Fake News and Mortgage Rates

March 26, 2020  – (6 minute read)

For years the media has been misinforming the public on mortgage rates. They continually state that the rates are controlled by the Federal Reserve.  And they continue to beat the drum of FAKE NEWS as I watched this mornings business news shows like CNBC.  Read on and learn how this market really works and its effect on mortgage interest rates.

Mortgage Crisis & Fed Unintended Consequences  

The Coronavirus Meltdown

The current Coronavirus crisis is having a critical impact on the Mortgage Industry, which could potentially make the 2008 financial crisis pale in comparison. The pressing issue centers around capital that’s required by Mortgage Lenders to be able to function and meet covenants that are required for them to continue to lend.

Here’s How the Mortgage Market Works

Let’s begin with the mortgage process. A borrower goes to a Mortgage Originator to obtain a mortgage. Once closed, the loan is handled by a Servicer, which may or may not be the same company that originated the loan. The borrower submits payments to the Servicer, however, the Servicer does not own the loan, they are simply maintaining the loan. This means collecting payments and forwarding them to the investor, paying taxes and insurance, answering questions, etc. While they maintain or “service” the loan, the asset itself is sold to an aggregator or directly to a government agency like Fannie Mae (FNMA), Freddie Mac (FHLMC), or Ginnie Mae (GNMA). The loan then gets placed inside a large bundle, which is put in the hands of an Investment Banker. That Investment Banker converts those loans into a Mortgage Backed Security (MBS) that can be sold to the public. This shows up in different investments like Mutual Funds, Insurance Plans, and Retirement Accounts.

The Servicer’s role is very critical. In order to obtain the right to service loans, the Servicer will typically pay 1% of the loan amount up front. The Servicer then receives a monthly payment or “strip” equal to about 30 basis points (bp) per year. Because they paid about 1% to obtain the servicing rights and receive roughly 30bp in annual income, the breakeven period is approximately 3 years. The longer that loan remains on the books, the more money that Servicer makes. In many cases, the Servicer might want to use leverage to increase their level of income. Therefore, they may often finance half of the cost of acquiring the loan and pay the rest in cash.

Servicing runoff, or even the anticipation of it, can adversely impact the market valuation of a servicing portfolio.

Servicer Dilemma

As you can imagine, when interest rates drop dramatically, there is an increased incentive for many people to refinance their loans more rapidly. This causes the loans that a Servicer had on their books to pay off sooner…often before that 3-year breakeven period. This servicing runoff creates losses for that Mortgage Lender who is servicing the loan. The more loans in a Mortgage Lender’s portfolio, the greater the loss. Servicing runoff, or even the anticipation of it, can adversely impact the market valuation of a servicing portfolio. But at the same time, Lenders typically experience an increase in new loan activity because of the decline in interest rates. This gives them additional income to help overcome the losses in their servicing portfolio.

But the Coronavirus has caused a virtual shutdown of the US economy, which has created an unprecedented amount of job losses. This adds a new risk to the servicer because borrowers may have difficulty paying their mortgage in a timely manner. And although the Servicer does not own the asset, they have the responsibility to make the payment to the investor, even if they have not yet received it from the borrower. Under normal circumstances, the Servicer has plenty of cushion to account for this. But an extreme level of delinquency puts the Servicer in an unmanageable position.

I’m From the Government and I’m Here to Help

In the Government’s effort to help those who have lost their jobs because of the Coronavirus shutdown, they have granted forbearance of mortgage payments for affected individuals. This presents an enormous obstacle for Servicers who are obligated to forward the mortgage payment to the investor, even though they have not yet received it. Fortunately, there is a new facility set up to help Mortgage Servicers bridge the gap to the investor. However, it is unclear as to how long it will take for Servicers to access this facility.

