? What are you basing that on?Mainly used, not only. I’m sure with the downturn the waiver program is being significantly scaled back. That’s good
Why would they use risky waivers now that appraisal turn times are 2-3 days? Especially in this economic climate? Hell, maybe they are expanding them? With a so-called leader ship we have at the top, that wouldn’t surprise me.? What are you basing that on?
Because it was never all about the turn time ( though they use it as an excuse)Why would they use risky waivers now that appraisal turn times are 2-3 days? Especially in this economic climate? Hell, maybe they are expanding them? With a so-called leader ship we have at the top, that wouldn’t surprise me.
Just like the lenders who are more than happy to make any loan if someone else gets the risk, governement/GSE employees have no skin in the game. If volume increases and costs decrease, bonuses go up. Ever hear of anyone getting fired by a GSE or government position when the taxpayers get slammed with all the risk of bad decisions? If I recall, Franklin Raines, head of FNMA leading up to the last debacle pocketed millions of dollars. Same is going on now, but in larger volumes and more direct risk to taxpayers.Because it was never all about the turn time ( though they use it as an excuse)
I hope their use is not expanding - in a more risk adverse time such as in a market decline they might even decide to pause them - but that is speculation on my part and nothing more
I do think waivers have declined this year, but not as a result of reducing the ratio of waivers to appraisals - simply due to the reduction in loan volume. The ratio of waivers to appraisals would probably scare folks...Why would they use risky waivers now that appraisal turn times are 2-3 days? Especially in this economic climate? Hell, maybe they are expanding them? With a so-called leader ship we have at the top, that wouldn’t surprise me.
Perhaps it is because the data shows that in the cases where they offer waivers they are no more risky than an appraisal?Why would they use risky waivers now that appraisal turn times are 2-3 days?
It is not just the loan volume, it is the types of loans being made. The majority of waivers granted during the boom was for the no cash out refi, and that segment of loans has decreased significantly.I do think waivers have declined this year, but not as a result of reducing the ratio of waivers to appraisals - simply due to the reduction in loan volume. The ratio of waivers to appraisals would probably scare folks...