6 percent in 2019. That rebound was driven largely by those aged 44 and younger. And who says Millennials aren’t buying homes? Homeownership continued to climb from the foreclosure crisis (2004) and Great Recession (2008), when rates dipped as low as 63.4 percent in 2016. Homeownership rates recovered approximately half of the 5.6 percent decrease from 2004 to 2016. In Hawai’i the homeownership rate is 59 percent, I bring up the Aloha State because American Savings Bank, First Hawaiian Bank, and Central Pacific Bank joined Hawaiʻi Community Lending, a Hawaiʻi-based nonprofit community development financial institution, in pledging to provide mortgage forbearances to Maui families impacted by the recent wildfires. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by the Trade-In Mortgage powered by Calque. Homeowners can buy before they sell, make non-contingent offers, and tap their home equity to fund the down payment on their next home. Lenders can help their clients negotiate a lower purchase price, reduce their interest payments, and eliminate PMI. Today’s podcast features Greg Korn and Ben Petit in an interview from the New England Mortgage Bankers Conference.)

Lender and Broker Software, Products, and Services

In an era defined by technological advancements, Dark Matter Technologies LLC emerges as a transformative force in the mortgage origination landscape, marking its evolution from Black Knight Origination Technologies. Under the Perseus Operating Group of Constellation Software Inc., Dark Matter Technologies remains steadfast in its commitment to pioneering innovation. CEO Rich Gagliano aptly sums up the company’s vision: “Dark Matter Technologies is on a mission to revolutionize the mortgage origination business by supporting, growing, and aggressively innovating new and existing products.” With over 1,300 dedicated mortgage technology experts and a portfolio that includes Empower, AIVA, Exchange, and more, Dark Matter Technologies is poised to lead the industry into a new era of unparalleled transformation. Learn more about Dark Matter Technologies and their mission, here.

There is approximately $9T in agency or government MSR outstanding. Billions of dollars are being transacted daily and this volume requires disciplined loan accounting processes to record loans accurately, produce investor reporting, and power business decisions. SBO from SitusAMC is a comprehensive loan accounting and master servicing platform that reconciles daily and monthly servicer cash collections down to the penny, aiding in the discovery of potentially misplaced funds and enhancing the financial integrity of the entire process. Servicers using SBO produce accurate and timely details providing confidence that their investor reporting obligations are being met. Schedule a demo of SBO with SitusAMC’s client-focused experts.

“Did you hear Capacity’s big announcement at TMC Fall? We’ve acquired Denim Social! Together, we’re building a support automation platform that helps you automate support, connect more authentically with your borrowers, and close more loans, faster. Read the press release to learn more! We also gave away a personalized AI Assessment worth $10,000 to help mortgage lenders identify opportunities for improving their business with AI. Plus, our new GSE Search feature pulls accurate, up to date GSE regulations within seconds using generative AI. Want to join the AI in mortgage revolution? Meet the Capacity team today.”

A new era in loan origination has arrived. Mortgage Machine Services, an industry leader in digital origination technology to residential mortgage lenders, announced the launch of its namesake platform Mortgage Machine™, an out-of-the-box, all-in-one LOS designed to accelerate lenders’ operational velocity and support an end-to-end digital origination process. Developed by digital mortgage pioneer and industry veteran Jeff Bode, Mortgage Machine utilizes intelligent automation, configurable business workflows and a cloud-based infrastructure to optimize the entire loan lifecycle and create a seamless lending experience. Key platform features include AI-powered task automation, a scalable cloud-based infrastructure, flexible APIs, pre-configured workflows for retail and TPO channels, integrated document management and POS functionality. Mortgage Machine also offers all-in-one eClosing capabilities, including an eClose room, eNotes, eVault and RON, and utilizes MISMO SMART Doc® data and security standards. Visit here to get started on your digital transformation journey.

Blend Labs continues to be the mortgage industry’s leading technology platform. Core to the platform is Blend’s unique integration with Desktop Underwriter® (DU®) and LPA. These integrations help streamline your approval process for borrowers, with all the conditions lined up for your fulfillment team. Add in intelligent and automated follow-ups and you’ll get to the closing table faster and more efficiently. Putting this information at the loan officer’s fingertips creates a streamlined process and eliminates manual work which equals lower costs, higher pull-through, and increased revenue. See more ways that Blend is committing to innovation and continues to lead the way.

Looking for timely advice on how to capture more loan volume and improve your bottom line in a down market? Now is the time to explore ways to tap into new markets. Expanding your mortgage footprint through new products and channels or by reaching new geographies insulates your business against economic and interest rate volatility by diversifying your sources of volume and revenue. By setting the groundwork to connect with new borrower markets now, you’ll open new revenue possibilities for when the market inevitably recovers, positioning your business to hit the ground running and beat out the competition. Download this informative eBook from mortgage solutions provider Maxwell for actionable advice, including how to create your expansion plan and choose the offerings best suited to the markets you want to pursue. Click here to download Growing Your Mortgage Footprint: How to Launch New Loan Products, Channels & Geographic Expansions.

Broker and Correspondent Products

Build your book with AFR Wholesale® (AFR)! Now, get the chance to listen from and ask questions directly to AFR and Freddie Mac to turn those prospects to active pipeline at the next Why Wait webinar series covering Manufactured Home Financing on Wednesday, September 20th at 1 PM EST. Register here today! Have you and your borrowers looked into Manufactured Housing as an option? With unbeatable affordability, customization options that are very tailored, quick installation and trusted quality, manufactured homes are worth exploring. Especially with a top lending partner in AFR who has been an industry leader for over 25 years. This is a live webinar, and a recording will not be provided so make sure to join and get great insight and have the opportunity to ask questions and listen to scenarios! Visit AFR Wholesale, email [email protected], or dial 1-800-375-6071. AFR Wholesale® – Don’t wait. Register today!

“With Cash-Outs on the decline during this high interest rate environment, it is important to present your borrowers with different cash-out options. That is why Vista Point is announcing a brand new HELOC product coming soon, in addition to our existing Closed-End Second. Our HELOC product is being designed as a complement to our Closed-End Second to provide a full suite of Equity Solutions. Our HELOC will provide a specific solution for borrowers that want the optionality of an interest-only payment, or the ability to draw up and buy down their line during the 5-year draw period with no Appraisals up to $250k. Just like on our Closed-End Second offering, with HELOC loan amounts up to $550K and combined lien amounts up to $2.5M, your borrowers can get the cash they need without sacrificing their advantageous 1st mortgage rate. HELOC will be available for full doc and bank statements on OO and 2nd homes. For more information, reach out to us, or meet us at the Philly MBA to discuss.”

Capital Markets

We learned last week that prices in August rose by the largest monthly percentage in 15 months. However, that month-over-month inflation was widely expected due to a surge in gasoline prices. Underlying oil prices are also pointing towards further increases in September. Meanwhile, core prices were up 0.3 percent and core goods prices declined by 0.1 percent. Over the last three months core prices have increased at an annualized pace of 2.4 percent, the lowest three-month pace since March 2021. Retail sales rose faster than analysts’ expectations in August, also due to higher gas prices. Many analysts expect consumer spending to slow as excess savings built up over the pandemic have materially declined and credit is increasingly costly and difficult to obtain. Additionally, the resumption of student loan payments is expected to cut into discretionary spending. It will take more than expectations of slower spending before the Federal Reserve feels inflation is firmly under control.

What could move mortgage rates this week? The U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, and the central banks of Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland are all announcing rate decisions after a spate of recent inflation data shows that price increases are alive and well. The Fed’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the action arm of “the Fed,” is not expected to raise rates. It’s unlikely that the commentary around the commitment to keep fighting inflation and higher rates for longer will change either, but it could tilt a little more to the hawkish side after a stronger-than-anticipated inflation report for August.

The week could also see some extra drama on the political front as the countdown continues toward a potential government shutdown on October 1 in addition to the battle between the United Auto Workers (UAW) union and Detroit automakers. The auto worker strike could complicate Fed Chair Powell’s bid for a soft landing. Union leaders are asking for a 36 percent wage increase over four years, to match the similar recent pay increase for top executives. The union also wants pay to rise automatically with inflation in the future, as it did before the financial crisis.

This week brings the aforementioned FOMC meeting that begins tomorrow and concludes on Wednesday with the Statement, updated SEP (where fed funds projections will be closely scrutinized), and Chair Powell’s press conference. The treasury will also be in the headlines with more coupon auctions scheduled: $13 billion reopened 20-year bonds tomorrow and $15 billion reopened 10-year TIPS on Thursday. The only scheduled, probably non-market moving, news out today is the NAHB Housing Market Index for September. We begin the week with Agency MBS prices roughly unchanged from Friday, the 10-year yielding 4.34 after closing last week at 4.33 percent, and the 2-year is at 5.00 percent.

Employment

Are you more energized, more encouraged, and more motivated to succeed today than yesterday? Zig Ziglar famously stated, “People often say that motivation doesn’t last. Well, neither does bathing; that’s why we recommend it daily.” “As an industry leader, Thrive knows that motivation, discipline, and belief in your ability to succeed is critical,” stated Randell Gillespie, National Sales Leader for Thrive Mortgage. “There is no better time than now to find ways to continually motivate your team, which is why we put so much focus on daily opportunities like these at Thrive. Through our weekly High-Performance Coaching Calls, our very own nationally-recognized Marketing Master, James Duncan, leads these motivating and educational experiences for results. The biggest names in the mortgage industry and thought-leadership have been part of our Thrive Nation broadcasts. We want everyone to be better today than yesterday. Start a conversation with us and find out how.

