Showing posts with label negam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label negam. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Countrywide admits:Ticking Time Bombs




I know it seems like a decade ago but people used to get a big head about their recent investment property purchase or their great 1% rate on their 1.3m condo in the city. WAMU, Countrywide, INDYMAC, World Savings(bought by Wachovia) and countless bankrupt lenders did these loans all day long. They allowed the borrower to have a payment that was less than the interest on the underlying mortgage. The "teaser rate" allowed people to qualify for a lot more home than they could possibly afford. Up until mid 2007 borrowers would be qualified based on the teaser rate that typically lasted for 5 years or until the loan had negativly amortized to 105% or 110% of the original balance. Then the loan would fully amortize. Meaning a HUGE spike in the payment. Let's not even mention the people that believed the loan officer or broker who swore on his/her upcoming BMW payment that the 1% was fixed. Yes, it is fixed but they were placing a serious bet about their income and the property market overall. Overall industry standard performance on these loans is that around 75% of people make the 1% negative amortization payment on their pick-a-pay. More like pick-your-poison.
I am all for financial innovation and creative financing but this product was heavily pushed to the point of terrible underwriting. The banks placed bets as well that property would continue to appreciate and/or the borrower would make a lot more in the future. During 2006, 60% of the loans done in Los Angeles/Orange County CA were interest only. A great percentage of the loan volume in CA done between 2004-07 were the option arm variety. The radio jingle ran" No points, no fees, lower your mortgage payment today 1% call today 1-800-...."




The time bomb begins to go off starting in 2009. These loans will be like a neutron bomb. Kill the formerly happy home owner/investor and leave the house standing in line for a foreclosure. Granted a great percentage of these will be fine, but if you think defaults were interesting from a perspective of that only happens in "working class"(read:poor) neighboorhoods then you have seen nothing like the upcoming disaster of 2009-2011. As an example here is the breakdown on a 750k loan with a 1.25% teaser and a fully indexed rate of 6.826% which is an excellent rate for a super prime borrower:




Minimum Payment Rate: 1.250%
Fully Indexed Rate (FIR): 6.826%
Minimum Payment: $2,499.39 ( Deferred Interest: $1,766.86 )
Interest Only Payment: $4,266.25
Fully Amortizing 30-Year Payment: $4,902.44
Fully Amortizing 15-Year Payment: $6,668.46
Fully Amortizing 40-Year Payment: $4,566.25 (not available)
Possible Minimum Payment Changes (based on a 30-year loan term)
Year 1
$2,499.39
= Base of Minimum Payment
Year 2
$2,686.84
= $2,499.39 + 7.50%
Year 3
$2,888.36
= $2,686.84 + 7.50%
Year 4
$3,104.98
= $2,888.36 + 7.50%
Year 5
$3,337.86
= $3,104.98 + 7.50%



When the loan hits 105-110% of the original balance they go fully amortizing. That big old 5k payment you see above. Hmm, maybe that will impact Cheese Cake Factory, Coach, Starbucks and the local car dealer. Funny how they are already slowing down now. Wait until the big resets occur. We are in the first quarter of a long drag out football game.

If you like the math misery done for you on a negam visit the calculator here. Also if you would like to read a previous post on the topic and watch a video of the time bomb click here.

FROM CNN&AP:
As of the end of December, Countrywide had nearly $29 billion in pay-option loans, with about $26 billion of the total having grown beyond their original loan amount, the company said in a filing late Friday with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
"Our borrowers' ability to defer portions of the interest accruing on their loans may expose us to increased credit risk," the company said. It added that its risk could be greater because the amount of deferred interest on pay-option loans was on the upswing.
The company noted some 81 percent of the loans were made out to borrowers who provided little or no documentation on their income. As of the end of December, 71 percent of borrowers with pay-option loans were electing to make less than full interest payments.
Even though borrowers with such loans had the option to just make interest payments, many were increasingly missing payments, the company said.
Some 5.71 percent of the loans based on unpaid principal balance were at least 90 days late as of Dec. 31, up from 0.65 percent a year earlier.
Like other lenders, Countrywide has since tightened its lending criteria and curtailed lending of so-called no documentation loans. It has also ramped up programs aimed at modifying loans for borrowers before their loans reset to higher rates.
At the close of last year, Countrywide's total loan servicing portfolio was valued at about $1.5 trillion.
Total delinquencies as a percentage of the number of loans was 6.96 percent, up from 5.02 percent at the end of the prior year. Some 1.04 percent of loans were facing foreclosure, up from 0.65 percent a year earlier.
California accounted for the highest portion of Countrywide loans, according to unpaid principal balance, of any state, the lender said.
The state had around $389 billion in loans, followed by Florida, with loans totaling around $113 billion. Texas, New York and New Jersey rounded out the list.
The company's banking unit, which also funds some of Countrywide's home loans, had $87.1 billion loans held for investment on its books at the end of the year.
A large portion of that stemmed from loans made in California and Florida, once-hot housing markets that have now been battered by falling prices and rising mortgage defaults and foreclosures. About $37 billion in loans were made to borrowers in California. Another roughly $6 billion pertained to loans in Florida.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Countrywide:Sorry you can't afford it.


