Archive for March, 2007

Feds propose a Mortgage Contract

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

Mortgage Contract in the works?

In testimony on Capitol Hill yesterday the idea of creating a 1 page disclosure document signed by both the borrower and the loan originator was proposed by Alex J. Pollock, Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute.
From an article on BrokerNewswire

To educate borrowers, Pollock introduced the idea of a one-page disclosure that would give the essentials of the loans and which would be given to every mortgage borrower a week before the closing.

“When considering borrowers in financial trouble, there is a natural desire to try to protect them,” he said. “I believe the superior strategy is to equip them to protect themselves.”

The disclosure would include:

amount of the loan;
LTV ratio;
final maturity;
prepayment fee if there is one;
balloon payment if there is one;
points and closing costs;
initial rate on the loan in percent and monthly payment in dollars;
how long the rate is good for;
fully indexed rate on the loan in percent and monthly payment in dollars;
the household income on which the loan was based;
initial monthly payment as percent of income and payment plus taxes and insurance as percent of income;
name, number and e-mail for the borrower to contact with any questions;
an authorized signature of the loan originator; and
the signature of the borrower.

“A good lender wants an informed and understanding borrower,” he said.

Source: BrokerNewswire http://www.brokernewswire.com

Original post by mortgage blog

Bueller, Bueller, Bueller -

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

Ben Stein says there is no sub-prime crisis
Watch here…
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/i_video/main500251.shtml?id=2582087n

Original post by mortgage blog

Celebrity Mortgage Bloggers and Real Estate Bloggers

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

This is not what this was intended for but what the heck…. these are mortgage bloggers and real estate bloggers from the Active Rain community. Mouse over them for a zoom and then click the photo and then see this item online to see their profile… this was designed for shopping sites but you can use it for anything really….

Original post by mortgage blog

Scandalous tales of Sex, Lies and Thievery

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

No this is not a blog entry about a new CBS drama series but instead a lurid tale of New Century the poster child of abuse for the sub-prime mortgage industry. Writing in his blog a supposedly ex-employee of New Century writes of sexual harrassment, mortgage fraud, Las Vegas hot tub parties and the like here are a few excerpts:

Regarding his manager’s open-fly policy:

Almost three years into our time at New Century our region manager finally got caught with his fly open. It turns out one of his latest conquests was none to pleased with her funding results after having put out for the old boss. It’s a pretty safe bet she expected to reign at the top of the food chain as her reward. However, I can only guess that our region manager had spread himself a bit too thin in returning the favors that had been granted him by half a dozen or so morally suspect females. This last one sued New Century. Our region manager subsequesntly took a one month involuntary leave and attended counseling. The girl was paid off. She’d been a low level producer before the affair but suddenly was awash in new business and loads of cash. Wow. Fun times, fun times

http://0182eb9.netsolhost.com/blog1/?cat=19

The writer also spreads the blame for the state of the mortgage industry around - placing some solely on the shoulders of realtors…

Case in point - while I was at New Century one of my brokers acted as a ’speaker’ at first-time homebuyer (no money down) seminars for a real estate office where they procurred a good portion of their business. These first-time homebuyer seminars were commonplace around the country during the real estate run-up. In conversation with this loan officer I learned of the content these seminars provided to first-time homebuyers. The gist of it was this - all you needed was the right credit score and a few other basic qualifications and these agents could get you into a home. There was no regard to whether the buyer could actually afford the home. There existed no content wherein the agents discussed affordability or budgeting or future financial scenarios once the adjustable mortgages they were utilizing actually adjusted. As a matter of fact, this loan officer told me the agents discouraged talking about affordability and budgeting. All they wanted the loan officer to focus in on was the payment to get the buyer into the home. They would also tell the buyers to refer to their accountants (as if the buyer’s even had tax or financial advisors) for any budgeting advice. The loan officer was futher instructed to refer to the first-time homebuyer loans as ‘entry-level’ loans meant to get the buyer into the house which was sure to appreciate thereby enabling the borrower to refinance into a conventional loan down the road.

http://0182eb9.netsolhost.com/blog1/?cat=21

And finally writing about the overall mental state of the industry:

It was also during this time that the SubPrime machine was firing on all eight cylinders. Loans were flying in, everything was getting approved, foreclosures were something that happened back in the Great Depression. Everything was great. Or so you might think. Because there was a new phenomenon taking place, the predatory broker. Now this is where a real departure between morality and immorality in SubPrime lending begins to appear. I say this because part of a lender’s moral and legal responsibility is to protect the interest of its borrowers. However, when the lender itself has created the platform on which brokers can prey on the unsuspecting, then the lender is just as culpable as the predator.
It is a hard position to believe on one hand you’re helping people get into homes or maybe helping them through a rough financial patch, then on the other hand knowing that you might be setting them up for failure. It’s a tough call. And here’s my take. You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink - unless he wants to drink. Therein lies the paradox of SubPrime lending. Who’s at fault? The water source, Wall Street. Or maybe the well-keepers, the lenders. Or could it be the horse-trainer, the mortgage broker, who leads the thirsty horse to the well. Or could it even be the horse, our poor borrower, who wants only to share in the American Dream. Well let me tell you, while I may have slept through Home Economics in high school I at least learned that the American Dream doesn’t come with a 5.99 Margin on a 2 Year LIBOR ARM with a prepayment penalty that could choke a donkey and an exploding payment at the end of two years that won’t help the borrower’s chances of continuing in good standing on their mortgage down the road - it will hurt their chances! It actually forces them to keep refinancing thereby creating more fees and more earnings and good God do I need to explain any more. It should be crystal by now. Don’t anyone forget that the people taking out SubPrime loans were adults - not children. It is their responsibility to be responsible for their own actions. Easy money does not mean it’s free.
On that preceding note, if I had to put a number to it I would guess that three quarters of the brokers I dealt with overcharged their clients and put them into loans only for the sake of generating the highest commission for themselves. The half-truths and bald-faced lies they must have told to force feed these loans down most borrowers throats I can only imagine - let alone the lies they were slinging the lender’s way. And I had to deal with these people every day. The norm would have me talking to one broker who was obviously fishing for guidance on packaging a kinky deal with another one on hold ready to rip me a new asshole because he couldn’t get more rebate by jacking the borrower’s rate any higher and another one in the lobby frothing at the mouth because we found out the W2’s he’d submitted were doctored and the poor bastard wouldn’t be able to make his Beamer payment that month - no wonder he was frothing.