“The fall season is here, and now more than ever is the time to build rapport with your referral partners and clients to maintain a steady stream of business. At Guaranteed Rate Affinity, not only do we have the greatest number of products, but we have the tech platform for our loan officers to do business from anywhere. With PowerVP, you can do anything from creating loan applications to sending pre-approval letters all from your mobile phone. Anything you could do from your desk, you can now do on the go with PowerVP. Gone are the days of being chained to your desk and missing out on important moments. Primarily, it gives you a work-life balance you never thought possible. Luckily, we’re hiring the best of the best loan officers to leverage our tech platform to grow their business. Ready to learn more? Contact Tim McGraw to get started.”

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Apache is functioning normally

September 1, 2023 by Brett Tams

LO Jobs; Jumbo and Non-Agency News; Bond Market Digests Higher Unemployment Rate

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LO Jobs; Jumbo and Non-Agency News; Bond Market Digests Higher Unemployment Rate

By:
Rob Chrisman

3 Hours, 47 Min ago

Some things in life are fleeting, like a frosty glass of rose, enemy troops singing Christmas carols in the trenches during WWI, or the time when lenders couldn’t hire people fast enough because rates were at 3 percent. I mention this because Krispy Kreme’s Strawberry Glazed Donuts, a flavor not seen in two years, is back today but only through Monday, in participating Krispy Kreme shops nationwide. Fleeting for donut aficionados. (Who says this commentary never has anything newsworthy?) Also fleeting are some astronomical events. Some will tell you that NASA doesn’t have much else going on besides coming up with the names of moons every month or two. Along those lines, thank you to Eric D. who pointed out that the common definition of a “blue moon” (the second full moon in any month) is wrong. It is the third full moon in a season that has four full moons per NASA. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by Black Knight. Black Knight is an award-winning software, data and analytics company that drives innovation in the mortgage and real-estate industries, and the capital and secondary markets. Listen to an interview with Canopy Mortgage’s Tim Davis on why he signed on with an emerging fin-tech mortgage company and the role innovation and technology will play in shaping the mortgage industry’s future.)

Non-Agency and High LTV Products

Most lenders offer programs besides conventional conforming and government loan types. Of course, the cost of originating loans has been challenging for the jumbo and non-QM segment, where it takes more effort to underwrite a mortgage. Many programs don’t have industry-standard underwriting automation tools like Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter and Freddie Mac’s Loan Prospector, which increases the cost of doing business. Meanwhile, on the demand side of the equation, banks and credit unions have pulled back on TPO platforms and products, exiting mortgage and warehousing, which creates an opportunity for LOs and brokers to take share from the banks who follow the puck to where it’s going and get in front of these changes.

Verus Mortgage Capital (VMC), a correspondent investor specializing in residential non-QM and investor rental programs, is now offering a Closed End Second Lien Mortgage Program so lenders can capitalize on the growing home equity market. The Closed End Second Lien Mortgage Program allows borrowers to access their home equity without impacting the interest rate on their first mortgage. The maximum loan amount of up to $500,000 comes with a fixed interest rate and monthly payment, and the program’s features also include a maximum CLTV of 90%, a minimum credit score of 680, standard income documentation (two years), occupancy – primary residence, and stand-alone transactions.

Loan Stream Mortgage MaxONE and MaxONE Plus are 100% CLTV FHA DPA programs that may help you qualify more borrowers and expand your market reach. A few features of MaxONE: FHA DPA, Purchase Only, Min FICO 600 – DU Approve/Eligible (no manual underwriting), No First Time Home Buyer Requirement, Non-occupied Co-borrowers allowed per FHA guides. MaxONE Plus features: 100% CLTV FHA Loan (Combines 1st and Subordinate Lien), 2nd lien with an interest rate 2% greater than 1st lien, Payment amortized over 10 years, Monthly payments required, 600 Minimum FICO.

Citi Correspondent Lending expanded non-Agency CRA premiums, effective with Best Effort locks completed on/after Friday, August 11, 2023. View Citi Correspondent complete announcement, which includes details around new MSAs added and changes to LMIHH and LMICT segments.

PRMG announced the release of the new Expanded Access Elite Prime Connect product and Investor Solution Elite DSCR product options within the existing Expanded Access and Investor Solution products. These new product options are designed to allow better pricing options within this suite of products. For both products max LTV is 75% and the minimum credit score is 680. For the Investor Solution option, the minimum DSCR is 1.15. View more information in PRMG Product Update 23-40: New Elite Non-QM Product Options and Product Profile Updates.

PRMG Product Update 23-41: Clarifications on Onyx Jumbo product regarding Borrower documented two-year history of managing investment property via the Borrowers federal tax returns, terms for Deferred DPA, WI WHEDA Advantage FHA and Conventional eligibility of PUDs and warrantable condos.

Capital Markets

Ahead of this morning’s release of the jobs report for August, bond yields were pressured to their lowest closing levels in three weeks yesterday in reaction to the Personal Income/Outlays report for July. The report showed a smaller than expected increase in income (actual 0.2 percent, expected 0.3 percent) and a bigger than expected increase in spending (actual 0.8 percent, expected 0.7 percent).

The strength of consumer spending is presenting fresh concern for policymakers hoping to return inflation to the 2 percent annual target. That strength in spending, coupled with an uptick in the PCE Price Index to 3.3 percent year-over-year from 3.0 percent, gives the Fed an argument to keep rates in restrictive territory. The question for investors is less about when (or if) a downturn might occur, but more specifically when the Fed might start to reverse course on rates. Keep in mind that any fast rate cuts would take the economy nose diving precipitously.

This morning brings the August payrolls situation. The economy added 187k jobs in August versus 175k expectations and versus a revised 157k jobs in July. The unemployment rate rose to 3.8 percent when it was expected to remain at 3.5 percent and average hourly earnings increased +.2 percent, lower than expected (0.3 percent) and 0.4 percent previously. Later this morning brings final August S&P Global manufacturing PMI, ISM manufacturing PMI for August, and July construction spending. Two Fed speakers are scheduled, Atlanta President Bostic and Cleveland President Mester. Before traders head for early exits, despite no early close ahead of the long Labor Day weekend, we begin the day with Agency MBS prices better by roughly .125, the 10-year yielding 4.06 after closing yesterday at 4.09 percent, and the 2-year at 4.77.

Loan Officer Jobs

Canopy Mortgage executes a strategic maneuver as it introduces Tim Davis, the mind behind “The Originators Guide” and the author of “The Circle of Referrals,” as its new Chief Growth Officer (CGO). This dynamic decision not only underscores Canopy’s dedication to enhancing the mortgage journey through its exceptionally effective in-house LOS but also highlights the company’s unwavering support for empowering its loan officers to enhance their individual effectiveness. Canopy is expanding its nationwide footprint seeking to onboard producing LOs who express interest in their highly competitive P&L model. Questions? Reach out to McKay Shoell or call 888-696-9076.

“Equity Resources is a privately owned mortgage banker that is very pleased to continue with its growth and expansion. We are seeking career-focused (self-sourced) loan officers in all our markets. Equity is proudly celebrating our 30th anniversary and we are excited about our future! The average tenure of our LO team is 10+ years, with many LO’s celebrating their 15th, 20th and 25th anniversaries with us! We are an agency direct lender currently licensed in 19 states along the east coast and mid-west. We offer a stellar marketing team that includes a social media director, a video production team, and a media team to support our loan officers. We help our loan officers develop a sustainable plan to assist them in growing their business with their referral partners. In addition, Equity offers a full suite of products (including several specialty lending programs.) For confidential inquiries to join our award- winning team, please contact Tom Piecenski, Executive Vice President of Sales at 614.327.5353.”

In the Northwest and California, Banner Bank is searching for Mortgage Loan Officers looking to create lasting Realtor and builder relationships at a bank focused on the market today. Banner has opportunities for lenders looking for local decision making with FHA, VA, USDA, state bond and true Portfolio lending opportunities along with servicing retained Fannie and Freddie loans to assist in client retention. Additional highlighted products cover CRA lending with private label no payment down payment assistance to help assist all borrowers with the right opportunity. Banner is the right fit for an established team, or the individual looking to grow their business and take the next step in their career. Please send resumes to Aaron Miller.

“At Planet, we’re hiring Branch Managers and empowering them with the resources to build extraordinary teams. Bring your team to the only Top 10 mortgage company with positive year-over-year production growth for the first 6 months of the year. Reach out today for a confidential discussion with Brian Miller, Planet’s SVP Talent Acquisition, at 214-223-9986, or Peter Briggs, VP Talent Acquisition, at 949-202-8213. When you’re here, you’re home.”

“At Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation, customer service is a way of life. #FairwayNation mortgage loan officers are dedicated to finding great rates and loan options for our customers while offering some of the fastest turn times in the industry. Our goal is to act as a trusted mortgage advisor, providing highly personalized service and helping you through every step of the loan process, from application to closing and beyond.”

