Retail Mortgage Branch Opportunities
        
        


  
 

 

Entries Tagged 'Mortgage Net Branch Information' ↓

Mortgage Branching In a Changing Industry

Mortgage retail branch opportunities are sprouting up like mushrooms after heavy rains. Everyone from independent mortgage brokers, to federally chartered banks, to wholesale lenders wants to get in on the action. These types of arrangements are often referred to by different names, branch partnerships or affiliate branches, being two of the more popular terms. A few companies are still referring to themselves as a “net branch”, now a dirty word thanks to some poorly-operated companies that have given the term a negative meaning. Perhaps there are so many terms currently in use because no new universal term has been coined yet.

A mortgage branch company is not an easy business to manage or operate. To some, it sounds like a quick way to get rich. Hire a lot of loan officers, make a few hundred dollars off each loan or a flat fee per month, and retire in a couple of years. If only it were so easy. There are going to be some tough lessons learned in the not too distant future.

Regulations abound. Both federal and state regulators have made, and are likely to continue making, drastic changes to the industry. These changes are not going to make your job any easier. Staying abreast of these changes is a monumental task and requires a heavy emphasis on compliance; something a good branch company should always do for you. To make matters even more challenging, state laws often contradict federal laws. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) permits a nontraditional branch office to be, “located in a non-commercial space, but it must have adequate office space and must comply with the local government use requirements” (HUD Handbook 4060.1, Chapter 2-11.C.1.). While HUD may permit a home-based branch office, several states require a commercial location.

Have you ever read a correspondent or broker agreement? All of the liability is placed on the company who enters into the agreement, not the loan officer who originates the loan. These agreements have become much stricter in recent years, with some even attempting to pass all of the liability onto the originating lender. The representation and warranty clauses often require guarantees beyond loan officers or the originating lender’s control. The cost for indemnity or loan repurchase can add up to very sizeable amounts quickly. Couple this with loans that must be sold scratch and dent for pennies on the dollar because they failed to meet a particular guideline, or because a borrower’s circumstances change after funding, and you have a financial exposure that some could not handle.

An often overlooked component of a successful mortgage branch company is the commitment and passion of the corporate staff, which is critical to assist the branches. The dynamics between the corporate staff and loan officers is uniquely personal. Excellent customer service requires specialized professionals with a broad understanding of the mortgage business. Branches depend on this vital link to the corporate office to succeed. When the branches succeed, the company succeeds. The staffing and infrastructure requirements for a branch company are extensive. There are plenty of loan origination software systems and back-office software systems to handle underwriting, secondary, closing, funding and other tasks, but systems that manage employees, licenses, and the unique compensation model in the branching world, are extremely limited.

Everyone lacks experience at one time in their life or another. Right now, many of the companies offering branch arrangements are just getting their feet wet with the business model. Sure they may have plenty of experience in mortgage lending, perhaps as a wholesale lender, but wholesale lending is nothing like a retail mortgage branch company. An independent mortgage banker or broker who is looking to expand may have experience with a handful of loan officers at their location, but what happens when some of the control is lost to an offsite office? Federal banking agency-regulated institutions offer the benefit of skipping the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS) test and required education, but they bring about stricter oversight from their own set of regulators and will mimic more of a traditional employer-employee relationship, which can be contradictory to the loan originator entrepreneurial spirit. The federal banking agency-regulated institutions are also attracting those who can not pass the NMLS required background check or test, potentially drawing a crowd that may be questioned.

When looking at mortgage branch companies, there is a lot of research that needs to be done. Loan officers are being bombarded with opportunities to join a branch company. Solicitations are coming from wholesale account executives that are being required to, not only establish and maintain relationships with mortgage brokers and loans officers, but to now actually recruit and manage them as employees. Blast emails and websites claim misleading information about production, capabilities, and costs. The decision to join a branch company should be a well thought out business decision; it should not be an emotional decision or one that was a result of a great sales pitch. Take the time to do your homework now and you will be rewarded later.

