Monday, January 13, 2014

New Mortgage Rules; Friend or Foe?

New Mortgage Rules; Friend or Foe?


Friday marks the launch of a new wave of mortgage rules lenders are required to adhere to.  The CFPB and Mr. Cordray stated “No debt traps. No surprises. No runarounds."  However, I am not convinced these rules will do anything to solve the past abuses they claim.  Furthermore, I will show here the additional problems and costs these rules will create for consumers.  Funny, the CFPB is supposed to be protecting the consumer, but it sure seems that is not the case.

Mr. Cordray and the CFPB also said Friday “The new rules are designed to take a "back to basics" approach to mortgage lending and lower the risk of defaults and foreclosures among borrowers.”  “No debt traps. No surprises. No runarounds. These are bedrock concepts backed by our new common-sense rules, which take effect today.”

So, the two components are known as the QRM or Qualified Residential Mortgage and the ATR or Ability to Repay.  Let’s look at the ATR first and break it down.  The CFPB lists the following 3 points regarding the ATR Rule and what it is meant to accomplish;

·       Lenders must determine that a borrower has the income and assets to afford to make payments throughout the life of the loan. To do so, the lender may look at your debt-to-income ratio, which is how much you owe divided by how much you earn per month, including the highest mortgage payments you would be required to make under the terms of the loan. To calculate your debt-to-income ratio, add up all your monthly obligations -- including student loan, credit card and car payments, housing costs, utilities and other recurring expenses -- and divide it by your monthly gross income.*

·       In an effort to put an end to no- or low-doc loans, where lenders issue risky mortgages without the necessary financial information, lenders will be required to document and verify an applicant's income, assets, credit history and debt. For borrowers, that means more paperwork and longer processing times.*

·       Underwriters must also approve mortgages based on the maximum monthly charges you face, not just low "teaser rates" that last only a matter of months, or a year or two, before resetting higher.*

First, lenders have always adhered to all of the above requirements, after 20 years in the industry I am 100% certain of this.  Yes, some lenders were breaking the rules, so punish them not everyone else too.  Lenders only factor in your utilities, bills and income taxes (into your debt ratio or debt factors) when it is an FHA or other government loan like a VA loan.  Conventional loans do not do this, period.  No or low-doc loans were a product utilized (and vital) for small business owners and self-employed borrowers who were acting in a tax efficient manner.  Sometimes, when you are self-employed, you write lots of things off.  You do this to avoid excessive taxes since you get few other breaks unless you are a large corporation.  A few irresponsible companies exacerbated and abused these programs.  Subsequently the government and the CFPB, who are supposed to be helping the consumer (hence their name “The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau”), banned these programs.  I am certain any self-employed business owner will tell you how helpful and beneficial this was.  

Instead, these organizations could have regulated the bad apples and increased compliance on these programs specifically instead of banning them altogether.

The last bullet point is a doozy for me.  Apparently using these calculations (that have always been used) the CFPB is going to save the day and your payment will never rise again?  Hogwash people!  Your insurance, taxes and expenses for owning a home will perpetually rise.  Maybe if we had rising incomes to match these anticipated and guaranteed rising costs over time, from owning a home, we would not have to meet a standard that is adhered to by underwriters and lenders for decades now.  I for one see zero value in any of this and most in the banking and mortgage industry agree.  This is nothing more than the appearance of action.  This is the wrong direction and in effect, will create greater lending expense (passed on to the consumer) and delays in obtaining mortgage financing.

So, what about the second component the QRM Rule?  Here are the highlights of this proposed rule;

·       To make sure you aren't taking on more house than you can afford, your debt-to-income ratio generally must be below 43%. This rule is not absolute. Banks can still make loans to people with debt-to-income ratios that are greater than that if other factors, such as a high level of assets, justify the risk.**

·       Qualified mortgages cannot include risky features, such as terms longer than 30 years, interest-only payments or minimum payments that don't keep up with interest so your mortgage balance grows.**

·       Upfront fees and charges cannot add up to more than 3% of the mortgage balance. That includes title insurance, origination fees and points paid to lower mortgage interest rates.**

Banks are not going to make a loan with a debt ratio > 43% as bullet point one suggests.  As the rule reads, if a lender does this, the loan is not saleable to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or Ginnie Mae.  This means the lender will be responsible for this loan and unable to sell it to the aforementioned agencies.  It will contain more risk which means more expense (fees to consumers) to offset that risk.  This means two things for consumers.  One, rising costs for non QRM loans whose expense will not be absorbed by a bank but passed on to consumers.  Two, less availability of these programs because banks do not want risk, they want loans they can sell off and remove from their books i.e. a QRM loan.

