Mortgage – HousingWire |
- Mortgage applications continue fall amid 5% rate
- MSR sector is a raging bull in a bear mortgage market
- Mortgage delinquency rate reaches 23-year low
| Mortgage applications continue fall amid 5% rate Posted: 13 Apr 2022 04:00 AM PDT Mortgage application volume dropped 1.3% for the week ending on April 8, from the previous week, as mortgage rates eclipsed the 5% mark. Refinance applications fell 5% from the prior week and 62% from the same week a year ago, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association‘s weekly survey. "Mortgage rates have spiked more than 1.5 percentage points thus far in 2022," Mike Fratantoni, MBA's senior vice president and chief economist, said in a statement. "The jump in mortgage rates will slow the housing market and further reduce refinance demand the rest of the year." Mortgage rates across all loan types continued an upward trend with the 30-year fixed rate exceeding 5.13% this week in the highest rate since November 2018, according to Joel Kan, MBA's associate vice president of economic and industry forecasting. Higher mortgage rates pushed up borrower interest in adjustable rate mortgages, with that share of applications last week increasing to 7.4%, the highest since June 2019. Refinance share of all applications dipped to 37.1% last week from 38.8% from the previous week. The FHA share of total applications rose to 9.5% from the previous week's 9.2%. While the VA share of total applications climbed to 9.9% from 9.8% a week earlier, the USDA share remained unchanged at 0.5%. On the purchase side, the association expects higher home prices, mortgage rates, and ongoing supply constraints to lead to a decline in existing home sales. Despite the sluggish sales in existing home sales this year, growth in new residential sales and the rapid rise in housing prices is forecast to deliver a 4% annual growth in purchase origination volume, setting a record. The MBA forecasts that purchase originations will eclipse $1.7 trillion in 2022, a 4% increase from 2021, citing faster-than expected mortgage rate increases, potential actions from the Federal Reserve to curb inflation. Refinance originations are expected to fall 64% to $841 billion this year and decline another 20% in 2023. The survey, conducted since 1990, covers more than 75% of the retail residential mortgage applications. The post Mortgage applications continue fall amid 5% rate appeared first on HousingWire. |
| MSR sector is a raging bull in a bear mortgage market Posted: 13 Apr 2022 03:00 AM PDT ![]() Fast-rising interest rates, up 1.5 percentage points over the past three months, have thrown a wrench into the mortgage origination and private-label securitization markets. Refinancing is plummeting, purchase activity is softening, and rate volatility is making secondary market deals harder to price efficiently across prime and non-prime/non-QM deals. In the face of all that dour news for the housing market, there is one bright spot — a sector that benefits from rising rates. That is the market for mortgage servicing rights (MSRs). As rates rise, MSR prepayment speeds drop — a byproduct of diminished refinancing activity. That, in turn, amplifies the value of MSRs because they pay out over a longer period. "The focus on inflation and the attempts by the Fed to control inflation through their rate hikes has created upward pressure on mortgage-related financial instruments," said Tom Piercy, managing director of Denver-based Incenter Mortgage Advisors. "As such, we begin to see prepayment curves adjust [downward] for both current par [mortgage] originations and the below current-par-rate vintages of 2020 and 2021. "This impacts origination volume negatively [particularly on the refinancing side] but provides for substantial pickup in value of MSR assets across all vintages." For Incenter, that "pickup" has translated into MSR transactions in January involving agency bulk offerings worth a combined value of $113.2 billion, which is close to what Incenter historically has sold in an entire year. (Agency deals involve Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and/or Ginnie Mae MSRs.) For February, Incenter traded just under $60 billion in agency MSRs, Piercy said, including two bulk deals involving Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac MSRs valued at $12.5 billion and $11.5 billion. "There were no publicly offered deals through the firm in the month of March," Piercy added. "We anticipate April to be another active month as we do have three deals in the queue for public offering." Those are in addition to an already announced $7 billion bulk offering of Fannie and Freddie MSRs. Incenter is not alone in tapping into the red-hot MSR market. The Prestwick Mortgage Group, an Alexandra, Virginia-based MSR advisory and brokerage firm, in March put at least three agency MSR bulk packages on the market, the two largest as part of a strategic partnership with San Diego-based Mortgage Capital Trading (MCT), according to bid documents provided to HousingWire. Two of those deals involved servicing rights on pools of Fannie Mae loans with a combined value of $610 million — a $242 million deal being brokered for an undisclosed Michigan bank and the other a $368 million offering by an undisclosed Pennsylvania bank. The third was a $640 million offering by a nonbank of Fannie and Freddie MSRs. In addition, Prestwick has at least three additional nonbank MSR transactions in motion with bid due dates in April — a $1.6 billion Fannie and Ginnie Mae offering; a $520 million Fannie offering; and a $1.8 billion Fannie and Freddie package also being offered in conjunction with MCT, according to offering circulars. "We’ve already seen about as much bulk [MSR] activity year to date [in 2022] as we saw all of last year," said Michael Carnes, managing director of the MSR valuation group for New York-based Mortgage Industry Advisory Corp. (MIAC). "…In the category of seller risks, the possibility exists that certain buyers could blow through their entire 2022 [MSR] acquisition budget. "I'm not suggesting that it has happened yet, but looking through my crystal ball, I’m viewing that as a possibility. As someone who's transacted these deals for 30 years, I do know some of these buyers get refreshed budgets at the