But what has not been yet contemplated is the fact that a borrower who does not make their very first mortgage payment causes that loan to be ineligible to be sold to an investor. This means that the Servicer must hold onto the asset itself, which ties up their available credit. And with so many new loans being originated of late, the amount of transactions that will not qualify for sale is significant. This restricts the Lender’s ability to clear their pipeline and get reimbursed with cash so they can now fund new transactions.

The Fed’s desire to bring mortgage rates down isn’t just damaging servicing portfolios because of prepayments, it’s also wreaking chaos in Lenders’ ability to hedge their risk.

Mark to Market

This week, due to accelerated prepayments and the uncertainty of repayment, the value of servicing was slashed in half from 1% to 0.5%. This drastic decrease in value prompted margin calls for the many Servicers who financed their acquisition of servicing. Additionally, the decreased value of a Lender’s servicing portfolio reduces the Lender’s overall net worth. Since the amount a Lender can lend is based on a multiple of their net worth, the decrease in value of their servicing portfolio asset, along with the cash paid for margin calls, reduces their capacity to lend.

Unintended Consequences

The Fed’s desire to bring mortgage rates down isn’t just damaging servicing portfolios because of prepayments, it’s also wreaking chaos in Lenders’ ability to hedge their risk. Let’s look at what happens when a borrower locks in their mortgage rate with a Mortgage Lender. Mortgage rates are based on the trading of Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS). As Mortgage Backed Securities rise in price, interest rates improve and move lower. A locked rate on a mortgage is nothing more than a Lender promising to hold an interest rate, for a period of time, or until the transaction closes. The Lender is at risk for any MBS price changes in the marketplace between the time they agreed to grant the lock and the time that the loan closes.

If rates were to rise because MBS prices declined, the Lender would be obligated to buy down the borrower’s mortgage rate to the level they were promised. And since the Lender doesn’t want to be in a position of gambling, they hedge their locked loans by shorting Mortgage Backed Securities. Therefore, should MBS drop in price, causing rates to rise, the Lender’s cost to buy down the borrower’s rate is offset by the Lender’s gains of their short positions in MBS.

Now think about what happens when MBS prices rise or improve, causing mortgage rates to decline. On paper, the Lender should be able to close the mortgage loan at a better price than promised to the borrower, giving the Lender additional profits. However, the Lender’s losses on their short position negate any additional profits from the improvement in MBS pricing. This hedging system works well to deliver the borrower what was promised, while removing market risk from the Lender.

But in an effort to reduce mortgage rates, the Fed has been purchasing an incredible amount of Mortgage Backed Securities, causing their price to rise dramatically and swiftly. This, in turn, causes the Lenders’ hedged short positions of MBS to show huge losses. These losses appear to be offset, on paper, by the potential market gains on the loans that the lender hopes to close in the future. But the Broker Dealer will not wait on the possibility of future loans closing and demands an immediate margin call. The recent amount that these Lenders are paying in margin calls is staggering. They run in the tens of millions of dollars. All this on top of the aforementioned stresses that Lenders are having to endure. So, while the Fed believes they are stimulating lending, their actions are resulting in the exact opposite. The market for Government Loans, Jumbo Loans, and loans that don’t fit ideal parameters, have all but dried up. And many Lenders have no choice but to slow their intake of transactions by throttling mortgage rates higher and by reducing the term that they are willing to guarantee a rate lock.

Furthering the Fed’s unintended consequences was the announcement to cut interest rates on the Fed Funds Rate by 1% to virtually zero. Because the Fed’s communication failed to educate the general public that the Fed Funds Rate is very different than mortgage rates, it prompted borrowers in process to break their locks and try to jump ship to a lower rate. This dramatically increased hedging losses from loans that didn’t end up closing.

It’s been said that the Stock market will do the most damage, to the most people, at the worst time.

Even Stephen King Could Not Have Scripted This

It’s been said that the Stock market will do the most damage, to the most people, at the worst time. And the current mortgage market is experiencing the most perfect storm. Just when volume levels were at the highest in history, servicing runoff at its peak, and pipelines hedged more than ever, the Coronavirus arrived.

