Opinion: I was CEO of one of the largest U.S. mortgage lenders: This move would lower the cost of buying a home.

Opinion: I was CEO of one of the largest U.S. mortgage lenders: This move would lower the cost of buying a home.

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It’s a difficult time to shop for a new home. The cost of a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has declined recently but is still hovering around 5% — almost double the rate in August 2021. Mortgage demand has dropped to the lowest levels since 2000. Put simply, Americans face the prospect of spending more of their hard-earned savings and wages to own a home.

Which makes this the time to take dramatic steps to make housing more affordable for all. The mortgage industry is a feast-or-famine business. Low rates are good for lenders. But when rates are elevated, as they are now, housing executives have little appetite for long-term investment. Nevertheless, housing executives and regulators should act countercyclically, adopting measures now that will help more Americans buy a home when rates eventually drop. 

It’s during these lean years when hungry mortgage executives should scrutinize costs and optimize processes.

It’s during these lean years when hungry mortgage executives should scrutinize costs and optimize processes. I know because I was the CEO of CitiMortgage after the 2008 financial-market meltdown. We were able to avoid a total collapse because the private and public sector worked together.

Housing can become more affordable by having better and more structured consumer data. Private lenders and federal housing agencies should work together to create such a program, which will ultimately lower the closing costs on a new loan for home buyers.

Here’s the problem: It’s expensive to originate a loan. The fully loaded cost of a retail originated loan can be as high as $8,500. This is largely because mortgage origination is an antiquated process that relies on paper verification of consumer data such as assets, income and cash flow of potential buyers. While there has been ample innovation in credit cards and buy now, pay later (BNPL), the fact is that mortgage lending technology has been stymied by disorganized consumer data.

The home buyers most affected by high costs are lower-income consumers. For example, the 30-year mortgage rate averagd about 2.75% in 2020 and 2021. While some 7 million homeowners refinanced in 2020, almost 2 million low-income homeowners did not.

High costs are not the only deterrent. Homeowners must navigate a complex refinancing process. They must provide many of the same documents to their lenders again and go through an elaborate reapplication process to lower their mortgage rate, with almost no reprieve on the cost of closing.

Read: I’m the CEO of one of the most successful privately held real estate firms in America — these are the 3 things every homebuyer should know now

One solution is to create a robust consumer financial data program. Federal housing agencies would have a secure national database that stored dynamic information on consumers such as asset, income and cash flow. Consumers could grant potential lenders access to this information via encrypted keys.

To prevent hacking, these keys could be stored in a decentralized manner, perhaps even leveraging the blockchain. Over time, this “mortgage key” would become part of the housing vernacular. Lenders would ask consumers for these keys. Such a system would reduce or eliminate much of the paperwork back-and-forth between consumers and lenders.

What’s more, since mortgage credit rules are mainly driven by the underwriting guidelines defined by the agencies, a majority of loans could be auto-underwritten for credit in real time — with manual intervention required to override the algorithmic bias of loans that are rejected. This would help to reduce the origination cost substantially and enable borrowers to overcome a big impediment to lock in lower rates, which would ultimately reduce their monthly mortgage payments.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac transformed the landscape of homeownership some 50 years ago by making available housing credit and lowering the interest cost. This was a paradigm shift for the housing market, and now almost two-thirds of Americans own their own homes.

This democratization must continue with a data digitization program. Better, more structured data will lead to more affordable housing.

Sanjiv Das was the CEO of CitiMortgage and Caliber Home Loans.

Also read: American attitudes about whether it’s a good time to buy a home just hit the lowest level in a decade, another sign of the housing market’s slowdown

Plus: Mortgage rates drop to lowest level since April as ‘high uncertainty’ creates volatility

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