Obviously, you are well aware of the credit crunch and the impact it has had thus far on the once roaring real estate markets. I say it's just the tip of the iceberg. Over half the loans in CA in 2006 were NEGAM or interest only. That is a small window into the loans that pushed the bubble further and will lead to a larger, more protracted collapse than anyone anticipates. Those days seem like ancient times in the mortgage world. Countrywide announced this today:



As you may be aware, federal regulatory agencies have issued joint guidance which impacts the qualifying methodology for non-traditional mortgage products. This guidance was designed to better address risks associated with non-traditional mortgage products that offer interest-only and/or negative amortization payment features and to better support the needs of those borrowers who might not understand these types of risks. In an effort to further align our lending strategy with this guidance, effective Monday, November 19, 2007 Countrywide®, America's Wholesale Lender® began calculating borrower repayment capacity for non-traditional mortgage products using the following three criteria:



The greater of the Note Rate or the Fully Indexed Rate
A full amortizing payment
A loan amount which includes the total potential negative amortization
The resulting qualifying payment amount will be used to calculate both the Housing and the Debt-to-Income (DTI) Ratios for the loan transaction. The qualifying loan amount including the total potential negative amortization is determined as follows:
New York - 110% of the original loan amount
All other states - 115% of the original loan amount Please note, for ARM loans with MTA or COFI indices, the qualifying interest rate will be calculated using the fully indexed rate (index + margin) plus an "adjuster." The adjuster is a variable which will be used to annualize the MTA or COFI indices due to the "lagging" nature of these two indices.

The bottom line is that a borrower has to qualify at the highest possible payment the loan could have in the future. During the boom everyone underwrote to the minimum payment, either the interest only or the lower NEGAM payment. Otherwise very few of these loans would have been approved. That's how you had someone making $100k buying a 800k house. The normal historic lending ratio is to have a loan balance that doesn't exceed 4x your gross annual income.
The exotic loans that were everywhere and are now like neutron bombs, destroying the borrower but leaving the home standing are no longer available. Countrywide's action is not the first major lender to dramatically tighten lending guidelines. But, I highlight their action because they originated about 20% of all mortgage loans year to date. The removal of leverage has been very rapid. The decline of real estate in the hot markets has just begun. I am an optimist by nature but I believe we are in a recession now and we likely will be in a deep recession until 2010. The FED can't cut rates to bail anybody out because the dollar will collapse even further. Creating a whole series of global problems. It's time for belt tightening for the American consumer. Don't let this spoil your Thanksgiving. Be thankful for what matters most in life. Pray that we buckle down and fight our way back to becoming the shinning beacon of hope on the hill that world expects and we deserve to be.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Lose an arm and a leg:Get an option arm today!



I have long hated this mortgage product. I am a big proponent of getting an old fashioned fixed rate. I completely understand the purpose of this loan structure, but in no way did the 12% of people that did them last year really understand the product. We usually see people get the picture about a year in when the balance has skyrocketed. Unfortunately, the NEGAM is the payment they could afford not the interest only. In addition, with the financial engineering in these products people buy the idea of the NEGAM payment and don't notice the high note rate which is the real interest rate that the borrower is charged. This product is being eliminated at lenders/banks daily. The real concern for people with these is that they get out from under them and into a safer loan product. Cheers and don't let the video spoil your dinner. From our friends at:http://armcrash.com/
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