|
||||
The CEO of the nation’s largest mortgage lender recently picked up his phone and began calling the company’s pay-option borrowers.Countrywide Financial Corp. Chief Executive Angelo Mozilo did just that to find out why they were making only minimum payments on their pay-option loans.
While recently speaking to investors in New York, Mozilo revealed that he conducted the “little experiment,” according to a recording of the conference call with the investors. “What we’re finding out is that they’re pretty smart,” Mozilo said on the call, which was reviewed by MortgageDaily.com. “It’s like voters: Individually they’re sort of idiots, but collectively they seem to make the right decisions.” Mozilo said with an average age of 38 for pay-option borrowers, they have never “in their adult lives seen (housing) values go down. “The concept is alien to them,” he said. So many of the borrowers are convinced the value of their homes will rise and will make up for any costs added by taking a pay-option loan. “The answer was, ‘I’m doing it because the rate of negative amortization is less than the increased value in my house each month,” Mozilo said. As of Aug. 31 Countrywide, which reported third quarter residential originations of $114 billion — more than any other U.S. lender, had about 400,000 pay-option customers, accounting for 18 percent of the company’s $220 billion residential loan portfolio. Countrywide, Mozilo said, goes to great lengths “to educate the buyer about pay-option products.” The information given to borrowers when they are applying for a loan includes “cautions about negative amortizations, payment shock and the reduction taking place in equity as a result of negative (amortization),” he said. After a loan is approved customers are sent a “welcome brochure that simply outlines the product in detail again, including the affects of habitually using the minimum payment option,” he said. Warning letters are also sent to customers about potential payment shocks; it is included in their monthly mortgage statement. “We are rewarded to keep people in homes,” Mozilo said. Consumers will continue to utilize “interest-only and pay-option home loans to combat affordability issues,” according to Mozilo. But as long as the unemployment rate stays relatively low the mortgage industry should not be greatly impacted. Today’s report from the U.S. Department of Labor statistics show October’s unemployment rate was the lowest since before Sept. 11, 2001.
|
||||
Patrick Crowley is a feature journalist and blogger for MortgageDaily.com. He is also a reporter, blogger and columnist for The Cincinnati Enquirer. |
FREE CALCULATORS TO HELP YOU SUCCEED
Tools for Your Next Big Decision.
Amortization Calculator
Affordability Calculator
Mortgage Calculator
Refinance Calculator
FHA Mortgage Calculator
VA Mortgage Calculator
Real Estate Calculator
Tags
Pre-Approval Resources!
Making well educated decions in a matter of minutes and stay up to date on the latest news Mortgage Daily has to offer. Read our latest articles to stay up to date on what’s going on…
Resource Center
Since 1998, Mortgage Daily has helped millions of people such as yourself navigate the complicated hurdles of the mortgage industry. See our popular topics below, search our website. With over 300,000 articles, we are guaranteed to have something for you.
TOP SEARCHED TOPICS
Your mortgages approval starts here.
Add 1-2 sentence here. Add 1-2 sentence here. Add 1-2 sentence here. Add 1-2 sentence here. Add 1-2 sentence here.
Stay Up To Date with Today’s Latest Rates
Mortgage
Today’s rates starting at
Home Refinance
Today’s rates starting at
Home Equity
Today’s rates starting at
HELOC
Today’s rates starting at