Volume 1 | Issue 37 | September 5, 2002
 
Top National News
Construction Spending Is Flat in July (Los Angeles Times)
Survey: Home Ownership Is Smart Buy (Las Vegas Sun)
In Insurance, Nothing Is Sure: Costly Matter Vexes Legislators, Industry (Boston Herald)
Commercial Real Estate Markets Poised for Rebound (GlobeSt.com)
Sales 'Settle Into Groove' (Inman News Features)
Mortgages Will Target Transit Sites (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Rhode Island Readies for Landmark Trial Against Lead Paint Makers (Associated Press)
State Charges Real Estate Company With Fraud (Associated Press)


 
Residential Finance News
Default Risk Rises on Nonprime Loans
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Find Strength in Housing Markets
S&P Reports Conventional Housing Strengthens Since 9/11

Commercial/Multifamily Finance News
Office DealMaker of the Day
Commercial Briefs

MBA News
Deadlines Approaching for MBA Annual Convention

Spotlight: Technology

Adrenaline Spurs LoanRover Decision Systems into Automated Subprime Decisioning

Sponsored by:
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“Being at the top of the subprime food chain, the underwriting criteria is vast.” — Scott McLoughlin, chairman, The Adrenaline Group

U.S. Dollar Swap Market COB 9/5/02

Source: Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc.


Construction Spending Is Flat in July
Los Angeles Times (09/05/2002) P. C5
Lagging commercial development kept construction spending at bay in July, with outlays up just slightly from an annual pace of $833.8 billion in June to $834.1 billion. Weak business spending prompted a drop in nonresidential construction to a six-year low of $162.1 billion, while apartment building and remodeling slipped to an annual pace of $408.6 billion. The declines in the commercial sector were countered by a modest 0.4-percent jump in single-family home construction, which bumped up to $262.6 billion.

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Survey: Home Ownership Is Smart Buy
Las Vegas Sun (09/04/2002)
A Fannie Mae survey of more than 1,800 adults found that most people--70 percent of respondents--view homeownership as a safe and wise strategy for building wealth, compared to 38 percent who said the same of IRAs or 401(k)s. This sentiment is reinforced by the many homeowners nationwide who saw their net worth climb as residential values appreciated even during recession; it should come as no surprise, then, that 78 percent of poll participants agree that now is a good or very good time to purchase a home. While minorities and baby boomers continue to spur housing demand, Fannie Chairman and CEO Franklin Raines insists that roadblocks such as accumulating down payment money, understanding the homebuying process, and language barriers continue to keep many minorities from achieving homeownership. The survey found that 32 percent and 27 percent of blacks worry about their credit rating and job security, respectively, when buying a home; while just 33 percent of Hispanics feel comfortable with loan points, insurance, and other aspects of the purchase process.

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In Insurance, Nothing Is Sure: Costly Matter Vexes Legislators, Industry
Boston Herald (09/04/2002) ; Powell, Jennifer Heldt
According to the Coalition to Insure Against Terrorism representative Jay Hyde, terrorism coverage is out there; but it is defective because it is too expensive for most facilities, leaving them uninsured or underinsured. The federal government's legislative branches have passed two different terrorism reinsurance bills, and it is up to a conference committee to hammer out a compromise. Meanwhile, insurers that are interested in providing coverage are trying to determine how much risk they can handle, but their reserves are dwindling as the stock market continues to falter. The situation is not economically healthy, Hyde says, especially since about $4 billion in commercial property deals have fallen through and another $4.5 billion will be delayed or have their terms renegotiated.

