Nov. 6, 2012: Mortgage jobs across the nation; Zillow buys Mortech; homeowners vs. hazard insurance basics
Rob Chrisman
Instead
of the two-party system, how about the “I want to party”
system!? Today, as one critic put it, is when the fate of the
nation is determined by several bridge clubs in Ohio. Many
states, like here in Kansas, saw little or no presidential
advertising as one or the other party wrote them off. But
let’s not forget the Congressional elections, which may have
more of an impact on the looming fiscal cliff. And in terms of
the stock and bond markets, they’re pretty much stagnating
until tomorrow when the results are known – if they are even
known by then (think Gore versus Bush). No market likes
uncertainty, but betting on rates and which way things will
go is like putting your money on black or red at the
roulette wheel at this point.
But
one thing for sure is that Veteran’s Day is coming up,
which gives the Census Bureau a chance to tell us about
ourselves (although it is another pseudo-holiday for some
companies). There are three states with 1 million or more
veterans residing in them: California, Florida, and Texas, but
up in Alaska 14% of people 18 and older are veterans (12% or
more in Maine, Montana, Virginia and Wyoming). The annual
median income for veterans was $35,821 in 2011
inflation-adjusted dollars compared with $25,811 for the
population as a whole, and there are over 9 million vets in
the labor force. No wonder the VA lending program is alive and
well!
I
have been retained by a national mortgage banker who is
seeking a Regional Operations Manager for its
wholesale/correspondent operations center in Sacramento,
California. The desired candidate is a
proven business leader with western regional knowledge,
industry connections and an overall expertise in operational
and sales processes. The mortgage banker is very well
capitalized and has a national
footprint with 2012 production in excess of $5 billion.
Qualified candidates send your resume to me at rchrisman@robchrisman.com
- "your exciting opportunity for 2013 awaits."
Regular readers know that the commentary occasionally has job
listings for individual companies. But here is one from Talagy,
a job site that contains banking and mortgage jobs across
the country. "Our clients are forward-thinking
financial services firms seeking mortgage experts with a
desire to succeed." Talagy is currently seeking candidates
for the following roles: Mortgage Division Operations
Manager (Fairfax, VA), Mortgage Processing Manager (Fairfax,
VA), Regional Underwriting Manager (Braintree, MA), Mortgage
Business Unit Risk Manager (Jacksonville, FL), Senior
Underwriter (Jacksonville, FL), Senior Underwriter (
Sacramento, CA), Corporate Portfolio Underwriter
(Jacksonville, FL) and Senior Underwriter (Austin, TX). If
you are interested in these or other positions, please visit www.talagy.com
or contact enrique.bush@talagy.com
for more information.
Today is the last day to comment on the RESPA/TILA form merge
by the CFPB. But that agency may also tweak LO comp, and I
received this note from a manager at another large lender
regarding LO comp. "Regarding Mortgage Brokers being
treated as professionals, this is most likely very true for
the majority. I manage a branch for a direct lender and
interview a lot of candidates. It amazes me how those coming
from the broker side are shocked when I tell them they will be
paid the same on a Government loan and a conventional. As a
direct lender we have one price sheet. They are still telling
me that they get paid differently as brokers depending on
which investor they send the loan to. Isn’t this steering?
Isn’t this what the whole Dodd-Frank is about? If brokers want
the respect of the industry, follow the rules. We are forced
to be compliant. CFPB will catch up with those that are not."
"Rob, yesterday's commentary had the note, 'An LO inside of a
mortgage bank is not supporting the bank by brokering out a
loan - they are supporting themselves.' Actually, there's
a good chance the LO is also supporting their client.
That shouldn't be lost in the equation, because any banker who
successfully retains and grows his/her book is an asset to the
bank that employs them. A brokered client may become a
repeat/banked client, or generate banked referrals. Efficiency
measures are great until they become so extreme that they
restrict the agent from being able to do the right thing to
help a client. This is how a relationship business grows into
an evil empire, IMO. Fine lines here need to be regarded in
the interest of the bigger picture."
