Most of the mortgage industrys modest increase in origination volume during the second quarter came through lenders retail production programs, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance ranking and analysis. Retail loan originations rose 9.2 percent to an estimated $250.0 billion during the second quarter, That represented a record 61.7 percent of the markets total output for the period, the highest retail share since Inside Mortgage Finance began analyzing origination channel trends. Most of the top lenders reported increased retail production at a time when many but certainly not all were scaling down their wholesale operations. Total wholesale originations declined...[Includes four data charts]
A number of nonbanks have increased their correspondent originations recently with plans to take more market share as the big banks focus on retail lending. Redwood Trust, PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust, Homeward Residential and others have all touted their recent correspondent efforts, both for agency mortgages and non-agency originations. Since 2010, Redwood has used its conduit platform to supply...
A mortgage marketing program with a money-back guarantee sounds too good to be true, but participating lenders that reported more than 400 percent return-on-investment can probably attest it is no scam. Mortgage Returns, a provider of customer relationship management and marketing solutions, reported that 35 lenders in its Guaranteed Marketing program averaged a 426 percent ROI after using it. The program revolves around the companys Five-Touch mortgage refinance campaign. Launched in May, the program generated...
The cost to close on a mortgage has dropped seven percent to an average $3,754 in the past year, according to the eighth annual closing costs survey from Bankrate.com. Title insurance and other third-party fees fell 12 percent from last years levels, while origination fees dipped a slight one percent. This is the second year in which lenders are required...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been feeling the heat over the size of its proposed rule to streamline and integrate the disclosures consumers get when taking out a home loan, so agency officials engaged in a little bit of push-back last week in an effort to fend off the criticism. The push-back started early in the week during a hearing of the House Small Business Committee, during which Rep. Scott Tipton, R-CO, took issue with the rulemakings size that exceeded 1,000 pages in draft form, a fraction of which is new...
A handful of mortgage lending industry trade groups have written the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau with several recommendations to help the bureau avoid unintended consequences in its upcoming rulemaking on mortgage‐loan originator compensation, as per the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. To begin with, the American Bankers Association, the American Financial Services Association, the Consumer Mortgage Coalition and the Independent Community Bankers of America encouraged the CFPB to...
U.S. Sens. Roy Blunt, R-MO, Jerry Moran, R-KS and Mark Begich, D-AK, wrote Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Richard Cordray late last week, urging the regulator to include a broad definition of qualified mortgage and a true legal safe harbor for conforming loans in the bureaus forthcoming ability-to-repay rules. These rules will have a dramatic impact on the mortgage market, and if drafted too narrowly could severely restrict access to mortgage credit, the trio wrote. To prevent these unintended consequences...
Refinancing borrowers with negative equity through the FHA Short Refinance Program would result in $24,000 in net benefits per refinanced loan, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development. In its economic impact analysis, HUD said it expects the program to generate $24.5 billion of aggregate net benefits, assuming one million homeowners with underwater mortgages participated in 2011 through 2013. However, the benefits come with a cost and the process is not that easy. The enhanced FHA refinance program is intended to maintain affordable homeownership, prevent foreclosures and mitigate the potential for strategic defaults. The program drew attention in recent weeks ...
The FHA could be the vehicle of a new refinancing plan offered by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-OR, to help homeowners who owe more on their mortgage than their homes are now worth. In a proposal called The 4 Percent Mortgage: Rebuilding American Homeownership, Merkley explained that his plan will not require taxpayer dollars but would rely on proceeds from the sale of government bonds to investors for funding. The aim, Merkley said, is give underwater homeowners the chance to ...
A bad bank entity for pooling and standardized restructuring and resecuritization of underwater mortgages may be the best bet for the housing market to pull itself out of the negative equity quagmire of the last several years, according to a proposal by a Georgetown University law professor. In his white paper Clearing the Mortgage Market Through Principal Reduction: A Bad Bank for Housing RTC 2.0 Adam Levitin makes the case that the best option for clearing the market lies via negotiated, quasi-voluntary principal reduction using a privately funded Resolution Trust Corporation-style entity. Such an RTC 2.0 would provide a framework for implementing quasi-voluntary principal reductions in the context of litigation or regulatory settlement or the federal governments exercise of its secondary market power to exclude...