President’s Club

The Rising Cost Of A Small Downpayment

Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is a mortgage lender’s insurance policy against highly-leveraged homeowners. It’s typically required when homeowner equity is less than 20 percent at the time of closing.

With PMI defaults up 40 percent over last year, though, private mortgage insurers are taking big losses.

They’re also taking outsized steps to prevent additional claims [...]

The Obvious Truth About Mortgage Rate Predictions

As the stock market dips then jumps then dips again, it’s important to remember that markets are unpredictable and nobody knows what will happen tomorrow.

Unfortunately, that doesn’t stop the analysts from trying.

An obvious example comes from May of this year. As the price of oil crossed $120 per barrel on its way to [...]

Why Homeowners With Adjusting Adjustable Rate Mortgages May Be In For A Surprise

For homeowners with soon-to-adjust adjustable rate mortgages, the recent banking turmoil worldwide may lead to budgetary pain.

This is because most conforming ARMs made since 2003 are based on a borrowing cost called LIBOR and LIBOR is up an uncharacteristic 2 percent since September.

LIBOR stands for London Interbank Offered Rate and is the rate at which [...]

Looking Back And Looking Ahead : October 13, 2008

Throughout the feverish activity on Wall Street last week, mortgage bonds sold off with force, driving mortgage rates to their highest levels since July.

It was the fourth straight week in which mortgage rates worsened.

But, with the mortgage markets closed Monday, stock markets rallied to their largest one-day gain in history.

The Dow Jones’ gains are expected [...]

How Falling Gas Prices May Stave Off Recession

Given the stock market’s recent performance, it’s not surprising that gasoline’s falling prices are garnering very little attention. That doesn’t make it any less relevant, however.

Since peaking in July, gas prices are off by 20 percent.

Falling gas prices are an important positive for the U.S. economy because less money spent at the pump means [...]

Pending Home Sales Shows That More Buyers May Be Shopping For Homes Than You Thought

Buyers are returning to the housing market.

Each month, The National Association of REALTORS® tracks homes under contract to sell, but whose closing has not yet happened. It calls them “pending sales” and publishes a monthly report to quantify them.

The Pending Home Sales report is important because it’s meant to predict future home [...]

The Impact Of The Federal Reserve’s Emergency Half-Point Rate Cut To 1.500 Percent

The Federal Reserve made an “emergency rate cut” this morning, dropping the Fed Funds Rate by one half-percent to 1.500 percent.

The move is meant to stimulate the U.S. economy.

When the Federal Reserve changes the Fed Funds Rate, it often takes 9 months for the changes to work their way through the economy.

On a [...]

Some People Were Thrilled To Watch The Stock Market Fall Below 10,000

Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed below the psychologically-important 10,000 level for the first time since 2004.

Despite the milestone-marker breach, however, there was a large group of Americans with reason to cheer. As stocks sold off, mortgage markets rallied to the benefit of home buyers and mortgage rates shoppers everywhere. [...]

Looking Back And Looking Ahead : October 6, 2008

Congress approved the $700 billion “Bailout Bill” Friday, answering the question that dogged mortgage markets all week long:

Will they or won’t they pass it?

The uncertainty prior to the vote created huge market swings that ultimately sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its worst week since the 2001 terrorist attacks, while causing similar damage in [...]

Fannie Mae Halves One Of Its Mandatory Loan Fees

In an effort to provide “the most market support possible”, Fannie Mae is cutting one of its mandatory loan fees by 0.250 percent, effective immediately.

Fannie Mae introduced the Adverse Market Delivery Charge in December 2007 to offset foreclosure and delinquency losses. The initial fee was a quarter-percent of the amount borrowed.

Then, as [...]