When interviewing branch companies, ask them how long they have operated branch offices and how many offices they currently have. Experience counts, unless you want to be a guinea pig. This information can be validated through HUD’s Single Family Neighborhood Watch Early Warning System (NW). If you do not have access to this information, ask the branch company to provide a printout for you. Not only will NW list all of the company’s active branch locations and the date each was authorized, the system is the only reliable and accurate source for production data and loan performance. Like borrowers, branch companies often speak higher of themselves than what the numbers may show. NW reports the most recent 24 month’s production data for all Federal Housing Administration (FHA) insured loans, as well as the compare ratio, which tracks defaults to that of the national average or other specified geographic areas. There are two reasons why this is very important: the first is to validate a company’s production. If they claim to be the world’s largest branch company or that they pay out over a million dollars a day in commissions, yet the data only reports 1,200 FHA loans in the past 24 months, you know something may be a little fishy. Secondly, and most importantly, is the compare ratio. A compare ratio of 100% means the company’s loans default at the exact same rate as the national average. At 200%, the defaults double national average and the game is about over; the days are numbered before HUD revokes approval.

Ask for the corporate contact list now, not after you have been hired. Look for a company that is staffed accordingly for its size and also look at job titles. The corporate office should not only include common back-office positions such as, underwriters and closers, but should also include IT, compliance, payroll, and support staff who are dedicated to supporting the branch offices with anything and everything, not just underwriting or closing coordinators in disguise as support.

Banker or broker? The choice should not be made now, but on each and every loan. No company can be everything to every borrower on every loan. We all want the very best pricing, instant service, and every program available, but the reality is no company can or has ever offered this. Is there a wholesale lender you have worked with that can do this? No. Look for a company that offers a good balance among pricing, products and service, but keep your options open to broker loans too. “First right of refusal” is not a policy put in place for your benefit. A branch company that allows you to choose on each and every loan, whether you want to bank it in-house or broker it to their expansive lender list, is forced to compete for your business. Loan officers want to close loans quickly, close all of the loans they come across, and get paid well for their work. Keeping your options open to both bank and broker your loans is the key to maximizing your success.

The right branch company will allow you to originate more loans and put more money in your pocket. By off-loading all of the back-office functions and associated costs and liability, your time is freed up to work on tasks that generate income for you – originating and closing loans and/or managing a team of loan officers. In order for this to work to your benefit though, all of the other elements must be in place. You must align yourself with a branch company that has the experience in operating branch offices, a company that has been around and will be here in the future, so your paychecks are good and on time.

Will Mortgage Brokers Become Extinct?

During the 70’s and early 80’s, banks dominated originations by carving out a whopping 80% of the retail loan applications. Brokers quickly picked up the slack and by the early 90’s the numbers reversed. The market, especially real estate investors, liked the idea of a personal mortgage broker who understood their goals scouring the landscape for the best products and rates.

Big banks have never been known for the best customer service or loan pricing, and the public punished them by fleeing to the broker community. During this time brokers enjoyed about 75% of all originations, leaving small pickings for the banks. Enter deregulation and the subprime loan.

We are all aware that our current economy was caused in large part by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in late 2006. From then until present day, there has been a littany of finger pointing by people on all sides about who is to blame for this mess. Unfortunately, you and our other fellow mortgage professionals have received a big part of the blame. Even big banks like Citi and Chase have pulled out of the mortgage broker market all together to separate themselves from the negativity swirling in the media.

Add to that the fact that many of the top mortgage insurance companies have restricted the use of third party originators and it begs the question, does this mark the end for mortgage brokers?

Maybe not.

Mortgage brokers who transition into mortgage bankers will survive. Mortgage bankers that can offer warehouse lines of credit, in-house underwriting, closing and funding, top-notch compliance, auditing, and access to training will be able to weather the storm. Even better are mortgage bankers that can still offer the traditional mortgage broker channel and have the best of both worlds. We predict the best of the best will survive. Loan officers will have to learn to adapt or leave the market; most from the subprime era have a history of 25 slam dunk stated income loans per month and now need to adjust to 2 or 3 FHA deals per month.

If you are a mortgage broker or loan officer we encourage you to seek a mortgage branch opportunity with Southwest Funding. If you are passionate about continuing to originate mortgage loans, now is the time to make the change.

How to Start a Mortgage Net Branch Company

It’s amazing the number of new mortgage net branch companies that pop up every year only to close their doors a year or two later. Failure to make payroll or a government shut down is typically the cause. Why does this cycle exist and how can you avoid it?