Lenders need to clear their pipelines, but social distancing is making it more difficult for transactions to be processed. And those loans that are about to close require that employment be verified. As you can imagine, with millions of individuals losing their jobs, those mortgages are unable to fund, leaving lenders with more hedging losses and no income to offset it.

What Needs to Be Done Now

Fortunately, there are many smart people in the Mortgage Industry who are doing everything they can to navigate through these perilous times. But the Fed and our Government needs to stop making it more difficult. The Fed must temporarily slow MBS purchases to allow pipelines to clear. Lawmakers need to allow for first payment defaults, due to forbearance, to be saleable. And finally, the Fed must more clearly communicate that Mortgage Rates and the Fed Funds Rate are not the same.

We have faith that the effects of the Coronavirus will subside and that things will become more normalized in the upcoming months.

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Source: MBS Hwy

Breaking News -Today Mortgage Rates Dropping

March 21, 2020 8:30am

The Fed announce it will buy Treasuries and Mortgage Backed Securities today.

Mortgage Backed Securities are rallying with the price up 92 basis points this morning to $103.68.

The stock market futures reversed losses and were up as much as 497 points.

If the rally holds, it will result in lower mortgage rates today. Mortgage rate pricing come out between 10am and 11am.

Source: John Sauro

Loan Application Rush Before Income Changes

Many rush to get their loan application in before their income changes.

With the sudden dramatic drop in rates and paychecks taking a hit, it is advised to quickly submit your loan request.  It costs nothing, no commitment necessary and if you choose not to go ahead with it there is no adversary effects on your financial situation.

If you don’t make a move now, qualifying for that great rate may not happen if your income shows a decline.


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Local NY Advisor:
John Sauro
(914) 764-3261
johnsauro@gmail.com

Emergency Fed Rate Cut Sunday Night

U.S. stock-index futures fell sharply Sunday night following the Federal Reserve’s emergency decision to slash interest rates nearly to zero and buy $700 billion in Treasurys and mortgage-backed securities in an effort to quell financial market turmoil sparked by the global coronavirus pandemic.

The benchmark federal fund rate is now at a range of 0 to 0.25 percent, down from a range of 1 to 1.25 percent. The cut essentially brings the nation’s interest rate to zero — something that President Trump has repeatedly pressed for over the past year.

“The Committee expects to maintain this target range until it is confident that the economy has weathered recent events and is on track to achieve its maximum employment and price stability goals,” the Fed said in its Sunday evening statement.

The Fed also said that it will buy at least $500 billion in Treasury securities and $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities over the coming months, a program known as “quantitative easing.”

This may or may not be good for mortgage rates. Contrary to popular belief, historically Fed Rate Curts result in Mortgage rates rising.

Weather ot not the Fed buying $500 billion in Treasury Securities and $200 billion in Mortgage Backed Securities brings Mortgage Rates lower is to be seen. There are many other factors that are in play, such as convesity buying, oil and heavy institutional borrowing on banks.

Stay tuned for another wild ride in the markets.

You can contact John Sauro for more information and consultation.

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John Sauro

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Source: John Sauro President North Atlantic Mortgage Corp. & Fox News

The Fed Rate Cut & Home Loan Rates

The Fed cut rates this week by .50% due to the concerns that the Carona Virus will damage the current vibrant economy.  Contrary to the media hype, historically mortgage rates can actually rise and they did the day after the rate cut.

That’s because mortgage rates are not directly affected by a fed rate cut.

Rather mortgage rates are directly affected by the prices of mortgage bonds, known as the Mortgage Backed Securities Market. Specifically the Fannie mae and Freddie mac bonds. Not the 10 year treasury, as many would have you believe. The 10 year Treasury affects the commercial mortgage backed securities market used for commercial real estate loans, not home loans. Glad I could clear that up.