As a mortgage sales professional have you ever thought, “What if I could focus on only the things that actually grow my business, flipping the hourglass and spending 80 percent of my time on what I do best: building relationships?” Or “What if I could surround myself with sales support that is truly team inspired, results driven marketing and customer obsessed headache-free process?” Welcome to radius financial group! They started radius with one main focus: to offer a better value proposition than any other bank or mortgage company in the country for you, your borrowers and your referral partners. radius can help you grow your business, have a better quality of life, and make more money. For confidential inquires please contact Carla Herrera.

Atlanta-based Highland Mortgage continues to grow and is searching for branches and loan officers throughout the Southeast, Delaware, Arizona, and Colorado. Contact Mickey Schilling, CMB®, its VP of National Sales. Now in its fourth year, Fannie Mae-approved Highland Mortgage is well-positioned to expand its footprint nationwide under Mickey’s guidance. Here are Mickey’s top reasons why Highland is the right destination for you.

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Apache is functioning normally

August 5, 2023 by Brett Tams

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Econ Focus

First Quarter 2023

Economic History

A Short History of Long-Term Mortgages

Americans take today’s selection of mortgages for granted, but financing a home is a much different experience than it was a century ago

By

Matthew Wells

The furniture industry was booming in Greensboro, N.C., 100 years ago. A furniture craftsman making a solid, steady income might have wanted to buy a home and build up some equity. But the homebuying process then looked very little like it does today. To finance that purchase, the furniture maker first would need to scrape together as much as 40 percent for a down payment, even with good credit. He might then head to a local building and loan association (B&L), where he would hope to get a loan that he would be able to pay off in no more than a dozen years.

Today’s mortgage market, by contrast, would offer that furniture maker a wide range of more attractive options. Instead of going to the local B&L, the furniture maker could walk into a bank or connect with a mortgage broker who could be in town or on the other side of the country. No longer would such a large down payment be necessary; 20 percent would suffice, and it could be less with mortgage insurance — even zero dollars down if the furniture maker were also a veteran. Further, the repayment period would be set at either 15 or 30 years, and, depending on what worked best for the furniture maker, the interest rate could be fixed or fluctuate through the duration of the loan.

The modern mortgage in all its variations is the product of a complicated history. Local, state, national, and even international actors all competing for profits have existed alongside an increasingly active federal government that for almost a century has sought to make the benefits of homeownership accessible to more Americans, even through economic collapse and crises. Both despite and because of this history, over 65 percent of Americans — most of whom carry or carried a mortgage previously — now own the home where they live.

The Early Era of Private Financing

Prior to 1930, the government was not involved in the mortgage market, leaving only a few private options for aspiring homeowners looking for financing. While loans between individuals for homes were common, building and loan associations would become the dominant institutional mortgage financiers during this period.

B&Ls commonly used what was known as a “share accumulation” contract. Under this complicated mortgage structure, if a borrower needed a loan for $1,000, he would subscribe to the association for five shares at $200 maturity value each, and he would accumulate those shares by paying weekly or monthly installments into an account held at the association. These payments would pay for the shares along with the interest on the loan, and the B&L would also pay out dividends kept in the share account. The dividends determined the duration of the loan, but in good economic times, a borrower would expect it to take about 12 years to accumulate enough money through the dividends and deposits to repay the entire $1,000 loan all at once; he would then own the property outright.

An import from a rapidly industrializing Great Britain in the 1830s, B&Ls had been operating mainly in the Northeast and Midwest until the 1880s, when, coupled with a lack of competition and rapid urbanization around the country, their presence increased significantly. In 1893, for example, 5,600 B&Ls were in operation in every state and in more than 1,000 counties and 2,000 cities. Some 1.4 million Americans were members of B&Ls and about one in eight nonfarm owner-occupied homes was financed through them. These numbers would peak in 1927, with 11.3 million members (out of a total population of 119 million) belonging to 12,804 associations that held a total of $7.2 billion in assets.

Despite their popularity, B&Ls had a notable drawback: Their borrowers were exposed to significant credit risk. If a B&L’s loan portfolio suffered, dividend accrual could slow, extending the amount of time it would take for members to pay off their loans. In extreme cases, retained dividends could be taken away or the value of outstanding shares could be written down, taking borrowers further away from final repayment.

“Imagine you are in year 11 of what should be a 12-year repayment period and you’ve borrowed $2,000 and you’ve got $1,800 of it in your account,” says Kenneth Snowden, an economist at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, “but then the B&L goes belly up. That would be a disaster.”

The industry downplayed the issue. While acknowledging that “It is possible in the event of failure under the regular [share accumulation] plan that … the borrower would still be liable for the total amount of his loan,” the authors of a 1925 industry publication still maintained, “It makes very little practical difference because of the small likelihood of failure.”

Aside from the B&Ls, there were few other institutional lending options for individuals looking for mortgage financing. The National Bank Act of 1864 barred commercial banks from writing mortgages, but life insurance companies and mutual savings banks were active lenders. They were, however, heavily regulated and often barred from lending across state lines or beyond certain distances from their location.

But the money to finance the building boom of the second half of the 19th century had to come from somewhere. Unconstrained by geographic boundaries or the law, mortgage companies and trusts sprouted up in the 1870s, filling this need through another innovation from Europe: the mortgage-backed security (MBS). One of the first such firms, the United States Mortgage Company, was founded in 1871. Boasting a New York board of directors that included the likes of J. Pierpont Morgan, the company wrote its own mortgages, and then issued bonds or securities that equaled the value of all the mortgages it held. It made money by charging interest on loans at a greater rate than what it paid out on its bonds. The company was vast: It established local lending boards throughout the country to handle loan origination, pricing, and credit quality, but it also had a European-based board comprised of counts and barons to manage the sale of those bonds on the continent.

Image : Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI collection [LC-DIG-FSA-8A02884]

A couple moves into a new home in Aberdeen Gardens in Newport News, Va., in 1937. Aberdeen Gardens was built as part of a New Deal housing program during the Great Depression.

New Competition From Depression-Era Reforms

When the Great Depression hit, the mortgage system ground to a halt, as the collapse of home prices and massive unemployment led to widespread foreclosures. This, in turn, led to a decline in homeownership and exposed the weaknesses in the existing mortgage finance system. In response, the Roosevelt administration pursued several strategies to restore the home mortgage market and encourage lending and borrowing. These efforts created a system of uneasy coexistence between a reformed private mortgage market and a new player — the federal government.

The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) was created in 1933 to assist people who could no longer afford to make payments on their homes from foreclosure. To do so, the HOLC took the drastic step of issuing bonds and then using the funds to purchase mortgages of homes, and then refinancing those loans. It could only purchase mortgages on homes under $20,000 in value, but between 1933 and 1936, the HOLC would write and hold approximately 1 million loans, representing around 10 percent of all nonfarm owner-occupied homes in the country. Around 200,000 borrowers would still ultimately end up in foreclosure, but over 800,000 people were able to successfully stay in their homes and repay their HOLC loans. (The HOLC is also widely associated with the practice of redlining, although scholars debate its lasting influence on lending.) At the same time, the HOLC standardized the 15-year fully amortized loan still in use today. In contrast to the complicated share accumulation loans used by the B&Ls, these loans were repaid on a fixed schedule in which monthly payments spread across a set time period went directly toward reducing the principal on the loan as well as the interest.

While the HOLC was responsible for keeping people in their homes, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) was created as part of the National Housing Act of 1934 to give lenders, who had become risk averse since the Depression hit, the confidence to lend again. It did so through several innovations which, while intended to “prime the pump” in the short term, resulted in lasting reforms to the mortgage market. In particular, all FHA-backed mortgages were long term (that is, 20 to 30 years) fully amortized loans and required as little as a 10 percent down payment. Relative to the loans with short repayment periods, these terms were undoubtedly attractive to would-be borrowers, leading the other private institutional lenders to adopt similar mortgage structures to remain competitive.

During the 1930s, the building and loan associations began to evolve into savings and loan associations (S&L) and were granted federal charters. As a result, these associations had to adhere to certain regulatory requirements, including a mandate to make only fully amortized loans and caps on the amount of interest they could pay on deposits. They were also required to participate in the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC), which, in theory, meant that their members’ deposits were guaranteed and would no longer be subject to the risk that characterized the pre-Depression era.

The B&Ls and S&Ls vehemently opposed the creation of the FHA, as it both opened competition in the market and created a new bureaucracy that they argued was unnecessary. Their first concern was competition. If the FHA provided insurance to all institutional lenders, the associations believed they would no longer dominate the long-term mortgage loan market, as they had for almost a century. Despite intense lobbying in opposition to the creation of the FHA, the S&Ls lost that battle, and commercial banks, which had been able to make mortgage loans since 1913, ended up making by far the biggest share of FHA-insured loans, accounting for 70 percent of all FHA loans in 1935. The associations also were loath to follow all the regulations and bureaucracy that were required for the FHA to guarantee loans.

“The associations had been underwriting loans successfully for 60 years. FHA created a whole new bureaucracy of how to underwrite loans because they had a manual that was 500 pages long,” notes Snowden. “They don’t want all that red tape. They don’t want someone telling them how many inches apart their studs have to be. They had their own appraisers and underwriting program. So there really were competing networks.”