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Commercial Real Estate Markets Poised for Rebound
GlobeSt.com (09/04/2002) ; Gilliard, Michael
GlobeSt.com's newly released Property & Portfolio Research National Outlook 2Q 2002 report shows improvement in several commercial property sectors. Construction activity in the retail sector continues to slow--although demand is still outweighed by supply--and an increase in consumer spending is expected to drive down vacancy rates from a peak of 13 percent at the end of the second quarter. Industrial real estate, meanwhile, appears poised for a rebound as improved customer spending and the continuance of strong absorption rates should drop vacancy rates from their high of 10.2 percent in the second quarter to somewhere around 8.5 percent by the end of next year's fourth quarter. Finally, both office and apartment vacancy rates continued to increase, the report confirmed; but Dallas and several other similar-sized markets remain a focal point for new development and improved net absorption.

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Sales 'Settle Into Groove'
Inman News Features (09/04/2002)
Though home sales have slowed since the first half of the year, National Association of Realtors chief economist David Lereah says record low mortgage rates continue to fuel the market for first-time buyers and trade-ups. However, 2003 should see some moderation take place, with the trade group expecting sales to jump 2.7 percent from last year to a record 5.44 million units in 2002 but to slip to about 5.22 million next year. NAR also predicts that this year's new-home sales will climb 1.9 percent to 926,000 and dip to 898,000 next year, while it estimates that housing starts will increase 3.5 percent to 1.66 million this year and fall to 1.63 million in 2003. Finally, median prices should be up 6.6 percent to $157,500 for resales and 5.5 percent to $184,800 for new homes, with gains of 4.2 percent and 5 percent, respectively, forecast for 2003.

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Mortgages Will Target Transit Sites
Philadelphia Inquirer (09/04/2002) P. B3; Downs, Jere
Fannie Mae's location-efficient mortgage, which already has made the rounds to such other cities as Seattle and Chicago, debuts in the Philadelphia metropolitan area this week. There, the government-sponsored enterprise will help provide Citizens Bank with the capital to fund the loans--which qualify borrowers who buy a home near mass transportation for a bigger mortgage than they normally could obtain. Eligibility guidelines stipulate that homebuyers not only purchase property within a quarter-mile of a public bus stop or half a mile from a train station but also that they limit themselves to two cars per couple or one vehicle per single person. The "Smart Commute" program assumes that because participating homeowners will be driving less and using public transit, they can handle a bigger loan--up to 8 percent bigger--and the higher monthly mortgage payments that come with it.

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Rhode Island Readies for Landmark Trial Against Lead Paint Makers
Associated Press (09/04/2002) ; Lewis, Richard
Rhode Island Attorney General Sheldon Whitehouse has filed a lawsuit claiming that lead-paint manufacturers American Cyanamid Co., Atlantic Richfield, ConAgra Grocery Products Co., Cytec Industries Inc., DuPont Co., Millennium Inorganic, NL Industries Inc., and Sherwin-Williams Co. have caused a public health hazard and should be held liable for pediatric lead poisoning. Lead paint--which can cause learning disabilities, neurological damage, or death in children--was banned in housing in 1978, but lead poisoning can still occur when pieces of peeling or chipped paint are ingested. Attorneys for the companies point the finger at landlords, insisting that most of the children live in substandard and poorly maintained dwellings; and they also argue that most of the lead paint has been covered and is no longer a hazard. Though all of the 40 to 50 lawsuits that have been filed against lead paint companies since 1989 have been unsuccessful, Alliance to End Childhood Lead Poisoning deputy director Eileen Quinn says Connecticut, West Virginia, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Hampshire, and Ohio could file similar suits if Rhode Island prevails.

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State Charges Real Estate Company With Fraud
Associated Press (09/04/2002)
The owner of the defunct Ocean County, N.J.-based A.J. Appraisal Co. is facing a four-count indictment for theft by deception and forgery, which could result in a 10-year prison term and as much as $100,000 in fines. The firm, which was contracted to conduct real estate appraisals to Alta Financial Mortgage Co. from 1996 to 1997--allegedly forged the name of a licensed appraiser on 430 documents after cutting business ties with the appraiser at the end of 1996. According to First Assistant Attorney General Peter Harvey, homeowners paid $175 each--totaling over $87,500 in fees paid to owner Stanley Karitko--for what they believed were genuine, accurate appraisals.

