Morning Roundup (2/17/2022)– Real Estate Investors, Climate Damage

Good Morning! Today is Thursday, February 17. The Education Department will cancel loans for students defrauded by DeVry University. Ukraine accused Russian-backed separatists of shelling a Kindergarten, calling it “a big provocation.” Retail sales rose by a seasonally adjusted 3.8% in January. The Mortgage Note Reports Office Spaces Are Not A Thing Of The Past: Despite many employees working from home and companies adopting hybrid work models, investors are still attracted to the land of cubicles. “Stronger Than Ever”: Real estate investors bought a record 18.4% of all homes sold in Q4 2021, nearly three-quarters of which were all-cash purchases. Climate Damage: More than 14.5 million single- and multifamily homes were impacted by natural disasters in 2021, causing an estimated…

Morning Roundup (2/16/2022)– Applications Fall, Million-Dollar Cities Nearly Tripled In 2021

Good Morning! Today is Wednesday, February 16. Republicans boycotted a Senate meeting on Biden’s five nominees to the Federal Reserve, delaying efforts to confirm them. A woman became the third person cured of H.I.V. after using a new treatment. The families of Sandy Hook victims reached a $73 million settlement with Remington. The Mortgage Note Reports UWM Embattled on Multiple Fronts: United Wholesale Mortgage is facing more public scrutiny as court battles — and backlash from brokers — mount. Million Or More: “Million-dollar cities” nearly tripled in 2021, with typical home values reaching at least $1 million in a record 146 new U.S. cities. Credit Availability Drops: Mortgage credit availability fell in January by 0.9% to its lowest level since…

Morning Roundup (2/15/2022)– Multifamily Forecast, Rate Locks Up

Good Morning! Today is Tuesday, February 15. Russia said it would pull back some troops from around Ukraine. Donald Trump’s accounting firm cut ties with his family business and retracted years of financial statements. The SEC is probing the business of block trading on Wall Street, with subpoenas to firms including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs as well as several hedge funds. The Mortgage Note Reports New Jersey Homeowners Can Apply For Up To $35K In Assistance: Eligible homeowners in New Jersey can receive up to $35,000 to help protect themselves against foreclosures. Multifamily Forecast: Commercial and multifamily mortgage loan originations were up 79% YOY in Q4 and 44% from Q3, while total lending is expected to break $1 trillion…

Morning Roundup (2/14/2022)– Falling In Love With Homes To Have Your Heart Broken?

Good Morning! Today is Monday, February 14. Happy Valentine’s Day. The Los Angeles Rams beat the Cincinnati Bengals in the 56th Super Bowl. A crucial roadway for U.S.-Canadian trade reopened Sunday after authorities cleared a weekend blockade protesting vaccine mandates. “Ghostbusters” producer Ivan Reitman has died at 75. The Mortgage Note Reports Falling In Love With Homes To Have Your Heart Broken?: This Valentine’s Day, if your heart is broken because you keep falling in love with homes to lose them to other buyers, you are not alone. Here’s some advice. Delinquencies Down In Q4: MBA reported that delinquencies on residential properties fell to 4.65% of all outstanding loans in Q4 2021. New Freddie Leaders: Freddie Mac announced that Kevin…

Morning Roundup (2/9/2022)– Applications Down, Rocket Superbowl Ad

Good Morning! Today is Wednesday, February 9. New York State will drop its indoor mask mandate this week. Mitch McConnell denounced the RNC’s characterization of Jan. 6 as “legitimate political discourse.” The House passed a bipartisan bill to keep the Postal Service solvent and to reduce mail delays. The Mortgage Note Reports Gearing Up For The Big Game: Leaders at Rocket are inviting people to take a peek at the homes they could buy if they win the world’s largest official game of Super Bowl Squares and they have revealed which stars will appear in their ad. 2022 Expectations: Home price appreciation and stock shortages are likely to continue through the first few months of 2022, as December saw price growth pick back up…