As a result of these two sources of opposition, only 789 out of almost 7,000 associations were using FHA insurance in 1940.

In 1938, the housing market was still lagging in its recovery relative to other sectors of the economy. To further open the flow of capital to homebuyers, the government chartered the Federal National Mortgage Association, or Fannie Mae. Known as a government sponsored-enterprise, or GSE, Fannie Mae purchased FHA-guaranteed loans from mortgage lenders and kept them in its own portfolio. (Much later, starting in the 1980s, it would sell them as MBS on the secondary market.)

The Postwar Homeownership Boom

In 1940, about 44 percent of Americans owned their home. Two decades later, that number had risen to 62 percent. Daniel Fetter, an economist at Stanford University, argued in a 2014 paper that this increase was driven by rising real incomes, favorable tax treatment of owner-occupied housing, and perhaps most importantly, the widespread adoption of the long-term, fully amortized, low-down-payment mortgage. In fact, he estimated that changes in home financing might explain about 40 percent of the overall increase in homeownership during this period.

One of the primary pathways for the expansion of homeownership during the postwar period was the veterans’ home loan program created under the 1944 Servicemen’s Readjustment Act. While the Veterans Administration (VA) did not make loans, if a veteran defaulted, it would pay up to 50 percent of the loan or up to $2,000. At a time when the average home price was about $8,600, the repayment window was 20 years. Also, interest rates for VA loans could not exceed 4 percent and often did not require a down payment. These loans were widely used: Between 1949 and 1953, they averaged 24 percent of the market and according to Fetter, accounted for roughly 7.4 percent of the overall increase in homeownership between 1940 and 1960. (See chart below.)

Demand for housing continued as baby boomers grew into adults in the 1970s and pursued homeownership just as their parents did. Congress realized, however, that the secondary market where MBS were traded lacked sufficient capital to finance the younger generation’s purchases. In response, Congress chartered a second GSE, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, also known as Freddie Mac. Up until this point, Fannie had only been authorized to purchase FHA-backed loans, but with the hope of turning Fannie and Freddie into competitors on the secondary mortgage market, Congress privatized Fannie in 1968. In 1970, they were both also allowed to purchase conventional loans (that is, loans not backed by either the FHA or VA).

A Series of Crises

A decade later, the S&L industry that had existed for half a century would collapse. As interest rates rose in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the S&Ls, also known as “thrifts,” found themselves at a disadvantage, as the government-imposed limits on their interest rates meant depositors could find greater returns elsewhere. With inflation also increasing, the S&Ls’ portfolios, which were filled with fixed-rate mortgages, lost significant value as well. As a result, many S&Ls became insolvent.

Normally, this would have meant shutting the weak S&Ls down. But there was a further problem: In 1983, the cost of paying off what these firms owed depositors was estimated at about $25 billion, but FSLIC, the government entity that ensured those deposits, had only $6 billion in reserves. In the face of this shortfall, regulators decided to allow these insolvent thrifts, known as “zombies,” to remain open rather than figure out how to shut them down and repay what they owed. At the same time, legislators and regulators relaxed capital standards, allowing these firms to pay higher rates to attract funds and engage in ever-riskier projects with the hope that they would pay off in higher returns. Ultimately, when these high-risk ventures failed in the late 1980s, the cost to taxpayers, who had to cover these guaranteed deposits, was about $124 billion. But the S&Ls would not be the only actors in the mortgage industry to need a taxpayer bailout.

By the turn of the century, both Fannie and Freddie had converted to shareholder-owned, for-profit corporations, but regulations put in place by the Federal Housing Finance Agency authorized them to purchase from lenders only so-called conforming mortgages, that is, ones that satisfied certain standards with respect to the borrower’s debt-to-income ratio, the amount of the loan, and the size of the down payment. During the 1980s and 1990s, their status as GSEs fueled the perception that the government — the taxpayers — would bail them out if they ever ran into financial trouble.

Developments in the mortgage marketplace soon set the stage for exactly that trouble. The secondary mortgage market in the early 2000s saw increasing growth in private-label securities — meaning they were not issued by one of the GSEs. These securities were backed by mortgages that did not necessarily have to adhere to the same standards as those purchased by the GSEs.

Freddie and Fannie, as profit-seeking corporations, were then under pressure to increase returns for their shareholders, and while they were restricted in the securitizations that they could issue, they were not prevented from adding these riskier private-label MBS to their own investment portfolios.

At the same time, a series of technological innovations lowered the costs to the GSEs, as well as many of the lenders and secondary market participants, of assessing and pricing risk. Beginning back in 1992, Freddie had begun accessing computerized credit scores, but more extensive systems in subsequent years captured additional data on the borrowers and properties and fed that data into statistical models to produce underwriting recommendations. By early 2006, more than 90 percent of lenders were participating in an automated underwriting system, typically either Fannie’s Desktop Underwriter or Freddie’s Loan Prospector (now known as Loan Product Advisor).

Borys Grochulski of the Richmond Fed observes that these systems made a difference, as they allowed lenders to be creative in constructing mortgages for would-be homeowners who would otherwise be unable to qualify. “Many potential mortgage borrowers who didn’t have the right credit quality and were out of the mortgage market now could be brought on by these financial-information processing innovations,” he says.

Indeed, speaking in May 2007, before the full extent of the impending mortgage crisis — and Great Recession — was apparent, then-Fed Chair Ben Bernanke noted that the expansion of what was known as the subprime mortgage market was spurred mostly by these technological innovations. Subprime is just one of several categories of loan quality and risk; lenders used data to separate borrowers into risk categories, with riskier loans charged higher rates.

But Marc Gott, a former director of Fannie’s Loan Servicing Department said in a 2008 New York Times interview, “We didn’t really know what we were buying. This system was designed for plain vanilla loans, and we were trying to push chocolate sundaes through the gears.”

Nonetheless, some investors still wanted to diversify their portfolios with MBS with higher yields. And the government’s implicit backing of the GSEs gave market participants the confidence to continue securitizing, buying, and selling mortgages until the bubble finally popped in 2008. (The incentive for such risk taking in response to the expectation of insurance coverage or a bailout is known as “moral hazard.”)

According to research by the Treasury Department, 8 million homes were foreclosed, 8.8 million workers lost their jobs, and $7.4 trillion in stock market wealth and $19.2 trillion in household wealth was wiped away during the Great Recession that followed the mortgage crisis. As it became clear that the GSEs had purchased loans they knew were risky, they were placed under government conservatorship that is still in place, and they ultimately cost taxpayers $190 billion. In addition, to inject liquidity into the struggling mortgage market, the Fed began purchasing the GSEs’ MBS in late 2008 and would ultimately purchase over $1 trillion in those bonds up through late 2014.

The 2008 housing crisis and the Great Recession have made it harder for some aspiring homeowners to purchase a home, as no-money-down mortgages are no longer available for most borrowers, and banks are also less willing to lend to those with less-than-ideal credit. Also, traditional commercial banks, which also suffered tremendous losses, have stepped back from their involvement in mortgage origination and servicing. Filling the gap has been increased competition among smaller mortgage companies, many of whom, according to Grochulski, sell their mortgages to the GSEs, who still package them and sell them off to the private markets.

While the market seems to be functioning well now under this structure, stresses have been a persistent presence throughout its history. And while these crises have been painful and disruptive, they have fueled innovations that have given a wide range of Americans the chance to enjoy the benefits — and burdens — of homeownership.


READINGS

Brewer, H. Peers. “Eastern Money and Western Mortgages in the 1870s.” Business History Review, Autumn 1976, vol. 50, no. 3, pp. 356-380.

Fetter, Daniel K. “The Twentieth-Century Increase in U.S. Home Ownership: Facts and Hypotheses.” In Eugene N. White, Kenneth Snowden, and Price Fishback (eds.), Housing and Mortgage Markets in Historical Perspective. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, July 2014, pp. 329-350.

McDonald, Oonagh. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Turning the American Dream into a Nightmare. New York, N.Y.: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012.

Price, David A., and John R. Walter. “It’s a Wonderful Loan: A Short History of Building and Loan Associations,” Economic Brief No. 19-01, January 2019.

Romero, Jessie. “The House Is in the Mail.” Econ Focus, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Second/Third Quarter 2019.

Rose, Jonathan D., and Kenneth A. Snowden. “The New Deal and the Origins of the Modern American Real Estate Contract.” Explorations in Economic History, October 2013, vol. 50, no. 4, pp. 548-566.

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Source: richmondfed.org

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Apache is functioning normally

July 17, 2023 by Brett Tams

In an effort to boost home loan lending to lower- and moderate-income borrowers, Fannie Mae has created a new program called “HomeReady.”

Fannie didn’t release all the details yet, but they expect to roll out the program later this year, integrating it with their automated underwriting system Desktop Underwriter (DU).

What we do know is that the program will automatically flag potential borrowers for inclusion in the program by utilizing the DU findings.

This means borrowers who would otherwise be denied a mortgage might actually qualify thanks to the expanded guidelines offered via HomeReady.

Additionally, lenders will be able to underwrite the loans with more certainty knowing that they won’t violate Fannie’s guidelines, potentially leading to costly buybacks.

HomeReady will eliminate or cap certain loan level pricing adjustments (LLPAs) such as those associated with credit score, LTV, and so on.

