Mortgage lenders are expecting diminished profits in the third quarter, due mainly to increased competition and a shrinking purchase market, according to Fannie Mae’s most recent Mortgage Lender Sentiment Survey.
That makes the third quarter the eighth consecutive quarter for which mortgage lenders have forecast diminished returns.
The real killer for mortgage lenders lately is the ongoing erosion of the purchase market, which they had hoped would be much stronger in order to compensate for the massive fall-off in refinance business, resulting from higher rates.
On net, lenders’ profit outlook the third quarter was worse than the outlooks reported last quarter and one year ago, with “competition from other lenders” once again cited by survey participants as the top reason for continued margin compression, Fannie Mae says in a release.
For purchase mortgage demand, across all loan types – GSE-eligible, non-GSE eligible, and government – the net shares of lenders reporting growth for the previous three months and expectations of growth for the next three months reached the lowest readings for any third quarter in the survey’s five-year history.
Reported demand for refinance mortgages remained negative but stable amid the higher interest rate environment.
Finally, in general, fewer lenders reported easing credit standards in the third quarter despite the decreased mortgage demand and increased competition.
“Lenders continued their bearish trend this quarter, as they note ongoing anemic refinance activity and the worst purchase mortgage demand for a third quarter in the survey’s history,” says Doug Duncan, senior vice president and chief economist at Fannie Mae. “The profit outlook remains negative, with those lenders expecting decreased profit margins outweighing those anticipating increases for the eighth consecutive quarter.
“For the first time this year, consumer demand was one of the top two reasons for the downbeat profit outlook, cited by more than one-third of lenders- a record high,” Duncan says. “Meanwhile, the pace at which lenders are easing credit standards has slowed. The net shares of lenders reporting easing credit standards for GSE-eligible and government loans are less than half the peak shares reached at the end of last year. This may suggest the realization among lenders that combatting declining affordability by making it easier to obtain mortgages might not be the answer – or simply that there is little room for additional easing going forward.”