A Capital Markets person from the Southwest wrote, "Brokering
is viewed as a real negative at our company by the MLOs. As
difficult as it is to warehouse lend (meet agency and investor
requirements for manufacturing quality), brokering is even
harder. Each wholesale company has their own AMC policy,
their own disclosure policy, 60-90 day turn times, and
underwriters that don’t condition like ours. I am frankly
surprised that anyone is still brokering at all."
BR writes, "I found that our LOs want to keep as much of their
pipeline 'in house' as possible so they maintain control of
service levels. Yet as the owner of the company (and a former
producer), I understand the value of having broker
relationships. You want to keep your client and referral
partners 'in front of you.' By utilizing these relationships
when necessary, your referral sources and clients gain further
confidence in your ability and wherewithal to provide a range
of products for them. As an LO, the last thing you want is
another LO from your competitor in the mix. Obviously, we
won't chase bad loans, but with the proper policies and
procedures mortgage bankers can achieve a successful balance
incorporating broker business into their model. We currently
only broker less than 5% of our overall volume and we
continually track this number each month."
JV notes, "Our mortgage brokerage company is 'courted' often
by mortgage banks. And, two of the things that scare us away
from banking are: (1) the risk of too high of a rates
during high-volume periods - we often compete on pricing
alone and the pricing at many banks would put us out of
competition (our volume remains high because our wholesale
rates are so low), and (2) the risk of too many overlays
or restrictions that would take away the flexibility we
offer because of our access to so many lenders. We
well-understand the necessity of forcing at least an 80%
capture rate on the banking side. By the same token, offering
a broker channel keeps mortgage banks 'honest' as it forces
them to remain competitive and flexible."
And “Author Unknown” wrote me, "The mortgage industry as a
whole should not allow any loan officer to broker a loan if
they work for a correspondent lender that has their own
underwriters. Wholesalers should turn down the broker
application for any company approved as a correspondent.
Whether the loan officer "screwed up" or the quality of the
loan file does not meet "their company's standards", it should
not matter. Why should the wholesaler take on the risk of
this loan that everyone knows has been underwritten
elsewhere?"
And
lastly, “Rob, I really enjoyed your write up yesterday on how
improving loan officer production being a significant
management challenge. I just wanted to share with you a way
our firm manages poorer performing loan officers. We utilize a
program called Bankers Performance offered by MQM Research www.mqmresearch.com.
They offer a product that on a monthly basis they do e-mail
surveys and or telephone call surveys rating the loan
officer’s performance. We have found this enables us to help
improve the loan officer’s quality and performance along with
being able to contact our clients if they are not 100%
satisfied and make them feel 100% satisfied with a management
follow up call. This has also generated us a ton of business
and additional referrals/refinances being that the market
continues to improve rate/fee wise. Lastly they also provide
us feedback so if any borrower is confused on where to make
their first payment, etc. We can reach out to the client and
make everything 100% clear.” (No, this is not a paid ad, nor
do I profess to know anything about it.)
Turning
to something more temporal, with Hurricane Sandy having
battered the eastern seaboard, no doubt there are millions of
people who are thrilled to have hazard insurance (also called
property insurance). Lenders, too, are grateful that the
collateral for the loans they’ve issued is covered. In the
interest of minimizing their own financial losses, lenders as
practice require borrowers to take out hazard insurance prior
to closing. Borrowers are issued with a specific coverage
amount and policy type to ensure that, at the very least, the
property is covered against the amount of damage that would
make it worth less than the amount loaned. Generally, hazard
insurance covers any physical damage from fire, smoke,
vandalism, and the like and ensures that the borrower has a
habitable place to live. In terms of payment structure, the
deductible represents the homeowner’s share of any loss, while
the monthly or quarterly premiums are paid to the insurance
company to accept the homeowner’s risk.
