Agency plans to postpone foreclosures until 2022
How many homeowners are circling the drain, facing the risk of losing their homes from COVID-19-triggered job losses?
How many jumped at the chance to sign up for mortgage forbearances, not knowing what might be around their income corner?
And how many wrongfully took advantage of the
CARES Act forbearance safety net, using their mortgage payment to buy stocks, real estate or Bitcoin?
The question of how many need a lifeline is the great COVID-19 mortgage mystery.
Government officials are assuming the worst.
On Monday, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau proposed a new rule requiring mortgage servicers to delay foreclosure proceedings on principal residences until after Dec. 31.
The rule would affect all servicing lenders, not just Fannie, Freddie, FHA and VA servicers that fell under the original CARES Act forbearance mandates.
The CFPB news release said nearly 3 million homeowners
are behind on their mortgages, with industry estimates of 1.7 million expected to exit forbearance programs in September.
The number in forbearance peaked at 4.3 million, or 8.53%, in June, according to Mortgage Bankers Association data. Last week, the MBA finds an estimated 2.5 million homeowners, or 4.9%, are in forbearance, about a 42% decline.
Black Knight data indicates 3.35 million borrowers were past due or facing foreclosure at the end of February. Foreclosure proceedings have begun against 168,000.
The mortgage industry seems to support the CFPB proposal.
“We share the same goal: avoiding foreclosure whenever possible,” said Bob Broeksmit, MBA president and CEO. “Servicers have successfully helped more than 1.4 million borrowers obtain payment relief and sustainable longterm solutions.”
Based on online chatter, some other industry stakeholders are opposed.
Claims run the gamut from bureaucrats are just kicking this foreclosure can down the road to arguments that it’s government overreach and a violation of the contractual obligation between investors and mortgage servicers.
Consider the mortgage meltdown. Nationwide,
6.3 million families lost their homes to foreclosure (1.13 million in California) from 2007 to 2013, Black Knight said.
There are three key differences between that meltdown and today’s pandemic-induced calamity. The economy now is recovering quickly. Homeowners have substantial equity, giving them more hope. And the foreclosure process is faster today than a decade ago.
“The economy is booming,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. Twenty-two million jobs were lost since March 2020, but about 14 million since have been restored, Zandi said. He projected the economy will add 6 million to 8 million jobs in the next 12 months.
“By this time next year, the job market will be fully recovered,” he said.
This CFPB foreclosure plan ultimately may save a plethora of homeowners from foreclosure.
If the CFPB proposal gets approved and foreclosure proceedings can’t start until next year, many more at-risk borrowers likely will find financially meaningful jobs, thereby getting back on mortgage track.
Preserving as much home equity (property value minus mortgage liens) as possible is a powerful motivator to keep one’s home or at least avoid foreclosure.
If the homeowner has to eventually sell, he will face high rents and struggle getting back into the homeownership race.
“The servicer benefits when the property is sold,” said Guy Cecala, CEO and publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance. “This is not a consumer benefit.”
Today mortgage servicers have a better, faster and less costly pathway compared with the meltdown days should they need to eventually foreclose.
“Lenders are more prepared to deal with foreclosures now,” said Raymond Snytsheuvel, chief operations officer at FirstLine Compliance.
Snytsheuvel estimates it took about two years to foreclose in California and at least five years in New York back then.
“It takes less than six months in California today,” he said.
The 30-year fixed-rate averaged 3.13%, 5 basis points lower than the previous week. The 15-year fixed-rate averaged 2.42%, 3 basis points lower than the previous week.
The Mortgage Bankers Association reported a big 5.1% decrease in mortgage application volume from the previous week.
Assuming a borrower gets the average 30-year fixed rate on a conforming $548,250 loan, last year’s payment was $60 more than last week’s payment of $2,350.
Locally, well-qualified borrowers can get the following fixed-rate mortgages with 1-point cost: a 15year FHA at 1.75%, a 30year FHA at 2.25%, a 15-year conventional at 2.125%, a 30-year conventional at 2.75%, a 15-year conventional high-balance ($548,251 to $822,375) at 2.25%, a 30-year conventional high-balance at 2.75% and a 30-year jumbo at 3%.
a 30-year high-balance fixed-rate at 2.99%, without points. critically needed resources to build and preserve housing for our most vulnerable people.”
Yentel said the Housing Trust Fund is off to a good start in its first few years of operation. But she and other housing advocates are pushing for a massive expansion of the program, lobbying Congress to pour up to $40 billion annually into the fund.