KB Home's Shares Hit New High on Continuing Boom
Posted To: Pipeline Press
On the heels of the State of the Union address, the MBA has issued its annual State of the Mortgage Industry release, and the assessment is generally positive . The consensus was that states hit hardest by the housing crisis will continue to deal with the aftermath but that 2012 should see some degree of recovery. The MBA pointed to a number of recent upticks. Upheavals in the single family market have actually helped the multi-family market, for one. The rental market has seen some very positive activity, as more lenders, many of them life insurance companies, have moved into the sector. Of course, the residential market and refinancing remain thorns in the industry's side. MBA President and CEO Dave Stevens attributes the dearth of financing to market uncertainty, which has been aggravated...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
MBS Live : MBS RECAP Open MBS Live Dashboard FNMA 3.5 103-15 : +0-06 FNMA 4.0 105-09 : +0-04 FNMA 4.5 106-19 : +0-04 FNMA 5.0 107-31 : +0-05 GNMA 3.5 105-00 : +0-06 GNMA 4.0 107-22 : +0-06 GNMA 4.5 109-05 : +0-07 GNMA 5.0 110-31 : +0-10 FHLMC 3.5 103-06 : +0-06 FHLMC 4.0 104-29 : +0-02 FHLMC 4.5 106-04 : +0-04 FHLMC 5.0 107-22 : +0-04 Pricing as of 4:04 PM EST Afternoon Market Updates A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBS Live Dashboard . 2:09PM : ALERT: MBS Stable Into Afternoon. Positive Reprice Potential Increasing As we said earlier in the day, lenders are normally more conservative with positive reprices around the MBS Settlement cycle, not to mention the same is also true for Friday afternoons. So all we can really say is that the shape of...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Ben S. Bernanke , speaking to the National Association of Home Builders, said that the typical post-recession behavior of the housing market , resurging to help fuel reemployment and rising incomes, has not played out this time and housing remains a key impediment to a recovery. The chairman reviewed the current state of the housing market, telling the builders of a major imbalance between supply and demand with 1-2/4 million homes currently unoccupied and for sale and 2 million more in the foreclosure process. At the same time, factors are constraining demand such as a decline in household formation, high unemployment and uncertain job prospects, and wariness about home ownership as an investment. The availability of credit is another constraint. This imbalance...(
read more)

Posted To: Mortgage Rate Watch
With yesterday's increases, Mortgages Rates moved to the edge of their recently long and stable stay at a 3.875% Best-Execution level. While some lenders are still best-priced at 4.0%, the average Best-Execution rate moved back down into 3.875% territory today. Keep in mind that "best-execution" refers to the most ideal possible rate/fee scenario and we track this because it's the most consistent way to benchmark the movement of the broader collection of lender rate offerings. (We explain even more about Best-Execution calculations in THIS POST ). The same thing that has been moving markets and mortgage rates around all week, is once again behind today's general bounce back. Early this morning, one of the leaders of a political party in Greece said that his party could not back the bailout...(
read more)