http://0182eb9.netsolhost.com/blog1/?cat=19

There is no evidence that all of this is not a mere fabrication - you the reader must decide - however the writer seems to name names (at least his own) and clearly points people to his new mortgage company - so this is not an anonymous person throwing words at a blog.

Original post by mortgage blog

Adjustable Mortgage Resets

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

Mortgage Reset Data
Looks like a busy year for sub-prime adjustable to fixed. This will probably boost the use of 40 year and 50 year fixed mortgages as the exotic products are removed from the market.

This chart is from a blog but the original is from
Credit Suisse Fixed Income Mortgage Strategy

http://www.autodogmatic.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=1226#1226

Original post by mortgage blog

UNICEF: Tapping the Power of Water

Tuesday, March 20th, 2007

The Tap Project, the agency’s first new campaign in 50-plus years, kicks off Mar. 22 to raise funds for clean drinking water in developing countries

Original post by BusinessWeek Online — Investing

Fingers Point as the Sky is Falling

Tuesday, March 20th, 2007

Reading many of my favorite mortgage blogs lately it seems everyone is pointing fingers regarding the “sky is falling” attitude of many mortgage industry participants and pundits. National news media and the channels like CNBC mention the subprime mortgage crisis every 15 minutes….

perhaps this could be a new drinking game - chug a beer everytime the phrase subprime meltdown is said on CNBC…..

Anyway like anything else the journalism majors don’t understand global capital markets and the headline news writers sell mass hysteria - don’t you have the bird flu yet?

What is amusing to me is that appraisers are blaming the mortgage brokers, the brokers blame the realtors and the realtors blame the home buyers for being dumb enough to accept the deal with the devil financing offered by the mortgage brokers who blame the realtors for showing people homes that couldn’t really afford propped up by bogus appraisals that created negative equity in the home ….. you see how this circle of blame is working….

Regardless this will create a huge opportunity and create a new garden of capital … more on that tomorrow…

Original post by mortgage blog

New Investment Advisory Services

Sunday, March 18th, 2007

Steelhead Capital prides itself on taking a private banking approach to supporting client objectives. By choosing to engage a customer we are committing all of our resources to making their opportunity a success. Customers that work with us know that this often means going beyond the role of a typical advisor.

For quite some time now the executive team has been assisting investors with all aspects of the commercial financing process, including custom commercial loans but also with sales, acquisitions, and other core elements of turn key investment solutions.

One of our goals with the new website format is to give you more access to institutional grade information. We hope you’ll find these expanded resources helpful, and look forward to continued improvements as part of our commitment to offering you the advantage of a private banking experience.

Original post by Steelhead Capital

LIVE Hot Transfer Mortgage Leads from DoublePositive

Monday, March 12th, 2007

Please welcome DoublePositive Marketing Group to Broker Outpost!

DoublePositive provides LIVE Hot Transfer Mortgage Leads for as little as $39 per transfer with no minimum orders and no long-term contracts. Every DoublePositive transfer passes through the DOUBLEconfirm(tm) process, which delivers live consumers who have the highest probability of converting into a sale:

STEP 1: Interested Consumer
Borrowers express interest in a new mortgage loan by submitting a form online or calling a toll-free number. DoublePositive gathers lead data and sends it to a call center in real time.

STEP 2: Live Contact
DoublePositive’s Call Center contacts the consumer and confirms the consumer’s interest in speaking with a mortgage originator.

STEP 3: Live Transfer
The Call Center Agent transfers the call to a mortgage originator, and the sales process continues directly between the interested consumer and mortgage originator.

You control the criteria of the borrowers DoublePositive transfers to you. Only borrowers who match your exact criteria after our DOUBLEconfirm(tm) process has been successfully performed will be transferred.

For more information check out www.doublepositive.com/mortgage or call 888-376-7484.

Original post by Darin

Welcome to Commercial Loan News

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

Welcome to the new Commercial Loan News blog from Steelhead Capital. If you’ve been to our website before, you’ll probably notice all the changes going on these days. We’re in the finishing stages of our relaunch, and have a number of new additions to the site to announce soon.

If you haven’t already, please take a moment and sign up for our newsletter mailing list here. Likewise, if you’re visiting our site and happen to notice any errors or just want to share your feedback on the new design, please drop us a line.

Thank you!
The Steelhead Capital Team

Original post by Steelhead Capital