Mortgage implosion or an environment of change?

August 23, 2007

Over the past month there has been more change in the mortgage industry than in the previous 20 years combined!  What happened to all those lenders?  How did it happen so quickly?  Is this an implosion or just an environment of change?


The answer to most of these questions lays in the “Secondary Market” of mortgage lenders.  Each lender needs to replenish their coffers with cash to continue to lend money to homebuyers.  To achieve this, lenders package loans into large dollar amounts and “sell” them to an investor.  This is considered the “secondary market”.  Those investors then create funds that are then made available to all of us in our personal investment portfolios, thus completing the cycle of funds.  Last month several of the funds failed and now investors have no interest in buying any additional mortgages from lenders. Thus, lenders have no new funds to lend. Without lending, they have no income and suddenly these companies have no value!  Mortgage implosion!

Over the past decade hundreds of brokers and small correspondent lending groups have formed and tried to act like the major lenders. We know these as Brokers, Mortgage Lenders and even some very large names are really “Correspondent Lenders”, in other words they buy money from the wholesale divisions of major mortgage lenders, like Wells Fargo and sell them under their own name. 
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Sarasota Real Estate Insights: Willing to Negotiate

May 15, 2007

Sellers balk at reducing listing prices, but yield to the softer market at the closing table. (By Raul Elizalde, 5/07)

It is becoming more and more clear to sellers of homes in Sarasota that the only way to bring traffic to their properties is to price them realistically. Since many sellers are still priced too high for the current market, properties that are priced correctly stand out and get more showings than their overpriced counterparts.

On the other hand, buyers, who are becoming aware of having the upper hand, tend to make offers at significant discounts from whatever the listing price may be, sometimes regardless of whether or not the property in play was priced correctly.

What is a seller to do, then? Price the home low to bring traffic but open the door to unreasonably low offers, or price the home high to leave a hopeful cushion but sacrifice the traffic? This is a tough dilemma.

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