Mortgage rates dropped because of the stock market turmoil.  When the stock market drops, investors move their stock investments into the bond market this is known as “Flight to Quality”.

Flight to quality is the action of investors moving their capital away from riskier investments to safer ones. Uncertainty in the financial or international markets usually causes this herd-like shift.

Therefore the Price of the bond rises and inversely the rates tied to those bonds drops.

Below is a chart of the Mortgage backed Securities Market showing the rise in bond prices from January 16th to march 6th. An increase of 133 basis points, which results in approximately 50% reduction in mortgage rates.

NY mortgage rates, ny refinance, ny home buyers, ny home purchase, Cash out mortgage,

Once the fears and media hype about the Carona virus subsides, as did with the Swine Flu H1N1 Pandemic in 2009, the financial markets should recover. Especially with the current strong economy and its anybody’s guess when that will happen. 

So I don’t recommend trying to time the bottom on mortgage rates.

Rates are historically very low. many today were not around in 1992, when mortgage rates first fell from their highs of 17% to below 10%.  Yes that’s true, look it up.  Also rates tend to move up faster than they go down, as banks are not eager to pass the saving on to their customers.

My advice; Connect with a experienced Mortgage Professional, typically found not in the banks, but in the mortgage Broker/Lender community.

These professionals specialize only in lending and have access to many different loan programs. I’m going to toot my own horn here.

I have been in the Lending profession since 1991 and seen it all. Many of clients have done multiple loans with me over the years. Take a moment to see what my clients have to say.

Contact me for a Complimentary Consultation and see how much you can save. I’m an analyst, not a salesman.  If I can’t save you money on your refinance or home loan purchase no harm, no foul.

Apply

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Close in as Little as 23 Days!

John Sauro

 

 

Sources: Written by John Sauro North Atlantic Mortgage, Chart MBS Pro.

 

Mortgage Information and questions

Be Prepared When Shopping For A Mortgage

Owning a home requires you to make the most important decisions of your life. With outstanding debt and uncertainty in the real estate market, how do you know your mortgage is efficient.
The more you know about mortgages, the better prepared you’ll be.
The most important tip I can give you, when entering this journey, is to ask advice from a top mortgage broker.
Questions such as:
• What type of a loan can I qualify for?
• How much money will I need to put down?
• Should I choose a Bank or Broker?
• What do I need to submit to start the process?
Take advantage of the resources available on the internet such as this handy FREE E-book on Conventional Loans or this FREE E-book for Future Home Buyers.
We can help you start the process. Simply ask us the questions you have so we can help you find the mortgage that properly fits your needs.

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FED Rate CUT May Not Be Good For Mortgage Rates

The possibility of a Fed Rate cut to stabilize the markets may move mortgage rates higher not lower.

Right now rates are at a 4 year low, due to a flight to quality, as fears of the Carona Virus continue to weigh on the markets.

“When money flows out of stocks and into Bonds, the price of Bonds rise, while inversely the Bonds rates drop, making mortgage rates more attractive.” says John Sauro of North Atlantic Mortgage. 


Contact me for a quick analysis today!

John Sauro

Direct Line: 1-914-764-3261

Johnsauro@gmail.comp

Residential Home Loans & Commercial Real Estate Lending.


The Federal Reserve May Need to Step in COVID-19 poses downside risk to the U.S. economy, and though there are limits to monetary policy, the Federal Reserve may need eventually to step in. An emergency rate cut is unlikely, as these are rare. The most likely outcome is that the Fed continues to wait and see how financial market conditions fare and whether the coronavirus is having significant direct or indirect impacts on the U.S. economy. However, we are not ruling out that the Fed could act. Investor sentiment needs a boost, and normally investors turn to the Fed, anticipating a “Powell put.” The term “Powell put” isn’t as ubiquitous as either the Yellen, Bernanke or Greenspan puts. The idea of a Fed put garnered attention in the 1980s and 1990s under former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan. Setting a floor Derived from the concept of a put option, these terms refer to central bank policies that effectively set a floor for equity valuations. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell seems less sensitive to stock prices than some former chairs, but he recognizes that a substantial decline in equity markets could alter the outlook for the U.S. economy. So, a Powell put exists, but equity prices likely have not fallen enough to trigger it. The Fed likely viewed the stock market as being a little frothy—we agree.

