CFPB & your regulators makng life easier?

This will be a big help in your business. Read the latest salvo.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

February 21, 2012

 CONTACT:

Office of Public Affairs

Tel: (202) 435-7170

 CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU CONVENES SMALL BUSINESS PANEL FOR KNOW BEFORE YOU OWE MORTGAGE DISCLOSURES

Panel is Bureau’s First Under Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act

 WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is announcing today the formation of a Small Business Review Panel as part of its initiative to integrate the mortgage disclosure forms that borrowers receive when applying for and closing on a loan. The review panel will solicit feedback from small businesses that make mortgage loans and conduct mortgage closings.

 “This is another step in the CFPB’s wide-ranging efforts to gather the input of the people who will be affected by our rules. The CFPB is dedicated to issuing thoughtful, research-based rules that take into account not only the benefits to consumers but also how businesses of all sizes will be affected,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “We take all feedback seriously.”

 The CFPB began its Know Before You Owe initiative to combine mortgage loan disclosure forms in May 2011. The project integrates two federally required mortgage disclosures into a single, simpler form that makes the costs and risks of the loan clearer for borrowers. Combining and simplifying these forms will also reduce burdens on lenders.

 For more than thirty-five years, two federal laws (the Truth in Lending Act or “TILA,” and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act or “RESPA”) have required lenders and settlement agents to give consumers who take out a mortgage loan different but overlapping disclosure forms regarding the loan’s terms and costs. This duplication has long been recognized as inefficient and confusing for consumers and industry. Under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the CFPB is responsible for solving this problem by combining the disclosures.

However, TILA and RESPA are separate laws with different and sometimes inconsistent requirements. The CFPB will propose rules that integrate the statutory requirements and resolve any inconsistencies. The CFPB’s thorough and innovative approach to the disclosure forms not only clearly conveys the information that the laws mandate but also highlights the information consumers really need to know.

The CFPB is convening the Small Business Review Panel to help with proposals the CFPB is considering. Examples of these include:

· Consumers need to know what information they can rely on. Three days after application, consumers will receive an integrated loan estimate that clearly discloses the terms and costs of the mortgage loan. However, many lenders and mortgage brokers provide consumers with preliminary estimates of loan terms and costs earlier in the process. These estimates are not required by TILA or RESPA. The CFPB is considering whether to require that these preliminary estimates carry a disclaimer informing the consumer that the preliminary estimate is not the Loan Estimate required by law. This is intended to help consumers avoid relying on estimates that may not be reliable.

 · Consumers need to be able to rely on their loan estimate. Under current rules, when a lender provides the consumer with an estimate of the cost of its own services under RESPA, the actual cost cannot be higher than the estimate unless there is a valid change of circumstances. The CFPB is considering a proposal to apply the same limitation when the lender estimates the cost of services provided by its affiliates or by companies the lender requires the consumer to use. This is intended to make the Loan Estimate more reliable for consumers.

 · Consumers need to know the final terms and costs before they sit down at the closing table. Under current rules, consumers typically receive a disclosure with some of their final loan terms and costs three business days before closing on the loan, but other costs are not finalized until the day of closing. As a result, consumers sometimes do not know how much they will owe until it is too late. The CFPB is considering a proposal that would generally require delivery of the integrated settlement disclosure stating the consumer’s final loan terms and costs at least three business days before closing to reduce the risk that consumers will face unexpectedly higher closing costs at the last minute.

 In developing new forms, the CFPB has engaged and continues to engage extensively with consumers and industry – well before proposing its regulation. The CFPB has conducted one-on-one testing of the forms in 9 cities across the country. The CFPB has also posted the forms on its website and received more than 27,000 comments from the public, including industry. Engaging with consumers helps the CFPB understand what they need from the form. Engaging with industry helps the CFPB understand the benefits and costs from the businesses – large and small – that are likely to be directly affected by the new mortgage disclosure.

