Fannie Mae Guidelines To Change December 13, 2010 | The Mortgage Reports

 

Fannie Mae Guidelines To Change December 13, 2010 : Here’s A “Cheat Sheet” To The Changes

Posted on November 9, 2010
Filed under Conforming Mortgage Guidelines

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New Fannie Mae Guidelines December 13, 2010

Fannie Mae is changing its mortgage guidelines.

Starting shortly before the New Year, home buyers and would-be refinancers may find it harder — or easier! — to get conforming-mortgage approved.

It depends on your personal credit profile.

Mortgage Guidelines Are Changing

Conforming mortgages are loans that, literally, conform to the lending standards set forth by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Often called "guidelines", the standards are the series of checklists that stand between a mortgage applicant, and his loan approval.

Conforming mortgage guidelines include things like maximum loan-to-value limits, and minimum credit score requirements, and they tend to change over time. Through the first 9 months of this year, for example, Fannie Mae issued 13 such updates.

Most guideline changes deal in the esoteric and, as such, have had limited impact on the borrower class as a whole.

This December’s changes, however, are "mainstream".

What’s New With The Guidelines : A "Cheat Sheet"

Effective December 13, 2010, Fannie Mae adds new bumps to the lending landscape, and takes others down.

Guidelines are changing across 9 separate areas of the mortgage approval process. Collectively, the updates figure to impact nearly everyone in want of a conforming home loan. They run the gamut from income and assets to documentation and reporting.

A few of the more major changes:

  • The 97% "Flexible Mortgage" is eliminated, replaced by a standard 97% loan subject to loan-level pricing adjustments
  • Borrower "minimum contributions" are eliminated for 1-unit purchases with at least 3% down. Gifts and grants are permissible sources for a downpayment.
  • All revolving debt must be included in debt-to-income ratios, regardless of whether there’s "10 Payments Or Less". If there’s debt, it must be counted.
  • A 5% monthly payment against the balance must be assumed when no minimum monthly payment can be verified via the creditor, or the credit bureaus.

Furthermore, the new guidelines contain a note that former homeowners with a foreclosure on record must wait 7 years before re-applying for a conforming mortgage.

The Looming December 13, 2010 Deadline

In 9 short weeks, Fannie Mae rolls out its changes.  For buyers with little or no money of their own, the looser gifting guidelines will be a boon. For others who carry car payments or student loans, the tighter debt requirements may lead to turndown.

Overall, Fannie’s new guidelines favor personal income over personal assets; it’s not what you have, it’s what you earn. A re-focus like this threatens self-employed persons and others with "good accountants".

Starting December 13, 2010, all mortgage approvals will be subject to the new guidelines.

Before the guidelines change, talk to a loan officer. Or, if you don’t have one, click here to send me an email. I answer all my own emails and love to hear from my readers.

Courtesy of Dan Green @ TheDailyMortgageReports.com

Fannie Mae Guidelines To Change December 13, 2010 | The Mortgage Reports

Appraisal Meltdown: Local builder experiences low appraisal on New Construction sale

Last week, a major regional builder experienced an appraisal evaluation for a property they just completed construction on and was prepared to close. The buyer and the builder had come to terms on a sales price near $400,000 before construction began.  The evaluation report generated by a local appraiser came back under the agreed upon sale price. In a panic, the lender for the buyer, the agent for the buyer, the buyers themselves as well as representatives for the builder began to scramble on how to address the current circumstance.

To further explain the details, the home was located in a community specific to this regional builder.  There had been numerous other sales in that community over the past 9 months, however, none of the sales were near the agreed purchase price of the property in question. The buyers had obtained financing from a large regional bank here in Cincinnati, and had been approved for a 20% down conventional style loan package offering an amazing interest rate with zero PMI. The buyer and seller had come to terms 6 months ago, and through the selection process the buyers added upwards of $13,000 to the original purchase price of $386,000. All parties were made aware and committed in writing of this price adjustment before construction was underway. During the construction period, a preliminary appraisal was ordered which is a common occurrence for a new construction home. The appraisal was done noting a sale price of $386,000 and months later the final appraisal was ordered noting  line items of upgrades the buyers selected at their selection meeting months before. The preliminary appraisal was submitted at a value of $386,000 then weeks prior to closing, what can be considered a final appraisal was ordered. To admit neglect, the appraiser did not receive the notice of final appraisal  weeks prior to closing.  The reason for this was explained to us as the appraiser had turned off his notifications from the 3rd party company working between the lender and appraiser. Upon notification that the final appraisal was needed the appraiser explained “there are zero comps to build a value of $398,465 within the area; it can’t be done.”  This opened the door of total chaos. The buyers were devastated and lost as to what to do.  Both the lender and builder’s representatives were shocked that a new construction home did not appraise for the agreed upon sales price. I was torn as well, having closed several new construction properties over the past 18 months and having no appraisal issues to note. In my experience, however, I knew the proper ways to approach such a scenario having dealt with this 3 times over the past year on resale properties.

