Mortgage Originations Fell Hefty 26% in 3Q09, New Analysis Finds

October 28, 2009

New 1-4 family mortgage originations tumbled a sizeable 26 percent between the second and third quarters of this year, according to new numbers compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance. Some $410 billion in new mortgages were made in 3Q09, the lowest quarterly pace seen in 2009. This brought mortgage originations for the first nine months of 2009 to $1.41 trillion or not far behind the $1.50 trillion seen for all of 2008.

Most of the decline in third quarter originations was due to a slide in refinance activity in the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac sector of the market. But new FHA originations held up remarkably well in the third quarter as volume actually rose 6 percent from the second quarter. FHA originations for the first three quarters of 2009 already have set a new annual record at $283 billion.


Cash is King in REO-Dominated Housing Market, Survey Finds

October 21, 2009

Cash deals accounted for more than a quarter of home sale transactions tracked nationwide during the third quarter of 2009, according to the Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance Monthly Survey of Real Estate Market Conditions. Not surprisingly, the survey found most of the cash deals were tied to sales of distressed properties–particularly damaged real estate owned, or REO. The growth in cash transactions, which is expected to continue for the foreseeable future, could put a damper on mortgage lender plans to grow their home purchase financing business in 2010.

For more information on the monthly survey contact John Campbell at john@campbellsurveys.com or (202) 363-2069.


Credit Unions Post Big Mortgage Origination Gains in 2009

October 21, 2009

Benefiting from the credit crunch and the evaporation of the non-agency mortgage market, credit unions have posted big gains in mortgage lending this year. According to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis, credit union mortgage originations jumped 18 percent in the first half of 2009 on a year-over-year basis to reach a record-high $66.7 billion. The industry is on track to break the $100 billion mortgage origination barrier for the first time ever in 2009.

Perhaps more significantly, the credit union share of total originations has risen from an historic 2-3 percent level to a record-breaking 7
percent in 2009. Most of the growth in credit union mortgage lending this year has taken place among the larger institutions who have stepped up to fill the void left by banks that curtailed their lending in the first part of the year.


Preliminary Numbers Show Originations Fell 9% in Third Quarter

October 14, 2009

A noticeable drop in refinance activity–particularly in the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac sector–during the third quarter appears to have taken its toll on overall mortgage originations for the period. According to preliminary numbers analyzed by Inside Mortgage Finance, 3Q09 mortgage production slipped about 9 percent from the previous quarter to reach approximately $500 billion in volume. That would bring mortgage originations for the first nine months of the year to some $1.50 trillion.

Significantly, the biggest drop in third quarter originations took place in September when refinance activity declined the most. Nevertheless, the recent drop in 30-year mortgage rates to below 5 percent is likely to boost refinance business in the fourth quarter and limit any major decline in 4Q09 originations.


Latest HAMP Report Card Shows Good and Bad Among Servicers

October 14, 2009

The Treasury Department’s latest scorecard on the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program reveals that most major mortgage servicers significantly increased the number of trial loan modifications they are doing between August and September. But the new data also show that some of the biggest servicers–most notably Bank of America–are way behind when it comes to HAMP modification activity. Treasury reported that only 11 percent of the Bank of America loans theoretically eligible for HAMP have seen trial loan modifications. Meanwhile, CitiMortgage had started trial mods on one-third of its eligible mortgages–the highest level recorded by any top five mortgage servicer.

A senior executive from CitiMortgage will be discussing the company’s approach to HAMP at an Inside Mortgage Finance audio conference on October 21 at 2 pm EDT. Click here for more info.


Wells Fargo and BofA Account for Nearly 40% of GSE Business in 2009

October 7, 2009

While more and more lenders have started selling mortgages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac this year, an increasing share of the two government-sponsored  enterprises’ business is coming from just two mega lenders. According to a new report in Inside Mortgage Finance, some 39 percent of Fannie’s and Freddie’s total business came from Wells Fargo and Bank of America in the first three quarters of 2009.

Wells was by far the biggest GSE customer in the year-to-date with a whopping $225 billion in volume and a 22 percent market share. BofA was in second place with $168 billion in GSE business and a 17 percent market share. Chase Home Finance and CitiMortgage rounded out the top four GSE customers in the first nine months with $88 billion and $55 billion, respectively, in volume.