We constructed several valuation metrics and compared them with actual stock prices. Each metric is constructed as the fitted values from a linear regression of stock prices on a proxy of fundamental value, including GDP, corporate earnings, and discounted free cash flow, measures that capture earnings and interest rates.

All these metrics showed that the stock market was overvalued. While the selloff in the stock market may not worry the Fed, credit markets could. The Fed can stop credit markets from freezing up; and that is one way to protect the economy. The Fed’s objective would be to prevent a supply-side shock, like coronavirus, from spilling over into the demand side of the economy.

We are watching high-yield corporate bond spreads, which are widening, but it will have to continue before it sounds alarms at the Fed. Odds on the FOMC We will be revisiting our subjective odds of a rate cut for the rest of this year’s Federal Open Market Committee meetings. While monetary policy has its limits and cannot cure the coronavirus, the Fed is not powerless. If financial market conditions continue to tighten, odds of a rate cut will increase. The Fed has shown that it will respond more quickly to an inversion in the yield curve, and a rate cut could help bolster investor sentiment. It may not cure all that troubles in financial markets, but it could help. Still, we believe the key is not equity but rather credit markets.

Making sure credit markets don’t freeze is critical. The impact of the coronavirus on U.S. GDP will be less than in China. The hit to the U.S. economy will come via reduced US goods exports to China, less spending in the U.S. by Chinese tourists, and a drop in domestic production because of supply chain disruptions. We expect this drag on the U.S. economy to be 0.45 percentage point on first-quarter GDP growth, but this is likely a little optimistic, particularly given the supply chain impact and evidence the virus has spread beyond China. 

The U.S. economy will experience growth of only 1.3% in the first quarter (annualized), down by 0.6 percentage point because of the virus. Growth in 2020 is now expected to be 1.7%, down 0.2 percentage point. The U.S. economy’s potential growth is estimated at near 2%. Our previous assumption that the virus will be contained to China proved optimistic, and the odds of a pandemic are rising. We previously put the odds of a pandemic at 20% (see our Alternative Scenario), but we now put them at 40%. A pandemic will result in global and U.S. recessions during the first half of this year. The economy was already fragile before the outbreak and vulnerable to anything that did not stick to script. COVID-19 is way off script. COVID-19 came out of nowhere. It may be what economists call a black swan—a rare and inherently unforeseeable event with severe consequences.

Source: Moodys

Find the lowest mortgage rate in ny

This is great news….there’s hope! TAX FAIRNESS FOR HOMEOWNERS

In late December, the House passed a bill, the Restoring Tax Fairness for States and Localities Act (H.R.5377), that would temporarily remove the SALT (state and local tax) deduction cap, if approved by the Senate.   Before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, enacted in 2017, homeowners could deduct any amount paid toward state income taxes, local income taxes and property taxes.   Due to the revamped tax law, however, the SALT deduction has been capped at $10,000 per return, or $5,000 for those married but filing separate.


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The new bill would increase the SALT cap from $10,000 to $20,000 for those filing joint returns in 2019, and would eliminate the cap for the 2020 and 2021 filing years. Support of the cap has been controversial, with some lawmakers believing the deduction largely supports the wealthy, providing an unfair advantage. Others, however, believe the average earner with even a modest home can be negatively affected by the cap, as homes in states with higher property taxes can quickly expend the entire $10,000 SALT limit.

