1 / 15

Mortgage Market Update: Impact of Washington

Mortgage Market Update: Impact of Washington. Brian Chappelle Potomac Partners. Overview. Washington affects the mortgage business in three ways: Regulations Access to credit C onsumer protection Enforcement New Entrant: CFPB Role of government in housing

fathi
Télécharger la présentation

Mortgage Market Update: Impact of Washington

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mortgage Market Update:Impact of Washington Brian Chappelle Potomac Partners

  2. Overview • Washington affects the mortgage business in three ways: • Regulations • Access to credit • Consumer protection • Enforcement • New Entrant: CFPB • Role of government in housing • What will be impact of its improving financial condition?

  3. Introduction • Current Washington environment • Plays to strength of lenders that know how to follow rules • Emphasis on infrastructure • Knowledge and customer service are even more important today • What It Means: • You can’t flick a switch and be a lender/originator • Preapproval process will continue to be critical

  4. Current Environment: Reasons for Optimism • WSJ headline: “Home Sales Power Optimism” • Home prices are rising/delinquencies have peaked • Press coverage more favorable • Government is worried about “access to credit” • Policymakers appear to understand • CFPB Director Cordray: Credit is “achingly tight” • President’s State of the Union Address • “too many families with solid credit who want to buy a home are being rejected”

  5. What has been the impact? • Fed Governor Duke’s recent speeches – • Purchase mortgages “hit their lowest level since the early 1990s” • Borrowers w/ credit scores between 620 & 680 have fallen 90% since 2007 • Borrowers under 40 are 50% of early 2000s • Cash transactions – now 30% • Private sector has returned to the housing market, just not to the mortgage market • Some in Washington “understand” that policies can have unintended consequences

  6. 1) Regulations: Overview • Government “sees” two fundamental missions • Ensure “access to credit” • New rules (Ability to Repay in particular) recognized this issue • Optimism about upcoming rules • Qualified Residential Mortgage • Protect the consumer from abusive practices • Loan originator compensation • Ability to repay rule • 3% cap on fees • NAR is supporting a legislative solution

  7. 2) Enforcement • Good News: • Mortgage repurchase/indemnification risk appears to be subsiding • Government has made positive “overtures” in recognition of “access to credit” issue • Penalty should fit the crime • Challenges: • Department of Justice/Inspector General investigations

  8. Systemic violation is key concern • Systemic violations • Procedural errors lead to significant penalties • Servicing Settlements – • Fed/State AGs - $25 billion for 5 banks • Fed/OCC - $8.5 billion • Increased costs of servicing • FHA settlements: Approaching $1 billion • Failure to self-report errors • Costs are more than financial • Reputation/”headline risk” • Market “costs” • Everyone is worried they could be “next”

  9. New Entrant: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) • CFPB is examining nonbanks • New experience for nonbanks • Waiting for first round of findings • CFPB also oversees enforcement of mortgage laws • Recent RESPA enforcement action

  10. CFPB Enforcement Action: Joint Venture • Facts: Builder & lender formed a mortgage brokerage • The joint venture did not advertise to the public. • There was no origination business outside of referrals of the builder. • The lender conducted all of the processing, underwriting and closing functions for the joint venture. • All origination activities of the joint venture were performed by a single employee of the lender . • The joint venture had no office space.  

  11. 3) Role of Government in Housing • “Heavyweight” debate was expected this year • Both R & D’s want to reduce gov’t role • NAR is taking a leading role • Good news: Improving market conditions • Home prices are increasing • CoreLogic = 12.2% Year over Year – May 2013 • Lower defaults and foreclosures • Better financial performance of Fannie/Freddie • GSE reform still unlikely until market stabilizes • Will time heal wounds? • FHA appears to be the immediate “target”

  12. FHA: It is all about its finances • FY 2012 Actuarial Review • Projects how portfolio (as of September 30th – 7.7 million loans) will perform over next 30 years • Based on credit quality & performance to date • Relies on estimates about home prices & other factors • Estimated FHA has negative value of $13.48B • Administration’s Budget updated estimate of FHA’s economic value in April 2013 • $17 billion improvement in the forward mortgage program • Projected to have $4.3 billion after paying claims • Reverse program is the problem

  13. FHA Performance Data Keeps Getting Better • Portfolio improvement is encouraging • Total delinquency rate (14.46%) has improved 364 bps (20%) from peak in December 2009 • Total DQ rate has improved 226 bps this year • Seriously delinquent (S/D) rate (8.45%) has improved 147 bps from its peak in January 2012 • S/D rate has improved 95 bps this year • 30 & 60 day rates have also improved

  14. What will Congress do? • Congress has held five hearings • Expect House to pass “tough” bill • FHA critics want to reduce FHA’s role • Mortgage limits • Downpayments • Borrower restrictions: • First-time homebuyers • Income restrictions • Impact of FHA’s improving performance & market conditions?

  15. Summary • Economy & housing numbers continue to improve • Positive environment for housing • Washington issues • Government “appreciates” connection between more rules & less loans to families that need help • What will government do to address “access to credit” issue? • Knowledge & customer service remain critical • Plays to strength of lenders that know how to follow rules • Pre-approval process continues to be critical

More Related