Prime Alliance’s 18 Strategies Blog

August 17, 2008

Picture This

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dan @ 7:34 am

Picture This
by: Joe Brancucci, Chairman and CEO, Prime Alliance Solutions, Inc.

Like you I see a great number of presentations: charts, graphs, bullet points, blah, blah, blah. And probably like you I find most of it dull, uninteresting, irrelevant. Yet one I viewed this week caught my attention. Expertly presented, artfully delivered, it capsulized all that’s transpired in the capital markets over the past two years on a single page, in one painfully simply, yet poignant graph.

fm_graphic_r21

The graph I refer to is titled ‘The Single Family Mortgage Related Securities Market’. It covers just 24 months and displays just four lines: market share positions of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae and Private Label mortgage backed securities. Beginning in June 2006, before the sub-prime cataclysm began, it shows what we all knew, and what was adversely impacting credit union share of the mortgage market: issuers of private label securities (Wall Street) held a better than 50% share. The mortgage loans backing these securities were largely what we know as Alternative A and Sub-Prime Loans. At that same point in time Fannie and Freddie held a share in the mid-20% range; Ginnie Mae, buyer of FHA loans, held a single digit share of the market, just as it had for some years.

Fast forward to June 2007. June 2006 was, if not the peak of housing market euphoria, it was pretty close. A year later marked the beginning of a new era, one that will in hindsight be remembered as a return to rationality in the housing and mortgage markets. Take another look at the graph. Private label security issuance began a precipitous decline. No more liar, NINJA or NINA loans. Another year later, in June 2008, private label share registered less than 1%. How things change.

We all know what happened and we all know why. Knowing about it and doing something about it are completely different in terms of importance. Obviously what we do with this information is crucial. Our strategic actions throughout this year and for the next few months will determine the role credit unions play in the housing finance market for the coming decade. Now, paraphrasing the old cliche, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’, this graph hints at numerous strategies. One that is obvious for credit unions is clearly depicted by Ginnie Mae’s rapidly ascendant share. From single digits just a year ago to greater than 20% today, FHA lending is critical to the future success of credit union mortgage lending.

FHA loans, for us old-timers, were the backbone of many, early first-time homebuyer strategies. Low-cost, low down payment, insured, they made it easy for people, especially those with lower to moderate incomes, to purchase their first homes. Sure they were, and are, more complex to originate and they had a relatively low maximum loan amount, yet they were effective in so many ways. One attractive feature for borrowers and lenders alike was that they were and are sustainable. Where the creative financing vehicles of sub-prime hysteria days routinely put borrowers in payment-shock peril, FHA loans do no such thing.

There’s another reason FHA Lending is even more attractive than it was even 30 days ago: the Housing Bill signed into law last month perpetuates the higher loan limits established for FHA loans in legislation that was passed earlier this year. Congress, recognizing that housing prices, while declining in many markets, are higher now than they were when the formula that set FHA limits was originally established. For FHA financing to be attractive, loan amounts had to increase.

What’s a credit union to do? Offer FHA loans to your members as soon as you can, either directly or through a credit union and member friendly third party. Industry predictions call for FHA loans to become more than 30% of single family loan originations. Need further persuasion? Some originators who made nice livings making loans that were placed into private label securities (read: the subprime guys) are looking at FHA loans as their next lunch ticket. The more this happens, the more members will overpay. The more credit unions get involved, the more affordable housing remains. Don’t procrastinate. This is one of the opportunities credit unions cannot afford to let pass by. Members can’t afford for us to let that happen, either.

This graph does hint at many potential strategies for credit union housing finance. Interested in what else I’m thinking about? Visit the 18 Strategies Blog (www.18strategies.com) for more strategic insights into capital market dynamics as well as 17 other strategies (one of the 18 is FHA Lending) I think are essential to credit union mortgage lending growth.

