ECONOMY - OCTOBER 24, 2011
Home Lending Revamp Planned 
New Rules Aim to Speed Refinancing
Federal  regulators on Monday plan to unveil a major overhaul of an under-used  mortgage-refinance program designed to help millions of Americans whose  home values have tumbled.
The  plan is the latest White House effort to deal with one of the most  critical impediments to economic recovery—a stagnant housing market  caused in part by a surfeit of homeowners who are unable to refinance.
The  overhaul will, among other things, let borrowers refinance regardless  of how far their homes have fallen in value, eliminating previous limits.  That could open up refinancing to legions of borrowers in Nevada,  Arizona, Florida, California and elsewhere who are paying high interest  rates and are deeply "underwater," owing more than their houses are  worth. President Barack Obama is expected to tout the program in Las  Vegas on Monday. 
The  plan will streamline the refinance process by eliminating appraisals  and extensive underwriting requirements for most borrowers, as long as  homeowners are current on their mortgage payments, according to  administration officials and an official at the Federal Housing Finance  Agency. Fannie and Freddie have also agreed to waive some fees that made  refinancing less attractive for some.
The  revamp is aimed at homeowners like Christine and Hector Penunuri of  Gilbert, Ariz., who have never missed a mortgage payment and who both  have jobs and good credit. Yet their application to refinance their  five-bedroom home, which has fallen in value, was denied earlier this  year because their tax returns showed a $1,000 loss in start-up costs  from Mr. Penunuri's business, which isn't even his day job.
It's  "absurd," says their mortgage broker, Steve Walsh of Scottsdale,  because the loan is already guaranteed by government-backed mortgage  company Freddie Mac.
The  Penunuris could save $350 a month by refinancing to a 4% rate from  their current 5.75%. They would use that money to put their two sons  into junior sports, take a family vacation and pay off other debts, says  Ms. Penunuri, 41 years old. "It's a win-win situation." 
Freddie  Mac declined to comment on the rejection of the Penunuris' earlier  refinancing. Freddie Mac and sister company Fannie Mae together  guarantee roughly half of the nation's $10.4 trillion in home loans  outstanding.
Christine Penunuri, at her home in Gilbert, Ariz., and her husband have never missed a 
mortgage payment and have jobs and good credit, but have been unsuccessful in refinancing their loan.
Regulators  are revamping a program rolled out two years ago, the Home Affordable  Refinance Program, or HARP, which lets borrowers with less than 20% in  equity refinance if their loans are backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.  President Obama announced HARP roughly one month into his presidency.  So far, only 894,000 borrowers have used it, of which just 70,000 are  significantly underwater. 
Officials  at the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates Fannie and  Freddie, estimate that between 800,000 and one million more borrowers  should be able to refinance. "It's in our interest to have these  borrowers refinance into lower rates and continue to pay," said an FHFA  official.
Monday's  refinance announcement is separate from a recent push by state  attorneys general to extract concessions from banks to refinance  underwater mortgages. That effort, part of the months-long negotiations  to settle alleged foreclosure-processing abuses, would apply only to  loans held on the books of five of the nation's largest banks, a much  smaller subset of loans.
In  past downturns, lower interest rates engineered by the Federal Reserve  were a powerful antidote for a sluggish economy. Falling mortgage rates  triggered a refinancing wave that lowered homeowners' mortgage payments,  freeing up cash for other things. That, in turn, helped to stimulate  spending that boosted economic growth.
This  time around, falling mortgage rates—now averaging just 4.11% for a  30-year fixed-rate mortgage, according to a Freddie Mac survey—haven't  packed the usual oomph. The reason: Many homeowners haven't been able to  refinance.
Where Refinancing Should Be Happening
While many borrowers with government-backed loans could reduce their rates by refinancing.
Because  a refinanced mortgage is treated like a brand new loan, refinancing is  nearly impossible for another eight million borrowers whose homes are  worth less than their mortgages, unless they qualify for HARP. 
But  what about those who still have equity in their homes? Some have  blemishes on their credit and employment histories or don't have enough  income to qualify under today's tougher lending standards. Some find  refinancing isn't worthwhile after factoring in new fees imposed by  Fannie and Freddie or other closing costs. Still others can't get a  refinancing application through a clogged mortgage-processing system. 
That's  a big obstacle to a stronger economy. Goldman Sachs economists estimate  that if current borrowers with a 30-year fixed-rate loan backed by  Fannie or Freddie were to refinance, they would save $24 billion  annually. Researchers at Columbia Business School estimate that the  benefits would accrue primarily to working- and middle-class borrowers  with mortgages below $200,000.
Refinancing Rethink
Key  points of the overhaul, designed to make refinancing easier for people  with mortgages backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie—about half the nation's  $10.4 trillion in outstanding home loans:
The  changes should help borrowers like Carol Gesior, who has two underwater  mortgages, backed by Freddie Mac, on suburban Chicago properties she  bought for siblings. She says she tried to refinance but her bank,  Citigroup Inc., told her she couldn't without equity. She was unaware of  HARP. If she could refinance both properties, she says she would  replace her 1995 Ford Crown Victoria. 
"I  made a commitment. I signed an agreement to pay. But I didn't do  anything to cause the values of these homes to decrease," says Ms.  Gesior, 52, an office manager at an investment management firm. "Any  logical person would have walked away already." 
A  Citi spokesman says the company is "happy to work with this client to  explore refinancing options that may be available to her."
One  problem is that bankers or other mortgage originators shy away from  refinancing all but the safest borrowers because Fannie and Freddie can  force a lender to buy back a loan if underwriting flaws emerge. In  response, lenders are asking for extra documentation of incomes and  scrutinizing appraisals, steps that raise costs and lead to more denials.