 The CFPB will be sharing the following documents with the Small Business Review Panel:

 An overview of the proposals under consideration: http://www.consumerfinance.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/20120221_cfpb_tila-respa-integration-rulemaking-outline-of-proposals-and-alternatives.pdf

A fact sheet summarizing the Small Business Review Panel process:http://www.consumerfinance.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/20120221_cfpb_factsheet-small-business-review-panel-process.pdf

A list of questions and issues on which the CFPB will seek input:http://www.consumerfinance.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/20120221_cfpb_tila-respa-integration-rulemaking-discussion-issues-for-small-entity-representatives.pdf

In this process, the CFPB is following the requirements of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of 1996. Generally, unless a proposed rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, the CFPB will seek input directly from small entities about potential costs of a proposed rule and potentially less-burdensome alternatives before issuing the proposal for public comment.

Under this law, representatives from the CFPB, the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA), and the Office of Management and Budget’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs will form a review panel. The panel meets with a group of representatives of small financial service providers selected by the CFPB, in consultation with the SBA. The representatives will provide the panel with feedback on the benefits and burdens of complying with the proposals the CFPB is considering. The representatives may also suggest alternatives that would minimize those burdens.

 Within 60 days of convening, the review panel completes a report on the input received from small providers during the panel process. The report also contains the panel’s findings on the potential effects of the proposed regulation on small providers and any significant alternatives that accomplish the objectives of the proposed rule while minimizing such impacts. The CFPB then considers the panel’s report and the comments and advice provided by small providers as it prepares the proposed rule. The CFPB plans to formally release a proposed rule for comment in July.

 ###

 The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit www.ConsumerFinance.gov.

 

First Tuesday newsletter

This may be of interest. Ther’s a couple interesting points to consider here. You can reach them at their contact info below.

You’re receiving the Weekly Headlines as a current first tuesday student
or as an interested member of the California real estate community.
To ensure property delivery, add us to your contacts.

 

THE FIRST TUESDAY JOURNAL WEEKLY HEADLINES
WEEK OF FEBRUARY 6, 2012

Hello Jeffrey,

As a current first tuesday student, you have access to our Membership Benefits. One of them is the first tuesday Newsletter, an email feed from our online magazine with the latest news in California’s real estate market.

It’s time for show and tell.

Don’t be shy. Let the people know what you’ve got to say when it comes to what’s going on in real estate. Share it on the first tuesday journal with your comments, votes and ratings.

Real estate has its springs, summers, falls and winter – yes, even in California. Forecast what’s ahead for housing with first tuesday’s newest course, Economic Trends in California Real Estate.

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Tip of the Week

Ready, set, go

Brokers with an office of agents can raise the bar of performance, even while the market is tight. Consider rewards for agents who close sales (an activity which generates income), not to agents who just obtain listings (an activity which only potentially produces income). Set up a competition for the agent who puts up the best marketing package of the month and then, watch the firm’s sold listings increase.

[For more information on California's top real estate brokers, see the first tuesday chart, The Top 30 Brokers in CA by Number Employed: 2011.]

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Possibly a webinar you need?

I received this today & thought it interesting enough to pass along. Don’t know the guys, nor the caliber of their product, but wanted to let you know about it.

Jeff

Mortgage Regulatory Strategies for 2012

An Inside Mortgage Finance Webinar
January 25, 2012, from 2:00-3:30 pm ET

Register Now for the Early Bird Discount

The regulatory outlook for the mortgage industry has perhaps never looked more challenging. The mortgage market meltdown has resulted in an onslaught of new rules from both federal and state regulators. The new environment of much tougher mortgage regulation is quickly unfolding in 2012.

Find out about the latest developments in the mortgage regulatory landscape and what they will mean for various mortgage market players at a special Inside Mortgage Finance webinar kicking off the new year. What changes are right around the corner and how will they alter the mortgage lending and servicing business equation? Hear from some of the top law and regulation mortgage experts in the country at this must-attend event on Wednesday, January 25, at 2 pm ET.

The passage of Dodd-Frank legislation has empowered regulators to manage almost every aspect of the mortgage lending, servicing and securitization business. Many seasoned players are wondering if there will be any room for innovation and profitability in the new mortgage regulatory environment. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has emerged as the most important mortgage industry regulator, yet its slow and somewhat confusing implementation of new powers has made it difficult to figure out exactly what the mortgage regulation landscape of the future will look like.

