If you've read anything that I have written in the past, you'll know that I haven't been a mortgage broker for over two years now. My old friends are telling me that none of the lenders are lending anymore. WAMU, Bof A, Wachovia (which bought World Savings), Indymac, etc... When I was a mortgage broker, these were the big guys. The ones that were always there.
There were smaller mortgage banks that had more niche products but the big guys were always there and always gonna be there and now they're not.
Just where I live there are three new condo towers. One is completed and the other two are almost finished. How will anyone buy them? Unless they are paying cash (and I know that some are), there is no financing to get. Where is a crafty mortgage broke to go to get a loan for their client. If all the giants have left the building who is left?
The credit crunch and the housing crisis are inexorably tied to one another. They have always had a symbiotic relationship. Well, as I have said before, we cannot exit this recession (possible depression) until the banks are ready to lend again.
This new housing legislation will do little to ease the pain. It really only applies to people who can go "full doc" and those typically aren't the people that are losing their homes (yet). It is the people who bought without having to prove their income that are in trouble. They are the ones who need help and they won't get it. I actually agree that they should not. Why should the responsible people who didn't buy a house because they could not afford it bail out those who did (via taxes)?
So back to the fate of the mortgage broker. My earlier blogs, PART's I & II, illustrated how mortgage brokers were being made obsolete by technology and fierce competition. Now, I see their end because they are losing the very product that they broker. If the big lenders are no longer selling loans through mortgage brokers, what are mortgage brokers going to sell? That really spells doom for that industry. It may be one of the shortest lived industries in history.
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