Loan servicing
Encyclopedia
Loan servicing is the process by which a mortgage bank or subservicing firm collects the timely payment of interest and principal from borrowers. The level of service varies depending on the type of loan and the terms negotiated between the firm and the investor seeking their services.
Mortgage servicing became "far more profitable during the housing boom", and servicers targeted borrowers "less likely to make timely payments" in order to collect more late fees.
s depending on the size of the loan, whether it is secured by commercial or residential real estate, and the level of service required.
The net present value of the flow of payments received from servicing less the expected costs to servicers creates an asset which remains on the balance sheets of servicers. Since in refinancing periods loans are often quickly prepaid and hence servicing fees cease, the value of these assets is extremely volatile.
There are economical loan servicing products that can also be purchased.
Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup are the largest companies involved in the loan servicing industry.
Special Servicers
"The business of managing borrowers in or near default, a.k.a. special servicing, is dominated by Ocwen Financial of West Palm Beach, Fla. and Litton Loan Servicing of Houston, owned by Goldman Sachs. Traditional, bigger servicers—Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup handle 60% of all U.S. residential mortgage debt—can deal with sticky borrowers but are far from dexterous: They rely on large staffs, with up to 24 employees handling a single borrower from the initial call from a collections agent all the way to foreclosure."
Mortgage servicing became "far more profitable during the housing boom", and servicers targeted borrowers "less likely to make timely payments" in order to collect more late fees.
Overview
Servicers are normally compensated by receiving a percentage of the unpaid balance on the loans they service. The fee rate can be anywhere from one to twenty five basis pointBasis point
A basis point is a unit equal to 1/100 of a percentage point or one part per ten thousand...
s depending on the size of the loan, whether it is secured by commercial or residential real estate, and the level of service required.
The net present value of the flow of payments received from servicing less the expected costs to servicers creates an asset which remains on the balance sheets of servicers. Since in refinancing periods loans are often quickly prepaid and hence servicing fees cease, the value of these assets is extremely volatile.
There are economical loan servicing products that can also be purchased.
Companies involved
Traditional ServicersBank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup are the largest companies involved in the loan servicing industry.
- GMAC
Special Servicers
"The business of managing borrowers in or near default, a.k.a. special servicing, is dominated by Ocwen Financial of West Palm Beach, Fla. and Litton Loan Servicing of Houston, owned by Goldman Sachs. Traditional, bigger servicers—Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup handle 60% of all U.S. residential mortgage debt—can deal with sticky borrowers but are far from dexterous: They rely on large staffs, with up to 24 employees handling a single borrower from the initial call from a collections agent all the way to foreclosure."
- Statebridge Company
- Fay Servicing
- LandAmerica Financial Group
- Ocwen Financial
- Hatfield Phillips