Thursday,
Dec. 4 Posted 4 p.m.
EST WHAT'S UP WITH JUMBO CONFORMING?:
A reader from the Bay Area asks why conforming jumbo rates have remained high.
I'm wondering the same thing. Why haven't they fallen? I'm sure at least one of
my beloved readers has a theory. Fire away to hlewis@bankrate.com.
Hi,
Holden, I know that Jumbo Conforming limits for 2009 are dropping substantially
or have been eliminated in many counties (based on your article--thanks!). However,
I live in high-priced San Mateo county in the SF Bay Area (one of the counties
where the jumbo conforming limit will still be over $600,000 in '09). And I'm
finding that my searches for jumbo conforming loans less than $600,000 and more
than $417,000 have turning up rates of more than 7 percent the past few weeks,
which is more like the 150 basis point premium over conforming rates associated
with full jumbos. In the past, jumbo conforming loans have been closer to 50 basis
points higher, so what gives? Are lenders just waiting for the mid-Dec FHA 2009
guidelines to be issued and protecting themselves until then by lending anything
non-conforming at jumbo rates? I figure this might be the case given how jumbo
conforming rates jumped substantially (despite the dramatic fall in rates over
the past week) since early- to mid-November, when banks imposed deadlines in order
to close loans in 2008.
For readers who don't
live in the land of jumbo conforming, much of the above might look like gibberish.
For those who fall within the jumbo conforming limits, it's probably very understandable.
If and when I get an explanation, I'll make it clear to all of y'all.
Posted
11 a.m. EST LOBBYING
FOR JOBS: The Washington Post says the Treasury is "strongly
considering" a proposal to intervene in the mortgage markets and cut the
30-fixed to 4.5 percent or less. The article has four reporters, including the
excellent Dina ElBoghdady, and each of the reporters has better sources than I
have. Still, I have my doubts that Treasury is "strongly considering"
the proposal. It appears that the National Association
of Realtors hatched this idea. The NAR proposed that the Treasury buy enough mortgage-backed
securities to drive the 30-year fixed down to 4.5 percent. But only -- get this
-- but only purchasers would be allowed to get that low rate. Refinancers would
be out of luck. The Treasury has the authority to buy mortgage-backed
securities and drive down rates. But to limit low rates to buyers, and to leave
refinancers out in the cold, would require Congress to pass a law. I propose that
such a law be titled the "Employment for Realtors Act." Maybe the Employment
for Realtors Act has a chance of passage. After all, this year the Realtors persuaded
a gullible Congress to offer a repayable tax credit to first-time homebuyers. The
Realtors are one of the most effective lobbying groups around. They're good at
what they do because they focus exclusively on what's good for their members.
They don't worry about what's good (or bad) for anyone else. It doesn't matter
to the Realtors if this proposal would prolong the recession, inflate another
housing bubble and treat current homeowners unfairly. What matters is whether
it would benefit the NAR's membership of real estate agents by boosting home sales.
If it would, the NAR will lobby for it strongly, no matter the cost to the rest
of us. Neel Kashkari, the Treasury official who oversees the
$700 Billion Big Bailout, told the Realtors to go forth and lobby Congress. Rest
assured that they will, and that the Realtors in your town are calling your representative
and senators. They're calling the congressional switchboard
at (202) 224-3121 or (202) 225-3121. TWITTER:
I have a day-old Twitter account and I'm picking up a follower about once every
hour. But most of my followers are industry people. If you're a Twittering consumer
and you're shopping for a home or a mortgage, follow me @HoldenL.
I'll keep you apprised of goings-on, including sudden rate moves. Take a look
at my followers, too; some of them, such as mortgage broker Dan Green, provide
good and fast info. Wednesday, Dec. 3
Posted 9 p.m. EST TREASURY
PLAN: The Wall Street Journal and Washington Post report that a couple
of industry groups want the Treasury Department to consume mass quantities of
mortgage-backed securities, sending mortgage rates as low as 4.5 percent. The
news is likely to cause mortgage rates to sink Thursday morning. I think this
rate dip will be a temporary condition, as it becomes clear that the report is
premature. This supposed Treasury plan might never come to fruition. The
Post and Journal are not saying which industry groups are behind this inchoate
proposal, but clearly we're talking about the National Association of Realtors
and National Association of Home Builders. It's easy enough to deduce that. Those
two groups would benefit more than anyone else -- consumers included. What's unclear
is how seriously the Treasury is considering this entreaty from the NAR and NAHB. According
to the Post, the idea is for Treasury to do what the Federal Reserve is about
to do: Buy billions of dollars' worth of mortgage-backed securities from Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, which securitizes FHA-insured loans. This brings
up the question of why the government would duplicate the effort. My
colleague Greg McBride, who appeared tonight on CNBC to talk about this proposal
to Treasury, wonders what the unintended consequences could be. The main worry
is that the Fed and Treasury would end up inflating another housing bubble. It's
rather scary to think that, indeed, maybe that's exactly what the Fed and Treasury
want to do -- that they believe another housing bubble would be better than the
alternative. If the federal government does succeed in spurring
home sales (instead of allowing the housing sector to recover on its own accord),
then house prices will rise, reducing affordability. Many would-be buyers have
been sitting on the sidelines, saving money and waiting for the right time to
buy. Not all of these future buyers would benefit from a swift upturn in house
prices. That's especially the case for people who are still saving for a down
payment, and aren't ready to buy just yet. There's also a question
about the disparate treatment of conforming and jumbo mortgages. By targeting
conforming mortgages, the Fed and Treasury would be excluding jumbo loans from
treatment. Jumbo rates are sky-high. This is a big deal in California, where houses
are so expensive that even solidly middle-class families get jumbo mortgages to
buy modest houses in the big metro areas. Why aren't the feds taking steps to
bring jumbo rates down? Wednesday, Dec. 3
Posted 11 a.m. EST TWITTER:
Follow me on Twitter for brief updates on what's going on in the mortgage world,
at http://twitter.com/HoldenL.