Federal regulators must agree on “Qualified Residential Mortgage” criteria following a flood of opposition to a proposed rule. Meanwhile, the CFPB must finalize a separate regulation on a “Qualified Mortgage” standard that is part of a new requirement that lenders assess a borrower’s ability to repay a mortgage. The Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department are looking to crack down on mortgage advertising and fair lending, respectively.

Learn about the risks and liabilities found with many of the new regulatory initiatives at this webinar where experts will explain everything you need to know about regulatory challenges that lie ahead.

Among the topics to be discussed:

  • The timetable for finalizing a QRM regulation and what changes may be made;
  • The difference between QRM and QM standards and their application to lending practices;
  • What risk-retention requirements may mean for different mortgage business models;
  • How to handle activist legislators and regulators that are looking to levy penalties, sanctions, etc.;
  • Truth in Lending Act liability and safe harbor standards;
  • What to expect from the new CFPB examinations;
  • How a lender can price a non-qualified mortgage to account for increased risk, and what the consequences are;
  • How the RESPA-TILA reform process will change how we do business and interact with the public;
  • The regulatory future of the non-agency or non-conforming mortgage market;
  • The increased regulatory demands facing mortgage servicers – how to manage foreclosures and represent the interests of investors at the same time.

These industry experts will share their insights and answer questions:

  • Rod Alba, VP/Senior Regulatory Counsel, American Bankers Association
  • Donald C. Lampe, Leader, Financial Services and Regulatory Compliance team, Dykema
  • Laurence E. Platt, Practice Area Leader, K&L Gates LLP
  • Guy Cecala, Publisher, Inside Mortgage Finance (moderator)

Your Webinar registration includes these added benefits:

  • Webinar attendance for you and your entire team;
  • A webinar manual with a program outline, speaker bios and presentations, and pertinent articles on the subject from Inside Mortgage Finance and our other newsletters;
  • A full transcript, emailed to you when you take our post-conference survey; and
  • The opportunity to connect with any or all of the speakers during the audience Q&A session—a favorite part of these events.

Cancel before 5:00 pm ET 1/23/12 for full refund less $25 fee.
You will receive an email confirmation shortly after completing your registration. You may also contact us at (301) 951-1240.


Two Ways to Register:

1. REGISTER ONLINE

2. REGISTER BY PHONE: Call Erika at 800-570-5744 or 301-951-1240. Our Customer Service representatives can answer any questions and register you in minutes.

For one low rate you and your entire staff (in one location) can participate in this exclusive Inside Mortgage Finance webinar without ever having to leave your office. You’ll come away with firsthand, actionable information. NOTE: Call for discounted rates for multiple sites.

What Is a Webinar?
It is a live event in which you listen to presenters either through your phone or through your computer while viewing their presentations online.

Register Now for the Early Bird Discount

 

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Loans available today

 

Please give some thought to using your retirement plan as a source of investment funds! Call us.

LOANS PRESENTLY AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE

Loan 14071

$40,000 1st T.D. Wanted. The note pays $367.00 per month including 11% interest*** all due in 5 years. Secured by home with a spectacular view on 31472 Panorama Dr, Running Springs. Property is being purchased for $63,000 with $23,000 cash down. Call for additional details.

 

Loan 14069

$31,000 1st T.D. Wanted. The note pays $250.00per month including 10% interest*** all due in 1 year. Secured by permanently attached manufactured home on large lot on Geary Ave, Menifee (near Temecula). Broker estimate of value is $150,000.00. Loan to value ratio based on the above is 21%. Call for additional details.

Loan 14067

$115,000 1st T.D. Wanted At close 12 months interest in advance will be paid ($12,650.00) The note pays $1,150.00 per month including 11% interest*** all due in 5 years. Secured by home on 1816 Scott Ave, Los Angeles (Echo Park, near Dodger Stadium). $18,000 of loan funds will be held to pay for rehab. Broker estimate of value is $250,000.00. Loan to value ratio based on the above is 48%. Call for additional details.

