MBA Newslink Friday 9-14-18

“Low inventory of homes for sale has been an issue this year, and newly constructed units have been one way to ease the shortage. Growth in August was focused in the lower price tiers. In fact, for the first time in four months, monthly growth was driven by the lower half of the market, based on application size.”–Joel Kan, MBA Associate Vice President of Economic and Industry Forecasting.

MBA Newslink Thursday 9-13-18

“Because home prices are rising, and demand is strong, most mortgage fraud in this type of market is motivated by bona fide borrowers trying to qualify for a mortgage. Undisclosed real estate liabilities, credit repair, questionable down payment sources and income falsification are the most likely misrepresentations.”–Bridget Berg, principal of Fraud Solutions Strategy for CoreLogic, Irvine, Calif.

MBA Newslink Wednesday 9-12-18

“A law or regulation has the force and effect of law. Unlike a law or regulation, supervisory guidance does not have the force and effect of law, and the agencies do not take enforcement actions based on supervisory guidance. Rather, supervisory guidance outlines the agencies’ supervisory expectations or priorities and articulates the agencies’ general views regarding appropriate practices for a given subject area.”–From a statement by five federal agencies clarifying the role of regulatory guidance.

MBA Newslink Tuesday 9-11-18

“Overall credit availability saw a slight decrease in August, for the first time in four months, as the jumbo index retreated from its record high in July. Strong month-over-month increases in the jumbo index reversed because of a reduction in the number of jumbo programs. The decline in jumbo credit availability was offset partially by an increase in the conforming index, which increased over the month due to the addition of low down payment programs.”–MBA Associate Vice President of Economic and Industry Forecasting Joel Kan.

MBA Newslink Monday 9-10-18

“Even as a strong market broadly benefits homeowners, it’s still very hard for people starting with less money ever to catch up. On an absolute-dollar basis, homeowners in minority communities became wealthier, but still fell further behind.”–Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman, on an analysis of home values in white, minority and mixed-race neighborhoods between 2012 and 2018.

MBA Newslink Friday 9-7-18

“While mortgage rates remain low by historic standards, they are creeping upward, eating into what buyers can pay, and in a handful of pricey markets, affordability already looks unnervingly low. Among lower-income buyers in those pricey markets, it is outright impossible to afford the mortgage on even a lower-priced home. As rates rise, both buyers and sellers will have to temper their expectations further.”–Zillow Senior Economist Aaron Terrazas.

MBA Newslink Thursday 9-6-18

“Housing is simply too important to our national economy and our local communities to risk disruption of the system by which it is financed.” –From an “open letter” by MBA and other trade groups to the Trump Administration and Congress urging action on secondary mortgage market reform.

MBA Newslink Wednesday 9-5-18

“The job market remains quite strong, supporting purchase demand, which is 2 percent higher than last year at this time. However, home prices, while decelerating, continue to rise faster than household income. Average loan size for purchase loans dropped to its lowest level since December 2017, a sign that first-time buyers are finding a way into the market.”–MBA Chief Economist Mike Fratantoni.

MBA Newslink Tuesday 9-4-18

“I’m really gratified with how great a state the Association is in and how committed, capable and enthusiastic the staff is about serving our industry and membership and caring so deeply about how they do their work. I feel I’m walking into a healthy organization with committed and high-performing employees.”–MBA President and CEO Robert Broeksmit, CMB.

MBA Newslink Friday 8-31-18

“While ongoing supply constraints are reinforcing the floor on home prices right now, the experts’ forecasts still imply the joists will start to crack sometime next year, and result in sub-3 percent annual home-value appreciation in 2020 and beyond. For the first time, a majority of the experts said that there is downside risk to their long-term outlook for home values nationally.” –Pulsenomics Founder Terry Loebs.