The Jumbo Mortgage Window Slams Shut

Are we in the middle of a fully-blown credit crunch, or is this merely an unpleasant

and discontinuous repricing? The answer to that question lies in whether credit

is available at any price. Have funding windows slammed shut, or are lenders

merely requiring higher interest rates than borrowers are willing to pay?

My feeling is that it’s a little bit of both, but that there are definite signs

of a real credit crunch, especially in the mortgage market.

The WSJ’s James Hagerty has an excellent

front-page article today which concentrates on so-called jumbo mortgages

– loans of more than $417,000, which won’t be guaranteed by Fannie Mae

and Freddie Mac. Spreads are widening so much in this market that jumbo-mortgage

rates are rising alarmingly despite long-term interest rates coming down. A

prime 30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan now costs 7.34%, up more than 80bp since

mid-May.

The problem is not defaults, which have remained low on prime mortgages in

general and certainly on anything fixed-rate. The problem is the bond market,

according to Doug Duncan, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association:

Alarmed by weakness in the housing market and rising foreclosures, investors

who buy loans and securities backed by mortgages have fled the market for

almost any loan that isn’t guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, Mr. Duncan

and others said. That means lenders must either hold loans, at least temporarily,

and face the risk of falling values for them, or seek out borrowers who qualify

for loans that can be purchased by Fannie and Freddie.

For other types of loans, Mr. Duncan said, "there is no market."

He said it isn’t clear how long the market will remain disrupted, but said

some mortgage bankers fear the current paralysis could last weeks. "We’re

getting calls from members [of the lenders’ association] who are quite desperate

about their circumstances," Mr. Duncan said. Large banks have the capacity

to retain loans on their books, but many other lenders can only make loans

that can be sold quickly.

For mortgage lenders without a large balance sheet of their own, this is very

bad news: they’re simply not set up to warehouse loans. Look at the way American

Home Mortgage imploded: the company was done in by its banks, which abruptly

pulled their credit lines – and credit, of course, is the lifeblood, the

oxygen, of any mortgage company. Without it, you last a few minutes at most.

That’s one reason why Countrywide is a

risky bet, even at book value: it has lots of credit today, but no one is

sure whether that credit will stick around tomorrow.

Jumbo mortgages are now being priced at levels above any reasonable expectation

of credit risk: they’re expensive entirely because of market risk. So I’m very

sympathetic to mortgage broker Darren Weisberg, who’s quoted in the WSJ article

as saying that "nobody in their right mind would pull the trigger"

on one of these things today.

This, then, looks like a credit crunch more than it looks like a repricing.

A similar syndrome might well play out in the LBO market, too, as banks find

themselves warehousing the loans they underwrote, rather than being able to

wrap them up in a pretty CLO and sell them in the secondary market.

I’m still reasonably hopeful, however, and not because I think the Fed will

or should cut rates today or any time soon. Rather, I’m placing my faith in

other sources of liquidity: foreign central banks, sovereign wealth funds, hedge

funds looking for distressed assets, even retail investors who are still finding

it difficult to get a nice return on their fixed-income investments. If I was

a retail bond investor, I’d love to buy fixed-rate jumbo loans at these prices.

And where there’s demand, supply will surely follow.

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