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Friday, March 02, 2007

Agencies Seek Comment on Subprime Mortgage Lending Statement

by Calculated Risk on 3/02/2007 12:51:00 PM

UPDATE: Added Tanta's comments (see bottom).

From the Fed: Agencies Seek Comment on Subprime Mortgage Lending Statement

The federal financial regulatory agencies today issued for comment a proposed Statement on Subprime Mortgage Lending to address certain risks and emerging issues relating to subprime1 mortgage lending practices, specifically, particular adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) lending products.

The proposal addresses concerns that subprime borrowers may not fully understand the risks and consequences of obtaining these products, and that the products may pose an elevated credit risk to financial institutions. In particular, the proposed guidance focuses on loans that involve repayment terms that exceed the borrower’s ability to service the debt without refinancing or selling the property.

The statement specifies that an institution’s analysis of a borrower’s repayment capacity should include an evaluation of the borrower’s ability to repay the debt by its final maturity at the fully indexed rate, assuming a fully amortizing repayment schedule. The statement also underscores that communications with consumers should provide clear and balanced information about the relative benefits and risks of the products. If adopted, this statement would complement the 2006 Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Product Risks, which did not specifically address the risks of these ARM products.

The agencies request comment on all aspects of the proposed statement and are particularly interested in public comment about whether: 1) these arrangements always present inappropriate risks to institutions and consumers, or the extent to which they can be appropriate under some circumstances; 2) the proposed statement would unduly restrict existing subprime borrowers’ ability to refinance their loans; 3) other forms of credit are available that would not present the risk of payment shock; 4) the principles of the proposed statement should be applied beyond the subprime ARM market; and 5) an institution’s limiting of prepayment penalties to the initial fixed-rate period would assist consumers by providing them sufficient time to assess and act on their mortgage needs.

Comments are due sixty days after publication in the Federal Register, which is expected shortly. The guidance is attached.
From Tanta in the comments:
On page seven, under the definition of “predatory lending,” you find:

“Making mortgage loans based predominantly on the foreclosure or liquidation value of a borrower’s collateral rather than on the borrower’s ability to repay the mortgage according to its terms.”

Now, they’ve been using this kind of language for years; it’s not like this is new to this document. The problem is that, for years, some of us have wanted them to go on to the next logical step, which is to explain just how a loan can be based on the borrower’s ability to repay if it doesn’t include verification of income and assets. What we have found over the years here, you know, is that lenders have come to think that they can just verify the borrower’s willingness to repay, which is what a FICO score and a down payment proxy, but not the ability to repay out of either income or assets. So they keep using that word “ability,” and then they keep going on as follows:

“Risk-layering features in a subprime mortgage loan may significantly increase the risks to both the institution and the borrower. Therefore, an institution should have clear policies governing the use of risk-layering features, such as reduced documentation loans . . . an institution should demonstrate the existence of effective mitigating factors that support the underwriting decision and the borrower’s repayment capacity.”

OK, so which is it? Is the absence of documentation of “ability to repay” mitigated by the appraised value and the FICO score? How is that, exactly, different from making a loan based on collateral value?

“The higher a loan’s risk, either from loan features or borrower characteristics, the more important it is to verify the borrower’s income, assets, and liabilities. When underwriting higher risk loans, stated income and reduced documentation should be accepted only if there are mitigating factors that clearly minimize the need for direct verification of repayment capacity. For many borrowers, institutions should be able to readily document income using recent W-2 statements, pay stubs or tax returns. A higher interest rate is not considered an acceptable mitigating factor.”

I put that last sentence in bold because it is the only outright statement of something you could call an actual rule in this document. But notice how they’re still waffling about the issue of collecting those W-2s, pay stubs, and tax returns. Look, any underwriter worth her salt will tell you that there are, in fact, good credit risk borrowers out there whose income cannot be easily read off one of those documents. The classic self-employed borrower with odd cash-flow patterns comes to mind. But there’s just a world of difference between telling a bank it can, if it finds mitigating factors, override the numbers on the documents, and telling the institution that it can get away with not asking to see them. The whole “stated income” thing gets to be a problem because the industry decided there were only two choices: use the numbers on the tax returns—even if they don’t make much sense as a measure of GMI, and resulted in terrible-looking DTIs—or just let the borrower make things up.