July 17, 2008

A New Strategy to add to the 18

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dan @ 9:10 am

This from Tom Kist, Chief Lending Officer, 1st Financial Federal Credit Union

 

If I may  offer another suggestion that may help expand your institution’s success, if  you don’t mind it coming from a “small credit union” lender; one of the things  we implemented in addition to what you suggested was the addition of a  mortgage sales team.  We actively solicit, through outside mortgage sales  reps (shoe leather and conversation), builders and real estate brokers and  their real estate agents.  Gaining the trust of a real estate agent or  builder may make a significant impact to the bottom line over time–the word  spreads quickly throughout the entire real estate channel.  The outside  reps are commission-based so if they are not bringing in relationships and  loans, it isn’t too costly for the credit union.  And, these reps  represent an institution with a good reputation, not some fly-by-night  brokerage company.

June 26, 2008

18 Strategies in 18 Months: The Recap

Filed under: Strategy Commentary — Joe Brancucci @ 7:01 am


I hoped you’ve enjoyed Prime Alliance’s 18 Strategies in18 Months, the daily e-mail we began sharing with you on June 2. We believe three things about the current market. First, the opportunity handed us as a result of the sub-prime crisis has an 18 month lifespan. Second, working together, our goal is positioning credit unions as our members’ first choice for housing finance. Third, we must focus on these strategies as a starting point to accomplish this goal. And the goal? It’s the Big Hairy Audacious Goal (BHAG) set by the CU Housing RoundTable in 2006. Ten percent market share by 2016, ‘Two to Ten’ as it’s commonly known.

The 18 Strategies you’ve had the opportunity to read this past month have many origins, yet they share a common purpose: to help credit unions put more members in homes more affordably. Eighteen is quite a few, I admit, yet I believe in every one of them. The role of strategy is to move us from our present market position, that of refinance lender for some of our members, to that of purchase-money adviser and lender for all of our homebuying members. Didn’t see all 18? Visit www.18strategies.com and spend thirty minutes. There you’ll find a brief summary of each strategy, with the full strategy just a click away. Or visit www.primealliancesolutions.com to download the 18 Strategies in 18 Months document. Where the site will give you a synopsis, this document provides more. In it you’ll see Prime Alliance has a follow-up plan for each strategy. Defining strategy is important. Executing on them is key.

Please use the 18 Strategies however you choose, but please, do use them. Download and distribute it, use it as a discussion item at an upcoming management team meeting, share it with your Board, choose those strategies that either fit your current model or the new housing finance model you’ve been contemplating. As I learned from Ross Shafer during the CUDL Conference this past week, the number is not important, the action you take is what matters.

Like you I am passionate about credit unions and I believe unabidingly that we must play a primary role in financing homes for our members. In many respects the opportunity we now have as mortgage lenders is the same opportunity we seized as automobile lenders more than fifty years ago. We were, and are, the affordable auto lender. We can and should be the affordable, sustainable mortgage lender. Car loans result in transportation, an initial linch-pin of financial security Home loans meet a more fundamental need, the need for shelter, the key to personal security and financial well-being. We must do both well for the well-being of our members .

And remember: while this may be the first you’ve seen our 18 Strategies, it won’t be the last. The ‘Want More?’ sidebars in the 18 Strategies document gives you a brief idea on what we have planned. There’s no need to wait, though. Additional information is already available for strategies one, two, four, five and fourteen, for instance. The CU Housing RoundTable, which will hold its Third Annual Meeting on October 16 – 17, 2008 in Seattle (you are invited, by the way, visit www.cuhousingroundtable.com for the details), is developing White Papers based on strategies three, four and seven. Prime Alliance is also offering webinars and classes on a number of them. SMS Univeristy is holding schools this Summer on FHA Lending. We’re as serious about this as we are about helping credit unions finance homes for members.

Finally, I’d like to use the 18 Strategies to start a dialogue about the role credit unions play in housing finance. So, share your thoughts with me and your peers on the 18 Strategies Blog, which debuts today at www.18strategies.com. I’ll bet we can refine and add to these strategies so that credit unions achieve their full potential as mortgage lenders.