 *******************************************************

these trust deeds are offered for sale subject to prior sale. we do not guarantee the accuracy of the above information. to receive a free copy of this brochure, send us your name and address. warning: if payments default on any trust deeds, you may have to foreclose at substantial extra expense to prevent loss of your money. buyer will be required to release the hope trust deed company, inc. dba hope 4 loans from all liability due to any loss, and buyer will be required to satisfy himself as to the adequate security value of the t.d. real property, the payor’s ability to pay, and the sufficiency of all documents.

A commission or not?

Quite often we are asked if a licesee can participate in a loan commission.

The answer is absolutely!, maybe.

With a valid R.E. Broker’slicense, & the property is not a 1-4 residential, the answer is how much do you want & can I keep at least a meager amount to buy fuel for the yacht?

With a Salesperson’s license, as long as the check is written to your broker of record, the only difference is how much more I keep for gas for the company plane.

A single family (1-4) is a whole different kettle of fish. RESPA (Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act) mandates that in order to participate in the commission earned, you must perform some or all of 14 services normally performed in the origination of a loan. In the interest of brevity, call & I’ll be happy to send you the whole enchilada.

Additionally, on the 1-4s there’s a very good chance you may need an additional license from the federal government which entails an unbelievable amount of education, reporting, & quite probably more hassle than it’s worth unless you are deeply involved in the conventional lending market.

There is a possible out of this quagmire which has to do with the purpose of the loan. If it is not for consumer purposes, you may be home free.

So there ya go. My best suggestion is to call prior to creating a pickle for yourself.

A few words of caution

You may be aware the legal & regulatory landscape has been dramatically altered with the fallout of the “Mortgage Crisis”.

I just had a conversation with a client that wanted my help in drawing up a loan on his friend’s mother’s owner occupied residence. By the end of our conversation he changed his mind.

The property being occupied by the owner brings a bunchof new demons to the party. Mandatory disclosures within 3 days of “application”, 10 business day “cooling off periods”, rate & term ceilings tied to annual percentage rates, no default interest, limit on prepaid payments & no balloon payments sooner than 7 years. Throw in mandatory impound accounts & independent verification of income along with prepayment limitations & you’ll get an idea what you’re up against.

Some of these issues are still in effect if the property is a vacation home & even go so far as to include rental properties if the owner is not “in the business”. What this means is a borrower with 5 rental houses who is actively engaged in a profession not related to real estate has some of these protections afforded to them.

Using my clients scenario as an example, grandma owns her principal residence, she is desirous of a loan to secure $$ for her grandson to open  a business. No problem, right? No It’s not grandma’s business, meaning her support of grandson’s grand plan does not change the face of the loan from a consumer loan, all this hoopla applies.

The penalties for violating these laws are aggregious. In a best case, your looking at recission (read interest free loan) up to the 1st 3 years, with a worse case scenario of you writing a check for $500,000 for damages.

So okay, the borrower is a friend & you are comfortable bending the rules a little, what’s the big deal?  As a matter of practice, the borrower owns you. If you need to foreclose, or even badger them for late payments there’sa whole lot of people running around offering to modify borrower’s loans (for a price) . How much are you gonna bet they don’t know about these restrictions when they start to dissect your loandocs?

The bottom line is be very careful if you decide to do a loan without professional guidance.

Watch out for fat ducks!

When you go duck hunting, which ones do you shoot at? If you’re a politician or a regulator, who are you going to “protect” to justify your existence? Whatever your take on the present mortgage boondoggle we’re dealing with, from greedy wall street yuppies to borrowers with room temperture IQs, when the powers that be get involved, Katy bar the doors.

In their zeal to protect everyone from everything everytime;  they have made unrealistic expectations of what we do. When it comes to Joe Lunchbucket hocking the family farm, you are now painted with the same brush Bank of AllKnowing is. Your profit,  requirements for underwriting, qualifying, servicing & foreclosure are identical.  This means you better be damn sure it’s getting done in the proper fashion. As we are all aware, the law of unintended consequences here means a lot of the folks we were able to serve & solve their financial problem now have little or no choice. The nanny state is far smarter than the folks with the problem.

The fact is that the owner occupied single family dwelling is both the backbone of our economy as well as the most desireable security for your loan. It’s also where the homeowner with a problem can’t go for help.