That should translate to a low mortgage rate for a traditionally higher-risk borrower, which should actually boost their chances of staying current on the loan.

That strange dilemma has always caught my attention and made me think – higher risk borrowers are charged higher interest rates, thereby creating costlier payments that are in essence more difficult to pay each month.

But you can’t have it any other way, unless there are programs like this around. Maybe that’s the point.

Anyway, in exchange for the lower rates, borrowers taking part in HomeReady will need to complete a mandatory online education course called Framework, which should prepare them for the home buying process and provide post-purchase support. It costs $75.

The course meets the standards of the National Industry Standards for Homeownership Education and Counseling and the HUD Housing Counseling Program.

HomeReady Allows Non-Borrower Household Income

Now onto some of the HomeReady Mortgage details that are noteworthy. For what Fannie calls the “first time,” a non-borrower household member’s income can be considered when determining the borrower’s DTI ratio.

This appears to be aimed at multi-generational and extended households that Fannie claims, “have incomes that are as stable or even more stable than other households at similar income levels.”

HomeReady will also allow income for non-occupant borrowers, such as parents of a borrower, to be used to supplement qualifying income.

The program is available to both first-time home buyers and repeat homeowners, and only requires a 3% down payment, an option now available to all Fannie Mae borrowers.

However, there are some income limits tied to this new program.

If the property is located in a designated low-income census tract, HomeReady will be available to borrowers at any income level.

Additionally, properties in high-minority census tracts or designated natural disaster areas will be eligible for HomeReady financing at or below 100% of area median income (AMI).

For properties that aren’t in these census tracts, HomeReady borrowers can only have an income at or below 80% of the AMI.

Fannie estimates that roughly half of census tracts nationally will be subject to the 100% AMI limit or have no income limit at all.

In any case, there are already maps posted on the Fannie Mae website that detail the income limits (or lack thereof) from state to state.

Additional details will be disclosed to lenders in coming weeks via a Selling Guide announcement, with Desktop Underwriter inclusion and loan deliveries expected in late 2015.

HomeReady Mortgage Program Highlights

[checklist]

  • Automated identification of HomeReady-eligible loans via DU
  • Risk-based pricing waived for borrowers with LTVs >80% and credit score >=680
  • LLPA cap of 150 basis points for loans outside the parameters above
  • 3% minimum down payment for purchases
  • 95% max LTV for limited cash-out refinances
  • No minimum borrower contribution (on 1-unit properties)
  • Cash on-hand acceptable as source of funds for down payment and/or closing costs
  • Income from non-borrower household member allows DTI ratio of 45-50%
  • Non-occupant borrowers also permitted
  • Reduced MI coverage requirement above 90% LTV
  • Homeownership education course mandatory
  • HomeReady loans can be bundled with standard loans in same MBS pools and whole loan commitments

[/checklist]

Source: thetruthaboutmortgage.com

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Apache is functioning normally

July 11, 2023 by Brett Tams

Beginning in mid-2016, Fannie Mae will incorporate “trended credit data” into its automated underwriting system Desktop Underwriter (DU).

You’re probably wondering what trended credit data is. In short, it’s a two-year picture of a consumer’s credit history with regard to how they manage revolving accounts.

Revolving accounts include credit cards and other credit accounts that allow borrowers to carry a balance over time or pay it off in full.

These differ from installment accounts, such as mortgages and auto loans, which have a fixed amount that is paid off in equal installments until maturity.

Banks and mortgage lenders are concerned about revolving accounts because they can provide clues about how a borrower might handle a mortgage, especially if they’ve never had one before.

For example, if a borrower is constantly carrying a balance on their credit card(s), and never making more than the minimum payment, this could be a sign that they’ll become a risky homeowner.

Conversely, a person who always pays down their debts in full each month, even if they aren’t required to do so, might send a signal to the banks that they’re ready for the responsibility of homeownership.

Transactors vs. Revolvers

While the two terms above might sound like heavy machinery, they’re not. They’re how the credit bureaus define us, based on our spending habits.

Those who make lots of transactions using credit, but pay them off in full each month are known as “transactors.”

Those who make lots of transactions but only make the minimum payment (or some payment less than the full amount due) are known as “revolvers” because they let their balances carry from month to month.

As you might expect, the latter group is the riskier of the two because it’s unclear if and when they’ll ever pay off their debts, or if they’ll just let them revolve forever.

The problem with existing credit reports is that they can’t always differentiate between these two types of spenders.

When you look at a credit report, you generally just see the current outstanding balances and the associated credit limits.

For a borrower with low credit limits this could make them look higher risk if they happen to have a relatively large amount of outstanding debt when the credit report is pulled, even if it will be paid off in full by the due date.

In fact, this type of borrower could be hurt by the existing credit report snapshot (versus two-year history) even if their debt is near/at zero because their credit limits are low.

On the other hand, you might have a consumer with lots of outstanding debt but also tons of available credit that only plans to make the minimum payment each month.

They might be rewarded in the credit score department because they have lots of available credit, even if their borrowing habits are worse than the consumer with lower limits.

This person might also be able to game the system by paying off their debts right before applying for a mortgage to look like a better borrower who doesn’t constantly revolve their debt.

It’s often recommended that you pay off your debts before applying for a mortgage to give your low credit score a boost (and also lower your DTI), assuming either might be a problem for you.

But this new two-year picture could make such a move less advantageous. Of course, Fannie Mae is presenting the inclusion of trended data as a positive for mortgage borrowers, but we’ll see how it plays out.

Less Paperwork Needed to Get a Mortgage

Everyone knows getting a mortgage can be a huge headache, what with all that paperwork. To ease this burden the company plans to introduce some other changes next year as well.

Fannie Mae will include nontraditional credit history (utility bills, cell phone, etc.) in DU as opposed to making underwriters manually review such files. This should help those with limited credit qualify for mortgages with less hassle.

Additionally, banks and lenders will soon be able to validate a borrower’s income via DU with data provided by Equifax’s The Work Number (TWN).

This means borrowers won’t have to come up with copies of their pay stubs, though they’ll still need to provide tax returns and other income documents.

I like where they’re going with this…it should streamline the process and make banks feel more comfortable about issuing mortgages, knowing the information they receive is accurate. But those looking to fudge the numbers might encounter more difficulty as verification technology improves.

Source: thetruthaboutmortgage.com

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Apache is functioning normally

June 29, 2023 by Brett Tams
Apache is functioning normally

They say the average mortgage application contains some 500 pages, which explains part of the frustration mortgage borrowers feel when going through the loan process.

But Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac want to ease that burden by finally digitalizing the mortgage experience.

Both companies announced upcoming changes that will go live in December and next spring.

Come December 10th, Fannie Mae will add both asset and employment validation to its stable of useful loan origination tools.

That means borrowers will no longer need to provide work paystubs, bank statements, or investment account statements.

Well, that’s the theory at least. We will see how it actually pans out…

‘A Dramatically Better Mortgage Experience’

Currently, borrowers are often asked to fax or e-mail these types of documents to verify income, assets, and employment.

But as with most things, it can get complicated when pages go missing, are illegible, lost, etc.

The most common complaint I hear about when attempting to get a mortgage is having to send the same document twice (or three times or more).

At the moment, Fannie Mae is already validating income electronically, and in just over a month assets and employment will get the digital treatment too.

Fannie expects these changes to result in “a dramatically better mortgage experience.”

Again, we’ll see how it turns out because technology has its own problems, but it’s certainly welcome news for both borrowers and lenders.

Greater Certainty for Lenders

While borrowers will be less burdened with paperwork demands, banks and lenders will feel more comfortable delivering loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac knowing the information is being verified upfront by their own systems.

Instead of relying on some paperwork from the borrower that may or may not be valid (or current), they can run it through the automated system to reduce uncertainty and risk.

Fannie refers to this as “Day 1 Certainty,” which in a nutshell give lenders “certainty on Day 1” that they’ll be free from reps and warranties for income, assets, and employment information that is validated through Desktop Underwriter (DU).

This Day 1 Certainty will also allow lenders to forego an appraisal on certain transactions, such as rate and term refinances with lower LTV ratios.

They say this will allow lenders to focus their attention on those higher-risk appraisals instead, while also streamlining the process with loan underwriters.

Loans are often delayed by appraisals, and the costs of an appraisal has risen dramatically in recent years.

Freddie Mac is making similar updates that will roll out next spring.

They include:

• A no-cost automated appraisal alternative
• Automated borrower income verification
• Automated borrower asset verification
• Automated assessment of borrowers without credit scores

Faster, Easier Mortgages for All?

It sounds like anyone who gets a mortgage backed by Fannie or Freddie (the majority of mortgages other than FHA and portfolio) will get the rocket treatment.

Still, you’ll have tons of pesky disclosures to sign along the way, which is never fun, albeit necessary.

The end result should be lower origination costs for lenders, which may or may not get passed along to customers.

Hopefully they will – but if anything, it should keep borrower costs from rising. Additionally, the home loan process should speed up as a result of these changes.

Instead of lenders fretting about loan quality, they’ll have more confidence to push loans through and close them with less delay.

Now they just need to figure out how to let borrowers e-sign all those mortgage documents to make the process really easy. It’d be nice to ditch the printer and the fax machine entirely.

