Private mortgage insurers have launched a number of initiatives to help lenders comply with the qualified-mortgage rule that took effect Jan. 10. The rule issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau puts new emphasis on capping debt-to-income ratios at 43 percent except for agency mortgages and limiting points and fees to 3 percent. Radian has announced 45-minute webinars discussing how QM impacts mortgage insurance as well as new, lower pricing for borrower-paid MI. The firms Loan Amount Estimator enables lenders that are capping their debt-to-income ratios at 43 percent to calculate maximum loan amounts and sale prices based on the MI product selected. In addition, the tool can be used for non-MI loans and is available through the MIs rate finder application, Radian Rates. United Guarantys QMI product allows...
The nations three largest funders of home mortgages Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America this week reported hefty declines in originations during the fourth quarter of 2013. Wells originated $50 billion in residential mortgages during the fourth quarter, a stunning 60 percent decline from the same period a year earlier. The last time this perennial market leader had fundings this low was in the fourth quarter of 2008 when financial markets were reeling worldwide and the U.S. housing market was in the throes of an historic collapse. But Wells closest competitors fared...[Includes one data chart]
Inside Mortgage Finance recently revised its product mix estimates to reflect a larger volume of home-equity loans originated during the first nine months of 2013. We also made...[Includes one data chart]
Mortgage lenders large and small have indicated they plan to stay away from making mortgages that do not fit into either the safe harbor or the rebuttable presumption QM boxes.
According to the banks fourth quarter earnings statement, 68 percent of its originations were refis the mirror image of Wells Fargo, which had 68 percent of its production in purchase-money loans.
The FHFA IG audit estimates that some 9.5 percent of claims for pre-foreclosure property inspections in 2011 and 2012 resulted in $5 million of overpayments by Fannie Mae.
It may be time for the mortgage industry to take a chill-pill: applications are on the rise again, rates have stabilized and some firms are actually hiring loan officers.