Friday, August 29, 2014

Minority Borrowers

Minority borrowers will exceed 50% of all mortgage borrowers in the next 10 years, according to Mark Fogarty, Editor At Large, at National Mortgage News.  I had dinner with Mark last week and he shared several statistical analysis’ that support his supposition.  Mark also believes that the minority market, defined cumulatively as Blacks, Hispanics and Asians, will be primarily an entry level market.  Mark advocates a lowering of lending criteria to best serve this emerging borrower segment of the home buying public. He cites a conflict of agenda’s between the Executive Office calling for expanded lending practices and the Federal regulatory agencies tightening credit criteria, as well as failing to adequately explain penalty triggers in their new regulations that can be very costly to Lenders if inadvertently misapplied.  I agree with Mark that we are currently in a “catch 22”.  We need to step up our communication with our legislators through avenues like the MBA’s Mortgage Action Alliance and make our voice heard.

I started in this business way before FICO scores and Automated Underwriting Systems.  I long for the days when my Underwriter and  I would pull out the FHA 4155 or the Fannie Mae Guide and make a credit decision.  For the days that our decision was honored by those who purchased our loans and for the days that my risk of penalty and repurchase was limited to my or the borrower committing fraud.  Now I am being second guessed by AUS systems and live and die by FICO scores. In this mandated environment, I am subject to buy backs, fines and penalties at the whim of the investor and/or an untold number of federal agencies.  I am fully ready to expand my minority lending.  I know how to do it.  I am a Hispanic American, for crying out loud. And I will, just as soon as I see some sanity and consistency come back into the mortgage landscape.  

Thursday, August 28, 2014

National Mortgage News & Frost Mortgage Win Mortgage Finance Authority Awards

The New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority recently held its biennial New Mexico Housing Summit in Albuquerque.  The National Mortgage News was honored with the Media Partner award for its coverage on affordable housing in New Mexico.  This was the fourth award the National Mortgage News has won for its coverage on affordable housing in the last two years.  Congratulations NMN!

At the same awards ceremony, which the National Mortgage News also happened to cover, they wrote this:

"Frost Mortgage Group in Albuquerque, N.M., won the MFA's Lender of the Year award for closing more than 200 MFA mortgages last year, the most of any lender in the state. Its president, Greg Frost Sr., who accepted the award, is a well-known national top originator and mortgage trainer."

I am honored to have received this award on behalf of Frost Mortgage.  Helping New Mexico's citizens across the spectrum of borrowers achieve their dream of owning a home is a joy and pleasure.

Read the full NMN article here

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Regulated Loan Docs Are Growing Out Of Control!

I just reviewed a loan package and counted 238 printed pages stuck in a bulging manila file folder. I admit that 97 pages were tax returns but the remaining 141 pages were standard  loan application, addendums/borrower documentation/verification and disclosure forms for a VA, self-employed borrower loan. And all the while I thought that we were now in a paperless lending environment.  In ’72, when I took my first loan application, I recall 9 pieces of paper in a loan file and 1 of them was the 2 sided, long legal appraisal. Are we nuts?  Do the regulatory agencies really think that the Borrowers are any better “informed” today than they were back in ’72?

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Fee Mistakes And "Right To Cure"

The big QM question about creating a method of curing fee mistakes, that exceed the allowable maximum, under QM regulations, is coming to the table.  The Mortgage Bankers Association and American Bankers Association have jointly asked the CFPB to allow a little more time for input, discussion and compromise.  Lenders have high hopes that they will come away with a regulation allowing a 180 day “right to cure” from the time the over charge is identified via any number of audits.

Currently, there is no method of curing such mistakes.  Lenders are now required, by regulation, to re-purchase the mortgage and re-originate it in a conforming manner. This is a draconian way to handle, what could be as little as a $150 miscalculation in closing costs.  The ability to cure would be fair to the consumer as well as limit borrowing costs, which would surely rise, as a hedge against the certainty of mortgage buybacks.  The right to cure will be a fair and equitable economic response that is more in line with the spirit of the regulation. 

Monday, August 25, 2014

Military Personnel Not Utilizing VA Financing

There are over 14m Vets and active duty military personnel who have not taken advantage of VA financing. VA notes changes on the horizon that could change that.  In an effort to overcome hesitancies by Realtors, Builders and Mortgage Originators to promote/accept the VA product on their transactions, the Veterans Administration is responding by:

1) Stepping up Appraiser approval processes to overcome appraisal time delays.  More VA appraisers are being approved every month.

2) The VA will soon offer guidelines clarifying negotiable fees to the seller, an area long criticized by the real estate community as non- competitive, by making sellers bear a substantial list of closing costs that are normally negotiable.

3) Increased communication to the real estate and mortgage industries allowing input from the marketplace in an effort to increase utilization of the product. VA is pledging much more back and forth dialogue.

The VA insured a record 629,300 mortgages in 2013.  $20m VA guarantees were issued in the first quarter of 2014.  As the consumer costs rise at Fannie, Freddie and FHA, there is an opportunity for the VA product to become more competitive and more utilized.

Friday, August 22, 2014

FHFA and G Fees

The Federal Housing Finance Administration (FHFA) extended its deadline for industry comments on G fees that are charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac  on loans sold to them.  The MBA and 19 other trade associations, including Homebuilders, Realtors, The National Urban League, National Housing Resource Center etc., have presented their comments and calculations showing how many buyer/borrowers are excluded from home ownership because of the record high fees currently being charged, as well as their, proposed increases.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

G Fee Increase

Are you aware that the President saddled new home buyers with a ½ point G fee increase last year, to run for 10 years, in order to cover Treasury revenue shortfalls during the government shutdown? He discovered this brand new “G fee honey bucket” and now wants to dip into it, once again.  He plans for homebuyers to provide extra funds to the Treasury, via increased G fee charges, that will only be paid by those who buy or refinance a home with a FNMAE/FHLMC loan until 2023.  Didn't our forefathers go to war with England because of “taxation w/o representation”.  Were you ever asked if you were willing to pay an extra $1000 a year on your $200,000 FNMAE/FHLMC loan for this purpose?  You realize that this extra government funding will only be collected from, and paid by, those who obtain a FNMAE/FHLMC home loan until 2023.  That’s a very small % of total “citizens”, and a very large % of those that the President and his team keep telling us they are trying to protect, with all their new mortgage regulations, who will affected.  Those citizens, who do not purchase a home with a FNMAE/FHLMC loan between now and 2023, won’t be paying for any of it.  So, the government is doing all it can, via new mortgage regulations, to “protect” the citizen/borrower, but first, let’s charge them more for their mortgage loan.  More than ever before.