Of course, this new era of automation means it’ll be more difficult to get away with nonsense going forward. That means less fraud, but perhaps less wiggle-room too.

(photo: Sarah)

Source: thetruthaboutmortgage.com

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Apache is functioning normally

June 29, 2023 by Brett Tams
Apache is functioning normally

This week, Fannie Mae published a new frequently asked questions (FAQ) document related to RefiNow, the refinancing product announced by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) in 2021 that targets low-income borrowers with single-family mortgages backed by the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs).

Fannie Mae explains in the document that RefiNow products are not limited to the same servicer as the original loan and notes the differences between RefiNow and HomeReady, the low down payment mortgage. Fannie Mae also created a separate document that compares the features and requirements of RefiNow and HomeReady.

“At a high level, RefiNow would likely be a better refinance option for borrowers with higher DTIs and income up to 100% of the applicable area median income (AMI) limit who have limited funds to pay for upfront appraisal costs,” the document states.

The document also notes that lenders can use a credit report to determine a borrower’s payment history, but “lenders must continue to conduct the additional due diligence necessary to confirm the borrower is current as of the note date.”

Other issues addressed in the document include the transference of mortgage insurance, age requirements for borrowers, using base pay income to qualify for RefiNow, and the applicability of area median income limits for multiple borrowers on a RefiNow transaction.

It also details how a desktop underwriter (DU) assesses the risk associated with a RefiNow transaction, explaining that “DU does not conduct a comprehensive examination of primary and contributory risk factors on the transaction.”

Rather, a DU assesses a RefiNow loan by determining that the loan being refinanced meets the payment history requirements based on a review of the credit report, and that the borrowers comply with applicable waiting periods following “derogatory credit events.”

The FHFA announced the development of RefiNow in April 2021, and lenders offering RefiNow must ensure that the borrower saves at least $50 a month in their mortgage payments while simultaneously dropping their interest rate by at least 50 basis points.

RefiNow was first available from Fannie Mae in June 2021, while Freddie Mac’s Refi Possible was made available two months later.

Source: housingwire.com

Posted in: Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2021, About, age, Appraisal, borrowers, Credit, Credit Report, Desktop Underwriter, Development, down payment, due diligence, events, Family, Fannie Mae, faq, Features, Federal Housing Finance Agency, FHFA, Finance, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, first, Freddie Mac, funds, government, GSEs, history, Housing, housing finance, in, Income, Insurance, interest, interest rate, lenders, loan, low, low-income, Mortgage, Mortgage Insurance, mortgage payments, Mortgages, new, Original, Other, payment history, payments, points, products, questions, rate, Refinance, refinancing, Review, risk, single, single-family, states, Transaction

Apache is functioning normally

June 22, 2023 by Brett Tams
Apache is functioning normally

Remember all those articles (including some on this blog) that claimed mortgage rates would have to rise to X percent in order for homes to become unaffordable?

Well, mortgage rates have been pretty flat for the past several years, and remain amazingly attractive historically, yet home prices have now risen out of reach for many prospective buyers.

What gives? How could this be? Well, they’re unaffordable because home prices have surged.

The Housing Recovery Has Left Many Behind

  • Half of largest housing markets nationwide are unaffordable
  • Despite the fact that mortgage rates remain low historically
  • And while median-priced homes remain affordable
  • These aren’t the properties that at for sale at the moment

While the housing recovery has been wonderful for those who were able to hang on through the crisis, and those lucky enough to pick up properties on the cheap post-crisis, it has left behind scores of would-be buyers in its wake.

Per a recent analysis from Zillow, mortgage payments are now unaffordable in half of the nation’s 35 largest housing markets, despite those rock-bottom interest rates. Certainly this can’t be good news.

They found that monthly payments for the median-valued U.S. property only require 16% of median income, which is quite affordable.

But here’s the problem – the median-priced home isn’t the one for sale. The homes that are for sale tend to be priced above the median for their particular market.

This isn’t just a feeling you get while perusing inventory online. In all but three of the largest 35 U.S. metros, the median price of homes for sale is higher than the median value of all homes.

In short, it’s mostly expensive homes that are listed these days, not the run-of-the-mill average-priced ones.

You’ve probably heard that starter homes are hard to come by. This is partially because the expected move-up buyers aren’t moving up, thanks to a lack of home equity and a low mortgage rate they don’t want to give up.

So when you actually look at homes listed for sale nationwide, 20% of median income is being swallowed up.

Unfortunately, that’s just the pretty picture of the nation as a whole. For many individual housing markets, it’s way worse.

Los Angeles Home Buyers Facing Biggest Challenge

  • Homes in Los Angeles are the most out of reach
  • They require a staggering 46.8% of median income
  • Which is likely beyond what lenders will approve DTI-wise
  • And even if approved it means heightened risk for the borrower

In Los Angeles, the typical property for sale requires 46.8% of median income, which a lender probably wouldn’t even accept DTI-wise.

Prior to the most recent housing bubble, buyers in LA only needed to spend 35.2% of income on mortgage payments for the typical home purchase.

To sum it up, LA buyers have access to some of the lowest mortgage rates in history, yet need nearly half their paycheck to cover the mortgage. Makes you question that rent vs. buy decision, eh?

It’s the same story in California’s five other largest metros, including San Francisco (40.2% of income), San Diego (39.6% of income), San Jose (39.3%), Sacramento (29.1% of income), and Riverside (27.9% of income).

To determine affordability, Zillow assumed the buyer had a 20% down payment and a 30-year fixed at Freddie Mac’s prevailing mortgage rate.

These numbers are all higher relative to the income spent on the mortgage from 1985 through 2000.

The problem is similar in many other metros nationwide aside from places like Cleveland, where homes are actually more affordable than they’ve been historically.

There, the median list price of ~$144,000 requires just 12.7% of median income for monthly mortgage payments, significantly less than the 20% needed during the pre-bubble years.

But Cleveland is one of the few places where it has gotten much cheaper, and remember, this is at a time when mortgage rates remain near uncharted territory.

Prospective buyers still have to contend with larger down payment requirements thanks to those higher list prices, when taken together, make the prospect of owning a home dim.

Underwriting Will Get More Forgiving

  • As a result of this lack of affordability
  • Mortgage lenders will begin easing underwriting guidelines
  • We’re seeing it already with 1% down mortgages
  • And higher DTI allowances, which could lead to trouble

The only silver lining is that many lenders are now offering 1% down payments, including Quicken, and some are even rolling out zero down options like Movement Mortgage.

At the same time, Fannie Mae will soon allow higher debt-to-income ratios when its Desktop Underwriter (DU) Version 10.1 is released in late July.

In just over a month, DU will consider loan applications with a maximum DTI of 50%, and no longer require compensating factors for DTIs between 45-50%.

Additionally, their prior DU release from last September opened the door to automated underwriting for borrowers without credit scores.

Clearly we are trending toward looser underwriting guidelines after years of what many felt were excessively harsh policies.

But it’s kind of worrisome given it comes at a time when home prices are eclipsing old all-time highs and mortgage rates remain dirt cheap.

If buyers are still struggling to qualify with 3% mortgage rates and 1% down payments, there might be a problem lurking.

Source: thetruthaboutmortgage.com

Posted in: Mortgage News, Renting Tagged: 2, 30-year, About, affordability, affordable, All, all-time highs, analysis, Applications, average, Blog, borrowers, bubble, Buy, buyer, buyers, california, Credit, credit scores, Crisis, Debt, debt-to-income, decision, Desktop Underwriter, down payment, Down payments, DTI, equity, expensive, Fannie Mae, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, first, fixed, Freddie Mac, good, history, home, home buyers, home equity, home prices, home purchase, homes, homes for sale, Housing, housing bubble, Housing markets, in, Income, interest, interest rates, inventory, LA, lenders, list, list price, loan, LOS, los angeles, low, low rates, Make, market, markets, More, Mortgage, Mortgage News, mortgage payments, MORTGAGE RATE, Mortgage Rates, Move, Movement Mortgage, Moving, News, Other, paycheck, payments, percent, policies, pretty, price, Prices, PRIOR, property, Purchase, rate, Rates, reach, read, Rent, rise, risk, sacramento, sale, san diego, san francisco, San Jose, september, short, story, time, Underwriting, value, will, Zillow

Apache is functioning normally

June 21, 2023 by Brett Tams
Apache is functioning normally

Underwriting, LOS, Appraisal Tools, Broker and Automation Products; Freddie and Fannie News; Housing Starts Skyrocket

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Underwriting, LOS, Appraisal Tools, Broker and Automation Products; Freddie and Fannie News; Housing Starts Skyrocket

By:
Rob Chrisman

Tue, Jun 20 2023, 9:40 AM

I am fortunate to travel around some (no, I am not on the missing Titanic tourist submarine, nor personally shepherding the new Credit Trigger Bill in MA), and am in the Bay Area to give a speech on the eve of the Summer Solstice, and am reminded of the passage of time and how my skill sets have become outdated. I can refold a map correctly, unknot curly telephone wire to get all the curls facing the right way, and can cover a textbook with a brown paper bag. I know how to write in cursive. But I don’t know why cars don’t need to warm up anymore, or why my cell phone doesn’t work in the guest bedroom. I barely understand how electricity actually works, aside from my Mom telling me not to poke my fork in the electrical wall outlet. But others have a better grasp of it, and it’s a great time to be one of the 1.032 million electricians in America, the most ever, and LOs pay attention to changes in demographics and job markets. Electricians’ pay has skyrocketed, averaging $37.51 per hour for an annual wage of around $78,000, a 7.8 percent year-over-year increase. A boom in the housing market plus the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022 (which steers $369 billion to beefing up energy infrastructure) is driving the golden age of electricians. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by MCT and its Hedge Advisory division. Download their recently released whitepaper, Mortgage Pipeline Hedging 101, for more information on hedging in today’s market. Today’s includes an interview with MCT’s Andrew Rhodes on secondary market happenings in the current rate environment and the importance of loan sale automation.)

