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Sept. 4, 2009 Written
10 a.m. EDT OUCH:
The unemployment rate rose to 9.7 percent in August, and the number of jobs fell
by a net 216,000, according to the Labor Department. This is the highest unemployment
rate since the depths of the 1982-83 recession, which until recently had been
the worst recession since the Great Depression. In July,
the unemployment rate was 9.4 percent, and it was a jump to 9.7 percent in one
month. The decline in nonfarm payrolls was smaller than most economists had expected.
Normally I say it's sorta-kinda not-so-bad news when job losses aren't as bad
as forecast, but the unemployment rate rises higher than expected, because that's
an indication that the long-term unemployed have regained hope -- that they've
gotten off their couches and started looking for jobs again because they believe
they might succeed this time. Not in this case. No matter how
you look at it, a 9.7 unemployment rate is absolutely awful. Bad economic news
is often good news for mortgage rates, but not this time. Higher unemployment
means greater risk for mortgage lenders, because job loss triggers lots of mortgage
delinquencies and foreclosures. As risk rises for lenders, they will be reluctant
to cut rates and quicker to raise rates. Whenever you're puzzled
by the behavior of lenders, just put yourself in their shoes. If you were lending
money to people so they could buy houses, would you become more cautious in today's
economic environment, when hundreds of thousands of jobs are disappearing every
month? Would you demand to see fresh pay stubs every month? I would, and so would
you, and that's why banks seem so skittish and why they pester you for updated
paperwork. TAYLOR, BEAN UPDATE:
Taylor, Bean & Whitaker has transferred the hundreds of thousands of mortgages
that it had been servicing before it shut down and declared bankruptcy last month. As
TBW explains on this page,
all Ginnie Mae-backed loans were transferred to Bank of America for servicing.
(I'll get to the non-Ginnie loans five paragraphs down.) Translated, this means
that if you had a Federal Housing Administration, Veterans Administration or Rural
Housing Service loan serviced by TBW, your new servicer is Bank of America and
that's where you should send your payments. TBW says you can
reach B of A's servicing department at (800) 669-6607. A B
of A spokesman says the lender mailed "welcome" letters to its former
TBW customers last week, and everyone should receive their letters by today, at
the latest. Now, if you've been reading my blog posts lately,
you know that there have been problems with TBW's escrow account practices. A
Bank of America spokesman tells me that if your mortgage was transferred from
TBW to B of A, then B of A will make sure that your insurance and taxes are paid.
If, for some reason, they aren't paid on time, then you won't be on the hook for
late fees and penalties. B of A's position is that, if TBW
didn't transfer your escrow funds, that's something for B of A and TBW to work
out. They're not going to put you in the middle of it. Let's hope. TBW
says that if your loan was backed by Freddie Mac, and if you were current on your
payments as of your August payment, your loan will be serviced by Cenlar. Cenlar
can be reached at (877) 680-5583. Here's Cenlar's
welcome page for former TBW customers. It has answers to frequently-asked
questions. Here's Freddie Mac's self-service
lookup where you can find out if you have a Freddie loan. If
you were delinquent on your mortgage as of August, then your loan has been transferred
either to Saxon or Ocwen. I don't know much about Saxon, but if your delinquent
loan is with Ocwen, you're in good hands. They're willing to work something out
with you. Saxon's number is (888) 842-6451 and here
is the welcome page for former TBW customers.. Ocwen's number is (800) 746-2936. I've
heard from more than one reader who has received "welcome" letters from
more than one servicer. My recommendation is that you call the servicers to try
to straighten things out. If matters are still confused, then mail your monthly
payment by Sept. 15 to the servicer that you got the last welcome letter from.
If you make the payment by Sept. 15, your payment won't be reported as late, and
if you mail it to the wrong servicer, it's up to them to sort it out. Federal
regulations protect you and your credit history in situations like this. TBW
provides this advice: "It is important for all consumers that your loan number
is written on your check and that you include any special payment instructions
such as additional payments to principal or escrow. Use your TBW loan number until
you receive a new loan number from your new servicer." Let
me repeat something: It's up to the loan servicers to clear up any SNAFUs. To
be on the safe side, photocopy your September payment check before you send it
(if you haven't mailed it already), and write down the address you sent the check
to, in case someone asks. What if you were making payments
via automatic draft from a checking account? Here's what Cenlar has to say on
its FAQ page; I don't know if the other servicers have a similar policy, but I
assume they do. Cenlar says: "If your loan payment drafted
in the past this service will continue. There is nothing that you are required
to do at this time. September and subsequent payments will be drafted no later
than the next scheduled draft date. If your payment did not draft in the month
of August it will be drafted at a later date once the servicing transfer is complete.