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Default Risk Rises on Nonprime Loans

MBA (9/5/02) Murray, Michael
Loans that are not standard Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fare should expect recent default numbers to increase, according to the Nonprime Mortgage Report (NMR), issued this week by the University Financial Associates (UFA), Ann Arbor, Mich.

The report said that higher unemployment and economic uncertainty in the form of a potential “double-dip recession” have contributed to a more than 30 percent increase in the nonprime mortgage default risk since 1999.

The NMR Default Risk Index for summer 2002 showed a 10-point rise from one year ago. The index has had a 100-point average from 1990 to 2000, but in 2002 the default risk hit 107, compared to 97 in 2001.

“A double-dip recession would cause [the NMR Default Risk Index] to continue to climb and an improving economy would work in the other direction,” said Dennis Capozza, professor of finance at the University of Michigan and a principal at UFA. “Right now, it’s looking like a weak economy and the double-dip scenario is getting more likely.”

Capozza noted that nonprime lenders should expect defaults on current originations to be 30 percent higher than the average loans originated in 1998 and 1999 and 7 percent higher than the average rate on mortgages originated in the 1990s with a number of factors to blame. Between 1990 and 1991, the index hit just above 140 but dropped into the 80s area between 1993 and 1994. It rose between 1994 and 1995 that had its lowest drop in default risk between 1998 and 1999.

Poor economic conditions, such as a recession, or the potential of a double-dip recession could cause weak payment performance from the borrower, Capozza said. But he said the Federal Reserve Board’s easing of key interest rates has brought a positive effect.

“It reduces the stress of the borrower because they are making a lower mortgage payment,” he said.

But Capozza added that the risk is still rising because the accommodating interest rate policy of the Fed is not sufficient enough to offset the eroding prospects for both the consumer and the underlying housing collateral.

The NMR’s predictions are based on analyses of economic conditions in each state and its localities, as well as the relationship of the conditions to loan profitability. The analysis includes assessing “millions of mortgage loans” to the vulnerability of each state to loan losses and prepayments.

UFA publishes a detailed analysis of each state every quarter, focusing on the best and worst places to lend. NMR predicted the increased defaults in southern California in the mid-90s.

Loans are based on having a “constant-quality,” such as the same borrower, loan and collateral characteristics while the index reflects only the changes in economic conditions, which have been less than favorable in the last two years, rather than the prior two-year term.

The Mortgage Bankers Association will issue its quarterly National Delinquency Survey on September 9.
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Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Find Strength in Housing Markets
MBA (9/5/02) Sorohan, Mike
New reports from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac show that the housing market has continued to strengthen and that homeowners consider housing the “soundest” investment they can make in today’s economy.

Fannie Mae’s 11th annual National Housing Survey, released yesterday, found that 70 percent of Americans saw buying a home as a “safe” and “smart” investment. This was nearly double those who said that an IRA or 401(k) plan was a “safe investment with a lot of potential.” Just 38 percent of respondents made that attribution.

Additionally, the survey said that nearly 25 percent of respondents said they planned to purchase a home within the next three years. More than 85 percent said that the value of their home had increased “at least a little” since they owned them, and 61 percent said their home value had increased “a lot.”

Fannie Mae Chairman and CEO Franklin Raines said that homeowners and potential homeowners were “encouraged” by the lowest interest rates in years. [The Mortgage Bankers Association of America’s Weekly Application Survey reported yesterday that the interest rates for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages fell below 6 percent, a record, and the lowest rates since 1963.]

“The highest percentage of Americans since 1994 say now is a very good time to buy a home, and a quarter of Americans plane to do so in the next three years,” Raines said.

The report also noted that potential minority homeowners believe they face “numerous obstacles” in purchasing a home. Nearly one-third (32 percent) of African Americans surveyed said they believed their credit rating would be a major obstacle to obtaining a mortgage, compared to 23 percent of all adults. Additionally, 27 percent of African Americans said that job security was a “growing worry” that could prevent them from making the decision to buy a home. And nearly two-thirds of African Americans said that not knowing how to get started would be a “major obstacle” or “minor obstacle” in purchasing a home now.