All that being said; you can still sleep at night if you make these loans, just be very sure they are created in the proper fashion by brokers who know what they’re doing. If a problem arises, the borrower doesn’t look at the originating broker; they pass right over go & dump the problem in yoour lap.

The requirements are far too lengthy to go over here,  you are welcome to contact us for more details.

 

Title Insurance Comparison

Just proves you are never too old to learn something new

 Mark Manwaring, a title rep from TICOR TITLE called my attention to a much more comprehensive policy available to property owners. This policy is absolutely amazing in the additional coverage it provides. For years, I thought the ALTA coverage we obtain for the lender’s protection was the tallest cotton around. There’s a new sheriff in town now.

Take a look at the comparison & be prepared to have your socks blown off. If you don’t start taking advantage of this product beginning with your next title need; I’ll start dating your sister! Trust me, that would truly be a fate worse than death.

For more info, you can reach Mark at MarkM@TicorTitle.com

 

 

More legal maneuverings

 CourthouseHere’s this week’s news from the courthouse

1.     Elizabeth Warren is not the new head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.  Raj Date is the interim director.

2.   Tenants that have been the victim of Domestic Violence can now terminate occupancy on 30 days notice notwithstanding th term of the lease

3.     California citizens with an expunged or pardened felony conviction can now  apply for both real estate license and mortgage loan originator endorsement.

4.     Trust accounts (especially conducting electronic transfers)are a very hot item for DRE audits these days  Update your compliance manuals  to be sure you are operating accordingly. Many audits are ocurring where this noncompliance is a big problem for  licensees.

5.     A Daughter allegedly commited mortgage fraud on her parent’s residence was captured after jetsetting all over the world.  Her new bail was raised to $500,000 from the original $25,000.00 which didn’t seem to slow her down.

7.     Another well travelled case, a  man with a British Passport,who was working in L A was deported from Samoa to face  fraud charges in L A

8.     West L A  banker is going to be a new resident of the big house for 18 months for “flipping” properties.

Thanks to our friend & information source for providing this info;

Law Offices of Herman Thordsen

” Full Service Law Firm”

6 Hutton Centre Drive

Suite 1040

Santa Ana, CA 92707

(714) 662-4990

 

www.lendinglaw.com

Mortgage musings

The Mortgage Meltdown – How We Got Into This Mess, Who’s Responsible, and Why We Should Keep Capital Punishment
by Paul Elis, President, PMB Capital                   Inc.

Who’s most responsible for the mortgage debacle?  It’s the powerful but blind and ignorant packagers and promoters of  the eight, nine and ten digit stacks of securitized mortgages and the “experts” who represented the buyers of those  securities.  These captains of the universe poured hundreds of billions of dollars into weak mortgages, touted them as strong investments, and encouraged and fed this insanity.  The vast majority of these mega-dollar movers and shakers are probably not larcenous as much as just ignorant of reality.  They may know the securities industry but they don’t understand the basic building block of the securities we’re discussing – the individual mortgage.

First, let’s look at the contributing players who are not the people I consider the primary culprits:

First, and the least of the guilty, is the incredibly large number of owner borrowers who either really believed that a free lunch was being given away or that the day of reckoning on their adjustable rate mortgage would never come.  Sure, some of them were “sold” a bill of goods by loan agents, but, let’s face it:  The majority of these borrowers got into these loans knowingly.  They took the easy way out; that of opting for the teaser rate and the low initial payment on an adjustable rate time bomb.  They probably owed more on their house than they should have and then, as we all know, couldn’t walk the walk when the inescapable mortgage payment adjustment came around and payment shock  followed.  Many of these people blindly accepted the       absurdity that prices would just continue to go up and up and, abracadabra, they could refinance – as though refinancing can cure any financial problem.  They ignored or never understood the most basic tenet of consumer credit:    You can’t borrow your way out of debt.  I never fail to be amazed at how some people always, always, always  choose the easy way out of every problem and are unconcerned  with long term consequences.  We know these people. They go through life snatching defeat from the clutches of victory.

Acknowledged: some empathy and sympathy needs to be expressed for those homeowners who we know really are the victims of economic and personal problems beyond their control.   They are the minority but this article   respects their personal difficulties and sympathizes with their tragedies.