The second point is also nonsense yet also has some value to it.  First, there are lots of situations where a borrower may need a loan with an interest only option or a smaller minimum payment.  These features become valuable in short term relocation situations, borrowers find themselves in, with their employers through relocation or promotion among many others.  Situations obviously exist where these features can be beneficial.  I think this is on target by the creation of responsibility for the loan itself (on the part of the bank).  Banks can continue doing these loans, but will be forced to have fiduciary accountability for the outcome of said loans over time.  This is something that was not happening in the past and is one valuable measure emerging from the Dodd Frank implementation.

Finally, on the third point, I have some real problems.  Most notably the inclusion of “points paid to lower mortgage interest rates”.  These are typically known as discount points and are used by borrowers to obtain a lower rate.  Under the new rules if a borrower elects to do this, they are not going to be able to go far, if at all, in buying down their rate for the long term.  If you want to lower your rate let us say .50% (1/2 percent), the offsetting cost the bank charges you to do that will nearly equal 1/2 the overall cost threshold of the 3% rule.  This rule says all of your “closing costs” for your new loan cannot exceed 3% of the loan amount.  So, here is an example. 

If you have a $125,000 loan, the 3% rule states your total closing costs cannot exceed $3,750.  If you want to pay 1.5% in points to buy down your rate say .5% (1/2 percent) from 4.5% to 4.0%, the cost would be $125,000 x 1.5% (discount points) = $1,875.  This only leaves $1,875 in closing costs (from the total 3% rule) that your lender and third parties can charge for their work in completing the loan.  This calculation can also be a detriment for borrowers who want to pay their mortgage insurance up front instead of monthly.  This too will have to be included in this 3% calculation, thus making it extremely unlikely you will be able to obtain many of the options from the past that create real shortcut value when obtaining mortgage financing.  If you combine paying your mortgage insurance up front (less than paying monthly over time) and buying your rate down slightly, you are in for limited options as a consumer! 

One additional problem that arises is that of lender paid closing costs on purchase transactions.  Prior to today, a borrower could ask their lender to charge a higher rate and use the additional points “Fees” to pay their closing costs for them.  This was beneficial for folks who did not have a lot of additional funds to pay it “out of pocket” or equity in their property to roll these costs in to the transaction.  If you want or should need to take this approach now SORRY, it is not going to happen under these new rules!

Last, the icing on the cake.  The bad, dirty and unethical people…the loan officers!  In quoting from the article, it reads like this “The rules also restrict "steering," or practices that give financial incentives to loan officers or mortgage brokers for pushing people into higher-interest loans that they can't afford -- a practice that was all too common leading up to the housing bust.”  I am certainly calling BS on this one.  

Maybe a few loan officer were "Steering" people, but most were not dragging people kicking and screaming into a loan they did not want.  You have to make a conscious decision to accept and sign for that loan.  Where is the culpability of the consumer in all of this?  Let’s pick on the one person or group (loan officers) trying to make a living off 100% commission, no base income or living wage support, trying to actually educate the consumer (for what little goes on) and provide them the ability to choose the right financing.  Let us not blame the boss for telling the loan officers, make your quota or you’re fired!  Let’s not forget the fact that if lenders do not offer all programs available to borrowers, they could go to jail and be fined for discrimination.

What is troubling to me is that the self-appointed CFPB (who answers to no other regulatory body except themselves) has created rules which hinder the consumer and the lending and banking industry.  For me, this is just another example of laws designed by folks who do not fully comprehend the industry in which they create them.  These groups fail to recognize the implementation consequences (cause and effect) and the disparate climate they create for consumers.

Let us also not forget the additional costs of implementing all of this are going to pass right on down to you and I in the process.  Today, I struggle to see how lending is going to be better from any of this.  It seems to me it will be increasingly difficult to obtain financing through a more laborious process while inhibiting options and increasing costs to consumers.  I thought this was about “Consumer” protection not “Consumer” restriction?

It is time for KeneXsus, so help us by supporting our site and our mission to start creating meaningful changes and balance in our markets.  Please feel free to email us for assistance navigating these new changes!  Check out our new site here: beta.kenexsus.com

The KeneXsus Staff,  
 

No comments:

Post a Comment