beginning of the year and have to go back to their investors for approval to get more, and they may very well be granted that approval, but it’s a consideration nonetheless." MIAC year to date through March had brokered at least five agency MSR bulk offerings valued in total at $8.8 billion, according to bid documents, including a $6.2 billion transaction in January and a $1.9 billion deal in March. MIAC has three additional agency MSR deals already on the market in April valued in total at about $6 billion. "We're also releasing a $1.8 billion [MSR] deal and a $3.6 billion deal," Carnes added. "The 1.8 billion should come out later this week, and then we may push the 3.6 billion offering into next week. "So those are all coming to market within the next week and a half. …The volumes are just incredible." Carnes said the buyers in the market for these MSR packages include banks putting their deposits to work and well-capitalized nonbanks. Data provided by New York-based mortgage-data analytics firm Recursion, shows that year to date through the first week of April some $255 billion in agency MSRs were transferred between institutions, with nonbanks being both the leading purchasers and sellers. Banks acquired about $66 billion in agency MSRs sold by nonbanks ($54.1 billion) and other banks ($11.9 billion), Recursion's data shows. Nonbanks acquired $188.6 billion in agency MSRs sold by other nonbanks ($179.1 billion) and banks ($9.5 billion). The top MSR buyers over the period, according to Recursion's data, were J.P. Morgan Chase, $39.7 billion; Lakeview Loan Servicing, $39.4 billion; Mr. Cooper, $30.6 billion and Carrington Mortgage Services, $24.5 billion. The leading MSR sellers over the first three months of 2022 included United Wholesale Mortgage, $25.9 billion to J.P. Morgan and $16.5 billion to Matrix Financial Services Corp.; Rocket Mortgage, $25 billion to Lakeview and $5 billion to Carrington; Freedom Mortgage, $22.2 billion in MSRs sold to three separate lenders, including $7.1 billion to Rocket; and Homepoint, $12.8 billion transferred to Freedom — which also was the leading MSR purchaser in 2021 at $143.4 billion in MSRs acquired. The MSR package sizes reflect the value of the underlying book of mortgages being serviced, not the actual sales price. In addition, the Recursion servicing-rights data reflect the agency-recorded transfer period and balance, not necessarily publicly announced sales volumes and dates. "The tide is turning because you’re looking at origination revenue declining due to higher rates and lack of inventory," Carnes said. "But as an offset to that, you’re seeing MSR values rise, and some firms are choosing to lock in those gains, while other firms are choosing to hold onto them [the MSRs] and rely on that revenue to help keep the lights on so to speak." Carnes and Piercy said, however, that there is a floor for the prepayment rate on mortgages that ultimately will affect the upward momentum of MSR values. Lower-rate mortgages at 3%, they explained, are no more likely to refinance (repay) if the prevailing rate is at 4.8% versus 5.3%, for example. "Yes, we could see pricing begin to hit its ceiling when looking at just prepayment curves," Piercy said. "For instance, most 2020 and 2021 conventional vintage [MSR packages involving mortgages at 3% rates or lower] have seen lifetime [prepayment] speeds drop to as low as 6% or 7% and more typically 8%. "The standard life of a mortgage asset without [rate-driven] refinance pressure is typically 8% over the history of data, simply due to relocation, divorce, death, etc." That doesn't' mean MSR values are declining for those MSR offerings involving legacy loans, it just means "the rate of value-add starts to level off after a period of time, after interest rates [on older mortgages] are so far below prevailing market rates," Carnes added. "You hit a floor on what people will assume for their prepays because you’re going to what’s called normal turnover," he said. "That said, I believe the next couple of quarters will be very strong for transactions." The post MSR sector is a raging bull in a bear mortgage market appeared first on HousingWire. |
| Mortgage delinquency rate reaches 23-year low Posted: 12 Apr 2022 01:06 PM PDT Mortgage delinquency rates in January reached a 23-year low, driven by the skyrocketing housing prices and a strong job market. About 3.3% of mortgages were delinquent by at least 30 days or more including foreclosure in January, according to a new CoreLogic loan performance insights report. The figure dropped 2.3 percentage points from 5.6% in January 2021 in the lowest delinquency rate since at least 1999. “The large rise in home prices — up 19% in January from one year earlier, according to CoreLogic indexes for the U.S. — has built home equity and is an important factor in the continuing low level of foreclosures,” Frank Nothaft, chief economist for CoreLogic, said in a statement. An average of 562,000 jobs were added every month in the first quarter of this year, the same as the average monthly gain for 2021, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While the delinquency rate in January marked the 10th consecutive month of year-over-year declines, Nothaft expects to see an uptick in distressed sales this year as some homeowners struggle to remain current after forbearance and loan modification. "There are many homeowners that faced financial hardships during the pandemic and are emerging from 18 months of forbearance," Nothaft said. Sponsored Video The serious mortgage delinquency rate, defined as being 90 days or more past due including loans and forbearance, was 1.8% last month, down from January 2021's rate of 3.8%. All 50 states logged year-over-year declines in their overall delinquency rate. Louisiana had the highest rate of 3.8% last month, dropping 2.4 percentage points from January 2021. New York followed with a delinquency rate of 3.2% and Mississippi trailed with 3% in January this year. Data in this report accounts for only first liens against a property and rates are measured only against homes with an outstanding mortgage. CoreLogic has about 75% of U.S. foreclosure data. The post Mortgage delinquency rate reaches 23-year low appeared first on HousingWire. |
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