Read more….https://rismedia.com/2020/01/16/salt-bill-update-after-house-vote-to-temporarily-eliminate-cap-bill-awaiting-senate-vote/

 

 

A Boost For The Housing Market Heading Into Spring

US mortgage rates hit 3-year low

The 30-year rate fell to 3.45%, which could boost housing market as spring approaches, according to TRD

Mortgage rates have hit their lowest level in more than three years, which could provide a boost to the country’s housing market heading into spring.

The 30-year fixed-rate average fell to 3.45 percent, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing data released Thursday by Freddie Mac. That’s down from 3.51 percent the week before and 4.41 percent at this time last year. The average rate for a 15-year mortgage also dropped to a three-year low at 2.97 percent. In June, it stood at 3.28 percent.


North Atlantic Mortgage Corp. 178 Trinity Pass Pound Ridge, NY 10576 1-877-794-5363

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But home prices nationwide have skyrocketed in recent years, so the lower mortgage rates might not be enough to enable owners to buy their first homes. They also reflect concerns about the global economy.

Low mortgage rates did help push home sales to a yearly high mark in December, when the country saw 5.54 million home sales for a 3.6 percent increase from November. The lower rates have also spurred several refinancings, with the volume of applications increasing by 15 percent from the prior week to hit their highest mark since June 2013, according to recent data from the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Fannie Mae chief economist Doug Duncan told the Journal that the low mortgage rates could be good for existing and prospective homeowners.

“It’s very much a historical opportunity for folks who have an existing mortgage to refinance and for credit-qualified people to lock in a low rate,” he said. [WSJ] — Eddie Small
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NY Refinance, NY home loan, NY debt consolidation, mortgage rates, real estate ny,

Rates plunge to Lowest levels in 4 years as Refi’s spike 15%

KEY POINTS
  • Mortgage rates last week hit their lowest level since October 2016.
  • Refinance applications, which are most sensitive to weekly rate moves, jumped 15% for the week and were 183% higher than a year ago. Demand hit the highest level since June 2013.

Homeowners rushed to take advantage of the sharp drop in interest rates last week.

Refinance demand pushed mortgage application volume up 5% for the week to the highest level since 2013, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index. Purchase demand, however, dropped.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($510,400 or less) decreased to 3.71% from 3.81%, with points remaining unchanged at 0.28 (including the origination fee) for loans with a 20% down payment. That is the lowest level since October 2016. The rate was 98 basis points higher one year ago.

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“The 10-year Treasury yield fell around 20 basis points over the course of last week, driven mainly by growing concerns over a likely slowdown in Chinese economic growth from the spread of the coronavirus. This drove mortgage rates lower, with the 30-year fixed rate decreasing for the fifth time in six weeks,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s associate vice president of economic and industry forecasting.

Refinance applications, which are most sensitive to weekly rate moves, jumped 15% for the week and were 183% higher than a year ago. Demand hit the highest level since June 2013. The average loan amount also spiked, as homeowners with jumbo loans have more to gain from weekly rate declines. The refinance share of mortgage activity increased to 64.5% of total applications from 60.4% the previous week.

Mortgage applications to purchase a home decreased 10% from one week earlier, but were 11% higher annually. Today’s buyers are facing a tight and increasingly pricey housing market. The supply of homes for sale fell to a record low at the end of last year, and price gains, which had been easing a bit, have reaccelerated again.

“Prospective buyers weren’t as responsive to the decline in mortgage rates — likely because of suppressed supply levels,” Kan said. “Purchase applications took a step back, but still remained 7.7% higher than a year ago.”

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Mortgage rates have been falling on fears over the coronavirus hitting financial markets. Rates, however, finally turned slightly higher Tuesday, as the stock market bounced higher.

“The bigger issue is merely the risk that today [Tuesday] marks some sort of turning point in the bigger picture,” said Matthew Graham, chief operating officer of Mortgage News Daily. “It’s too soon to know if that’s what this is, but it’s definitely the first obvious candidate since the coronavirus rate-drop began.

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-Source: CNBC