My first stop was with the lender to immediately inquire about options, policy and procedures in handling this from the perspective of my client’s loan package. While those wheels were turning, conversations with comforting my clients began. They were on the exact other side of this scenario while selling their home this past spring. Realizing the stress people put on themselves during the process of building a home, my focus was still on their future:  keeping them focused on what a beautiful home they built and how amazing it will be the day they unlock the front door for the first time.  Then we had to discuss our approach.

During the discussion with my clients, I also started note sharing with the builder’s representatives, making certain the line of communication was wide open. My focus with the builder was simple, “We don’t care who is to blame here; we just want a solution.”  There were a few I thought of right away. The seller could provide comps in the community that could submitted to the appraiser for review with data to support the purchase terms. The builder was unable to provide this because there was none to provide. I did my homework, studied each home sale in comparison only to discover the subject property was the biggest and best the community had constructed and completed since early 2008. Supplying comps was out, so the other solution was to order a new appraisal, however, the lender killed that by noting the loan package didn’t allow for that option. So here we were looking at a home that appraised for $13,000 less than the sales price with seemingly nowhere to go.

My buyers had the funds to cover 20% of $398,465 as months of planning put them in that position.  However with a lower appraisal, it put the loan to value ratio at a different position, placing PMI back into the conversation. My clients were not able to swallow PMI; in fact they were against even furthering those discussions. So we were now looking at the $13,000 in upgrades my clients had selected to be installed in the home as being the difference and deal breaker in this closing.

Late in the night on Thursday–12 hours from closing–the builder’s representatives and I had at-length conversations, discussing positioning for solutions. The builder made me aware that several channels of people needed to review the on-hand documentation, appraisal and purchase contract included. I was told after over an hour of deliberation, that mid-morning on Friday would be the earliest time to continue our negotiations.

Mid-morning Friday, my negotiations with the builder started again. This time they took the stern position of “this is not our problem and we are not budging.”  I was really taken aback, by no means is this my client’s problem either.  I knew the appraisal was a direct opinion of the value of the home, the home the builder owned.  It was made known to me that the lender had discussed options to close the loan with the appraisal we had, and instructions on how was delivered to the builder. At this time, the builder knew the financial status of my clients, taking nearly every bit of leverage away.  The buyers just wanted to close with the loan package they had prepared for and sales price to which they had agreed.  That was not going to be the case.

Friday afternoon my negotiations hit a fevered pitch.  I was strong and precise at painting the picture to the builder.  “What are you going to do with this $13,000?”  My clients don’t have an extra $13,000 to bring to closing–which is exactly what the builder demanded. If they want the house, they must pay us what we agreed to. I went on to ask “what would you do if your buyer didn’t have the $13,000 to bring?”  This is the response I got, “we would send your buyers a default letter.  That letter would explain we would be keeping the $19,000 they put down in earnest money and then we would put house up for sale.” As unreal and unfair as that all sounds, that was exactly what they were going to do with the beautiful home my clients built IF the sale price of $398,465 was not provided in full.

My clients were devastated that the builder they chose was being so demanding with a situation my clients didn’t cause.  Offering no peace of mind, no security, no direction; rather, they would be setting demands, holding a defensive position, not taking any responsibility and pushing my clients to a very emotional state of mind.  Our lender in the process then raised a hand at being helpful, introducing a new loan package which required some upfront cost to remove PMI from the package which we were able to negotiate the builder to pay. The explanation of the loan package really made me wonder what really goes on behind the scenes at regional lending institutions.  It was described the numbers would work; the system would be blind to the missing $13,000 for the appraisal, all because my clients had 20% of the higher number to put down. Even with the lower than sales price appraisal, the down payment was somehow turned around sideways and then placed on paper to look like nothing had changed. Believe this story or not, that is exactly what happened, the loan was re-disclosed, GFE was generated and closing took place without manipulating the contract or loan package.

