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Meet the computer that now decides
whether you'll get a mortgage loan
By Michael
D. Larson Bankrate.com
It's
not exactly HAL, but chances are a computer system called DU, LP,
CLUES or some other acronym-laden name will have a lot to say about
whether you get that next mortgage.
These automated underwriting systems, which evaluate loans by running
them through computerized scoring and analysis models, have swept
through the lending industry during the second half of the 1990s.
Designed and marketed by the nation's largest mortgage companies,
they simplify the underwriting process for lenders and eliminate
costs and closing delays for consumers.
But even though an estimated three-fourths of
home lenders now use some kind of automated qualification process,
many borrowers don't understand how they can benefit by shopping
at one. Without some understanding of these systems and how they
work, those customers could end up with sub-par deals.
"It approves people who you never would approve
as an underwriter before and the beauty of it is that it standardizes
the process," says Kurt Bokenkamp, a vice president at the Chicago-based
mortgage company Prism
Financial Corp.
"It's all about getting the borrower done faster
and getting them into their home quicker with as little pain as
possible."
What pain? It used to be getting a decision
on a mortgage went something like this: Joe and Jane Smith headed
to the lender's office, filled out an application and submitted
eight years' worth of bank statements, a note from their employer
detailing their earnings during the last 120 months and a pair of
sixth grade report cards (preferably demonstrating at least
a 3.5 GPA). They wouldn't get a preliminary answer for what seemed
like forever and they'd have to hope their 6-month rate lock would
extend at least until closing.
Though that scenario exaggerates the details,
yesterday's process was longer, tougher, more paperwork-intensive
and more nerve-racking. Today, it's an entirely different ballgame,
thanks to the automated underwriting systems.
These lending "engines" come in a variety of
formats, but the two most widely used were designed by the secondary
marketing agencies Fannie
Mae and Freddie
Mac. They were formally rolled out in 1995 and are dubbed Desktop
Underwriter (DU) and Loan
Prospector (LP), respectively.
When
people shop at automated lenders, they generally deal with loan
officers who take their application information. That information
is entered into fields on the officers' computers, which have the
DU or LP software installed on them.
Lenders
have options
Next, lenders have a few options. They can send their applications
along to either Fannie Mae via the company's MORNET
dial-up network or to Freddie Mac via that company's GoldWorks
network. As a third choice, they can connect to either of the agencies
through the Internet. The cost to the lender is usually $20 per
loan with Freddie Mac or a variety of rates with Fannie Mae, depending
on the particular deal that lender has been able to work out with
the company.
Computers at the two agencies take over from
there, crunching debt-to-income ratios, running loan-to-value calculations
and pulling credit score data. In a process that usually takes less
than two minutes, their systems then return a recommendation to
the lender on each loan.
That recommendation can take a number of different
forms, with responses such as "streamlined approval" at one extreme
and "caution" at the other. The first means the loan is basically
a done deal, as long as the borrower provides a few documents to
prove the application information is correct. The latter means the
application probably shouldn't be approved unless the borrower can
show that extenuating circumstances are to blame for past credit
problems. A doctor's note or hospital statement proving a man missed
four months' worth of mortgage payments only because he was bedridden
and unable to work, for example, might suffice.
"You give information one time and it's carried
through the process," says Tom Booker, vice president of technology
marketing at Fannie Mae. "The amount of time to provide and know
whether you got a loan is in minutes, maybe hours at the worst,
vs. weeks or months."
There's
more than speedy answers
Consumers can get more than speedy answers. Both Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac say that because they've amassed years of risk-management
data from their systems, they have been able to expand the range
of products lenders can evaluate electronically. The agencies also
say their constant analysis of loan performance data shows they
can ease documentation requirements, as well as loosen credit, income
and other underwriting assumptions the systems use, without increasing
their risk exposure too much.
That means borrowers who once were cast into
the "subprime" market, where higher interest rates are the norm,
have more choices today. No longer do they have to look at their
credit reports, sigh and take it on the chin at a subprime shop.
Instead, someone can now go to an automated underwriting-equipped
lender and have a fairly decent shot at getting a "conforming" loan
-- one that meets Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac guidelines -- at regular
market rates.
Thanks to diminished costs and faster approval,
lenders have more time to analyze and think, Booker says. And that
allows them to "take on different kinds of borrowers with different
kinds of needs."
They can "take on borrowers who may have credit
histories in their past that may not have allowed them to qualify,
or take borrowers who don't have a 20 percent down payment.
"It gives you greater and greater confidence
to make broad decisions about that risk you're taking and your ability
to reduce it so you can take more on."
Beyond
conventional borrowers
Automated underwriting is expanding beyond the world of conventional
borrowers. Thanks to upgrades of its system in December 1997 and
March 1998, for example, Freddie Mac can now process Department
of Veterans Affairs loans and Federal Housing Administration mortgages
electronically. Fannie Mae added those capabilities this October
and August, and both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in recent months
threw in the ability to run "Alt A" or "A-" through their systems.
These mortgages fall into the gray area between prime and subprime,
usually because the borrower has minor income- or debt-related problems.
"We handle a very broad array of loans and it
has evolved over time," says Patricia McClung, a Freddie Mac director
responsible for LP's Internet-based version. "When we started out,
our focus was primarily on traditional, conventional, standard 'A'
loans, not a lot of your more unusual types."
While consumers should be able to find automated
underwriting-equipped lenders running DU or LP without much trouble,
people with superb credit or simple financial histories may want
to consider a very large mortgage company when shopping for a loan.
That's because some of the biggest lenders have developed their
own underwriting engines in-house, allowing them to streamline the
lending process even further for borrowers who aren't self-employed,
trying to qualify with no income verification or doing anything
else out of the ordinary.
Countrywide
Credit Industries Inc., for one, conceived of its Countrywide
Loan Underwriting Expert System at the beginning of the decade.
Since March 1993, the CLUES system has been the underwriting engine
of choice throughout the Calabasas, Calif.-based company's nationwide
branch network, according to Iain Stobie, senior vice president
for artificial intelligence.
"Its job is to make a decision about whether
the borrower is a good credit risk, whether they have the ability
and the credit history to qualify for the loan and whether the property
is good collateral on the loan," he says. By using CLUES, the company
is also able to offer strong borrowers a specialized loan that requires
hardly any financial statements, pay stubs or other paperwork that
can take hours for consumers to dig up.
Very
little documentation required
"Pretty much all they have to do is walk into a branch and
show their Social Security number," Stobie says. "Using automated
underwriting, we can say there's practically no documentation required.
Much of the decision is based on the credit report and that's an
objective, third-party source of information.
"So really, if you've got good credit, you're
almost there."
There are still limits on what technology can
do to make home buying quicker and more efficient. Appraisers have
to visit homes. Title agents have to trek up to the county courthouse.
Inspectors have to test air conditioning and heating systems. But
lenders note that even some of this is changing. On streamlined
approval loans, for instance, appraisers sometimes don't have to
do much more than take photos of the properties and make cursory
outdoor inspections. A computerized review of recent sales in the
neighborhood and other electronic steps satisfy Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac requirements.
"The biggest thing it's done for us is that
it just allows the borrower to get a decision quicker so the borrower
can get along with their lives quicker," says Prism's Bokenkamp.
"The good credit, decent savings pattern type of borrower that has
enough money to actually buy the house will fly through the system
much faster.
"A majority of loans are going through automated
underwriting at some point in life," he adds, "and it's going to
be bigger and bigger in the next couple years."
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