Posted To: Secondary Markets
The latest hot issue in the mortgage markets has been the 10
basis point addition to G-fees mandated by the payroll tax cut passed late last
year. Unfortunately, the media has only
recently picked up on the fact that this “tax cut” was financed by a hidden tax
on mortgages. However, since neither
Congress nor the President know much about mortgages, details on how this tax
would be imposed were not included in the bill.
The legislation did not state, for example, whether the 10 basis point
g-fee surcharge was considered part of the guaranty fee or a separate add-on to
the loan’s rate.
Read: Tax Cut Extension Now Officially Raising Mortgage Rates
This ambiguity created a number of issues for lenders. Most servicing contracts specify that the
total amount of interest either bought up or down with the GSEs cannot exceed a
fixed sum, i.e., 37.5 basis points (which is fairly standard language). If the total g-fee (including the surcharge)
is increased by 10 basis points, the amount of excess servicing that can be
“bought up” is thus reduced by the same 10 bps.
While buy-ups used to be relatively rare (since Freddie and Fannie both
assign putrid multiples to the cash flow), the lack of ready buyers for
servicing means that another avenue for selling excess servicing has been
rendered uneconomical.
The additional fee also has played havoc with loan
pricing. As I understand it, the GSEs’g-fee
buy-down multiple (i.e., what they will charge to convert the g-fee into a
single payment paid when the loan is pooled) is around 6x. This means that the 10 bp surcharge is worth
around 60 basis points in price (or 0.6% of a loan’s face value). The uncertainty surrounding the surcharge also
threatened to disrupt pooling practices.
To this point, there has been no guidance on whether the entire g-fee
(including the surcharge) actually can be bought down. If it couldn’t, that would mean that 30-year
3.75% loans could not be securitized into agency 3.5% pools, the lowest coupon
with good liquidity and well-behaved pricing.
If these loans can only be pooled into Fannie or Gold 3s, this could
severely disrupt both the MBS market and loan pricing. (As I discuss later, heavy originator selling
will in turn increase the points required for lenders to offer these loans—or,
more simply, make it more expensive for borrowers to obtain low rates.)
I’ve been told that both Freddie and Fannie will have a call
today (Friday, 2/10) to clarify the treatment of the surcharge. As I understand it, the surcharge will be
treated as part of the g-fee, meaning that it can be bought down entirely. This will allow 3.75% loans to be pooled in
3.5% pools; while it will be relatively expensive to buy down the entire g-fee,
it does give lenders the option of either pooling down (into 3s) and holding/selling
the servicing, or pooling into 3.5s by buying down the g-fee.
This in turn raises the interesting and important issue of
how the lower coupons are trading. There
is decent liquidity in 15yr 2.5s, with average monthly issuance of 585mm over
the last three months. However, the
market for 30-year conventional 3s remains relatively illiquid, although
production seems to be ramping up; according to Fannie Mae, roughly 230mm 3%
pools have been created thus far in February.
While the overall price performance of Fannie 3s is better than it has
been in the past (when prices could move up or down by a half-point or more on
minimal volume), the dollar rolls remain pretty volatile. A decent origination day will push prices in
the back months (April and May) sharply lower, while front months (February and
March) remain roughly in line with other coupons, duration-adjusted. This week, for example, saw the March/April
roll (i.e., the price difference between March and April) for Fannie 3s as wide
as 30/32s (equal to a financing rate of -7%); the roll is now 21/64s (for a
more moderate -0.71%).
There is a complex interactive relationship between a
security’s price performance and issuance.
A coupon won’t perform well if its outstanding balance remains small; a
small tradeable “float” means that prices can get pushed around on very limited
volume. However, no originators will
issue pools for securities with erratic performance. The biggest factor inhibiting the growth of
the market for 30-year 3s is the belief that there is no natural clientele for
the security. Its coupon is too low, and
its duration too long, for banks and depositories; insurance companies and
pension funds that would buy their long average lives and durations need higher
returns on their portfolios. In my mind,
the only natural holder is the government (or, more to the point, the
Fed). A program to purchase 30-year 3s
(and 15-year 2.5s, to a lesser extent) would be the most direct way for the government
to positively influence the mortgage markets.
...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
MBS Live : MBS MID-DAY Open MBS Live Dashboard FNMA 3.5 103-17 : +0-07 FNMA 4.0 105-10 : +0-04 FNMA 4.5 106-19 : +0-04 FNMA 5.0 107-29 : +0-03 GNMA 3.5 105-02 : +0-08 GNMA 4.0 107-23 : +0-07 GNMA 4.5 109-04 : +0-06 GNMA 5.0 110-28 : +0-06 FHLMC 3.5 103-08 : +0-08 FHLMC 4.0 104-30 : +0-03 FHLMC 4.5 106-03 : +0-03 FHLMC 5.0 107-19 : +0-01 Pricing as of 11:03 AM EST Morning Market Updates A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBS Live Dashboard . 10:35AM : ALERT: Bond Markets Doing Their Best To Hold Overnight Gains Things have been fairly calm so far this morning, especially considering the raft of overnight and early morning headlines indicating that one of Greece's political party leaders will not vote to approve the bailout package. 10yr yields...(
read more)