The fact that is still evident here is this,  my clients now know they built a home with a well-known builder in our region and came to terms on value when the opinion of fair market value is $13,000  less than what they actually paid for it. This asks the question, how healthy is new construction right now?  Are builders overbuilding?  Are buyers overspending?  Are appraisers overlooking?  And finally, are lenders overstepping the bounds that good faith lending has created?

My clients felt let down by their builder, bruised by the financial system, torn by the current events of the real estate world.  I recall my buyer asking me, “Do you deal with this everyday in your career?” and of course, “sometimes, some days, certain situations put me in a position to negotiate with or without leverage for my clients.”  I realize that moments like these are the reasons why I have become so good at helping people. My clients needed solutions, and the solutions I had in this case, the builder chose not to see them as acceptable.

 We worked smart to establish communication, deliver and draft solutions, and finally 3 business days later, my clients go the keys to their new home. I created positive thoughts to the final outcome, however the steps to get there are moments I don’t choose to give energy too. This circumstance only grew worse based on the techniques and delivery of the parties involved. We couldn’t control the circumstance, but you can control how you handle it!

The lastest Fannie Mae fallout- FIRST HAND!

Last last week several large financial institutions put on delay on up coming foreclosure actions, the details for reason can be viewed here in an article from the Washington Post. The article states “To be certain affidavits have followed the correct procedures, Bank of America will delay the process in order to amend all affidavits in foreclosure cases that have not yet gone to judgment,” spokesman Dan Frahm said in a statement. However I found out first hand this is affecting MORE then just foreclosures that have not yet gone to judgement.

3 weeks ago a client of mine drafted an offer to Fannie ”JP Morgan Chase” a bank that also put on this hold, and had it acceptedwith a closing date of next Thursday October 14th. The filing of foreclosure on the property took place in March of 2010 and was filed at the Hamilton County auditors office around the 20th of that same month. The foreclosure had already gone to judgement, then on Tuesday I receive an email from the sellers Fannie May via JP Moran Chase’s representatives that the close was on hold and needed to be extended until March 2011! My client, who was financing the purchase had locked in to an amazing interest rates and was beside themselves at what to do. The seller offered a full refund of the 5% down fee that collected on the contract agreement day and was in full understanding if the buyer wanted to walk away.

At this point I started to get down to business, not to focus on the problem but to uncover the solution!! I started by calling the County to make certain the title had been file, and recorded property and it was. I then called the title company assigned by the seller Fannie Mae via JP Morgan Chase. The closing coordinator assigned to our case was at a complete gasp, she had also be notified a the hold late in the day on Monday. She explain 45 pending closing on her desk had been put on hold, I respond ”shew only 45 that sounds like a lot”, she then said “NO not only 45, 4500!” I couldn’t believe it, the title company is exclusive to cases in Ohio for Fannie Mae and all there foreclosed upon PENDING sale contract cases had been put on hold. My next call was to the listing agent, a well-known REO agent in our area who specializes in this type of transaction. He himself is difficult to get a hold of and not 10 mins after I left a message he called me direct, in a frantic vibration. He described to me the issue, all his business was on HOLD, he explain I can’t close a thing, he said “most will close within 60 days that are already pending, but some it will be upwards of 6 months”. He told me this all came down between start of business Monday Oct 5th and mid day Oct 6th. Talk about losing your income for half a year.

I stayed positive and my final call went to my beloved title attorney here in Cincinnati. The man who has the right thing to say about any situation related to real estate. Like always when I call him, I explained my situation in detail, I explained what my research had uncovered. He described to me the directions he had been given about the situation “We were told it only affects future foreclosure, this is new to me”, keep in mind this is a real estate TITLE attorney who owns his own title agency. This news was fresh and still his, but what really caught me off guard what the advice he gave me to solve the problem “Kris, I apologize but you are helpless, there is no solution”.

And so we wait…..

Market Update: Interest Rates

*4.25%                

30 Year Fixed Rate                         

Normal Closing costs

 

*4.50%                

30 Year Fixed Rate                         

$500 Closing Cost Special

 

 

*3.125%              

5 Year ARM                       

Normal Closing Costs

 

*3.75%                

15 Year Fixed Rate                         

Normal Closing costs

 

*4.0%            

15 Year Fixed Rate                         

$500 Closing Cost Special

 

*4.375%

FHA/VA 30 Year Fixed

0 Points

 

Other loan programs available. Please call for details.

