Wednesday,
May 14
Posted
11 a.m. EDT
WRONG
TALL SALLIE:
I want to bring your attention
to an exclusive article
on Bankrate today -- a
story that we're breaking
before anyone else. Sallie
Mae, the biggest servicer
of student loans, has
erroneously
reported the payment histories
of up to a million borrowers,
causing some people's
credit scores to plummet
more than 100 points overnight.
If you have
an extended or graduated
repayment plan with Sallie
Mae, and you're trying
to get a home loan right
now, please check your
Equifax credit score immediately.
You may have some cleaning-up
to do. If you're planning
to close on your mortgage
within the next few days,
you might even be forced
to postpone. Don't panic,
but if you fall into those
categories -- you have
an extended or graduated
repayment plan with Sallie
Mae, and you're closing
on a home loan this week
or next week -- you need
to make this your top
priority. Act fast and
you might be able to stay
on schedule.
Let's say
you fall into this unfortunate
bunch. I recommend that
you notify your lender
and the closing agent
or title attorney today
that your Equifax score
might have dropped precipitously
over the weekend because
of Sallie Mae's coding
error. I'm serious when
I say that this is the
top priority. Get moving
on this as quickly as
possible. Ask the lender
to pull your Equifax score
today. If a fix needs
to be made, follow the
advice you're given. I
hope the loan officer
or broker does the heavy
lifting, and that all
you'll have to do is sign
a dispute letter.
I reiterate:
Don't freak out, but move
quickly.
And I hate
to say it, but keep an
eye on your credit card
accounts. Credit card
companies are notorious
for raising interest rates
on customers who get dings
on their credit reports.
This error by Sallie Mae
could trigger rate escalations
on millions of credit
cards.
WELCOME
NEWS ON PRICES:
The Consumer Price Index
rose
0.2 percent in April,
and when you strip out
energy and food, prices
rose 0.1 percent.
That's good
news for mortgage borrowers.
The low-core CPI number
will lessen any upward
pressure on long-term
mortgage rates.
There's
still room for concern.
In the last 12 months,
overall prices have gone
up 3.9 percent, and core
prices (minus food and
energy) are up 2.3 percent.
Most people believe that
the Federal Reserve would
like that latter number
to be below 2 percent.
Mortgage
market participants will
look kindly on this inflation
report. Most expected
the inflation numbers
to be higher than this,
so these results come
as a pleasant surprise.
GOOFY
PREDICTION OF THE DAY:
Every Wednesday, Bankrate's
research department conducts
the weekly rate survey.
I predict that the benchmark
30-year mortgage rate
will rise 11 basis points
in this week's survey,
to 6.24 percent. I base
that prediction on three
factors, in declining
order of import: Freddie
Mac required net yields,
mortgage bond prices
and spitting in the wind.
The votes
for next week's Rate
Trend Index haven't
all come in yet, but the
votes cast so far suggest
(by a narrow margin) that
rates will rise over the
next few weeks.
Monday,
May 12
Posted
11 a.m. EDT
START
YOUR CONFORMING JUMBOS:
Lenders just might be
getting serious about
underwriting the new conforming
jumbo mortgages for more
than $417,000. Word is
that the new conforming
jumbos sport a rate about
three-eighths to half
of a percentage point
higher than rates for
conforming loans.
Before this
year, mortgages were separated
into two categories by
loan amount. Conforming
loans could be bought
and guaranteed by Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, and
there was a maximum loan
size, set by a formula,
that changes in most years.
At the beginning of this
year, the conforming limit
was $417,000. Loans above
that amount were jumbo
mortgages.
Californians
and Americans want to
refinance their jumbo
ARMs into jumbo fixed-rate
mortgages to escape escalating
ARM rates. But high jumbo
rates (which I'll get
to in a sec) are deterring
a lot of people. So this
spring, Congress created
a third class of loan:
the conforming jumbo.
These are loans for more
than $417,000 and up to
$729,750. The conforming
jumbo limit varies by
metro area. In most of
the country, the limit
remains $417,000, but
it's higher in places
where houses are expensive.
In Southern California,
the conforming jumbo limit
is all the way to the
max possible $729,750.
In Medford, Ore., the
jumbo conforming limit
is $422,500.
Before last
summer, jumbo loans typically
had rates about a quarter
of a percentage point
higher than conforming
mortgages. But an August
meltdown in the jumbo
loan market, and the resulting
drying-up of money available
to jumbo borrowers, pushed
jumbo rates higher. Last
week, in Bankrate's weekly
survey, the 30-year fixed
conforming loan averaged
6.13 percent and the jumbo
averaged 7.35 percent.
The difference between
the conforming and the
jumbo was 122 basis points,
compared to about 25 basis
points a year ago. We
mortgage geeks like to
say that the spread between
conforming and jumbos
almost quintupled.
The new
conforming jumbo mortgages
officially became available
at the beginning of April.
But they weren't priced
differently from regular
jumbo loans. The lack
of a rate differential
defeated Congress's purpose
in creating the jumbo
conformings. Teeth were
gnashed.
On Friday
afternoon, Fannie Mae
announced that it would
buy jumbo conforming mortgages
for the same prices as
conforming loans. Some
investors, and therefore
lenders, immediately dropped
their rates on conforming
jumbos. From what I hear,
the new jumbo conforming
rates are about three-eighths
to half a point higher
than conforming rates.
In
real numbers, this means
that if a conforming customer
is quoted a rate of 6.125
percent for a 30-year
fixed, a jumbo-conforming
customer with the same
excellent credit profile
(and solid equity in the
house) is quoted a rate
of around 6.5 to 6.625
percent. That's still
higher than the conforming
rate, but it's a big improvement
compared to the jumbo
rate, which remains well
north of 7 percent.