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Secrets of the automated mortgage
underwriting system are revealed at last
By Michael
D. Larson Bankrate.com
Borrowers
may think the mortgage industry is an "evil empire." But just like
Ronald Reagan's onetime enemy, the business seems to have realized
some glasnost is in order.
Companies that design automated underwriting
systems -- which lenders use to evaluate roughly three out of four
mortgages today -- have started releasing more details than ever
before about how they work. Fannie
Mae opened its Desktop
Underwriter system to scrutiny Jan. 14 by sharing a list of
all the factors that DU reviews. Observers now know the system considers
whether someone is getting a fixed rate or adjustable rate mortgage,
for instance, and whether a borrower is buying a duplex, renting
out one of the units and using the income to support the loan payment.
(For a more detailed look at the system's inner workings, see the
accompanying
Bankrate.com story.)
The move comes just two months after the Department
of Housing and Urban Development said it will make its automated
underwriting system for Federal Housing Administration loans transparent
when it comes out later this year. While it doesn't go as far as
it could, this policy of openness should help demystify the lending
process for prospective and rejected borrowers alike.
"Anything that gets out to consumers what is
looked at, it's a good thing," says Joe May, a loan officer with
Home
Security Mortgage Corp. in Fredericksburg, Va. "Everyone
wants to know what's going to be on the test, what it's going to
be graded on and the more people know about the process, the better
it is for consumers and the entire mortgage industry."
Lenders have used automated
underwriting systems for years, but the trend accelerated in
the late 1990s. The percentage of companies with a computerized
loan approval process in place soared to 75 last year from 25 percent
in 1996, according to Jeff Lebowitz, a principal at the industry
research firm Mortech,
LLC of Silver Spring, Md.
Speeds
up the process
Most experts agree that's helped lenders approve loans faster
while saving consumers money on underwriting costs. But it's also
shifted a lot of the responsibility for lending decisions to the
secondary marketing agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac.
Consider that together their two automated underwriting
systems account for 95 percent of the market. While those systems
technically don't approve or deny mortgages, they reply to applications
submitted by lenders with either an "approve" or "accept" (the language
depends on whether Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac did the evaluation),
a "refer," or a "refer with caution."
The first response means the reviewing agency
will probably agree to buy the loan from the lender. The second
means the agency wants manual underwriting performed on it. The
third means the agency probably won't buy the mortgage unless there
are extenuating circumstances.
Since lenders often follow those guidelines
to a "T," somebody who's referred may not get a loan. If the borrower
does, it may be at a higher interest rate. That's because the lender
has to either hold that loan in its own portfolio or sell it to
a private company that costs more to do business with than the agencies.
Given this setup, it's only natural consumers
would want to know how to get the best rating. But until now, the
agencies haven't been willing to share exactly how their systems
work. Nor have they given people a road map to success.
Freddie Mac has provided some information about
its Loan
Prospector system to consumers via the company's Internet site
for a few years, but many details have been left out. Other information
is available exclusively to lenders.
Fannie Mae, on the other hand, has talked in
general terms about its DU system to many audiences, but refused
to share specifics with anyone. In interviews last fall, for instance,
company officials wouldn't discuss exactly how borrowers are evaluated
or how much lenders pay to use the system. They also wouldn't provide
examples of the responses, called advice or findings, that DU spits
back to lenders.
HUD
wants consumers to know
Those stances prompted HUD
to lambaste the agencies in mid-November. HUD also promised
to make its own automated underwriting system, which will start
processing loans sometime in late spring or early summer, transparent.
Consumers will be made aware of the government agency's underwriting
methodology and anyone who's rejected for an FHA loan will be told
exactly why.
"Buying a home is the most expensive, most complicated
and most intimidating financial transaction most Americans ever
make. Some people who could qualify for mortgages don't apply because
they fear the process is too hard and fear they'll be turned down,"
HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo said. The agency's approach, he added,
should help change that this year.
"In effect, FHA's new automated underwriting
system will be like a glass box, exposed to the light of day and
public scrutiny."
Whether on its own or in response to HUD's pressure,
Fannie Mae revised its own stance on automated underwriting technology
last month. During a speech
before the National
Association of Home Builders, Chief Executive Officer Franklin
Raines fired off a list of the things DU considers. He also pledged
to improve the system so that it tells lenders more about why a
borrower's application was referred rather than approved.
"I'm going to open the book on Fannie Mae's
automated underwriting system," Raines said. "You want to know what's
in Desktop Underwriter, how it works and what criteria it uses?
OK. Here it is."
What
Fannie Mae looks at
In addition to an overall list of the variables that the system
uses, Fannie Mae spelled out what it considers to be the most important
things about a transaction -- equity, credit history and liquid
reserves.
A loan looks better, for example, if the borrower
has more invested in the transaction via a higher down payment.
The system also likes borrowers who have managed their finances
well and have a fair amount of money left over in the bank after
closing because that cash could be tapped for a payment or two,
if necessary. (For a more detailed look at the system's inner workings,
see the accompanying
Bankrate.com story.)
Still, Fannie Mae didn't explain how the system
weights each of the DU variables. It also didn't provide consumers
a way to take their data and compute how they would rate on their
own.
There are other details missing as well. Fannie
Mae says its system overrides an otherwise approvable application
in a couple of cases, such as when a borrower has a total debt to
income ratio that's "unusually high." But a company spokeswoman
refused to say how high is too high. The only thing consumers do
know is that the old 36 percent guideline -- which said people shouldn't
get a mortgage if overall debt payments would swallow more than
36 percent of gross monthly income after closing -- no longer applies.
It's
good for people who pay their bills
Agency supporters argue that rigid black-and-white standards
serve no purpose because automated underwriting systems allow strength
in one part of a borrower's application to compensate for weakness
in another. A strong record of paying bills on time might make up
for a low down payment, they point out.
"The good side about automated underwriting
is it has some leeway," says Randy Johnson, a Newport Beach, Calif.
mortgage broker who wrote How to Save Thousands of Dollars
on Your Home Mortgage. "People who pay their bills are going
to get their loans approved, by and large.
"You don't have a human underwriter coming in
and saying, 'You've only been employed 23 months, not 24 months',
'Your ratios are 40.1 and my limit is 40', or 'Show me the seasoning
of three months of bank statements on that account for the down
payment', or 'Write me a letter of explanation on the credit,' "
he adds. "It allows people who are interested in helping their clients
get past that issue."
Officials from the secondary marketing agencies
also say that lenders should be a part of the explaining process
when it comes to automated underwriting methods. Giving borrowers
the keys to the city without someone to show them around would be
foolish.
"We are a company that, by and large, speaks
with lenders who then speak with customers," says Freddie Mac spokesman
Douglas Robinson. "The lenders have our guidelines."
Not everyone agrees, however.
Wei Chao, a 37-year old research scientist at
Iowa State University, is in the process of shopping for his first
house in Ames. While he understands the concept behind automated
underwriting and some of what the systems look at, he says he wishes
he knew more.
"I believe it would make our lives a lot easier
if they let us know what things in the files (are) actually hurting
us," Chao says during an e-mail interview. "It shouldn't be a black
box."
"I give my confidential financial information
to them," he adds. "It's fair they let me know how they have come
to the decision to say no."
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