#18: Commit to Playing a Role in Affordable Housing

Filed under: The Eighteen Strategies — Dan @ 6:48 am

When the dust finally settles after the sub-prime Olympics, we’ll find ourselves right back where we were two years ago. Affordable housing is a significant National issue, one that’s given short shrift of late given market woes.

Affordable housing is another niche we can claim as credit unions, especially while other industry lenders are licking their wounds. Developing an affordable housing strategy requires a keen understanding of your community(s) housing needs, local age, wage and cultural demographics, relationships with those that understand the issues and influence affordable housing decisions. Many of the seventeen strategies that precede this one provide the foundation for an affordable housing strategy. That’s why this one is purposefully Number Eighteen.

By now you’ve appointed your Housing Czar, or you’re close to doing so. As the Czar is making connections, establishing relationships and developing plans, make it understood that affordable housing is an essential part of your credit union’s long-term housing plan.

#17: Practice Highly Targeted Marketing

Filed under: The Eighteen Strategies — Dan @ 6:45 am

It’s astonishing with all that’s happened to the mortgage markets in the past 12 months that members, Realtors, builders and our communities remain unaware that credit unions are some of the most stalwart lenders in the industry. It’s time to change that. Past time, in fact.

First things first. Standard awareness advertising, where we market general messages to the general public, is not enough. We must begin engaging in highly targeted housing finance marketing campaigns to those members we know to be homeowners. Not only can we know who among them own homes, we can know who they financed with, the type of loan they have, the interest rate they are paying. With this almost perfect knowledge, we can put an almost perfect, custom offering in front of every one of our home owning members. Prime Possibilities, offered in collaboration with MGIC, is the solution for this highly targeted activity.

Second, it’s time we market ourselves to the Real Estate Community and other transaction influencers. Strategy #15 addresses this very need. Creating awareness of our capabilities while establishing relationships with those that influence our members’ financing decisions is absolutely essential to our long-term success as mortgage lenders.

#16: Participate in the CU Housing RoundTable

Filed under: The Eighteen Strategies — Dan @ 6:44 am

Ever have the feeling you are too busy doing to really, truly, deeply think about what you are and, more importantly, should be doing? Us too. This is one of the main reasons we formed the CU Housing RoundTable. Credit union mortgage lenders need time to think–together–about those strategies we should pursue that will help put more members in homes more affordably. Putting more members in homes also moves us closer to 10% market share within the next seven years, the RoundTable’s Big, Hairy Audacious Goal.

How will participation in the RoundTable specifically help your credit union? By focusing us all outward and forward, on the broader industry, on the remarkable opportunities that lay ahead, on issues important to members, on strategies that will help our credit unions thrive. Credit unions have always done their best thinking together. The Housing RoundTable focuses our collective intelligence on housing finance, the next great frontier of credit union lending.

Expanding horizons and boundaries is the primary task of all Think Tanks, the CU Housing RoundTable included. Think Tanks work best when the best minds participate. Join now, volunteer to help write a white paper, attend the annual meeting on October 16 and 17 in Seattle. For more information visit www.cuhousingroundtable.com.

#15: Establish ‘Influencer’ Relationships

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dan @ 6:42 am

We call this the ‘Strange Bedfellow’ strategy. Like Strategies Number Three and Thirteen, this, too, opens our mortgage lending cocoon to the broader world, into the primary transaction in which we hope to play a role for all members. Realtors, builders, estate planners, accountants, all influence where our members finance their homes. Precious few of them think credit union when they think mortgage.

The single biggest influencer is the Real Estate Community: Brokers, Agents, Realtors. Once they begin working with a buying member, the member is commonly in their thrall. Putting the Real Estate Community under a spell of our own should become a primary objective for every mortgage lending credit union. It’s not as simple, though, or as immediate as magic, however, these relationships take time, months, in fact to take hold. Begin working with your local Agents now; it will take 18 months for the relationship to blossom, We know of a few credit unions who made the commitment. Their Real Estate channel now accounts for as much as 15% of their monthly business.