But
as I understand it, region-specific hazards are often not
covered by basic hazard insurance. In California, separate
earthquake and wildfire policies are either required or
strongly recommended, depending on the lender, while the same
goes for hurricane policies in Florida. Another note on
natural disasters: if a lender is aware of an approaching
disaster and the borrower doesn’t yet have
windstorm/flood/locust swarm insurance in place, closing will
be delayed until after the disaster passes, and the borrower
will probably have to have the property reappraised to confirm
that the value hasn’t been negatively affected. Homeowners’
insurance is more comprehensive in that it protects against
not only physical damage to the property but theft of personal
property. It’s also possible to add coverage in a rider that
addresses damage to or theft of specific personal property
(jewelry, collectibles, artwork, my beer can collection!)
Homeowners’ insurance also covers the property owner’s
liability, as it takes on the risk of someone getting injured
on the property, needing medical treatment, and suing for
personal loss.
For
a quick bit of industry news, Zillow entered into a
definitive agreement to acquire Mortech, Inc., a
mortgage technology company that provides essential software
tools to the mortgage industry, for approximately $12 million
in cash and 150,000 shares of restricted stock, which goes a
long way in Lincoln, NB. (In a quick side note, I spent some
time with the owner of Mortech while sitting next to him and
his wife at dinner in Chicago two weeks ago.) “This
acquisition accelerates the development of Zillow Mortgage
Marketplace, Zillow’s lending marketplace where borrowers can
connect instantly with reputable lenders to get personalized
loan options and real-time mortgage rates.” Mortech’s
subscription-based software solutions include a product and
pricing engine to help lenders quickly match the right
mortgage products to the needs of a borrower at the best
prices, a lead management platform to help lenders efficiently
serve borrowers from multiple channels both online and
offline, and marketing tools to keep lenders’ brand and rate
quotes in front of borrowers throughout the mortgage shopping
process
Turning
briefly to the markets, agency MBS drifted through much of
Monday. Thomson Reuters and Tradeweb reported “Mortgage
bankers were modest in supplying $1.5 to $2 billion in TBA
sales, while specified pool lists were moderate.” Prices moved
up a little, down a little, and some investors put out price
changes to their clients - much ado about nothing. And today
we have Obama versus Romney, with the incumbent seen as more
dovish and accommodative to the rates and bond markets and
Romney more in favor of free markets determining where things
go. Stay tuned, but in the very early going rates have
nudged higher with the 10-yr. (which closed at 1.68%) up to
1.71%.
(This joke comes along every 4 years. I literally flipped a
coin to see who had what role - it is not a statement of
political views.)
The Presidential election 2012 was too close to call. Neither
Mitt Romney nor Obama had enough votes to win. There was much
talk about ballot recounting, court challenges, etc., but a
week-long ice fishing competition seemed the sportsmanlike way
to settle things. The candidate who caught the most fish at
the end of the week would win the election.
After much of back and forth discussion, it was decided that
the contest would take place on a remote frozen lake in
northern New Hampshire.
There were to be no observers present, and both men were to be
sent out separately on this isolated lake and return at 5PM
with their catch for counting and verification by a team of
neutral parties.
At the end of the first day, Mitt Romney returned to the
starting line and he had 10 fish.
Soon, Obama returned and had no fish. Well, everyone assumed
he was just having a bad day or something and hopefully, he
would catch up the next day.
At the end of the 2nd day Mitt came in with 20 fish and Obama
came in again with none.
That evening, the democrats got together secretly and said, "I
think that Mitt Romney is a low-life, cheatin' son-of-a-gun.
Tomorrow don't bother fishing. Just spy on him and see just
how he is cheating.”
The next night (after Mitt returns with 50 fish), the
democrats got together for the report of how the republicans
were cheating.
Obama said, "You are not going to believe this; he's cutting
holes in the ice!"
If
you're interested, visit my twice-a-month blog at the STRATMOR
Group web site located at www.stratmorgroup.com.
The current blog discusses some of the considerations facing
the FHFA regarding Fannie and Freddie. If you have both the
time and inclination, make a comment on what I have written,
or on other comments so that folks can learn what's going on
out there from the other readers.