How to Reduce Third Party Settlement Costs
November 20, 2006
Every consumer taking a home mortgage today pays a tax in unnecessary
charges for the various third party services required to deliver the
mortgage. These includes services provided by title insurance companies,
mortgage insurance companies, appraisers, credit reporting agencies,
flood insurance companies, and escrow companies.
Excessive Settlement Costs Are a Tax on the Borrower
The taxes don’t go to government, nor in most cases are they retained by
the service providers. Rather, they are paid to those who are positioned
to direct which service provider will receive the business; these
referral agents are mainly lenders, Realtors and builders. The payments
include referral fees, which are sometimes legal and sometimes illegal.
Some of the tax is absorbed by marketing expenses directed to the same
referral agents.
The problem is not that there isn’t competition in these industries, the
competition is actually intense, but it is directed to referral agents
rather than to the consumers who pay for the service. Competition
directed to referral agents drives prices up rather than down, since
most agents are more interested in being paid for the referral than in
negotiating lower prices for consumers.
RESPA Has Not Reduced the Tax
Under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), referral fees
are illegal, but this rule has been completely ineffective because it
has left the power to refer business unchanged. Small referral agents
often ignore the rule and large ones develop affiliated business
arrangements, which convert illegal referral payments into legal
referral payments.
Proposals For Eliminating the Tax
There are several ways to eliminate or neutralize referral power. Much
the most effective way is to require lenders to pay for all third party
services that they require, passing the cost on to borrowers in their
rates and fees. Competition by third party providers to sell lenders
would then force the prices down, and rate competition by lenders would
force them to pass the savings on to borrowers. This would require
Federal legislation, however, and the prospect of that ever happening is
remote.
An approach proposed by HUD several years ago, which did not require new
legislation, would have allowed lenders and others to package third
party services with loans, selling the package at an all-inclusive
price. I supported this concept, but it was done in by its complexity,
which included something to hate by every interest group in the country.
A third approach, which I recently proposed to HUD, aims to induce some
referral agents to become agents of borrowers as a competitive strategy.
A lender who negotiates lower prices with third party providers and
passes those prices on to its borrowers, can gain a competitive
advantage. There are, in fact, lenders who would do this now if not for
a well--intentioned HUD rule that prevents it.
Need For Guarantees of Third Party Fees
To use lower third party fees as a competitive tool, loan providers must
guarantee those fees. Otherwise, they have no way of distinguishing the
fees they quote to borrowers from those quoted by competitors. Indeed,
without an explicit guarantee, the low fees quoted are indistinguishable
from those of low-balling competitors who have no intention of
delivering.
But guaranteeing third party fees is hampered by a HUD rule against
marking up the prices of third party services. Consider a loan provider
who guarantees an appraisal fee of $400. If the actual cost comes in at
$500, he must take the $100 loss, but if the actual comes in at $300, he
must charge $300 to comply with the markup rule.
Guarantees Require That Loan Providers Be Able to Mark Up Third Party
Fees
My proposal is that HUD revise its rule toward markups on third party
charges as follows: Markups would be permitted by any loan providers who
guarantee their own and all third party charges.
The goal is to encourage loan providers to guarantee their own and all
third party fees. (I use the term "loan provider" because it covers both
lenders and brokers, since the proposed rule should apply to both). On
refinances, this would be all third party fees. On purchase
transactions, the guarantee would cover charges of service providers
selected by the loan provider.
As loan providers offering fee guarantees become a force in the
marketplace, borrowers will discover that they can shop rate and total
guaranteed fees. This would fundamentally change the way the market
works, and put downward pressure on all fees.
On purchase transactions, where the title agency is usually selected by
the Realtor or builder, a new and in many cases lower-cost option would
become available. In states where home sellers are obliged to purchase
title policies for buyers, the availability of a lower-cost policy
available through the buyer’s loan provider could change the way
business is done.