Posted To: Pipeline Press
"Fat, drunk & stupid is no way to go through life son." One probably doesn't hear that admonishment much in the halls of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which finalized regulations that require non-bank residential mortgage lenders and originators to establish anti-money laundering (AML) programs and file suspicious activity reports (SARs) , as FinCEN requires of other types of financial institutions. Law firm Ballard Spahr was quick to set up a free webinar for its attorneys to explain the new requirements and discuss the steps non-bank residential mortgage lenders and originators must take now to comply with the new requirements. Mortgage banks, who now have this new regulatory worry on their plate, may want to have someone sit in next Thursday (2/16) from 12-1 EST...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
How many times must we go through the same motions surrounding the various bailout/solvency/reform issues in Greece? Granted, things are just slightly different each time, but the aspects of "seemingly urgent decisions required" as well as "certain deadlines needing to be hit" or else face the consequences of "almost certain Greek default and probable exit from the Eurozone" feel like they've been present in each iteration of the broader situation that we refer to as "Greek Drama." After all the sturm and drang of the most recent installment of Greece bailout drama, and even after several Eurozone officials said today in several different ways that said drama was resolved, we now have several other Eurozone officials saying that, while the drama is resolved, it actually, possibly, maybe isn...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
MBS Live : MBS RECAP Open MBS Live Dashboard FNMA 3.5 103-22 : -0-05 FNMA 4.0 105-13 : -0-08 FNMA 4.5 106-19 : -0-07 FNMA 5.0 107-30 : -0-04 GNMA 3.5 105-02 : -0-06 GNMA 4.0 107-24 : -0-07 GNMA 4.5 109-03 : -0-06 GNMA 5.0 110-28 : -0-04 FHLMC 3.5 103-13 : -0-06 FHLMC 4.0 105-00 : -0-07 FHLMC 4.5 106-03 : -0-06 FHLMC 5.0 107-27 : +0-02 Pricing as of 4:02 PM EST Afternoon Market Updates A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBS Live Dashboard . 2:06PM : ALERT: Treasuries, MBS Attempting to Turn a Corner Following 30yr Auction Volume surged briefly following the 1pm 30yr Bond Auction, but has since died down. In the process, Treasury yields and MBS prices experienced a bit of volatility, but that now seems to be resolving itself in a favorable manner....(
read more)

Posted To: Mortgage Rate Watch
Mortgages Rates moved higher today at the quickest pace of the week. For the second time this year, the 3.875% Best-Execution rate on 30yr Fixed Conventional loans is in question. If rates move much higher from here, the average Best-Execution rate across multiple lenders will have risen back to 4.0% and for quite a few lenders, is already there. (We explain more about Best-Execution calculations in THIS POST ). Today got started off on a sour note for rates with the late night news that Greece was very close to finalizing the terms of their most recent bailout. This isn't some surprising game-changer, but has done enough damage to bond markets, which tend to offer lower interest rates in times of economic uncertainty. As a successful bailout relieves some uncertainty, rates generally moved...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
Loretta E. Lynch, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York announced the settlement of claims her office had brought against Bank of America, Countrywide Financial Corporations and some of its affiliates for underwriting and origination mortgage fraud. The settlement ends an inquiry into whether Countrywide, acquired by Bank of Boston in 2008, had knowingly made loans insured by FHA to unqualified home buyers. The settlement, in the amount of $1 billion requires an immediate payment of $500 million to correct some of the harm done to FHA by Countrywide's conduct. The remaining $500 million will be deferred to fund a loan modification program for borrowers across the nation with Countrywide mortgages that are under water. If, after the expiration of three years, the bank has not applied...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
Latest Alert From MBS Live: Treasuries, MBS Attempting to Turn a Corner Following 30yr Auction - 2:06PM Volume surged briefly following the 1pm 30yr Bond Auction, but has since died down. In the process, Treasury yields and MBS prices experienced a bit of volatility, but that now seems to be resolving itself in a favorable manner. Fannie 3.5 MBS are down only 4 ticks on the day at 103-23, and 10yr yields are down to 2.045 after being as high as the 2.07's before the auction. New and meaningful headlines out of Europe have slowed to a trickle and there are no other major decisions or announcements scheduled to be made today. Several officials are on record as saying that the Greek bailout agreement is a done deal but other officials note that nothing official will be announced today. Whether...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
As prices continued to decline during the fourth quarter of 2011 in most metropolitan areas of the U.S., housing affordability rose due not only to the lower prices but also because of record low interest rates . The National Association of Realtors® released its Housing Affordability Index (HAI) including a new annual metro-level housing affordability index which shows historically favorable conditions dominating across the country. The median price of an existing single-family home rose in 29 out of 149 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) in the fourth quarter compared to the fourth quarter of 2010. Prices were unchanged in two MSAs and fell in 118. The national median existing home price was $163,500 in the fourth quarter compared to $170,600 one year earlier, a decrease of 4.2 percent...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
A final settlement between the nation's five largest mortgage servicers , two federal agencies and 49 of the states' attorneys general (AGs) was announced this morning by officials representing the AGs, the Departments of Justice (DOJ) and Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The settlement, the result of a 16 month nationwide investigation into foreclosure abuses, fraud, and unacceptable mortgage servicing practices is, as anticipated, for $25 billion dollars but there was no information released as to which state was not participating in the action. Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Company, Citibank, and Ally Financial, (formerly GMAC) and their servicing subsidiaries have agreed to commit a minimum of $17 billion directly to borrowers through a series of relief...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
MBS Live : MBS MID-DAY Open MBS Live Dashboard FNMA 3.5 103-18 : -0-09 FNMA 4.0 105-14 : -0-07 FNMA 4.5 106-20 : -0-06 FNMA 5.0 108-00 : -0-02 GNMA 3.5 105-02 : -0-06 GNMA 4.0 107-25 : -0-06 GNMA 4.5 109-03 : -0-06 GNMA 5.0 110-30 : -0-01 FHLMC 3.5 103-10 : -0-09 FHLMC 4.0 104-31 : -0-08 FHLMC 4.5 106-03 : -0-06 FHLMC 5.0 107-27 : +0-01 Pricing as of 11:04 AM EST Morning Market Updates A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBS Live Dashboard . 10:05AM : ECON: Wholesale Inventories and Sales, Rise More Than Expected The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that December 2011 sales of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations and trading-day differences but not for price changes, were...(
read more)