I'll tweet as soon as the results of our rate survey come in this afternoon.
RATES: Today is the day when
I endeavor to guess what our weekly rate survey will reveal. Bankrate's research
department surveys mortgage rates every Wednesday morning, and the timing makes
it difficult to make a prediction. I won't bore you with details about why the
timing of the Fed's yadda yadda yadda. Sigh. It's really hard
to make this prediction this week. I'll say that our survey will say that the
30-year fixed rose 14 basis points this week, to 6.11 percent. I
could be way off. It's possible that our survey will say that rates are down 3
basis points or 5 basis points, instead of up 14 basis points. Or the survey might
say that rates went up a lot more than 14 basis points. As I said, the details
would bore you. Suffice to say that last week's tremendous volatility makes it
hard to do a week-to-week comparison. Yadda yadda. GOOLSBEE:
At the beginning of March 2007, the subprime mortgage market blew up. Prominent
subprime lenders such as Fremont General, Ameritrust and New Century collapsed.
In the middle of the month, Ameriquest closed. Then HSBC stopped buying loans
from smaller lenders. Those are just the big ones. It was a subprime bloodbath. On
March 29, 2007, three weeks after the subprime dam collapsed, a University of
Chicago economist named Austan Goolsbee published an op-ed
in The New York Times, in which he pooh-poohed the idea that people were fooled
into buying homes that they couldn't afford. Goolsbee wrote: Almost
every new form of mortgage lending - from adjustable-rate mortgages to home equity
lines of credit to no-money-down mortgages - has tended to expand the pool of
people who qualify but has also been greeted by a large number of people saying
that it harms consumers and will fool people into thinking they can afford homes
that they cannot. Congress is contemplating a serious tightening of regulations
to make the new forms of lending more difficult. New research from some of the
leading housing economists in the country, however, examines the long history
of mortgage market innovations and suggests that regulators should be mindful
of the potential downside in tightening too much.
Goolsbee
noted that many types of new mortgages were invented between 1970 and 2000. "These
innovations mainly served to give people power to make their own decisions about
housing, and they ended up being quite sensible with their newfound access to
capital," Goolsbee wrote. He added that the market should
trust borrowers who believe that their incomes will rise in the future. Let them
buy too much house now and let their incomes grow into it: An efficient market,
Goolsbee wrote, is one characterized by "people's decisions unrestricted
by the amount of money they have right now." Read that
again. He says lending decisions shouldn't be based on the incomes and down payments
people have now; decisions should be based on how much borrowers think they'll
earn someday. Goolsbee concluded that when you look at the
market that way, "the mortgage market has become more perfect, not more irresponsible.
People tend to make good decisions about their own economic prospects." I
think he was terribly wrong. When I look at people who have
low credit scores, I see people who don't make good decisions about their economic
prospects. I see people who don't pay bills on time, don't keep jobs for long,
and who regard the state lottery as a retirement plan. Apparently, when Goolsbee
looks at subprime customers, he sees sensible people who can accurately assess
their future economic prospects. Why does it matter what a
University of Chicago economist said almost two years ago? It matters because
Goolsbee was the Obama campaign's chief economic adviser. He will be the staff
director and chief economist on President Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board,
and will be one of three members of the president's Council of Economic Advisers. You
can take the economist out of the University of Chicago, but can you take the
University of Chicago out of the economist? We must hope so, because the Chicago
School's anti-regulation fervor has been discredited by the mortgage meltdown. This
March, a year after that Times op-ed appeared, Goolsbee wrote a short essay
for The Washington Post, explaining what an Obama administration would do to turn
the economy around. The first priority, he wrote, would be to "enact a comprehensive
plan to help bring an end to the foreclosure crisis that threatens millions of
families." Goolsbee advocated an FHA refinancing program
for delinquent borrowers. Such a plan has has since been started, called Hope
for Homeowners. (In its first six weeks of operation, the FHA took a grand total
of 180 Hope for Homeowners applications nationwide.) Goolsbee
added: "Obama would couple this plan with a direct interest-rate subsidy
for low- and middle-income borrowers patterned on the mortgage interest deduction
now predominantly used by high-income itemizers, as well as with comprehensive
credit counseling, additional aid for loan workouts and reform of the bankruptcy
code." Maybe Goolsbee has adopted some humility.
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