Mortgage Broker Land
Net Branches | Wholesale Lenders | Lead Companies | Credit Companies | Trainers | Processors | Mortgage Brokers

Welcome to MortgageBrokerLand.com, an online community for the mortgage industry where you can join mortgage brokers, wholesale lenders, lead providers, and other industry professionals in discussions concerning today's mortgage business. To gain full access to MortgageBrokerLand.com you must register for a free account. As a registered member you will be able to:
  • Post loan scenarios for review by wholesale account executives and other mortgage brokers
  • Communicate privately with other members around the country
  • Establish your community reputation to take advantage of free offers from service providers
All this and more is available to you when you register for a free account. So sign up today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support.



Go Back   Mortgage Forums for Mortgage Brokers > Mortgage Business > Loan Scenarios and General Mortgage Talk

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 04-01-2008, 04:07 PM
Secret! Secret! is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Southern California
Posts: 496
Secret! has a spectacular aura about
Arrow Future of Subprime

In case you don't happen to receive our newsletter, this is the lead article in The Mortgageland Journal's April edition. I hope you find it interesting!

Future of Subprime

I frequently read a handful of industry discussion boards, and post on some of them from time to time, as some of you know. I see this particular question being asked and discussed often, so I thought I would take a stab at it this morning for you.

Based upon what I read, the conventional wisdom seems to be that it will 'come back' (like it was the last several years) and that it will probably take a dozen years or so to do that. That 'conventional wisdom' I speak about, looks like it's coming from people who joined our industry during the last industry cycle Aug '98 to late Dec '05, so in my view they lack a clear picture in the broader context of the business.

I want to give you some of it's history, so you'll have a well-rounded view of the horizon. Subprime, formerly called B/C paper and/or 'non-conforming,' began in 1914 (with my initial industry employer and others). As an eye-witness, I know it was a around in 1966 when I started as a twenty-something LO. Fannie Mae and her snot-nosed step half-brother Freddie Mac (labeled 'conforming') began in 1972 and BTW, I went to their baby showers, etc. and drank a lot of beer!

Since then, Fannie (FNMA) & Freddie (FHLMC) - let's call them by the initials they like to use these days "GSE's" - during their history have stumbled badly a couple of times and ONLY because they are Government Sponsored Enterprises, they haven't exploded all over everybody like 'non-conforming' has a couple of times (but been real close).

The way in which 'non-conforming' was done - 'originate to distribute' - during the last 20 years (not before that), and especially the reckless way it was handled the last decade, is at the core of what it's going through, and what you all have seen recently.

The last full year of originations before the Aug.'98 to Dec.'05 cycle when rates plunged and home values soared to the heavens, give us a production volume of $65.693 Billion for Subprime's 1998 annual total. While the 2007 annual total for Subprime was nearly three (3) times that at $181.289 Billion, and as has been reported just 2 weeks ago on the front page of the NMN, "B&C Vanishes as Volumes Fall to 7-Year Low."

News reports from December '03, were reporting that a Mortgage Broker shift to Subprime had started, 'conforming' was off by 1/3. Therefore, for the 5 year period 1998 through 2003, mortgage brokers (60+% of the market) were concentrating on 'conforming' loans; then subprime took off like a rocketship, only to slide backwards significantly as we moved into the current industry correction.

I sware, I'm not trying to make your head explode. Actual number of individual loan transactions closed/funded in 1998 was 1,021,676 – 2007 it was 933,480. So, back in 1998 (we worked harder not smarter), we closed more individual transactions, and made a whole lot less money for our troubles!

It is my observation Subprime it will not be back like it was during the '98-'05 period (ever again), but IS back (if you thought it left) right now ... only YOU don't know who the players are, and who the big-shot players are going to be (nor do I) ... because they are starting/building/growing/ developing, etc. right as we speak. It's my sense going forward they will operate nearly as they did during the period immediately prior to the start of the last cycle in August '98 with annual production totals for the next several years (about 1/3 of today's numbers), and similar to that period.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
House Mortgage Bill Faces Tougher Future (AP) Ron Burgundy Mortgage News 0 11-15-2007 11:11 PM
A Brighter Future Secret! Loan Scenarios and General Mortgage Talk 16 08-22-2007 04:22 PM
Future shock: Central Florida markets will fall (CNNMoney.com) Ron Burgundy Mortgage News 3 07-07-2007 05:36 PM
Future shock: Central Florida markets will fall (CNNMoney.com) Ron Burgundy Mortgage News 0 07-06-2007 05:17 PM
Small Businesses Should Save for Future (AP) Ron Burgundy Mortgage News 0 05-19-2006 02:13 PM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 01:53 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0
© MortgageBrokerLand.com. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Service