Meanwhile, Freddie Mac’s quarterly Conventional Mortgage Home Price Index, also issued yesterday, showed that home values increased by an annualized rate of 7.6 percent nationwide during the second quarter. While the rate was down slightly from the revised annualized rate of 7.9 percent for the first quarter, Freddie Mac economists said the growth suggested “robust” appreciation, particularly over the past six quarters.

Freddie Mac Chief Economist Frank Nothaft said that while he expected home price growth to slow still further this year, that given current economic conditions the GSE had revised its 2002 forecast for house price appreciation from 4-5 percent to 6-6.5 percent.

“The rate of appreciation, coupled with low mortgage rates, will ensure that housing will continue to provide support for the current economy throughout the rest of the year,” Nothaft said.

The Freddie Mac index indicated that all regions of the country showed some price appreciation, ranging from a high of 3.3 percent (13.8 percent annualized) in the Mid-Atlantic region (New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania) to just an 0.4 increase (1.8 percent annualized) for the East South Central Division (Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee).

Links:
Fannie Mae: www.fanniemae.com
Freddie Mac: www.freddiemac.com
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S&P Reports Conventional Housing Strengthens Since 9/11
MBA (9/5/02) Murray, Michael
Although the aftermath of September 11 has included a falling stock market and slow recovery from a possible double-dip recession, housing maintained a strong leadership position, based on a report from Standard & Poor’s, New York.

The report, titled “U.S. Housing Market on Firm Foundation Since Sept. 11,” states that conventional housing, accounting for 64% of new home construction, has proven to be the most resilient aspect of the housing market since September 11, while multifamily, which represents 21% of the market, has suffered to a more surprising degree than expected.

"The strength of the conventional housing market has materially exceeded the expectations of most industry participants," said Lisa Sarajian, Standard & Poor's Managing Director, Real Estate Companies.

But multifamily housing real estate investment trusts (REITs) will likely experience weak operating conditions as long as conventional builders are doing well, which means multifamily REITs could remain under pressure for another six months to a year, Sarajian said. However, she noted that moderate leverage levels, sound liquidity positions, and minimal debt maturity needs for multifamily REITs should enable most of these rated companies to ride out the weak operating environment.

The good news, Sarajian said, is that this activity has prevented a more material economic downturn than might otherwise have been the case.

"But this current, very robust level of activity, absent a corresponding improvement in job or household formations, is probably not completely sustainable regardless of interest rates," Sarajian added.

As a result, Standard & Poor's believes that single-family housing starts will cool modestly as a gradually strengthening economy brings an end to declining interest rates. The potential for modestly lower housing starts, however, is not expected to negatively impact the credit quality of conventional homebuilders.

Meanwhile, the report also shows that while accounting for 15% of the market, manufactured housing has continued to battle high levels of repossessed inventory. More recently, it has been competing in some markets with conventional housing at lower price points. The ratings agency said that the outlook for manufactured housing industry participants likely remains negative until repossession levels level off or new finance participants enter this market.
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Office DealMaker of the Day
MBA (9/5/02) Murray, Michael
L.J. Melody & Co., Houston, has arranged $25 million in acquisition financing for the 226,000 square-foot Siemens Westinghouse Power Corp. office building in Orlando, Fla. The four-story, Class A building was completed in April 2001.

John Nelson, managing director in the San Francisco office and David Borge, vice president, L.J. Melody & Co. in the Orlando office arranged the funding for the transaction with Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB), New York. The borrower, Falcon Real Estate Investment Co., Ltd., New York, is a 5-year single tenant purchase deal with a floating rate over LIBOR, but the interest rate and amortization was not disclosed.

Although Class A office buildings have been faced with the ongoing issue of terrorism insurance, it was not an issue on this deal, but Borge and Nelson said terrorism insurance continues to be a hindrance on other large deals across the country.