Another constituency in this second tier cast of guilty characters are the loan agents.  Some of these people are clearly unscrupulous but most of them fell into the same trap of unrealistic expectations and always-make-the-easy-choice mentality that affected so many homeowners.

Then there are the real estate speculators, not to be confused with legitimate long-term investors and competent  rehabbers.  Speculators were a major influence in driving home prices to unrealistic heights and are now, by virtue of  their inevitable loan defaults, major contributors to the ensuing flood of loan defaults and, by extension, the  resulting collapsing property market.   Investing in  real estate is a time honored way of building capital and             serves a socially desirable purpose in supporting a stock of available rental housing.  But, the only sure winners in this endeavor are those with long term perspective and technical knowledge of a great number of real estate      business factors such as purchase contracts, financing negotiations, insurance policies, maintenance, lease documentation, title insurance, legalities, etc.   I further submit that loan agents who encouraged speculators to take out loans on their primary residences in order to speculate should lose their licenses.  And, the homeowners who bought into this mindless idea of risking their families’ well being in order to place bets on home should face ten years to life for being “felony-stupid,”  although losing everything is probably sufficient punishment.

And, another contributing player is the government. I’m not faulting public policy of encouraging home ownership through the availability of high mortgage amounts at cheap rates.  However, if Washington is going to facilitate highly leveraged home purchases, it better have a “plan B” ready when economic reality belies the underpinnings of these tenuous loans and the foreclosures begin.  —Oh, I’m sorry,  I forgot: Real Estate can’t go down in value, especially in California.

One more lesser guilty group I’d like to pounce upon: The home selling agents, mostly Realtors, who encouraged buyers to buy as much home as possible by using loans that obviously carried a downstream risk of  a huge “payment shock” upon rate adjustment.  —Not that a brokers’  counsel to a buyer to consider buying a less expensive house would have been well received or heeded.

NOW, HERE’S THE CENTRAL ISSUE.  Let’s talk about primary responsibility, the 800 pound gorilla among the guilty.  J’accuse: The folks who “packaged” and sold  these bundles of securitized mortgages and the representatives of the buyers that stupidly recommended their purchase by  institutions.  These are the guys who kept shoveling fuel into the engine.  We’ll add to this list of “most guilty”  the rating agencies who, insanely, rated these securities  backed by such fragile mortgages as strong investments.         In fact, I think the rating agencies are probably the most  inexcusably at fault, but that’s subject matter for another  article.  The captains-of-the-universe financial types  who created and marketed the hundreds-of-millions and billion dollar securities had a total understanding of the securities business BUT—  They had no understanding at all of the individual mortgages that comprise these bundles of  loans. To paraphrase: they may have been able to navigate around their ivory towers but they didn’t know the street.

Putting aside the ruthlessly greedy and the downright criminal persons (and there were, no doubt, some of these),  the people involved in the upper tiers of the securities business didn’t understand the one-loan-to-one-family consumer mortgage issues.  Like so many real estate macro-economic          conditions, the driving force of this industry came from the buyer’s of the securities product.  In other words, there were vast sums of money lusting to buy these securities. So, of course, the high loan to value and subprime mortgage  product was created, securitized and marketed.  It’s kind of the debt counterpart of the real estate equities’ periodic phenomenon of overbuilding.  The driving force in overbuilding often is not market requirement for the space so much as the availability of  too much capital tempting  otherwise unjustifiable development.

If each of the ivory tower-dwelling captains of the  universe had earlier in their career spent six months as a street level loan officer working with homeowners and learning  the nuts and bolts of the product itself and of the lender – home owner relationship and had then worked six months more as  an underwriter learning each component of a healthy loan and      acquainting themselves with the misinformation or fraudulent        information so often submitted on loan applications, they would have had an appreciation of the realities of the  mortgage industry.  If they had worked for six months as a collection officer gaining real world knowledge of what goes   wrong with defaulting borrowers, they would know that 90, 95  and 100% loans just don’t hold up when a borrower starts to  have problems.  As a former director of the California Mortgage Association, I have close friendships with many of  the leading entrepreneurial lenders in the private money loan  industry, “street level lending.”  Many of these  real-world business guys and gals won’t do a loan over 55 or 60% of the property value and many of them can instinctively  sniff out a fraudulent loan application.  They’re good at deal-making, they usually take an active part in the             underwriting of each mortgage and they know when a loan is risky.  I submit that if the mega-dollar shufflers had spent a six month internship with these top of the line  mortgage entrepreneurs who wouldn’t consider doing a loan over 55 or 60%, they would have recognized the absurdity of trusting the 90, 95 and 100% loans.