Unsure how to begin? Talk with Shiela Finley (shiela.finley@PrimeAllianceRES.com), EVP, Prime Alliance Real Estate Services. PARES can help you build your ‘Strange Bedfellows’ strategy very quickly. Don’t forget builders, and other influencers. Look for more information on creating these relationships later this year.

#14: FHA Lending, Everyone?

Filed under: The Eighteen Strategies — Dan @ 6:41 am

Rather than say us older, let’s say us more experienced Prime Alliance Team Members remember Government Lending. Not well, mind you, it’s been some time since anyone’s done much of it, and we are, well, getting older. Government Lending, FHA Lending specifically, is hip, it’s happening, it’s big. Some industry experts put FHA volume at as much as 30% of all lending in under 18 months. You’ve got to get ready. Yesterday.

What do you do? Three things concurrently. Get educated. Prime Alliance can help. If you attended Symposium and had the chance to see Tracy Ashfield’s presentation on FHA Lending, you’re ahead of the game. Didn’t catch it? It will be on the Symposium DVD, due out later in June. SMS University is also holding two webinars in June so you can get the information. The next webinar is June 19 11:30 to 1:00 Pacific Time. SMS University will also be holding four face-to-face classes later this summer and early fall. For more information on all these sessions, visit www.consultsms.com. Prime Alliance customers receive a $50 discount on the face-to-face classes. When registering, use the Customer Discount Code ‘PA’.

While getting educated, start the FHA approval process. The process isn’t as arduous as it once was, yet it will take some time. Don’t wait, contact HUD today at www.fha.gov. And, as soon as you’ve done that, partner with an FHA Lender that can give you a jump on Government lending. During Symposium we announced that CU Members Mortgage and Prime Alliance have joined together to bring you such a quick start program. Contact your account executive today for more information.

Still not sure Government Lending is for you? Consider this: former hard-money lenders, the subprime guys who refuse to give up, are turning their attention to FHA Lending as one significant way to replace the business they’ve lost. Don’t let them get the jump on you.

#13: Establish Community Housing Relationships

Filed under: The Eighteen Strategies — Dan @ 6:39 am

Strategy Number Three, Appoint a Housing Czar, emphasizes ‘uncocooning’ the mortgage department. Establishing community-housing relationships is a second strategy to expand our lending horizons.

Thinking about it, the mortgage transaction is a secondary transaction, one small yet essential piece of the main event: the purchase of a home. It begins before we get involved, and continues long after. Being exceptional lenders requires clear knowledge of the environment in which we’re operating. Working with local agencies gives us a window into the needs, challenges and opportunities of our local housing market, valuable insight we must have as we define our strategies and structure our mortgage programs and products.

Where to start Local governments are often a good place. Housing is important in every community; it’s a political issue everywhere because housing has been a national housing policy priority since the 1940s. City Hall should welcome your inquiries, especially with the type of lending help credit unions offer. They will also be able to put you in touch with local groups that have housing as either their primary or partial mission.

#12: Mortgage Literacy: The New Mantra

Filed under: The Eighteen Strategies — Dan @ 6:37 am

One of the hardest lessons learned from the subprime crisis is this: the level of mortgage literacy in this country is abysmally low. How else could otherwise intelligent people end up in inappropriate loan products they couldn’t possibly afford?

Credit unions were chartered to promote the responsible use of credit . While our education mission has always been important, the stakes have never been higher: people are losing their homes. Let’s re-commit to member education, this time emphasizing housing finance. Members, and your communities, will thank you for it in the form of increased mortgage business.

This strategy dovetails nicely with the Strategy Number Ten, Be the Expert. Providing education that will help members make wise decisions is another way to position your credit union as a local expert.

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