“It’s still an issue,” Borge said. “It just depends on the lender. It depends on the deal.”

According to Nelson, terrorism insurance is “absolutely” still an issue on other properties because it continues to be difficult to obtain for the property owner.

“Most [lenders] are requiring it,” Nelson said. “Sometimes you can’t get [terrorism insurance] depending on the property or the state [the property] is located in.”
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Commercial Briefs

MBA (9/5/02) Murray, Michael
Behringer Harvard REIT I, Inc., a newly organized Maryland corporation, has filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to sell a maximum of 80 million shares of common stock, and a minimum of 250,000 shares, for $10 per share to the public with an additional 8 million shares at $10 per share pursuant to its dividend reinvestment plan.

Behringer Harvard REIT I officials said the corporation was formed to acquire and operate institutional office buildings and other commercial real properties, and to provide mortgage financing for the commercial properties.
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Deadlines Approaching for MBA Annual Convention
MBA (9/5/02) Sorohan, Mike
The Mortgage Bankers Association’s 89th Annual Convention and Expo in Chicago is just six weeks away. That may seem like plenty of time—but it’s not.

“We are filling up quickly,” said Elaine Howard, the MBA’s senior director of conferences and meetings. “Registration is well ahead of record pace.”

“Decades of Discovery” (the convention’s theme) takes place October 20-23 at the Hyatt Regency in Chicago—an appropriate locale, since Chicago saw the birth of the MBA back in 1914. The convention features four educational tracks—Business, Educational, Management and Technology—and a number of major speakers and events.

Highlighting this year’s convention is former President George H.W. Bush, who will speak at the opening General Session on October 21. Other scheduled speakers include former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, HUD Secretary Mel Martinez, Freddie Mac Chairman and CEO Leland Brendsel and Fannie Mae Chairman and CEO Franklin Raines.

This year’s ticketed events also pack a punch. The Chairman’s Luncheon (October 21) features Apollo 13 Spacecraft Captain James Lovell Jr., who will share his experiences aboard the spacecraft that resulted in the award-winning film Apollo 13. Tickets for this event are $125.

The Sports Luncheon (October 22) features a Chicago institution—former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka. Twice named NFL Coach of the Year and the force behind the Bears’ Super Bowl XX team, Ditka will discuss his colorful career. Fox News personality Greta Van Susteren will moderate the Sports Luncheon; tickets are $125.

Club MBA, a popular convention event, this year features funk icons Kool and the Gang and the Fab Four, a Beatles tribute band. Tickets for this event are $190.

Additionally, the convention features an enormous Exhibit Hall featuring nearly 200 exhibitors and sponsors.

September 20 marks the early convention Registration deadline and the cut-off date for hotel room blocks. “To get a hotel room, you have to register first,” Howard said.

For more information about the 2002 MBA Convention, visit the convention Web site at http://events.mbaa.org/89th_annual/index.cfm.
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Tech
Adrenaline Spurs LoanRover Decision Systems into Automated Subprime Decisioning

MBA (9/05/02) Murray, Michael
Subprime lending has been targeted as a breeding ground for unscrupulous Subprime lending has been targeted as a breeding ground for unscrupulous predatory lenders, who charge exorbitant fees to unsuspecting borrowers. At the same time, some consumer advocacy groups claim that borrowers with strong credit are coerced into using a subprime lending without realizing the fees are higher. But new technology might be able to curb these practices by opening up different products that could lower costs to subprime borrowers.

The Adrenaline Group, Arlington, Va., has been working with LoanRover Decision Systems (LDS) to create LoanRover, a subprime lending decisioning system with risk-based pricing that can determine the appropriate mortgage products and interest rates for high-risk subprime borrowers.

“To have a loan with that many loan level adjustment attributes and be able to adjust a coupon before the loan is underwritten, that drives a lot of efficiency into the origination process,” said Chris Puchalla, chief executive officer of LDS. “I would say [to fully risk-adjust the pricing] is the single most dramatic ability of the system.”

