MBA Asks Congress for Government Backing of Warehouse Lines

The Mortgage Bankers Association Tuesday afternoon asked Congress to provide short-term government guarantees on warehouse lines of credit to address what it believes is a liquidity crisis facing non-depository residential funders. The trade group also thinks it might be a good idea to allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy participations in warehouse lines of credit, a move it thinks will add liquidity to the sector. In years past mortgage bankers -- and warehouse executives -- were adamantly opposed to allowing the GSEs to get anywhere near the warehouse niche. MBA claims warehouse lending capacity has shrunk to just $25 billion or so compared to $200 billion two years ago. "This sub-crisis is the result of a shortage of warehouse lines of credit, meaning independent mortgage bankers are doubly hamstrung to originate new mortgages threatening their viability," said MBA chief John Courson in written testimony before the House Financial Services Committee. According to exclusive survey figures compiled by National Mortgage News, there are just 10 or so active warehouse lenders compared to 30 two years ago. Many warehouse providers have either failed or closed down that line of business including most of the Wall Street firms that played in the space. Active warehouse firms include Horizon Bank, Flagstar, GMAC-RFC, National City, and a few others. MBA wants the government to provide federal guarantees on warehouse lines for 12 to 24 months -- but only on Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and government-backed loans, which currently accounts for most of the market.

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