May 25, 2020
Amazon effect to overhaul home-buying, mortgages with 5-day closings
  Business
Insider is polling experts around Wall Street to learn what different
areas of finance will look like in 2030. The home-buying industry
transformed over the past decade, as it recovered from its disastrous
role in the global financial collapse.We asked execs at companies
innovating in the home-lending industry about what changes they see
coming in the next decade. Experts expect the industry, which is still
bogged down in byzantine, paper-heavy steps, to rapidly evolve in the
coming years as the Amazon effect hits mortgage providers. In the
not-too-distant future, tech advancements and continued partnerships
between banks and fintechs could mean home-closings happen in days
instead of dragging on for weeks. To get more news about WikiFX, you can visit WikiFX news official website.
Visit BI Prime for more stories.Home ownership is intrinsic to the
American dream. But at the start of this decade, the notion had taken on
the spectre of nightmare — a white-picket fence charred and mangled by
excess, neglect, and complacency.The mortgage industry took center stage
in the global financial collapse in 2008 and 2009, revealing an
antiquated, deeply flawed process that, instead of serving as a beacon
of prosperity and wealth, rained financial destruction upon millions of
Americans. But destruction often affords the opportunity for rebirth.
The ensuing years have been spent clearing the detritus and installing
safeguards to prevent such calamity in the future.They've also seen
leaders in the home-lending industry — from tech startups propelled by a
flood of VC cash to old-school stalwarts looking to keep pace or make
amends for prior sins — use the disaster from the aughts as a chance to
rethink and reimagine a cumbersome, inefficient system.We've traded
robo-signing scandals — when thousands of lending employees, tasked with
processing a glut of foreclosures, robotically and fraudulently signed
off on piles of paperwork without verifying or vetting it, leading to
billions in settlements against the largest financial institutions — for
algorithmic underwriting and digital documentation that streamlined
lending and, in some cases, reduced discrimination. Instead of filling
out reams of paper in a stuffy bank office, today people can apply for a
mortgage from the comfort of a smartphone."The mortgage-application
process has been revolutionized by technology, allowing homebuyers to
complete online what used to be a heavy load of paperwork,†Steve
Boland, head of consumer lending at Bank of America, told Business
Insider. It hasn't been perfect though. Some argue lending standards
ratcheted up too much in reaction to the freewheeling pre-crisis era.
  "The financial crisis at the start of the decade really set the stage
and has had widespread ramifications on the housing market,†Jason
Bateman, head of Redfin Mortgage, said. "While credit standards were far
too loose in 2006-2007, it's clear the pendulum swung way too far in
the other direction.â€Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, has railed
against the perils of mortgage overregulation in public appearances as
well, blaming it for preventing multitudes of would-be first-time
homebuyers from claiming a piece of the American dream.And even with
with all the technological improvements, the system often remains bogged
down in enormous loads of paper, with mortgage application files still
frequently running hundreds of pages long. But the next 10 years offer
another opportunity to push the industry forward. We polled a handful of
executives from innovative home-lending firms about what kind of
changes would reshape the industry by 2030.
From closings in five
days, to "everything stores†for homebuying, to a massive generational
shift between boomers and millennials, here's how mortgage experts say
the industry could change over the next decade. The Amazon effect hits
homebuyingWhen we asked executives about the most significant changes
they expected in the coming years, there was harmony in the belief there
was a lot of fat still to trim in the system."While owning a home has
long been the cornerstone of the American dream, it's head-scratching
that in today's on-demand Amazon and Venmo digital world, the mortgage
industry — with $15 trillion in assets — has remained painfully analog
and plagued with inefficiencies,†said Vishal Garg, cofounder and CEO of
mortgage-tech startup Better.com, a rapidly growing digital lending
startup that has attracted more than $200 million in funding from
backers.That sentiment was echoed by Nima Ghamsari, cofounder and CEO of
Blend, another mortgage-tech startup that has raised nearly $300
million in funding and has more than 170 lending clients."We will see a
major shift in how the homebuying process happens.
Right now,
despite all the progress we've made as an industry, buying a home
involves dozens of steps,†Nima Ghamsari, cofounder and CEO of Blend,
said. "All of them are manual and require a lot of effort from the
homebuyer.â€Garg said he expected the "Amazon effect†to hit the mortgage
industry, eventually allowing customers to deal with the process in one
place — realtor, financing, title insurance, homeowners insurance,
appraisals.Part of the inefficiency of the current system comes from
customers having to jump through hoops and coordinate with a different
service providers, which "puts a lot of pressure on the buyer and often
her agent to quarterback the transaction and keep everyone informed and
on track,†said Bateman, whose firm started out as a digital brokerage
but has added mortgage and title capabilities. "The holy grail that
we're all working toward is the end-to-end buying experience,†Bateman
added."The holy grail that we're all working toward is the end-to-end
buying experience,†Bateman added.Fintechs that started out focused on
simplifying and automating mortgage applications and platforms have been
using the large sums of investment capital they've attracted to build
out their capabilities, adding services like title and homeowners
insurance, home-equity loans, realtor and appraisal networks.
"In
the next decade, we'll eliminate paper and friction from the homebuying
journey and give consumers a one-stop shop where they can access all the
tasks to get into a new home,†Ghamsari said. Banks and tech startups
will continue to join forces In recent years, incumbents like JPMorgan
Chase, Wells Fargo, and Ally have been handing off key components of
their mortgage businesses to scrappy tech startups like Better, Blend,
and Roostify.With margins thinning and competition intensifying from
nonbank lenders like Quicken Loans and LoanDepot, a topflight
digital-mortgage offering is becoming a standard requirement for banks.
But the relationship is symbiotic. Part of the reason banking giants are
investing in digital lending startups — Ally, Citi, Goldman Sachs,
JPMorgan, Santander, and Wells Fargo have each put up capital — in
addition to partnering or buying their services off the shelf is they
recognize the value of these startups can grow dramatically with the
scale and brand recognition that banks provide. "Whereas incumbents
value startups for their speed and the opportunity to stay on top of
potentially disruptive innovations, startups benefit from the scale and
resources offered by larger established firms,†Garg said. Bank of
America has been an exception to the trend, electing to dedicate a large
chunk of its $10 billion annual tech spend to upgrading its internal
and consumer-facing mortgage platforms, rather than outsourcing.
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