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On the (not so) Mega ReFi
Finally some details on a plan that has been whispered about for six weeks now. Actually, the information available begs some questions. Some thoughts on what was released from the FHFA yesterday:
- I’ve said from the start that the fatal flaw in the Refi program is that it only includes those who happen to have their mortgage held by Fannie and Freddie. About 40% of the mortgages that would otherwise qualify for a new deal are getting nothing.
This is the telephone number to determine if you are eligible: 800-7FANNIE. Four out of ten who call will be told to buzz off. The reason is that they got a mortgage from a Community Bank.
Obama is going to take credit for the refi program (he already has). But he’s also going to take a ton of flack from those who get left out in the rain.
- On the topic of fairness, there is one condition for eligibility that got me a laugh:
In other words, all “good” borrowers (LTV<80%) need not apply. To qualify for a new mortgage today one would have to put down a minimum of 20%. How does one characterize the refi? Subsidy comes to mind.
- In order to have a chance at a refi one must also:
*Have a clean payment history. (One late payment in the past 12 months is okay). There will be a waiver on any LTV (no need for appraisal).
*Have entered into the mortgage prior to May, 2009.
So there are a lot of hoops to jump through to take advantage of what has been offered.
- FHFA is very vague on their estimates of how many mortgages will be eligible. The guess is that it might be as high as 900,000 by the end of 2013. The program does not start until January 1, 2012. Thereafter the number would be about 37,000 a month.
What does that mean for the economy? The answer is not much; at least not for 2012 (Beyond that is anyone’s guess).
The average mortgage is $200,000. Assume that the savings from the refi 1.5% and the closings commence in March of 2012. The result is that there is a monthly reduction in the mortgage payment of $333. By the end of 2012 there should be about 370,000 refi’s completed. That would put the full year total interest reduction at $680mm. ($540mm adjusted for taxes)
While this is clearly good news for those lucky enough to get the Refi, the $540mm is not a big number in our $15T economy. Obama’s (busted) Jobs Program was supposed to provide a stimulus of $435B. The economists who looked at it thought it might add 1.5% to total GDP. If the same logic is applied to the Refi program the benefit would have a stimulative effect of only 1/8% of GDP. Yawn.
- There is a question of how much interest savings can be achieved. As of today, the cheapest Refi for a new 30 yr mortgage would be ~4.25%. To achieve a net 1.5% savings, the old mortgages have to be 5.75% on average. This rings wrong to me. I think the average for those who are otherwise eligible is meaningfully lower than 5.75%. This suggests (to me) that the benefits will be muted.
- Many have written to me that the Refi is a plot to eliminate any prior flaws in the loan documentation. I don’t think so. But I’m not a lawyer. It’s best to check with your own counsel. The FHFA is actually waiving prior Representations and Warranties made by the borrower and the originator of the loan. From the FHFA:
- There is no discussion of fees/expenses in the FHFA news release. That’s interesting. The proposal is for ~1mm refi’s over 24 months. How much is the re-documentation cost for one of these? $2,000? Who pays for that? Is the cost added onto the principal of the new mortgage? Do the Feds pay for all/part of it from the Hope Now money that Treasury is sitting on?
The expenses come to about $2b over the first 24 months of the program. That money will go to lawyers, banks and loan servicers. I, for one, am very happy that the bloodsuckers get another 2 large. It’s interesting to note that the fees eat into the benefits of the refi such that the first two years of interest savings are lost to the costs.
- The lower the refi interest rate, the better the economic results. This raises the question of, “What’s the Fed’s role in this?"
Bernanke has already pulled out all of the stops to assist refi’s. We have perpetual ZIRP, QE1&2, the Twist and a change in Fed policy to reinvest principal payments back into new MBS. As a result, we have 10-year Treasuries at 2.25%. The refi works much better if the 10-year is at 1.50%.
My conclusion is that the Fed will announce a new LSAP (QE-3) in the not too distant future. While I see this coming pretty clearly, I still want to vomit.
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I'm thinking the real goal, is to prevent Fannie/Freddie from becoming landlords on 3-4 million houses. Also, the unwashed masses will buy into the PR boost for the disgrace in the White House.
I supose it would depend on when the mortgage was first purchased. We bought our house in 2005 and our rate is 6.25%. Getting down to 4.25% would certainly help out.
Of course, who knows if we'd qualify. Our mortgage is through BofA.
It was the same for me and my wife. We just refinanced at 4.25% which lowered our payments about 100 bucks. The real issue was that when my home was appraised it was undervalued by about 15K on top of the 25% drop in pricing from four years ago. Accordingly to the new laws apparently they do not have to give credit on a property if antoerh house has not sold with the same upgrades. When I bought the home I put in about 40K worth of exterior work and it was all negated because no other home has sold in the past 90 days with the same upgrade. Fantastically craptastic!!!
The Motive Behind This Bullshit Bankster Lovin' Program
If my mortgage was securitized and held by MERS and I knew the TBTF banks don't have the documents to foreclose without robosigning fraud (as shown by now dozens of court judgments in multiple states)...
Why would I refinance and give the TBTF Banksters a clear and legal title and promissory note to the property?
That is exactly what this Obama Bin Lyin' No Bankster Left Behind bullshit refi program is all about, Charlie Brown...
This plan isn't big enough to accomplish that. Though I don't doubt it will happen once we hear an announcement from the state AG greasing of the palms, err... I mean, meeting of the minds.
@ ProblemIs
Obama Bin Lyin' 5 stars for that one.
No Bankster Left Behind 5 stars for that one too.
got any more?
on the head
So what about the young people who can't afford a house or don't want to purchase one because the market remains artificially high forever? Fuck'em, I guess.
"So what about the young people who can't afford a house or don't want to purchase one because the market remains artificially high forever?"
Detroit?
Lotsa cheap homes there!
Come on Bruce. We know who pays the fees - the taxpayer. We also know where thaat money will go. Right back into the pockets of the same fucknuts who drove up and profitted from the real estate bubble in the first place. Fuck them. Where are the fucking guillotines?
The guillotine has been replaced by a pack of wild-ass Libyan thugs.
What I still can understand is why would someone refinance an underwater mortgage? Why throw good money after bad? A simple analogy: Get a $20,000 loan on a AMC Pacer. These "no-ID required title loans" are not a solution. They are a way for borrowers to get rich of application fees. Im okay with that for private industry, but why is the US gov. pushing these?
Although it does not make finacial sense to refi an underwater mortgage, I will conceed perhaps there is "reading between the lines". Rather than throw money from helicopters, Ben et al is promoting giving away free money via the mortgage market. "I dont care about if you dont make a payment, (wink wink) just take the money!!" 6 months later - foreclose.
And we thought at first it would be the MOTHER of all give aways....as always too little too late huh. And just enough to get those left out super pissed.
Nah, that's not how politics works. Everything is always compromised down to nothing but talking points. If Obummer had actually announced a plan that made a difference for most, then I would be shocked.
This is a typical carrot and stick election year maneuver.