 

*The above  interest rates are based on 80% LTV and a 30 day lock. $250 and $500 closing costs are based on loan amounts above $125,000. Loan amounts below $125,000 are subject to be slightly higher in closing costs. The rates are for conforming loan amounts up to $417,000 owner occupied. The interest rates are subject to change based on market conditions and are subject to credit approval, credit scores and underwriting. Full Documentation required. . The interest rates above 80% LTV can be different based on the CLTV, credit scores, and loan programs. Please call me for more details. 1st National Bank is an equal housing lender. For Realtor/Builder use only.  Loan programs and loan guidelines are subject to change without notice. Restrictions apply. The low closing cost interest rates are based on using specific title companies. If another title company is used, closing costs can be higher.10-1-2010           

     

 

TR Wise

Sales Manager

1st National Bank

7451 Mason-Montgomery Road

Mason, Ohio 45040

Office/Cell

(513) 238-0999Fax             

(513) 672-0479

Published in: on October 4, 2010 at 09:22  Leave a Comment  

FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums UPDATE

 

The new FHA MORTGAGE INSURANCE PREMIUMS go into effect for CASE NUMBERS
assigned on or after 10/4/10

NOW is the time to contact your potential FHA buyers & clients (especially
those possible FHA streamline refinances) and get word out. If they want a
choice of options, they need to get a purchase contract and/or a loan
application in NOW. The new MIP has merits in that it will be a lesser loan
amount financed and therefore less loan to pay off when people sell their
house. However, it causes a HIGHER PITI payment that may not be appealing
to people.

Current upfront mortgage insurance premium – 2.25 bps ~ On or after
10/4/2010 – 1.00 bps ~ LOWER!

Current monthly MIP – .55 bps ~ On or after 10/4/10 – .90 on LTV’s > 95%
~ HIGHER!

Take a look at the attached analysis here: FHA_Premium_Changes_Analysis[1] to see the significant difference this
change will make on a $150,000 purchase price. You will notice the lower
UMIP will mean an $1800 lower loan amount. But, the much higher monthly MIP
would increase the monthly payment $32! This is going to have an impact on
borrowers and their financing options. Call or email me with questions! We
are closing FHA loans in 30 days!

Courtesy of Kathy Lamb Union Saving Bank

Market Update: Interest Rates

*4.25%

30 Year Fixed Rate

Normal Closing costs

*4.375%

30 Year Fixed Rate

$500 Closing Cost Special

*3.25%

5 Year ARM

Normal Closing Costs

*3.75%

15 Year Fixed Rate

Normal Closing costs

*3.875%

15 Year Fixed Rate

$500 Closing Cost Special

*4.25%

FHA/VA 30 Year Fixed

0 Points

Other loan programs available. Please call for details

TR Wise

Sales Manager

1st National Bank

7451 Mason-Montgomery Road

Mason, Ohio 45040

Office/Cell (513) 238-0999

Fax (513) 672-0479

Published in: on September 4, 2010 at 12:22  Leave a Comment  
Tags:

Wells Fargo Ranks First in Commercial Mortgage Servicing, Bankers Report

 

Wells Fargo Ranks First in Commercial Mortgage Servicing, Bankers Report

Aug 24, 2010 10:06 AM, By NREI Staff

 

Wells Fargo tops the list of the nation’s commercial mortgage servicers at midyear, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Wells Fargo recorded $462.8 billion in U.S. master and primary servicing volume through June 30.

PNC Real Estate/Midland Loan Services reported the second-highest volume, $307.9 billion, while Berkadia Commercial Mortgage registered $202.6 billion, followed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch with $133.4 billion and KeyBank Real Estate Capital, $124.7 billion, according to the MBA.

The totals include multifamily master and primary servicing as well as other commercial property types.

A primary servicer is generally responsible for collecting loan payments from borrowers, performing property inspections and other property-related activities. A master servicer is typically responsible for collecting cash and data from primary servicers and then providing that cash and data, through trustees, to investors.

Wells Fargo, PNC/Midland, Berkadia, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and KeyBank are the largest master and primary servicers of commercial, including multifamily, loans in U.S. commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and other asset-backed securities, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

GEMSA Loan Services, PNC/Midland, Prudential Asset Resources, Northwestern Mutual, and NorthMarq Capital are the largest servicers for life companies. PNC/Midland, Wells Fargo/Wachovia Bank, Deutsche Bank, Berkadia and Prudential are the largest Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac servicers.

PNC/Midland ranks as the top master and primary servicer of commercial bank and savings institution loans; GEMSA the top credit company, pension funds, REITs, and investment funds servicer; PNC/Midland the top FHA and Ginnie Mae servicer; Wells Fargo the top for mortgages in warehouse facilities; and Berkadia the top for other investor type loans.