We will notify you accordingly. Please be assured that there will be no adverse
credit reporting or action taken as a result of delays. Your patience is appreciated."
Thursday,
Sept. 3 Written 10 a.m.
EDT WHAT TBW DID:
As the 12th-largest mortgage lender in the country was about to collapse, it transferred
its customers' escrow money into the bank account that held the company's operating
funds. The company paid employees out of that bank account. And customers' escrow
refund checks bounced. That's the gist of what happened
with Taylor, Bean & Whitaker. The Ocala, Fla.,-based mortgage lender and servicer
shut down and declared bankruptcy last month. Florida's Office
of Financial Regulation (OFR) filed two cease-and-desist orders against TBW. In
the second order, the OFR says TBW had its customers' escrow money in a separate
bank account, as required by law, but the bank abruptly closed the account. The
bank is unidentified. TBW tried to open an account at two banks,
according to the OFR. Neither bank would do business with TBW, so the mortgage
company deposited customers' escrow money into its operating fund. That's a big
no-no. "If I did something like that, I'd be in jail," a mortgage broker
tells me. The OFR says TBW executives promised that they were
keeping the escrow and operating funds separate in the company's internal accounting,
even though both baskets of money were in the same bank account. I
have several e-mails from readers who say they got escrow refund checks from TBW
that bounced. One reader says the check didn't bounce, but TBW put a stop-payment
on it. I'm asking the folks who e-mailed me to call their banks and find out exactly
what happened: did the TBW escrow refund check come back as insufficient funds,
or did TBW stop payment? The bottom line is that TBW employees
were paid out of the operating account, according to the OFR. But customers' escrow
refunds apparently went unpaid out of the same account. What do you call it when
a company stiffs you the money that it owes you, but pays its employees with money
out of the same account? I'm making a request to readers who
have or recently had mortgages serviced by TBW. At this
e-mail address, please let me know the following: If you
got an escrow refund check that "bounced," exactly what happened? Was
it returned as nonsufficient funds, or did TBW stop payment? What's the date on
the check, and when did your bank find out that TBW wasn't honoring it? If
you currently have a mortgage serviced by TBW, could you please call your homeowner
insurance company and let me know if TBW has paid any premiums that were due recently?
If TBW didn't pay the premium even though you paid for it through your escrow
account, ask the insurance company what recourse you have. I'm
worried. If TBW isn't honoring escrow refund checks, is it paying its customers'
insurance premiums and property taxes? I'm also looking for
an attorney who is well-versed in the law governing escrow funds, and especially
what happens when a mortgage servicer intermingles escrow and operating funds,
then declares Chapter 11 bankruptcy. If that's you, e-mail me. The
OFR is the investigative agency in this matter. I'm not exactly filled with hope
because I question their competence. Here's the home
page of Florida's Office of Financial Regulation. You can go to this
page to find out how to file a complaint, or you can call (800) 848-3792.
The second cease-and-desist order is a slow-loading PDF
file. From my brief interaction with the OFR, I get the
sense that they don't understand the scale of this. I'm not sure that they even
know that people's escrow refund checks aren't being honored. Frankly, I don't
think the OFR is taking this matter as seriously as they should. Perhaps that's
unfair. I think, though, that if they took this seriously, they would return my
calls. I got an e-mail from a reader who complained to a lot of agencies, including
the OFR. The OFR hasn't called him back.
Tuesday,
Sept. 1 Written 10 a.m.
EDT MORE TBW FALLOUT:
Last week I asked to hear from people who have been inconvenienced by the demise
of Taylor, Bean & Whitaker, or TBW. The prominent Ocala, Fla.,-based mortgage
lender closed up shop abruptly last month after it was raided by the FBI. I
heard from a few people, not a lot. And they describe more than one type of problem.
