
Mortgage rates up slightly
By Holden Lewis • Bankrate.com
5.21.09
Since March, mortgage rates have held fairly steady. That streak
didn't end this week, when mortgage rates moved modestly in both directions.
The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose
3 basis points, to 5.24 percent, according to the Bankrate.com national survey
of large lenders. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage point. The
mortgages in this week's survey had an average total of 0.43 discount and
origination points. One year ago, the mortgage index was 6.02 percent; four
weeks ago, it was 5.23 percent.
The benchmark 15-year fixed-rate mortgage fell 2 basis points, to
4.74 percent. The benchmark 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage rose
15 basis points, to 4.96 percent. The 30-year jumbo mortgage fell 19 basis
points, to 6.37 percent, and has fallen to its lowest level since December
2006.
Purchase first, then refi
While mortgage rates remain
steady, wait times keep stretching longer -- specifically, the time that
elapses between applying for a mortgage and closing on it. Only an optimist
would count on getting a loan funded within 30 days of application. Lenders and
brokers point to several explanations.
First, there's the matter of priorities. Purchase loans take
precedence over mortgage refinances. When someone buys a home, the transaction
often is one link in a chain of purchases and sales. Delay one closing and
suddenly there can be a bunch of stuffed moving vans with no place to unload.
Then there are priorities that have something to do with the
mortgage crisis. Foreclosure prevention is the top priority for some lenders.
With refinances
under the Obama administration's Making Home Affordable plan, there are
priorities. A lot of lenders are refinancing loans without mortgage insurance
first.
At Equity
Now, a mortgage bank based in New
York City, mortgage insurance is a big issue when it
comes to refinances under the Obama plan, underwriting manager Matt Hackett
says. "For our perspective, at least, we're going to be able to help more
of the people who purchased or refinanced their last loan and were under 80
percent (loan to value), so they don't need mortgage insurance,"
Hackett says.
With other lenders, there are even different priorities for loans
with mortgage insurance. If your loan has mortgage insurance, you'll probably
get faster help by applying for a refinance with your current servicer, even if
you have the ability to apply elsewhere.
Human beings doing underwriting
Whether you're buying a home,
doing a regular refinance, or refinancing under the Obama plan, the process is
likely to go slower because lenders are pulling back from automation.
In the years leading up to the mortgage boom, and during it, a lot
of loans passed through automated underwriting systems: The borrower's
information was fed into a computer, and the program spat out an approval for a
plain-vanilla loan or a referral to a more exotic instrument.
If the computer approved the application, a clerk checked to see
if all the paperwork was there. Otherwise, it was barely touched by human
hands.
That explains why a borrower might be asked to submit fresh pay
stubs a few weeks after supplying pay stubs at application. With a letter of
explanation, the borrower has to explain why he or she applied for any type of
credit -- overdraft protection, credit card, another mortgage -- in the 90 days
leading up to the mortgage application.
" On top of these
delays and annoyances, borrowers find themselves frustrated by backlogs for
appraisals. That's the subject of another story, to come.