Another  obstacle is new fees that Fannie and Freddie charge borrowers with  less-than-perfect credit, even if the borrower's existing mortgage is  guaranteed by Fannie or Freddie. 
The  changes being prepared by federal officials should boost refinancing  because they will let banks avoid the risk of any "buy-back" on a HARP  mortgage as long as borrowers have made their last six mortgage payments  and they prove that they have a job or another source of passive  income. They are also set to reduce loan fees that Fannie and Freddie  charge. The fees will be waived on borrowers that refinance into loans  with shorter terms, such as a 15-year mortgage.
Pricing  details won't be published until mid-November, and lenders could begin  refinancing loans under the retooled program as soon as Dec. 1,  according to federal officials. Loans that exceed the current limit of  125% of the property's value won't be able to participate until early  next year. The program's expiration date, originally next June, will be  extended through 2013. HARP is only open to loans that Fannie and  Freddie guaranteed as of June 2009.
Mr.  Walsh, the Scottsdale broker, says such changes could lead him to hire  "a ton" of new loan officers. "I have a line out the door of people who  want to refinance under that program and can't," he says.
Refinancing  can't fix the biggest problems eating at the housing market. Tight  lending standards and high volumes of foreclosed-property sales are  putting pressure on home prices at a time when demand is weak,  potentially creating more underwater borrowers.
But  refinancing could help those borrowers repair their balance sheets and  guard against future defaults. If lenders and regulators successfully  execute the changes, they could be "amazingly powerful," said  mortgage-market pioneer Lewis Ranieri. "It'll start to create the  confidence which is largely what's keeping the system from going  forward."
The  changes could spur an additional 1.6 million refinanced loans by the  end of 2013, assuming interest rates don't rise sharply, according to  Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.
For  the very safest homeowners, falling mortgage rates have been a bonanza.  Some have become serial refinancers. Jim Wozniak locked in a 3.88% rate  for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages for his primary residence in  Brookfield, Wis., and his lakefront home in nearby Hartland late last  month. Replacing 4.25% loans, he will save $2,700 annually.
"This  is probably my third time in three years," says Mr. Wozniak, a  54-year-old investment adviser who says he has an excellent credit score  and lots of equity in both properties.
For  others, the hurdles are insurmountable. Appraisals are a big one. When  an appraisal shows that a property has too little equity, lenders  sometimes order a second appraisal. "You get into these appraisal wars,  often at the borrowers' expense," says Marietta Rodriguez, the national  director for home-ownership and lending at NeighborWorks America, a  nonprofit housing group. 
Steven  Eisner, a 59-year-old attorney in Haddonfield, N.J., says he expected  to sail through the process when he tried to refinance last month  because he has good credit and strong income. Instead, he was startled  to find that the appraisal on his vacation condo in Bonita Springs,  Fla., came in so low he would have needed to ante up $52,000.
He  put 25% down when he bought it four years ago. But, because of sagging  home prices, his equity has declined to just 10% of the property's  value. Refinancing "is simply not worth the trouble," says Mr. Eisner,  whose mortgage is guaranteed by Fannie.
Not  everyone benefits from encouraging more refinancing, of course. Banks  and investors in mortgage-backed securities—including Fannie and Freddie  and the Federal Reserve—stand to lose billions if performing loans pay  off, leaving investors with cash to reinvest at today's lower rates. 
"Somebody's  going to get hit. This isn't a free good," says Anthony Sanders, a  real-estate finance professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va.
That  doesn't faze Mr. Eisner. "We've certainly done enough to prop the banks  up," he says. "These are loans that everyone knew could prepay."
The  success of any refinance push rests not only on whether policy makers  can untangle a Gordian knot of technical hurdles, but also on whether  they can get buy-in from private-sector players. One major obstacle to  refinancing is that the mortgage industry has shrunk. Four big banks now  control more than 60% of the mortgage market. Many originators,  including the biggest banks, have cut staff or shifted loan underwriters  into units working through piles of delinquent mortgages. 
New  rules designed to prevent independent mortgage brokers—who originate  loans on behalf of a bank or other lender—from fleecing consumers have  made it harder for them to compete with bigger lenders that aren't  subject to the same rules. For example, new compensation rules make it  less attractive for brokers to originate smaller or more complicated  loans.
The  reduced competition has led to longer processing times and higher  prices for consumers. When their borrowing costs fall, banks aren't  necessarily reducing the rates they charge borrowers by the same amount.  Banks with big market share "know they can get away with it," says  Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist in Leesburg, Va. "The  market's just not as competitive as it once was."
Industry  executives dispute the notion that the market isn't competitive but  concede that the industry wasn't ready to handle a surge in applications  after rates dropped two months ago. 
"Capacity  constraints" will be temporary because lenders are hiring more staff,  but "in the short run, there's no question that's a challenge," says  David Stevens, the chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association.  Lenders are going "through a lot more checks and balances simply to get a  loan approved safely and soundly."
Some  spurned borrowers aren't giving up. Barb Skaer, 70, of Appleton, Wis.,  and her husband wanted to refinance a $402,000 mortgage on a second home  that appraised at $547,000 two years ago. She says they have strong  credit scores and own part of a manufacturing business that makes bobby  pins and hair clips.
Ms.  Skaer says their bank, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., quoted a 4% rate.  But she says her loan officer told her she and her husband wouldn't  qualify for a new loan because their income from their factory business  declined the past two years. A J.P. Morgan spokesman declined to  comment.
Ms. Skaer says they are appealing the decision at their bank and may go elsewhere if that doesn't work. 
"Our  theory is that if we can afford [the current payment of] $2,189 per  month, we should be able to afford $200 less by refinancing," says Ms.  Skaer. "This makes absolutely no sense to us, and we are not taking 'no'  for an answer." 
Copyright 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
 
No comments:
Post a Comment