Register or Sign in        Email This Page     Link To This Page    
Visit MND at MBA in NYC!
1,270
# of Questions
 

Send Article via Email

REGISTERED USERS:
Can forward to 6 email addresses at a time. Register or Login

PREMIUM SUBSCRIBERS:
Get the additional advantage of
Co-branded Emails and Landing Pages - Learn more about Premium Subscribtions

Your Name: 
Your Email: 
I want to forward this to
(Enter Email Address Below) :
Include a Personal Message (optional)

Please add 3 and 6 and type the answer here:
Leave this field blank.
Email Preview Below:
This feature is available to Premium Subscribers. Learn More About Co-branded Email and our Other Co-branded Services.
 
This email was sent to you by:
Anonymous |
Mortgage News Daily

Message:   YOUR MESSAGE HERE
Email alerts, such as this one, are a free service provided by Mortgage News Daily. If you would like to receive an alert when important news breaks please register to join our community.

Register with Mortgage News Daily - Registration is free and offers many benefits.
Manage your Email Alerts - Once you're registered, you can manage all MND email alerts on one page, turning subscriptions on or off with one click.

About MND:
Mortgage News Daily combines the expertise of some of the housing industry's leading minds with the power of social media to offer an always lively, constantly evolving web community. MND communicates breaking news, streams video, and provides expert opinion and commentary to a community of interested market professionals and curious consumers.
Mortgage Portmanteaus -- Brankers and Broanchers vs. Net Branches
Posted to: The Garrett Watts Report
Thursday, March 11, 2010 12:48 PM

Forward this email:  Send a copy of this story to someone you know that may want to read it.

A portmanteau means a blend of two or more words and their meanings into one new word.  An example is the word brunch meaning breakfast +lunch.  Another is smog meaning a combination of smoke and fog.  Some would consider a portmanteau a type of word morphing and we agree.  Mortgage lending has had its share of portmanteaus.  

Over the last several years mortgage brokers who were transitioning to mortgage banking were sometimes phrased as Brankers.  Branker is a morph of a mortgage banker and mortgage broker.  A Branker acts and operates as a mortgage broker and doesn’t perform many functions of a mortgage banker – underwriting, doc prep and secondary market --, but does fund and sell loans in their name as a mortgage bankers. 

One key similarity with Bankers and Brankers is loan repurchase and regulatory risk.  A Branker funding a loan in its name has essentially the same liability as a banker.  As the mortgage meltdown evolved, capital requirements increased and a warehouse liquidity shortages occurred, Branking died a quick death.    

A new mortgage lending portmanteau has evolved.  It’s been here before, but we can’t call it what it really is because HUD doesn’t like the name.  I’m calling it Broanching.  Broanchers are mortgage brokers who latch onto a mortgage banker and are responsible for the P&L of the branch.  All revenues generated from origination activities are credited to the Broacher’s branch; and all expenses specific to operating the branch are the responsiblilty of the Broancher.  Sometimes the “mother ship” might assess a monthly administrative fee, fee for brokering out to another wholesaler or even credit the Broancher if a high percentage of loans are funded through mortgage bank.  

It is amazing how fast this is taking off.  Many wholesalers believe their business may shrink because the overall share of TPO business is expected to shrink below 15%.  Out of fear, many have developed a retail channel strategy of recruiting their mortgage broker customers to become Broanchers.   These lenders are recruiting existing TPO customers and bringing them in as a branches.  Some allow the mortgage broker to use their existing name as a DBA and some want them to take on the corporate name.  The bottom line it is net branching – “it walks like a duck and talks like a duck, it must be duck.”  

Many mortgage brokers are flocking to mortgage bankers to become Broanchers.  Out of fear, many believe the new regulations and headline news may make it difficult to operate as an independent mortgage broker.  Some believe HVCC and the new RESPA regulation have made it difficult for mortgage brokers to compete with large retail mortgage banks.
ju
This week, one of my broker buddies with 10 loan officers and a $10 million monthly pipeline was courted by 4 regional mortgage bankers,  two of which were TPO shops only three months ago.  My friend is a seasoned professional and asked each banker the following questions:

  • What is your net worth and what were your profits last year?
  • What is your monthly volume and how much warehouse capacity to you have?
  • Who are your secondary market investors?
  • What type of technology supports the branches and the bank?
  • Are you selling loans through mandatory or best efforts delivery commitments?

My friend is convinced he needs to make this move, but is asking all the right questions to ensure he attaches his operation onto the right company.

This channel is growing as a strategy for both originator and banker in response to the many regulatory changes and potential drop in volume this year.  I’m not sure Broancher is the right portmanteau to label the old name of net branching that we can’t use today.  If you have another name we might use, let’s hear about it.




More from MND:

 

If you would like to opt-out of receiving email forwards from this person please click here to remove your email address.

Forward this email:  Send a copy of this story to someone you know that may want to read it.

 

More From MND

Mortgage Rates:
  • 30 Yr FRM 3.89%
  • |
  • 15 Yr FRM 3.26%
  • |
  • Jumbo 30 Year Fixed 4.11%
MBS Prices:
  • 30YR FNMA 4.5 106-20 (0-01)
  • |
  • 30YR FNMA 5.0 108-00 (0-01)
  • |
  • 30YR FNMA 5.5 108-28 (-0-05)
Recent Housing Data:
  • Mortgage Apps 23.07%
  • |
  • Refinance Index 26.40%
  • |
  • Purchase Index 10.33%
X
Track Mortgage Rates Daily with our Free Daily Rate Updates. There are several ways to follow daily rate movements, including:
Email Address:   Zip Code:  
RSS - Subscribe to our Daily Rate Update RSS Feed.
Twitter - Follow our Daily Rate Update on Twitter.
Facebook - Follow our Daily Rate Update on Facebook.
Bookmark - Bookmark our rates page and visit daily for updates.
Mobile Apps - There's an App for this too. Learn more about our Mobile Apps.