A mortgage branch company is not an easy business to manage or operate. To some, it sounds like a quick way to get rich. Hire a lot of loan officers, make a couple hundred dollars off each loan, and retire in a couple years. If only it was so easy.

You will need at least $100k per month just to cover corporate salaries. Don’t forget about the phone lines, office space, insurance, frivolous lawsuits, audits, software, and wide array of other expenses. It’s best to plan on a minimum of $200k monthly in expenses just to get started. All of those loan officers and loans to fund need lots of attention.

Government regulations – you need a library of books just to keep up with every governing agency. Multiple state and federal agencies all have rules on how you must operate your business. To make things even more complicated, these rules are often confusing, not clearly written, and have a habit of changing without much notice or any explanation.

Investor guidelines can sometimes be a moving target. Have you ever read a correspondent or broker agreement? Notice who takes all of the responsibility and risk? If a borrower fails to make the first few loan payments, even when the reason is beyond your control such as a job loss or illness, guess who owns that loan now? The mortgage branch company. Not only does the mortgage branch company get to underwrite, close, and fund loans, they also involuntarily become real estate investors and loan servicers.

In order to operate a mortgage branch company, you must have experience in doing so. Most of the mortgage net branch companies that start every year are done so by persons with mortgage industry experience, but no real experience in actually running a mortgage branch operation. They are blind to the realities that exist and are quickly overcome by financial problems and government headaches.

An often overlooked component in a successful mortgage net branch company is the commitment and passion needed to assist the mortgage branches by the corporate staff. The dynamics between the corporate staff and loan officers is uniquely personal. Excellent customer service to the mortgage retail branches requires specialized professionals with a broad understanding of the mortgage business. Mortgage retail branches depend on this vital link to the corporate office to succeed. When the branches succeed, the company succeeds.

When looking at mortgage branch companies, find out how long they have actually operated in such a capacity. What kind of staff do they have in place? Does the CEO also act as the licensing specialist? Ask for a corporate office employee roster with job titles. If you want to be a guinea pig with a mortgage branch company that only has a couple years or less of experience, be prepared for the day when the corporate office phones are no longer answered and your paycheck bounces.

Southwest Funding is one of the oldest retail mortgage branch companies. Originally started as a single retail operation in 1993, the company quickly expanded and added branch locations throughout Texas. In 2004, the company amended its name from Texas Residential Mortgage to Southwest Funding as mortgage branch offices outside of Texas started opening. HUD approved since 1996, Southwest Funding has the proven track record and experience to be your mortgage branch provider.

Wholesale Mortgage Lenders Jump into the Mortgage Net Branch Game

The overhaul of the mortgage industry by the government has changed the business models of many companies. Wholesale mortgage lenders fearful of their ability to survive in the near future are trying to become retail mortgage net branch companies over night by turning customers into employees.

Can they do it?  Most will not be able to succeed. Wholesale mortgage lenders lack the experience to operate a retail mortgage branch company. They are not accustomed to licensing originators.  Accounting and payroll departments are not in place, most do not offer the ability to also “broker” mortgage loans but require all loans to be “banked”. When you lose the choice to broker a mortgage loan, the mortgage banking company has no competition and you have no alternative, no plan B for your loan. Turn times can slow down, pricing can worsen, your employer – the mortgage banking company – does not have to compete for your business. Not only do you suffer, but so do your borrowers.

A true retail mortgage branch company offers BOTH mortgage banking and mortgage brokering, and lets you make the decision each and every time on how you want to close your loan. This type of arrangement puts you in control and requires your employer, the mortgage branch company, to be competitive with their mortgage banking.

Not too long ago wholesale mortgage lender account executives served as the sales representatives for the wholesale mortgage lender to develop new mortgage broker relationships and maintain existing ones. Today, many account executives are being faced with new a job description – Keep your mortgage broker customers AND go find some loan officers to work for us. This presents a conflict of interest, the account executive must manage loan officers who are now employees of the wholesale mortgage lender, and they must continue to manage their mortgage broker customer base. The mortgage broker is in direct competition for the same borrower as the loan officer of the wholesale lender.

What if you had the ability to bank mortgage loans with multiple lenders and broker mortgage loans when you wanted? Could you really have both? Contact us today and find out why we are the industry leader in mortgage retail branch opportunities. Southwest Funding is truly you net branch alternative.