Remember those damnable jumbo
mortgage loans of the housing bubble? Well, like the Terminator,
according to Inside Mortgage Finance, "they're
back"!
As a bit of background, jumbo mortgages are home loans that exceed the
limits imposed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In most parts of the United
States, these two GSEs limit mortgages to $417,000
with a "conforming limit" of $625,500 in some of the most expensive
real estate markets (100 out of the 3300 counties in total) in the United
States. Jumbo loans are generally taken on properties ranging in price
from $750,000 to $10 million and a borrower must have a minimum credit score of
700 with a debt-to-income ratio of no more than 45 percent and a 20 to 40
percent downpayment. Jumbo loan holders also require a higher reserve
base than normal loans and, in normal circumstances, have a higher interest
rate than conventional mortgages.
Let's start with a bit of history.
Here is a graph showing the conforming limit
in dark blue, the average price of an American home in pink, the average sale
price of a home financed with a jumbo loan in medium blue and yellow and the
average size of a jumbo mortgage taken out on these homes that were priced
higher than the conforming limit:
Between 2002 and 2006, banks
originated an average of $557 billion annually in jumbo mortgages.
There's your housing bubble!
The volume of jumbo mortgage
originations more than tripled between 1993 and 2005 as shown on this bar
graph:
Now, let's go back to the present.
Here is a graph showing the interest rate on a
30 year fixed jumbo loan over the past three years:
Here is a graph showing the interest rate
on a 15 year fixed jumbo loan over the past three years:
Here is a graph showing the interest rate
on a 15 year fixed regular loan over the past three years:
The current rate on a 15 year fixed
mortgage is 3.47 percent. The current rate on a fixed 15 year jumbo is
only very slightly higher at 3.50 percent. In fact, back in September
2013, the rates on jumbo loans were lower than the rates on regular loans, an
event that has never happened before. Normally, the rate on jumbo loans
is at least 0.25 percent higher than the rate on regular mortgage loans, in
fact, during December 2008, the spread reached 1.8 percentage points. Why
is this historically unprecedented relationship taking place? There are
several reasons:
1.) Volatile interest rates
that have pushed up yields on mortgage bonds issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac which has translated into higher interest rates on "conforming
loans".
2.) Higher fees charged on
"conforming loans" because Federal officials are reducing the
exposure of Fannie and Freddie which have been passed along to consumers.
3.) Banks are flush with cash on
deposit and want to loan that money out. Jumbo mortgages are kept on bank
balance sheets meaning that interest rates are not set by the bond market.
Higher interest rates since late spring have meant that banks are
increasingly willing to loan higher amounts of money to their wealthier
clientele. Some banks are offering special discounted mortgage rates for
clients that maintain high balances in savings and brokerage accounts in an
effort to attract borrowers.
All of this has led to an increase
in total jumbo mortgage originations over the past year. In the second
quarter of 2010, jumbo mortgage lenders originated a tiny $18 billion in loans
and that was up 20 percent over the first quarter volume. In the first
three quarters of 2008, only $87 billion of jumbo loans were originated.
If we look at the present situation, we find the following jumbo loan
originations by quarter for 2013:
Q1 2013 - $97 billion
Q2 2013 - $105 billion
Q3 2013 - $102 billion
Jumbo loans have increased by 34
percent on a year-over-year basis, a rather impressive increase.
Obviously, banks and borrowers feel that history will not repeat itself.
Banks feel that their very well-heeled clients are less of a risk than
the rest of us. That said, let's look back at a bit of history that seems
to be forgotten already. During 2008, the number of delinquent jumbo
loans skyrocketed as shown on this graph:
Apparently, even America's wealthy are immune from the humbling experience of defaulting on a mortgage. The large number of jumbo loan
defaults led to a massive downgrade of mortgage-backed securities that were
held by the two top originators, Chase Home Finance and Washington Mutual.
That was, in large part, responsible for the collapse of WaMu in 2008.
The current low interest rate
environment has had a wide range of what could ultimately be very negative
impacts on the economy. The recent resurgence in housing prices has been predicated on low interest rates. When the Fed ends its unprecedented experiment, we could well see a repeat of history with even wealthy Americans walking away from their jumbo mortgages.