One homeowner was about to refinance with TBW, when he was informed "from
a third party" that his closing had been canceled. He didn't say who the
third party was, but whoever it was, the third party didn't return his call. Then
there are the escrow payoff problems. When you sell the house or refinance the
mortgage, there usually is money remaining in the old loan's escrow account. (The
escrow account is the stash of money that is used to pay insurance and taxes.)
The money remaining in the escrow account is supposed to be refunded to the former
borrower. Some TBW customers got escrow refund checks, but
the checks bounced. One reader writes: "I have called
the Ocala Chamber of Commerce, Better Business Bureau, Florida Attorney General,
OFR -- Office, HUD -- Inspector General, FDIC, Federal Reserve, Bank of America,
Cenlar, Saxon, Federal Trade Commission, and the list goes on, with no answers.
I am wanting to know when and where, will a solvent check arrive that returns
my escrowed money for taxes and home insurance." Mortgage
servicers are lightly regulated. That's what Americans want, apparently, because
we like to vote for politicians who promise to ease regulations on businesses.
In this case we have a servicer that's largely "regulated" by the laissez-faire
state of Florida, and which has sought refuge in federal bankruptcy court. This
skein isn't going to be easy to unravel. I'll check into it.
Meanwhile, keep those TBW horror stories coming. Let
me know if I can interview you and identify you by name.
Friday,
Aug. 28 Written 10:00 a.m. EDT TBW
FALLOUT: A mortgage loan officer tells me that he has received dozens of
e-mails from customers of Taylor, Bean & Whitaker, the prominent lender that
went belly-up this month. He showed me a missive from a borrower who got a $3,100
check from TBW to reimburse him for escrow overpayments. But the check bounced. If
the fall of Taylor Bean cost you a bundle, or caused you great inconvenience,
I'd love to hear from you. Thursday,
Aug. 20 Written 10:30 a.m. EDT DOWN
A LITTLE: The 30-year fixed fell
15 basis points in this week's Bankrate.com survey. Rates for other types
of mortgages didn't fall as far. BONDS AND RATES:
This question comes from a reader named Janet: "How do bond values affect
mortgage rates?" For our purposes, let's confine our discussion of
bonds to mortgage-backed securities, which behave like bonds. Also to keep it
simple, we'll talk about conforming mortgage-backed securities, without tranches.
When you buy such a mortgage-backed security, you're buying the right to receive
principal and interest payments on an underlying pool of mortgages. This
bond -- this mortgage-backed security -- is an IOU. Owning this bond means that
a bunch of people collectively owe you money via monthly mortgage payments. Mortgage-backed
securities are extraordinarily complex because they carry various types of hard-to-measure
risks, and those risks affect one another. There's the risk of nonpayment, of
course, but also the risk that borrowers will pay off their loans earlier than
expected in a refinancing boom, and the risk that they'll keep their loans longer
than expected if rates go up and stay there. So let's step back and discuss
the simplest type of bond. Same concept as a mortgage-backed security, but much
less complex. This simple bond is a one-year IOU. You lend someone $100, and the
borrower pledges to repay you 50 cents a month in interest for the next year,
and the principal amount of $100 a year from now. That IOU is a one-year bond
with a yield of 6 percent. The day you lend the money, you could immediately
sell the IOU for $101. The buyer would pay $101 for the privilege of receiving
$106 over the next year. The bond yield would be about 5 percent. As you see,
the price of the bond went up, so the yield went down. You also could hold
the IOU for six months. After receiving $3 in monthly interest payments (remember,
you've been getting 50 cents a month), you decide to sell the bond. Maybe you
think the borrower might lose his or her job, so you're willing to unload it for
$99. That $99, plus the $3 in interest you received over half a year, means you
earned a net $2 interest in half a year, for a yield of 4 percent. The buyer,
on the other hand, hopes to receive $3 interest over the next six months, plus
$100 at the end of the year -- thus making a $4 profit in six months on an investment
of $99, for a yield of about 8 percent. Hope that's a clear-as-mud explanation
of how yields (and, therefore interest rates) go up when bond prices go down,
and vice versa.
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