The captains of the universe and their security lawyers obviously came up with criteria for individual mortgages to be placed in their securities bundles.”   I’m  wondering who sat at the conference table when these criteria were discussed.  Was there a “lowly” loan collection  agent with thirty years of real world experience present alongside with the billion dollar salesperson?  Was there someone participating who is actually a successful  entrepreneurial mortgage lender?  Or, was the conference  dominated by a senior vice president who saw visions of mega-dollar commissions and an annual bonus equal of 100 families’ home mortgages?  Where were the scarred and  experienced street-smart entrepreneurs when they were            needed?

My mortgage investors haven’t had to take back a property through foreclosure on any loan written in the last nineteen years.   My IQ is probably 20 or 30 points lower than that of the financial wizards – but I’m a  whole lot smarter.  I’m committed to designing and underwriting loans one at a time that economically work for my  fund and for the borrower who, let’s not forget, is the guy or gal who has to actually write the mortgage payment check each month. My focus is where it belongs, on the borrower, not on      the billion dollar securities buyer. The all-powerful financial emperors were focusing in the wrong direction!

A couple of random comments:   First, I’m  probably not going to vote for John McCain but I deeply and  profoundly admire his stand on NOT bailing the mortgage industry out of its self-created mess.  While Clinton and      Obama were busy pandering to the masses about bankrolling a fix, only McCain had the guts to say that the rest of us tax payers shouldn’t bail out these morons and shouldn’t reward  stupid investing or irresponsible borrowing.  Good for you, Mr. McCain.  I hope you will go down as my most  admired unelected presidential candidate during my lifetime.

Second comment about the current state of the mess: If there needs to be a fix, I propose no grace at all for the lenders.  But maybe we can do something for the “upside down” homeowner which could save his house and, thus, help stabilize the market.  There is some talk about  legislation or court mandates reducing mortgage loan balances downward to the market value of the homes.  That’s  another brilliant idea from the panderers.  So, now we’re   stealing from one class for the benefit of another class and creating a whole sea of bankrupt lending institutions who are,  once again, going to cry for a bailout, except this time they  would have a valid point.  Here’s my thought:  In cases of borrower distress, where the mortgage loan balance is now higher than the property value, the existing loan could be bifurcated into an economically sustainable first mortgage and a second mortgage representing the portion of the loan not supported by the property value.   The second loan  would become a “sleeping” second with no monthly payments and  would be paid back with no or very little interest at such time as the owner occupied home is sold, to the extent that the sales price at that time covers that second. This way, the lenders maintain their rightful claim to their capital and the  homeowners stand a better chance of staying in their homes.  This would be both humane and economically responsible.  Also, first mortgage loans with variable interest rates should be tightly capped as to payment increases.

Thirdly, loans are unfortunately not now readily available for investors who want to buy many of the distressed and foreclosed homes, the purchases of which would greatly help to stabilize the market.   It’s every bit as stupid to    NOT give strong and credit worthy investors 65 or 70% loans as it is to give weak and fraudulent home buyers 90 to 100%  loans.   I don’t understand the regulators’ policies here.  Once again, the people who presume to regulate    don’t have a clue how things really work.

Fourth comment:  The lenders who were engaged in illegal lending practices and the borrowers and agents who submitted fraudulent loan applications should be aggressively prosecuted.

These people could give Capitalism a bad name.

Note:  Paul Elis The author is a fund manager in the investment property mortgage business and does not make consumer or homeowner loans. Neverthelss, he’s one of the most astute proffessionals I know in this business. He is available at paulelis@pmbcapital.com