Broker and Lender Services, Products, and Software

National Homeownership Month means new opportunities for your business. June is National Homeownership Month and ICE Mortgage Technology® is sharing resources all month long to help mortgage professionals put more people into homes. Did you know, according to their 2023 Borrower Insights Survey, fewer than one in 10 borrowers wanted a fully digital experience? By leveraging mortgage automation, you can streamline the previously manual steps that slowed your team down, and ensure they have time to deliver the high touch experience your borrowers are looking for. Click here to learn how ICE Mortgage Technology can partner with you to streamline the various steps in the mortgage process.

It’s industry belief that transferring your loans to a new subservicer is slow, risky, and just too scary to even try. As a result, most originators have FOMO (Fear of Moving On), but Servbank clients found there was no need to fear the move because Servbank has the loan transfer process down to a science. They handle dozens of client transfers per year, with a fully assisted, stress-tested transfer process that is entirely transparent. Once aboard, all loans get the same compassionate, compliant servicing that has turned Servbank into one of the nation’s Top 10 Subservicers. But the proof isn’t in the claims, it’s in the numbers. In April 2023, Servbank efficiently transferred 175,000 loans timely, with imperceptible disruption to the customers or their existing clients. So, if you have a FOMO from your current servicer, let Servbank share all the details with you on how they can make transferring your loans a seamless and worry-free process that will enhance your brand and improve your bottom line. Ready to learn more? Visit here.

“AFR Wholesale® (AFR) is incredibly honored and blessed to be providing homeownership for over 25 years. As a leading manufactured home lender amongst wholesalers and to be a leading FHA 203k lender for sponsored originations and an innovator in construction and renovation lending, AFR is steadfast in providing more homeownership opportunities to more families. AFR wants to teach the masses how to leverage programs such HomeOne®, Home Possible®, Home Ready®, and a full suite of other lending products to help diversify your lending toolkit. You still have time to join! We invite you on June 21st at 2 PM EST. to join AFR and special guests from Fannie Mae to learn about HomeReady® and how to leverage this program. Register Today! This is a live webinar and will not be recorded, so sign up today and don’t miss it! Contact AFR by going to afrwholesale.com, email [email protected] (1-800-375-6071).”

“One of the ways Xactus is serving to innovate and innovating to serve is with its powerful residential and commercial appraisal valuation management technology, Appraisal FirewallX. It shortens appraisal times and lets you manage your own appraisal process. Appraisal FirewallX also improves efficiency because it is integrated with numerous LOS systems such as Encompass by ICE Mortgage Technology. Cambridge Savings Bank has been using Appraisal FirewallX since it launched Encompass in 2017 and it has enabled the Cambridge team to maintain partnerships with its approved appraisers and move away from a very inefficient manual process to a highly automated one. It considers Appraisal FirewallX’s customer service to be top notch too. In fact, it’s one of Cambridge’s top vendor relationships. See how this innovative technology solution can improve your appraisal process and how Xactus is advancing the modern mortgage. Email us for a demo.”

Integrated LOS and POS systems are essential to creating the quick, easy, and fully digital mortgage application process that today’s borrowers expect. Learn how MeridianLink® Mortgage LOS is leading the charge toward better borrower experiences in its recent ebook on the importance of integrated systems in creating an automated online application process from start to finish.

Cover your staff’s time off with Maxwell’s on-demand underwriting. As a mortgage professional, you know the value of an uninterrupted workflow. Maxwell Fulfillment services empowers you to seamlessly maintain your operations while your team enjoys time off this summer (and beyond). With direct integrations to your LOS, our experienced onshore team of underwriters provides a seamless, fast, and cost-effective experience. To learn more about Maxwell’s on-demand underwriting or other fulfillment services, click here or schedule a call today.

Freddie and Fannie Updates

The two Agencies, under the guidance of the FHFA, continue making the changes that the industry keeps following, given 60-70 percent of production follows their processing and underwriting guidelines. This includes the increasing issue of climate change.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) issued its 2022 Report to Congress. The statutorily required report provides information about FHFA’s 2022 examinations of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac (the Enterprises), Common Securitization Solutions (CSS), the 11 Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBanks), and the FHLBanks’ Office of Finance.

Of note, the FHFA increased its efforts to address the climate-related risks faced by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks. The agency’s latest annual report to Congress outlined the progress made by FHFA’s eight climate-focused working groups.

Fannie Mae’s Appraiser Update June 2023 edition focuses on certain appraisal quality issues and share examples of ways they identify and mitigate the resulting risks. Also, several recent appraisal-related policy changes and the Uniform Appraisal Dataset (UAD) and Forms Redesign project are discussed.

Fannie Mae implemented 2023 area median incomes (AMIs) in Desktop Underwriter® (DU®), Loan Delivery, and the Area Median Income Lookup Tool. There was a 7.73 percent average increase for 2023, meaning more borrowers may meet AMI requirements. AMI is also used to determine eligibility for certain loan-level price adjustment (LLPA) waivers. Lenders may use this information to determine income eligibility for HomeReady® and other loans with AMI requirements.

PennyMac Announcement 23-44: Freddie Mac Bulletin 2023-11 Credit Underwriting Updates.

Fifth Third Correspondent Lending Communiqué edition 2023-5-6.16.23 provides information on Agency and FHA Products Temporary Buydowns, Investment Property QM Points and Fees, Long Term Lock Updates.

With SEL-2023-04, Fannie Mae announced multiple Selling Guide changes, including updated requirements related to shared equity and shared appreciation, subordinate financing, and alternatives for tax filing documentation. View AmeriHome Mortgage Announcement 20230511-CL for details.

Pennymac is aligning with Freddie Mac’s selling guide updates on property appraisals and condominium projects. Updates are listed in Announcement 23-41: Freddie Mac Bulletin 2023-9 Property Appraisals and Condominium Project Updates and are effective immediately.

PennyMac posted Announcement 23-43: Updates to Conventional LLPAs. Pennymac updated Conventional LLPAs effective for all Best Efforts Commitments taken on or after Tuesday, June 13, 2023. The “Purchase Special” will improve by 0.10 for loan balances <= $175,000.

Citizens Correspondent National Bulletin 2023-13 includes information on Conventional Conforming Product and All Product Updates. See the bulletin for additional information and all lock, delivery, and purchase by dates, if required.

Of course, the private mortgage insurance companies, like Arch, Enact, Essent Guaranty, MGIC, National Mortgage Insurance, and Radian, are very interested in anything that the Agencies are up to or impact their business. Seth Appleton, President of U.S. Mortgage Insurers (USMI), released a statement on the U.S. Senate Reintroduction of The Middle-Class Mortgage Insurance Premium Act of 2023 sponsored by Senators Maggie Hassan (D-NH) and Thom Tillis (R-NC).

Capital Markets:

Okay class, let’s review. Our Federal Reserve (the “Central Bank”) doesn’t want to be seen as weak on fighting inflation. We learned last week that consumer prices rose 0.1 percent in May, in line with many analysts’ expectations. Year over year numbers are always rolling, dropping off the one 13 months ago. Sure enough, over the last year, prices were up 4.0 percent versus 4.9 percent in April. This marks the lowest annual inflation reading in over two years. Are we having a “soft landing?”

Shelter costs continue to buoy the headline number, however rental prices have moderated significantly from last year’s large increases. Consumer expectations for future inflation also fell to their lowest since March 2021. Meanwhile, the Federal Open Market Committee kept the Fed Funds Rate steady at a range of 5.00 – 5.25 percent following its June meeting. While this was in line with expectations, the dot plot released following the meeting indicates the committee still feels more tightening is appropriate this year. Officials continue to reinforce their expectations for rates to remain elevated for longer than some analysts’ forecasts. Employment and housing remain significant headwinds to inflation subsiding to levels where the Fed would consider declaring an end to the current tighter policy cycle.

After yesterday’s holiday, markets resumed today with Philadelphia Fed non-manufacturing figure for June (-16.6), as well as May housing starts and building permits (+21.7 and +5.2 percent, respectively, an enormous jump). Two Fed speakers are currently scheduled, St. Louis President Bullard and New York President Williams. The bond market, and therefore interest rates, begins the trading week little changed from last Friday: the 10-year is yielding 3.75 after closing last week at 3.77 percent, the 2-year at 4.71, and Agency MBS prices unchanged.