There are two very, very important issues underlying this false dichotomy. One, we’ve seen in action lately, and you can call it the “rep and warranty” problem. If I see your tax returns, but approve you anyway because I did an operating income analysis, looked at the value of your assets, and decided that you should get a loan even though technically your DTI calculates too high, then it is the quality of my underwriting decision that is at stake here. If, however, I tell the LO to throw those tax returns away and resubmit the file as “stated,” then I still get to make the loan, but if it turns out to be a bad idea after all, I can claim to have been defrauded by the borrower. It remains a major mystery why the regulators haven’t caught on to this yet.

Two, there is actually some research out there on the question of “lender-chosen” versus “borrower-chosen” documentation reductions. Moody’s, for instance, has found that programs in which the lender expects documentation from all borrowers, but, after analysis of the application, credit report/FICO, and any other supporting documentation, may waive the income or asset documentation requirement for higher-quality borrowers, perform much better than programs in which the borrower can withhold documentation from the lender and get qualified on a presumption of reduced documentation. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, for instance, do this with their automated underwriting systems: the originator enters the application data into the system, which automatically provides itself with a credit report and (usually) data about the property and plausibility of the sales price/appraised value (an internal AVM). It then evaluates the loan, and if it likes what it sees enough, it may report back to the originator that, say, the loan can be counted as “full doc” with just the last pay stub (no W-2s for the last two years), or with just one bank statement showing enough funds to close (instead of three months worth of bank statements showing funds to close plus reserves). The point here is that the borrower doesn’t get to walk in the door and say, “I want one of those loans where I don’t have to give you my W-2 or my bank statements.” That latter thing would be the “borrower-chosen” approach, and those are the ones that perform really poorly. Of course, a “lender-chosen” program will also perform really poorly if the underwriting analysis gives too much weight to DTI or down payment in the initial analysis. (That is, if you’re hanging your hat on DTI, it’s not wise to waive the documentation of the income. If you’re hanging your hat on down payment, it’s not wise to waive the documentation of the source of those funds. You have to do a demonstrated holistic approach in order to do a “lender-chosen” program correctly.)

I honestly can’t see any reason why the regulators wouldn’t at the very minimum require that institutions making reduced doc subprime loans handle this the way the GSEs do, namely only as lender-chosen, not as borrower-chosen, programs which require documentation for most borrowers and waive documents only after a holistic review. But they don’t even raise the issue in the guidance. What’s with that?

Tanta

Thursday, March 01, 2007

New Century Financial Intends to File Form 12b-25 on March 2, 2007

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 10:45:00 PM

Press Release: New Century Financial Corporation to File Form 12b-25 With the SEC

New Century Financial Corporation (NYSE: NEW - News), a mortgage real estate investment trust (REIT), today announced that it expects to file a Form 12b-25 with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with respect to its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006. The Form 12b-25 will be filed with the SEC on March 2, 2007.

Fremont Intends to File Form 12b-25 on March 2, 2007

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 07:50:00 PM

From Fremont:

Fremont General Corporation (the "Company"), today announced that it intends to file a Form 12b-25 with the Securities and Exchange Commission before the close of business on Friday, March 2, 2007. As previously reported by the Company, the Form 12b-25 will explain the reasons for the Company not filing today with the Securities and Exchange Commission its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006.
This could be interesting.

Weekly Claims

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 05:59:00 PM

"The main take away from these jobless claims data is that there is a significant weakness developing in the labor market which will be validated or refuted by the February employment report."
Asha Bangalore
Northern Trust Vice President and Economist, Mar 1, 2007
Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows the 4-week moving average of weekly claims since 1990 (for more on claims, see Dr. Bangalore's commentary today).

I think the level of concern for the 4-week moving average is around 350K (dashed line on graph).

Last week I wrote about claims: "there is nothing indicating a significant slowing of the labor market". And just one more week of typically noisy claim data hasn't changed my view, but I am watching these numbers more closely right now.

GMAC's Subprime Mortgages

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 05:34:00 PM

From AP: GMAC's Subprime Mortgages a Threat to GM

The cratering of the subprime mortgage industry could present more than just a pothole for General Motors Corp.

The world's largest auto maker disclosed Thursday that it will need more time to file its 2006 annual report with the Securities and Exchange Commission, marking the second year in a row the company has postponed the key filing.

Many analysts attribute this year's delay to a substantial hit the Detroit-based automaker might take from the exposure its part-owned finance unit _ GMAC Financial Services _ has to the business of making mortgage loans to people with weak credit or heavy debt burdens.
...
Lehman Brothers analyst Brian Johnson estimated that loan-loss provisions and writedowns of mortgage securities at ResCap could cost GM $900 million to $950 million in cash charges in the first half of this year.

