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REAL ESTATE
Goodbye easy mortgage money
By Amy Hoak, MarketWatch
Last Update: 5:01 PM ET Mar 21, 2007
CHICAGO (MarketWatch) -- The era of easy mortgage
money has disappeared in the wake of problems in loans
made to some of the riskiest borrowers at the height of
the housing boom, with lenders now asking for more
financial documents, bigger down payments and proof of
greater credit responsibility from would-be borrowers.
The tougher underwriting standards won't prevent most
mortgage applicants from getting a loan and they aren't
likely to remain in place for long, especially if the
housing market regains its footing later this year. But
they are limiting options even for the most creditworthy
borrowers and forcing first-time home buyers and those
with less than stellar credit to go back to the drawing
board and rethink their purchase or refinancing options.
Lenders also are shying away from loans that cover 100%
of a property's value and looking askance at cash-out
refinancing requests.
Those shut out due to stricter lending standards should
focus on improving their credit scores and building
savings, working toward the goal of buying a home in the
future, Johnson said.
"For people who thought they were going to be able to
buy a home this year because of this profligate lending
... they can make themselves attractive to the industry
again by doing things that should have been doing," he
said. "Stop relying on credit. Get your fiscal house in
order. There will be lenders standing in line all day."
Affected borrowers
One group of borrowers that will find the going more
difficult is made up of those who choose no- or
stated-income loans, said A.W. Pickel III, president of
LeaderOne Financial Corp. in Lenexa, Kan.. These
borrowers, who find it hard to document their income
because it is earned irregularly -- say through
occasional commissions -- may need to make some
concessions.
Case in point: LeaderOne Financial had a no-income, 100%
jumbo loan available up until last week, he said.
Borrowers who applied for this loan weren't subprime --
in fact, they required a credit score of at least 720.
Today, it's a 95% mortgage instead.
Other challenges will hit those on the fringe between
prime mortgages, for borrowers who are the best credit
risks, and subprime loans, for the risky borrowers,
experts said.
Borrowers with a credit score under 620 are likely to
feel the most pressure with regard to stricter
standards, said Mark Lefanowicz, president of E-Loan.
And credit scores will probably need to be higher for
borrowers at the fringe to reach prime status, said Eric
Weinstein, president of Centreville, Va.-based Carteret
Mortgage Corp. The credit score that separated an A
borrower from an Alt-A borrower, the first step down to
subprime, used to be about 620 and now is scooting up to
the 660 range, he said.
Credit scores, the best known of which is the FICO score
created by Fair Isaac Corp., are used by lenders to
predict repayment behavior and set interest rates
accordingly.
For some of the subprime and Alt-A loans, lending
criteria have been changing so often that Weinstein's
company is busy "remapping" lenders' offerings, trying
to keep up.
"It's driving us crazy," Weinstein said. "Some are
staying the same, some are getting tighter and some are
out of business," he said of the lenders he deals with.
Another group affected by stricter standards is
first-time buyers who may be shut out of homeownership,
Lefanowicz said. During recent years, some Realtors'
clientele was largely made of first-time buyers, many of
whom didn't need a substantial down payment, he said.
"Now, they're going to need more cash to get in, more
times than not," he said.
The pendulum
But Weinstein also believes some of these tightened
standards won't stick around for long.
"Give it one or two years and it will swing back to
where it was," he said. "Right now it's very tight ...
it will slowly loosen up as the housing market
improves."
What is happening right now is part of the "natural flow
of events in the mortgage industry," he said. The
reaction isn't unusual at a time when home values aren't
rising as they once were; rapid home-value increases
inspire more risky loans to be made (because lenders are
confident they can easily recoup the mortgage value from
the appreciated sales price if the borrower defaults),
while slower appreciation will inspire tighter lending
standards, he added.
The pendulum swings back and forth, Pickel said, and
depending on the performance of outstanding loans
certain products ripped from the list of options today
could very well be back in a year.
But the pendulum may not yet have finished swinging to
the conservative side. As a result of the problems in
the subprime market -- including defaults that are
affecting some lenders' books -- some of the stricter
lending standards "will move into the prime even if the
defaults don't," said Christopher Cagan, director of
research and analytics at First American CoreLogic, a
provider of mortgage risk analytics and real estate
information. He expects that lenders will, in general,
be more cautious about the loans they approve.
With many housing markets throughout the country cooling
significantly, more homeowners aren't able to tap home
equity and instead are missing payments, defaulting on
their loans and heading for foreclosure -- often after
the interest rate on an adjustable-rate loan resets.
That has caught lenders' attention, even if they aren't
hit by the subprime fallout, making them more
conservative as a result.
In a report released this week, "Mortgage Payment Reset:
The Issue and the Impact," Cagan studied 8.37 million
adjustable-rate mortgages that originated between 2004
and 2006, and estimated that 1.1 million of those
homeowners will end up in foreclosure during the span of
six to seven years. The debt from the mortgages will
total $326 billion, and after foreclosure and resale,
about $112 billion will be lost to remaining equity,
lenders and investors over several years, according to
the report.
But putting the numbers in perspective, Cagan reported
that the losses would translate to less than 1% of U.S.
mortgage lending projected for the several-year period,
and won't have a debilitating effect on the economy or
mortgage lending industry.
"There will be loans for (borrowers) to get," he said.
"Wells Fargo and Bank of America aren't going to go out
of business for two years and say 'We're not going to
make any loans to anybody.'"
Amy Hoak is a MarketWatch reporter based in Chicago.
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