LoanRover has raised capital from a number of investors, including ex-Fannie Mae officials, to create the automatic underwriting system for the subprime market. The underwriting engine uses Java language but is also data driven so that it can deliver “best loan execution” with a reasoning engine specific to the subprime underwriting function that can choose mortgage products from the top ten lenders.

“It’s a DU [Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter] or LP [Freddie Mac’s Loan Processor] for the subprime market,” Puchalla said.

The concept of “best loan execution” can move further if the system “sits behind” DU or LP so that unqualified prime loans could still qualify for another type of loan and subprime loans could fall into a prime loan category if it is added to the LDS technology

“If the user (mortgage originator) is coming in looking for a subprime loan and they hit our technology first, we can add the ability for the system to refer to DU and LP for decisioning as well,” Puchalla said. “Having us next to DU and LP is an efficiency for the market. That’s the goal.”

The primary users of the system are mortgage brokers, who use loan origination systems (LOSs) to send loan applications to the lender. A browser-based user interface ties together with a core underwriting engine with proprietary disqualification logic and a credit interface that can pull and modify credit with a “local edit” function based on full documentation provided to credit agencies.

The system also runs adjustments to interest rates based on the different products and the “bells and whistles” within those products, such as a prepayment requirement, income amount, credit adjustments and other factors that can change pricing.

“Instead of [making] a generic rules engine and see what the loans are like, we saw what the loans were like and built the reasoning engine backing into the underwriting criteria,” said Scott McLoughlin, chairman, The Adrenaline Group.

HUD’s proposed rules amending the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) emphasize mortgage originators, including lenders and brokers, showing costs, including rates and yield spread premiums (YSPs) up front to borrowers during the three days within taking the application or the Good Faith Estimate. But the preliminary process of finding a product from subprime lenders and delivering rates and fees to borrowers could be completed in 30 seconds rather than 24 hours with the LoanRover system, McLoughlin said.

“[Mortgage originators] could go back in, add a borrower and modify the data, if there is additional data, and get revised findings,” Puchalla said. “The findings come back to the loan officer, the loan officer can then select the product that best fits the borrower’s needs and then they move forward with the loan application. It is submitted for a final review before closing docs are drawn.”

Saxon Capital, one of The Adrenaline Group’s clients, had been working on its own workflow system and chose LoanRover as one of its components. Saxon has 1,000 loan products; the system selects every available loan from its Alt-A and subprime mortgage products.

“These organizations are implementing general automation workflow systems where the underwriting process is still manual,” McLoughlin said. “It is simply a missing component.”

Puchalla has also met with retail mortgage banker executives who do not have a strategy for subprime lending because they do not want to take the warehouse line risk based on short-selling a loan leading to diminishing returns or they do not like the stigma of subprime loans.

But the “Portable Funding Technology,” developed by LDS, helps to keep the retail mortgage banker from taking the funding risk by submitting the loan through the LoanRover system, table-fund the loan and receive a prepurchase commitment from the investor in its database, Puchalla said.

“That allows the retail banker to originate a product, grow their originations and participate in funding subprime loans as well without the execution risks of funding the loans on their lines of credit,” Puchalla added.

LDS originally incorporated in Virginia in 2000 as SubPrimeX, but changed its name in 2001. At the time, however, SubPrimeX hired The Adrenaline Group as a partner to develop its LoanRover technology. After nine to twelve months, they created LoanRover version 1.0.

Technology to qualify or disqualify consumers for products and provide a variety of options will still not be a panacea to the human element steering customers to the products they want to sell them but the LoanRover, a mortgage originator, could have the ability to choose the best available price from the top ten lender loan products.

“Being at the top of the subprime food chain, the underwriting criteria is vast,” McLoughlin said. “The criteria for a prime loan would be a subset of the myriad criteria [found] in the subprime world.”
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