Among the areas of concern to analysts and investors: At the end of the third quarter, ResCap, long viewed as the crown jewel in GMAC's businesses, held $57 billion of subprime mortgages for investment, or 77 percent of its total loans held for investment. Its exposure to "residual interest" in mortgage securities _ the high-yielding slices that suffer some of the first losses if loan defaults are higher than expected _ was $1.4 billion as of Sept. 30. Meanwhile, ResCap is one of the biggest providers of short-term "warehouse" funding to smaller mortgage lenders.

"While warehouse lending is typically secured, the recent rash of bankruptcies among smaller lenders increases the risk the company will have loss exposure with this product," said analyst Kathleen Shanley at GimmeCredit, which says investors should sell their ResCap bonds.

OFHEO Q4 House Price Index

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 03:31:00 PM

I recommend Kash's post and graphs today: New Data on House Prices

Construction Spending

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 03:04:00 PM

From the Census Bureau:

The U.S. Census Bureau of the Department of Commerce announced today that construction spending during January 2007 was estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1,180.2 billion, 0.8 percent below the revised December estimate of $1,189.3 billion. The January figure is 1.2 percent below the January 2006 estimate of $1,194.5 billion.
Note: all dollars are seasonally adjusted, but not price adjusted.

Click on graph for larger image.

Construction spending can be divided into three parts: private residential construction, private nonresidential construction, and public construction.

Private residential construction spending continues to fall. Based on Starts, residential construction spending will continue to fall for most of 2007 as housing units currently under construction are completed.

One of the keys for the general economy is for private nonresidential construction to offset some of the declines in private residential construction. For private nonresidential, spending was flat from December to January, but spending is still 14.7% ahead of January 2006.

Unfortunately for the general economy, the typical pattern is for nonresidential investment in structures to follow residential construction with a typical lag of 4 to 5 quarters for structures (see Investment Lags).

WSJ: Mortgage Defaults Start to Spread

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 11:05:00 AM

From the WSJ: Mortgage Defaults Start to Spread

The mortgage market has been roiled by a sharp increase in bad loans made to borrowers with weak credit. Now there are signs that the pain is spreading upward.

At issue are mortgages made to people who fall in the gray area between "prime" ... and "subprime" ... A record $400 billion of these midlevel loans -- which are known in the industry as "Alt-A" mortgages -- were originated last year, up from $85 billion in 2003 ... Alt-A loans accounted for roughly 16% of mortgage originations last year and subprime loans an additional 24%.
...
Data from UBS AG show that the default rate for Alt-A mortgages has doubled in the past 14 months. "The credit deterioration has been almost parallel to what's been happening in the subprime market," says UBS mortgage analyst David Liu.

Countrywide Says Late Payments Rose

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 11:02:00 AM

From Bloomberg: Countrywide Says Late Payments on Subprime Loans Rose

Countrywide Financial Corp., the biggest U.S. mortgage lender, said payments were late at the end of last year on almost 20 percent of the subprime loans it tracks for other companies and investors who own them.

Delinquencies of at least 30 days on "nonprime" loans, those made to borrowers whose credit rating fell short of the highest criteria, widened to 19 percent as of Dec. 31 from 15 percent a year earlier, the Calabasas, California-based lender said in an annual regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The rate stood at 17 percent at the end of September, according to the company's last quarterly filing.

Worries Persist Over Subprime Loans

by Calculated Risk on 3/01/2007 12:15:00 AM

“It is impossible to get a number. And I don’t think they even know.”
Richard X. Bove, an analyst with Punk Ziegel & Company on big investment bank’s exposure to subprime loans.
NY Times: Calm Returns to Market, but Worries Persist Over Subprime Loans. Excerpts:
Wall Street now faces risks on two fronts. First, it stands to earn less from originating, packaging and trading mortgage-backed securities. Second, it will have to absorb more of the losses from loans when borrowers are no longer making payments.
...
For some analysts, the bigger risk to Wall Street is simply that the spigot has been turned off.

“Does the flow of mortgages to the securitization machine slow?” asked Jeffrey Harte, an analyst with Sandler O’Neill. “That’s what I’m most worried about.”

Volume is falling. Production of nonagency mortgage securities fell almost 50 percent between January and February, according to preliminary numbers compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance. The data indicate that new subprime and Alt-A loans fell significantly in February.
There is much more in the NY Times article.