Morning Roundup (2/8/2022)– UWM Lawsuit, HPSI

Good Morning! Today is Tuesday, February 8. The Supreme Court reinstated Alabama’s congressional map, which a lower court had said hurts Black voters. Vladimir Putin met with President Emmanuel Macron of France but did not rule out a Ukraine invasion. The budget airlines Frontier and Spirit plan to merge. The Mortgage Note Reports UWM Sues Brokerage in Effort to Enforce its ‘Anti-American’ Restrictions on Lenders. UWM’s Mat Ishbia is defending his company’s decision to slap America’s Moneyline with a $2.8 million lawsuit over its decision to violate UWM’s restrictions on working with Rocket and Fairway Independent. AML’s Shawn Nevin calls it ‘anti-American.’ $53 Million Agreement With Fannie Mae To Help Rebuild Communities Of Color In Metro Areas: Fair housing organizations throughout the…

$53 Million Agreement With Fannie Mae To Help Rebuild Communities Of Color In Metro Areas

By KIMBERLEY HAAS The National Fair Housing Alliance and 20 fair housing organizations throughout the country have reached a landmark $53 million agreement to resolve claims that Fannie Mae treated homes it owned in majority-Black and Latino communities unfavorably. Lisa Rice, President and CEO of NFHA in Washington, D.C., said in a statement that Monday’s settlement brings hope to underserved neighborhoods in 39 metropolitan areas. “Black and Latino consumers were actively targeted by predatory subprime mortgage lenders in the run-up to the 2008 Financial Crisis and, as a result, homes in Black and Latino neighborhoods were respectively 2 and 2.5 times more likely to be foreclosed than homes in White communities. Millions of homeowners in Black and Latino communities lost their homes,…

Affordability Challenges Push Housing Sentiment Down

Fannie Mae’s Home Purchase Sentiment Index (HPSI) fell 2.4 points to 71.8 in January, its lowest level since May 2020, the GSE reported. The full index is down 5.9 points year-over-year. Affordability concerns drove sentiment down, with four of the index’s six components falling month-over-month. Only 25% of respondents said they believed it’s a good time to buy a home, an all-time low for the survey, while 69% said it’s a good time to sell. “Consumer sentiment toward housing softened further in January – the HPSI fell 2.4 points to 71.8 – as affordability and supply constraints continue to limit home purchase opportunities, particularly among younger households,” said Doug Duncan, Fannie Mae Senior Vice President and Chief Economist. Younger consumers…

Economist: Interest Rates Will Go Up in 2022, Rise Even More in 2023

At least one economist says the Federal Reserve is already behind the inflation curve, and the mortgage industry should expect interest rate increases into 2023. “Short-term interest rates will be pushed up by the Federal Reserve [in 2022], as the Fed announced,” writes Dr. Bill Conerly in Forbes. “They will raise rates in quarter-point increments three or four times this year. They will still be behind the curve, most likely, and will raise short rates more aggressively in 2023.” Predicting future Fed moves isn’t easy — not even for the Fed itself. Last summer, the Federal Reserve said it wouldn’t raise rates at all until 2023. That proved to be untrue. In a video news conference after their two-day meeting…

CHLA Asks FHFA To Delay April Fee Hikes

The Community Home Lenders Association (CHLA) sent a letter to FHFA Acting Director Sandra Thompson asking for adjustments to upcoming Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fee increases. On January 5, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced “targeted increases” on upfront fees for certain high balance loans and second home loans, to go into effect April 1. Its stated goal is to “minimize market and pipeline disruption.” “These targeted pricing changes will allow the Enterprises to better achieve their mission of facilitating equitable and sustainable access to homeownership, while improving their regulatory capital position over time,” Thompson said in a press release. “Today’s action represents another step FHFA is taking to strengthen the Enterprises’ safety and soundness and to ensure…