Employment

Nations Lending Continues Growth with Highest Ever Rank on Scotsman Guide! Nations Lending has once again been recognized by Scotsman Guide as one of the Top Mortgage Lenders in America. The company secured the 42nd position on the 2023 list, which was based on its impressive volume of nearly $3 billion. This marks the eighth consecutive year that Nations has been included in the ranking. Over the last few months, the company has introduced a slew of new products and improvements that have seen immediate success. This includes the RIO, a Nations investor-product-focused on generational wealth for investors with simplified qualifications, a temporary buydown solution for the Jumbo product line, giving Nations an advantage in promoting payment solutions in the early years of the loan, enhancements to its agency product line-up with lowered FICO scores to 500 for FHA/VA loans, and focusing on a borrowers Positive Rent Payment History for borrowers that are past tenants. Any IMB interested in joining Nations can reach out to John Owens.

“Who onboarded over $1B producing LO’s in May-June? Who won a Regional HW Tech100 Award? Who made the Scotsman Top Lenders list …again? Who made 2023 National Mortgage News Best Mortgage Companies to work for? Who was the 4th fastest growing company Inc Regionals Rocky Mountain Region? Who developed a highly efficient proprietary LOS that allows LOs to do more volume with less effort? Who has a business model that is sustainably good and profitable in any market? …heard enough yet? Join us and we’ll revolutionize the mortgage industry together. Reach out to Josh Neumarker at Canopy Mortgage for more information 888-696-9076.”

“Are you frustrated as a retail loan officer or mortgage banker with the lack of flexibility to provide custom loan options? Take control: follow the lead of an estimated 24,000 MLOs like you who have joined the wholesale channel in the last year. Whether you open your own independent mortgage brokerage or join a team as a loan officer, you’ll have the ability to provide your clients with the personalized solutions they need. Contact our team at BeAMortgageBroker.com today and you’ll be well on your way to a more fulfilling tomorrow.”

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Source: mortgagenewsdaily.com

Posted in: Refinance, Renting Tagged: 2, 2017, 2021, 2022, 2023, 203k, About, age, All, Alternatives, AmeriHome, Announcement, app, Appraisal, Appraisals, appraisers, appreciation, automation, average, Bank, banks, bedroom, best, bond, borrowers, Broker, brokerage, brown, building, building permits, business, buydown, cambridge, Capital markets, cars, climate, Climate change, closing, Commentary, Commercial, companies, company, Congress, construction, correspondent, Correspondent lending, cost, Credit, custom, customer service, Demographics, Desktop Underwriter, Digital, Digital mortgage, diversify, driving, efficient, Employment, Encompass, energy, environment, equity, existing, expectations, experience, Fannie Mae, fed, Federal Home Loan Banks, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Federal Open Market Committee, Federal Reserve, Fees, FHA, FHFA, fico, Finance, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, financing, fomo, Forecasts, Freddie Mac, Free, funds, future, Giving, good, great, growth, guest, guest bedroom, guests, guide, history, holiday, home, home loan, homeownership, homes, Housing, housing finance, Housing market, Housing Starts, How To, HW TECH100, ice, ICE Mortgage Technology, impact, improvements, in, Income, industry, Inflation, Insights, Insurance, interest, interest rates, interview, investment, investment property, Investor, investors, job, jump, Learn, learned, lenders, lending, leverage, list, Live, LLPAs, loan, Loan officer, Loans, LOS, Make, making, manage, manufacturing, market, markets, Maxwell, MBS, Media, mobile, Mobile App, model, modern, More, Mortgage, Mortgage automation, Mortgage Insurance, mortgage lenders, Mortgage News, mortgage professionals, mortgage technology, Move, Moving, NC, new, new york, News, office, Operations, or, Originations, Other, paper, Partnerships, payment history, PennyMac, percent, Permits, podcast, points, premium, president, price, Prices, private mortgage insurance, products, Professionals, programs, project, projects, proof, property, Purchase, quality, rate, Rates, reach, reading, ready, Relationships, renovation, Rent, rent payment, rental, rental prices, Residential, Review, right, rocky mountain, rose, sale, sales, savings, science, Secondary, secondary market, Securitization, selling, Selling Guide, Senate, Servicing, seth, shares, skill, social, Social Media, Software, St. Louis, stress, Subservicer, suite, summer, survey, tax, tax filing, Technology, the fed, time, tools, top 10, trading, Travel, under, Underwriting, update, updates, VA, VA loans, value, versus, volume, wall, wants, wealth, Webinar, will, work, working

Apache is functioning normally

June 17, 2023 by Brett Tams

Wouldn’t it be nice if your mortgage lender could gather your income, asset, and employment information from a single digital document, similar to a credit report?

And instead of asking you to send over bank statements (all pages, even the blank ones!), recent pay stubs, two years of W-2’s, and employment information, simply asked you to verify a single bank account.

That’d probably make it a lot easier to get a mortgage, right? And perhaps a lot less frustrating too.

Single Source Validation Can Make Getting a Mortgage a Lot Easier

  • A new technology called Single Source Validation
  • Makes it faster and easier to verify borrower data
  • Such as income, assets, and employment
  • That look and feel similar to credit reports

Well, Fannie Mae has actually rolled out this technology via “Single Source Validation,” which as the name suggests, allows lenders to validate a variety of borrower attributes from one data source.

They’ve partnered up with a vendor called Finicity, a Salt Lake City-based company that can generate asset verification reports within Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter (DU).

Another company called FormFree has also linked up with Fannie, and has a similar product called AccountChek, which facilitates the transmission of bank, retirement and investment account data.

These asset reports are then used to automatically verify three important items: income, assets, and employment.

Aside from being a lot easier on borrowers, this single source of data will also increase efficiency for mortgage lenders and speed up the loan process.

One early participant in the pilot program is Quicken Loans, which claims those who import income and asset documents can reduce the average length of the mortgage process by 12 days.

The company already offers the ability to digitally import financial documents, but this goes a step further by using asset data to identify employment and income information.

Put simply, it relies upon direct deposit information found in bank statements to pull income and employer info. And the assets are there too, so all the dots are connected automatically.

Quicken is offering this enhancement to all borrowers, not just those who applied via Rocket Mortgage.

A second participant, United Wholesale Mortgage (UWM), is offering this new capability to mortgage brokers who submit loans to the wholesaler.

This means all shops, whether big or small, will be able to streamline the cumbersome mortgage process going forward.

Source Data Can Reduce Fraud, Mistakes, and Turn Times

  • Aside from speeding things up and making it easier for borrowers
  • Single Source Validation should also reduce fraud and underwriting mistakes
  • Because borrowers will have a harder time fudging the numbers
  • Or not disclosing certain things in an effort to fool mortgage lenders

Aside from the convenience factor, the single source of data should eliminate fraud and mistakes, and reduce turn times.

As it stands now, a borrower has to upload bank statements, paystubs, and tax returns separately. Then the lender has to manually verify employment. This can lead to a lot of questions and confusion, and a lot of second and third requests for paperwork.

With a “Verification of Assets Report” from Finicity, which the borrower authorizes by granting access to certain bank account data, all of that information can be merged into a single report.

This should make it harder for borrowers to fudge the numbers and submit false paperwork, and it should reduce any inputting errors made by processors and/or underwriters.

Additionally, it might reduce mortgage delinquencies by ensuring borrowers are truly qualified for the mortgages they apply for.

Take a look at the sample report above, which provides a really detailed snapshot of a hypothetical borrower’s financials.

You get their name, address, asset information, 2-month and 6-month average daily balances of assets, asset totals by account, and transaction history in those accounts, broken down by category.

It looks a lot like a credit report, except instead of credit history it documents income, asset, and employment history.

This information can also be integrated into Fannie’s automated underwriting system to ensure it is inputted correctly.

That means lenders won’t have to worry about loan defects related to income, assets, and employment. And you never know, those cost savings could be passed onto consumers in the form of a lower mortgage rate.

Now imagine applying for a mortgage in the not-too-distant future, whereby you fill out an application online (or on your phone) and simply provide credentials so all your financial data can be accessed, merged, and analyzed.

And when combined with a credit report, could result in a real approval within minutes, assuming nothing mucks up the process.

It probably won’t be that easy for all borrowers, but for the plain vanilla W-2 borrower with one or two bank accounts working the same job for several years, these two reports could get them pretty far along in the process.

Throw in an appraisal waiver and you’ve got a mortgage in a week, if not days.

Assuming the pilot goes well, this new feature should be available to all Fannie Mae customers sometime in 2018.

Source: thetruthaboutmortgage.com

Posted in: Mortgage News, Renting Tagged: 2, About, All, applying for a mortgage, Appraisal, asset, assets, average, Bank, bank account, bank accounts, big, borrowers, brokers, city, company, Consumers, Convenience, cost, couple, Credit, credit history, Credit Report, data, Delinquencies, deposit, Desktop Underwriter, Digital, Direct Deposit, employer, Employment, Fannie Mae, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, first, fraud, future, getting a mortgage, history, in, Income, investment, items, job, lake, lenders, loan, Loans, LOWER, Make, making, Mistakes, More, Mortgage, mortgage delinquencies, mortgage lender, mortgage lenders, Mortgage News, MORTGAGE RATE, Mortgages, new, new technology, offers, or, paperwork, pilot, pretty, questions, rate, read, retirement, returns, right, Salt Lake City, savings, second, single, tax, tax returns, Technology, time, Transaction, Underwriting, united, United Wholesale Mortgage, UWM, W-2, waiver, will, working
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