Posted To: Pipeline Press
Top Realtors and loan officers know that words make a difference in dealing with buyers and borrowers. It may seem obvious, but word choice, be it in advertising or client relations, has a big influence on what customers think about any given organization. Take, for example, the statement that "we can get you more loan business, trust us." The reader is highly unlikely to do so; in fact, he or she would likely be rather suspicious. The phrase "trust us" is a "negative transfer phrase"; that is, it elicits a psychological response that is the opposite of its intention. However, if told to "imagine if we can show you how to generate enough loan growth to not only meet your budget, but easily surpass it," the customer would be both interested to hear the solution and inclined to, yes, trust that...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
" House lock " is not a major factor when it comes to a homeowner's ability to find a job. A working paper commissioned by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston found that, while many Americans lack mobility because their homes are "underwater" in respect to their mortgages, this is only a marginal contributing factor to continued unemployment. Migration across states and among homeowners has fallen sharply at the same time as a widespread drop in housing prices has resulted in wide-spread negative home equity. According to CoreLogic, 10.7 million homes, 22.1 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage, were worth less than their mortgages at the end of the third quarter of 2011 and an additional 2.4 million borrowers had less than 5 percent equity. The nation's unemployment rate has...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE As it turns out, the reason we’d heard about the meeting of Greek officials and the troika starting earlier in the day yestersday while never hearing anything else before domestic markets closed, was that the closed door meeting was going on the entire time. Even though the portion of the meeting with the heads of Greece’s political parties concluded shortly after 5pm (EDT), Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said that additional issues needed to be worked on immediately so a deal could be reached ahead of Thursdays Eurogroup meeting. EU/IMF Officials weren’t seen emerging from his office until 10:50pm, almost 6 hours later. Here are a few of the relevant Reuters wires ranging from 5pm-11pm: · RTRS - GREEK PARTY CHIEFS' MEETING...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
MBS Live : MBS RECAP Open MBS Live Dashboard FNMA 3.5 103-28 : +0-04 FNMA 4.0 105-21 : +0-02 FNMA 4.5 106-25 : +0-01 FNMA 5.0 108-01 : +0-01 GNMA 3.5 105-08 : +0-02 GNMA 4.0 107-32 : +0-03 GNMA 4.5 109-09 : +0-03 GNMA 5.0 110-31 : +0-02 FHLMC 3.5 103-18 : +0-05 FHLMC 4.0 105-07 : +0-01 FHLMC 4.5 106-08 : +0-02 FHLMC 5.0 107-24 : +0-03 Pricing as of 4:04 PM EST Afternoon Market Updates A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBS Live Dashboard . 1:28PM : ALERT: Limited Reaction to Good-But-Not-Great 10yr Auction Bond markets have reacted in a generally positive way to today's 10yr note auction. The high-yield awarded was 1.1 bps lower than "when-issued" yields just before the release (this is bond-market friendly as it means that yields were...(
read more)

