The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some U.S. mortgage lenders are starting to go broke

String of bankruptci­es in industry expected in wake of higher rates.

- By Carmen Arroyo, Steven Church and Maxwell Adler

The U.S. mortgage industry is seeing its first lenders go out of business after a sudden spike in lending rates, and the wave of failures that’s coming could be the worst since the housing bubble burst about 15 years ago.

There’s no systemic meltdown coming this time around, because there hasn’t been the same level of lending excesses and because many of the biggest banks pulled back from mortgages after the financial crisis. But market watchers nonetheles­s expect a string of bankruptci­es broad enough to trigger a spike in layoffs in an industry that employs hundreds of thousands of workers, and potentiall­y an increase in some lending rates. More of the business is now controlled by independen­t lenders, and with mortgage volumes plunging this year, many are struggling to stay afloat.

“The nonbanks are poorly capitalize­d,” said Nancy Wallace, chair of the real estate group at Berkeley Haas, the business school at University of California, Berkeley. “When the mortgage market tanks they are in trouble.”

In 2004, only about a third of the top 20 lenders for refinancin­gs were independen­t firms. Last year, two-thirds of the top 20 were nonbank lenders, according to Lendingpat­terns.com, which analyzes the industry for mortgage lenders. Since 2016, banks have seen their share of the market shrink to about a third from about half, according to news and data provider Inside Mortgage Finance.

Many of the so-called shadow lenders will emerge from this slowdown relatively unscathed. But some lenders have already stopped operating or scaled down

dramatical­ly, including Sprout Mortgage and First Guaranty Mortgage Corp. Both specialize­d in riskier lending that isn’t eligible for government backing.

First Guaranty, a company that according to court papers is majority owned by fixed-income giant Pacific Investment Management Co., filed for bankruptcy, saying it failed after it made loans earlier this year that dropped in value. It was holding on to those loans until it had enough to bundle into bonds and sell to investors, and it had been temporaril­y funding them with a line of credit.

Once interest rates started to climb, lending volume shrank across the industry, according to court papers. That meant the company could no longer find enough new loans to bundle, or get enough financing to keep operating, said First Guaranty’s chief executive officer, Aaron Samples. Firms included Flagstar Bank and Customers Bank are owed about $418 million, according to court documents.

First Guaranty employed 600 people before it filed bankruptcy in June and made $10.6 billion in loans last year, according to court records. Days before seeking court protection, the company fired 471 workers because it couldn’t get enough financing

to overcome a cash crunch.

Independen­t lenders gained a toehold in the market because banks pulled back so much after the 2008 financial crisis, which started with excessive lending in mortgages. Regulators have often encouraged the retreat, and it’s still happening: Wells Fargo & Co., the biggest Wall Street firm in the U.S. mortgage business, plans to shrink its home loan empire, Bloomberg has reported.

Unlike banks, independen­t lenders often don’t have emergency programs they can tap for financing when times get tough, nor do they have stable deposit funding. They depend on credit lines that tend to be short-term and depend on mortgage prices. So when they’re stuck with bad assets, they face margin calls and potentiall­y go under.

Many independen­t lenders have managed their risk well, and for lenders that work extensivel­y with government-backed companies like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the situation is less dire. They can often get emergency funding from government-sponsored enterprise­s if they run into difficulty. But those lenders that make riskier loans and work less often with the GSES have fewer options when they face margin calls.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? More of the business is now controlled by independen­t lenders, and with mortgage volumes plunging this year, many are struggling to stay afloat. “The nonbanks are poorly capitalize­d,” said Nancy Wallace, chair of the real estate group at Berkeley Haas.
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES/TNS More of the business is now controlled by independen­t lenders, and with mortgage volumes plunging this year, many are struggling to stay afloat. “The nonbanks are poorly capitalize­d,” said Nancy Wallace, chair of the real estate group at Berkeley Haas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States