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The Need for a National Warehouse Lending Solution is Growing

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The need for a national warehouse lending solution is growing, and the issue is gaining speed and momentum both within the industry and in the national media. (If you missed it, we outlined using a national warehouse line to solve the national liquidity issue here. This post is also a good background for anyone just becoming familiar with the issue).

The Wall Street Journal continued their coverage this week in an article by James R. Hagerty:

“Many of the small mortgage banks that remain are struggling. Mortgage banks, often small, family-owned companies, aren’t licensed to take deposits and so lack that source of money for their loans. Instead, they typically borrow money for short periods from so-called warehouse lenders. They use this short-term credit to make loans to their customers and then pay back the warehouse lenders after selling the loans to bigger banks or to government-backed mortgage investors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
“But this warehouse credit is much harder to obtain than it was a year or two ago because many of the big banks and Wall Street firms that used to provide it have exited that business.”

Read the full article “Under 5%, Mortgages May Be Near The Bottom“. In a related story, credit union originations were up by 17% in 2008, according to numbers released by Inside Mortgage Publications:

“Credit Unions are significantly increasing their mortgage originations in the current economic meltdown and credit crisis. According to new numbers compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance, credit unions boosted their mortgage production by a healthy 17 percent during 2008. That growth came at the same time that overall mortgage originations fell 39 percent. The result was that the credit union share of total mortgage lending jumped from 2.5 percent in 2007 to a record-high 4.7 percent in 2008. Almost one quarter of last year’s credit union originations came from just five institutions – Navy Federal in Virginia, State Employees in North Carolina, Pentagon in Virginia, Boeing Employees in Washington, and Alaska USA in Alaska.”

This report demonstrates as we have pointed out that the current recession and declining consumer confidence in large banking institutions has created a great opportunity for credit unions and community banks to grow their customer base. As many reports have highlighted in recent weeks, despite the struggles of mammoth lending institutions, smaller banks, community banks and credit unions have not experienced the same issues because they did not engage in risky investments or other questionable practices.


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