The Mortgage Bankers Association also asked firms to provide information about CMBS loans on which they are the "named special servicer," where the firm stands ready to service the loan should special problems develop, such as delinquency. The leading named special servicers were LNR Partners, Inc., CWCapital LLC & CWCapital Asset Management, C-III Asset Management LLC, PNC/Midland and Berkadia.

The survey also collected servicing volumes for loans on commercial properties located outside the United States. Hatfield Philips International ranks as the largest master and primary servicer of non-U.S. commercial/multifamily mortgages, followed by, Deutsche Bank, PNC/Midland, GEMSA and Situs Asset Management.

Wells Fargo Ranks First in Commercial Mortgage Servicing, Bankers Report

Bankrate: Loan Closing Costs Jump 36.6% Year-Over-Year

 

Bankrate: Loan Closing Costs Jump 36.6% Year-Over-Year

by CHRISTINE RICCIARDI

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010, 11:45 am

The average origination and third-party fees on a $200,000 mortgage increased 36.6% to $3,741 from last year’s average of $2,739, according to Bankrate‘s annual mortgage fee survey. Lender origination fees increased to $1,463, or 22.8%, in 2010 from $1,192 in 2009, while the average total third-party fees rose 47.2%, to $2,277 from the year-ago average of $1,547.

Bankrate suggests one reason for this jump in cost is the government requirement for lenders to provide accurate good faith estimates (GFEs) of closing costs. GFEs give a borrower an idea of how much the loan will cost to close and, until this year, were non-binding. This means that the lender could provide an inaccurate or lower statement to the borrower without being penalized. Since May, however, lenders are penalized for undershooting a GFE.

Another cause of closing cost inflation, suggests Bankrate, is the increased cost of labor lenders go through to comply with tighter underwriting standards and background checks.

"Just to do one loan is time-consuming now, with all the compliance and paperwork," Chik Quintans, mortgage planner for Atlas Mortgage, told Bankrate. "Labor is a true cost."

HousingWire reported in late June that mortgage brokers made an average $1,135 on each mortgage originated in 2009, up 272% from 2008 ($305), according to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).

New York and Texas maintain the most expensive closing costs nationally. Four out the the past five years, the two states have occupied the top two spots on the survey. Last year results were reversed, Texas in first followed by New York.

Utah, California and Alaska complete the top five most expensive states for mortgage fees while Wisconsin, Montana, Iowa, North Carolina and Arkansas came in at the lowest cost (in descending order).

Bankrate is a web-based financial rate aggregation firm. The company’s survey takes numbers from online GFEs as well as origination fees charged by lenders and by third-parties. The survey excludes property taxes, recording fees, homeowners insurance and prepaid items such as a partial month’s mortgage interest.

Write to Christine Ricciardi.

Bankrate: Loan Closing Costs Jump 36.6% Year-Over-Year « HousingWire

New Tools Improve Valuations, Appraisal Institute Reports

 

New Tools Improve Valuations, Appraisal Institute Reports

Aug 16, 2010 12:17 PM, By NREI Staff

The future of commercial real estate valuation will be shaped by innovative technology, according to reports published by the Appraisal Institute, an organization of professional real estate appraisers.

The valuation profession can make the transition from a data-poor discipline to a data-rich one by adapting the tools of “predictive analytics” used in other industries, according to "Visual Valuation: Implementing Valuation Modeling and Geographic Information Solutions.”

Edited by Mark Linne, with Michelle Thompson, the book features 15 chapters by experts who provide practical discussions on how to use GIS and modeling technology in valuations. It includes case studies by academicians who apply technology to solve problems in housing, resource management and other areas.

The valuation scenarios presented in the book range from approachable to complex, as contributors discuss valuation modeling and GIS while addressing the concerns of more sophisticated users already comfortable with the technology’s practical applications.

New Tools Improve Valuations, Appraisal Institute Reports

Mortgage Rate Update! Major opportunity!

don’t think any of us would have ever thought all mortgage rates would be
at or under 4.5%! Just to highlight a few of the rates you will see on the
attached Rate Sheet … These are good for PURCHASES and on REFINANCES
where there is no 2nd mortgage to subordinate. Call or email me for
details!

4.5% – 0 Points – 30 YR FIXED

4.5% – 0 Points – 20 YR FIXED

4.0% – 0 Points – 15 YR FIXED

(Closing costs as low as $250 Refinance / $500 Purchase)

4.25% – FHA 30 YR FIXED

Published in: on August 14, 2010 at 11:48  Leave a Comment  
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