Posted To: Mortgage Rate Watch
For several sessions in a row, Mortgages Rates have moved in the opposite direction from the previous session, although even the bigger examples of these movements haven't been enough to nudge 3.875% out of the "best-execution" position. The same back-and-forth movement continued today as rates improved ever so slightly after rising slightly yesterday. Keep in mind, that the term "rates" in this context refers to the combination of the interest rate itself and the closing/borrowing costs required to obtain that rate. We explain more about Best-Execution calculations in THIS POST . Also in the same vein as yesterday, today's market movement began in reaction to headlines surrounding Greece's ongoing negotiations with creditors (the 3 official creditors, the ECB, IMF, and European Commission...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
For several sessions in a row, Mortgages Rates have moved in the opposite direction from the previous session, although even the bigger examples of these movements haven't been enough to nudge 3.875% out of the "best-execution" position. The same back-and-forth movement continued today as rates improved ever so slightly after rising slightly yesterday. Keep in mind, that the term "rates" in this context refers to the combination of the interest rate itself and the closing/borrowing costs required to obtain that rate. We explain more about Best-Execution calculations in THIS POST . Also in the same vein as yesterday, today's market movement began in reaction to headlines surrounding Greece's ongoing negotiations with creditors (the 3 official creditors, the ECB, IMF, and European Commission...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
One of the financial institutions that are party to the reported settlement agreement with the attorneys general of the majority of the states is reportedly on the auction block. According to Bloomberg News, Ally Financial is talking with private equity firms about selling its mortgage unit, Residential Capital LCC , through a pre-package bankruptcy. Any sale of the company would be complicated by its recent financial history. The company was founded as General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC) in 1919 by General Motors as an intermediary to provide financing for the purchase of its autos. Over the years it expanded into other types of lending and into real estate brokerage and adopted the acronym as its brand name. GMAC was hard hit by the housing crash and was one of the beneficiaries...(
read more)

Posted To: MBS Commentary
After the 10yr auction, production MBS and the long end of the yield curve didn't move much at first. But it now seems that some additional bid for the 10yr was on hold until after the Fed's Scheduled selling that ended at 2pm. As that was wrapping up, 10's made another move lower in yield to test the the pivot point just over 1.96% that can be seen in the chart below. First, here's the full text of the MBS Live alert that went out after the auction: Limited Reaction to Good-But-Not-Great 10yr Auction (1:28PM) Bond markets have reacted in a generally positive way to today's 10yr note auction. The high-yield awarded was 1.1 bps lower than "when-issued" yields just before the release (this is bond-market friendly as it means that yields were slightly lower than the street was expecting) and the...(
read more)

Posted To: MND NewsWire
According to CoreLogic, the Santa Ana California based provider of information and business services, there were a total of 830,000 foreclosures nationwide in 2011 compared to 1.1 million in 2010. The most recent monthly numbers, for December 2011, were down from foreclosures both a month earlier and in December 2010. There were 55,000 foreclosures during the month of December, a drop of 2,000 from the November total and a significant decrease from a year earlier when there were 67,000, a -15 percent change. According to CoreLogic, there have been approximately 3.2 million foreclosures since the beginning of the financial crisis in September 2008. The foreclosure inventory - the stock of homes in the process of foreclosure - also decreased on an annual and accelerating basis. There were 1.4...(
read more)

Posted To: Pipeline Press
What, exactly, qualifies a person as "rich"? It depends who you are - here in the States the wealth of the top 1% is about 225 times greater than that of the typical family, compared to 125 times in 1962, and the cumulative wealth of the Forbes 400 was $1.54 trillion, equal to worth of the bottom half of American families . Household net worth has been falling, and a recent Gallup poll states that the median income to be considered "rich" is $150,000 a year, up from the $120,000 that qualified a person as rich in 2003. Amongst different demographics, however, what makes one "rich" is relative. About 15% of respondents said it would take $1 million a year or more to fall into that category, but three in 10 say that they'd qualify as prosperous even pulling in less than six figures. About half...(
read more)
