Fed’s $1.2 Trillion Effort to Revive Economy is Missing the Point The Need for a National Warehouse Lending Solution is Growing
Mar 26

Mary Kladde

In my last post I stated the following:

There’s been quite a bit of lip service given with regards to supporting small business over the last couple of weeks.  Independent mortgage bankers/correspondent lenders are representative of the small businesses in question.  ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS.  Somebody somewhere in a position of authority and influence needs to get a clue quickly before it’s too late.  Let’s remove/suspend some of the capital requirements for Community Banks and Credit Unions on Warehouse Line Lending and get the ball rolling!

Today, my call was answered:

MBA Formally Asks for Capital Cut on Warehouse Lines

The Mortgage Bankers Association has asked federal banking regulators to cut the capital requirement on warehouse lines of credit by as much as 80% to alleviate a funding crisis facing non-depositories. Currently, depending on what stage of funding a loan is in, the risk weighting on a warehouse loan can be as high as 100%. This means $8 in capital must be held for every $100 in warehouse credit outstanding. For Fannie Mae, Freddie Mae, Federal Housing Administration and Veterans Affairs loans the trade group wants the capital charge to be 20%. Non-bank mortgage lenders are seeing their lines disappear or reduced with several regional banks exiting the warehouse sector as a way to preserve capital. MBA’s letter was sent to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Office of Thrift Supervision.

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