Mortgage News

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Fannie Mae Adds New Risk-Based Pricing And "Adverse Market" Fees For All Conforming Mortgage Applicants

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Fannie Mae's Loan Level Pricing Adjustments (LLPA) for conforming mortgages, effective October 2008

Effective October 1, 2008, Fannie Mae is making home loans more expensive for Americans.  You may want to bookmark this page because where Fannie goes, Freddie often follows.

The first part of Fannie’s two-part change is a remodel on its risk-based fee structure, also known as loan-level pricing adjustments.  The original model was eighty-sixed after just 12 weeks.

To read the fee chart, locate the intersection of your credit score and mortgage loan-to-value.  The cross-section is your risk-based mortgage fee, as mandated by Fannie Mae, and represented by this formula:

How to calculate loan-level pricing adjustment fees from Fannie Mae

Risk-based fees are relatively new to conforming borrowers; mortgage pricing was previously one-size-fits-all.  Today, however, not so much. 

20 different conforming borrowers might be offered 20 distinct mortgage rates and none of the them would be considered out-of-market.  It’s one reason why "ballparking" a mortgage rate is so darn tough these days.

But don’t be discouraged if the risk-based pricing model confuses you — it’s actually one with which we’re all pretty familiar.  Think auto insurance. 

With auto insurance, the cost of a policy increases as a driver’s perceived risk to the insurance company increases.  A "safe" profile, in other words, is rewarded with lower premium.

Risk-based pricing by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac acts like a tax on conforming mortgage borrowersThe same methodology applies to loan-level pricing adjustments and, in this sense, LLPAs are strangely fair — the highest risk borrowers are paying the highest costs.

Fannie Mae’s second pricing change, however, is not as democratic.

Across the board, Fannie Mae is doubling its Adverse Market Delivery Charge to 0.500 percent. 

This is a blanket fee that applies to all mortgages that Fannie Mae securitizes, regardless of credit score or loan-to-value.

Everyone pays.

Now, consider: This is the 3rd and 4th time since December 2007 that Fannie Mae stepped between Wall Street and Main Street to alter mortgage pricing. 

This is bad news because rates are supposed to be determined by the price of mortgage bonds alone.

Instead, rates are being set by the price of mortgage bonds plus whatever fees Fannie (or Freddie) tack on top.

And, so long as Fannie and Freddie project a growing number of mortgage defaults in their respective portfolios, we can expect that loan-level pricing adjustments will increase for a 5th and 6th time sometime before the New Year.

Watch this 5-minute video on the mortgage market and you’ll understand what I mean.  Guidelines are shrinking, costs are rising, and underwriting is a giant kludge.

So, why is now a good time to buy a home?  Because, all things equal, it’s going to be a heckuva lot more expensive and a lot more difficult to get it financed in the future.  Markets are still contracting, folks.  Fannie’s new fees are proof.

Battered GSE Stocks Recover Slightly in Early Tuesday Trading

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Shares of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae
were looking a little better in early trading on Tuesday after investors
fled the two government sponsored entities (GSEs) the previous day over
doubts that their underlying capital could make it more
difficult for them to buy or guarantee mortgages. That, in turn, could
make interest rates on new home mortgage loans rise sharply.

The concerns arose after Lehman Brothers reported that new
accounting rules
might require that the two companies raise
billions in new funds.

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IndyMac Joins Roster of Banks to Fold its Mortgage "Tent."

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IndyMac has announced that, effective yesterday, it
is closing both its wholesale and retail production channel and will no
longer accept any new mortgage loan submission or rate locks. It will
also reduce its workforce to around 3,200 from the
current level of 7,400. The bank will also, apparently, continue its
other retail banking operations.

The stock had reached $.71 cents Monday after trading as high as 31.32
in the last year and was delisted from NASDAQ.

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