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		<title>Wells Fargo Bankers Toting Guns Aim at 40% of Market: Mortgages</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Jun 2012 12:58:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[In mid-January, sales managers in Wells Fargo Co. (WFC)’s mortgage unit, the largest in the U.S., gathered at a hotel south of San Francisco dressed as cowboys, six shooters strapped to their hips. The invitation said “40% or BUST!!” The &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/1530/wells-fargo-bankers-toting-guns-aim-at-40-of-market-mortgages/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In mid-January, sales managers in<br />
<a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/WFC:US" title="Get Quote" class="web_ticker">Wells Fargo  Co. (WFC)</a>’s mortgage unit, the largest in the U.S.,<br />
gathered at a hotel south of San Francisco dressed as cowboys,<br />
six shooters strapped to their hips. </p>
<p>The invitation said “40% or BUST!!” The goal: A bigger<br />
share of the business than they already control &#8212; about 34<br />
percent of all U.S. home lending and 13 percent of mortgages for<br />
purchases in the first quarter. About a dozen managers urged the<br />
audience of 500 loan officers to lend more, according to two<br />
attendees who asked their names not be used because they aren’t<br />
authorized to speak publicly. Onstage, the men had fake<br />
mustaches and wore red-flannel shirts and jeans, the women long<br />
dresses like those in a movie western, one of the people said. </p>
<p>Chief Executive Officer <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/john-stumpf/">John Stumpf</a> has said the bank<br />
doesn’t have market-share goals, even as it held the <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/san-francisco/">San<br />
Francisco</a> rally and encouraged salespeople in New York and<br />
Atlanta. Regulators such as Edward J. DeMarco, acting director<br />
of the <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/federal-housing-finance-agency/">Federal Housing Finance Agency</a>, have expressed concern<br />
about increasing concentration in lending, and analysts say the<br />
housing market has become too tied to the San Francisco-based<br />
lender since it successfully navigated the 2008 credit crisis. </p>
<p>“The part that amazes me is that back in the early days<br />
Wells Fargo said, ‘we don’t want as much market share,’ ” said<br />
<a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/david-lykken/">David Lykken</a>, a managing partner at Austin, Texas-based Mortgage<br />
Banking Solutions, who has more than 37 years of mortgage-<br />
industry experience. “Now, in many ways, they are the market.” </p>
<h2>Record Share </h2>
<p>Wells Fargo’s first-quarter market share for all mortgages,<br />
including new homes and refinancings, equal to $130 billion, is<br />
the most on record and more than triple the closest competitor,<br />
<a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/JPM:US" title="Get Quote" class="web_ticker">JPMorgan Chase  Co. (JPM)</a>, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a<br />
trade journal. It’s up from 30.1 percent in the preceding three<br />
months and 13.3 percent in 2006. </p>
<p>Mortgage originations and sales accounted for 24 percent of<br />
the lender’s fee-based revenue in the quarter, with another 2<br />
percent coming from servicing, according to an April 13<br />
presentation. The lender reported $2.9 billion in income from<br />
mortgage banking as the <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/federal-reserve/">Federal Reserve</a> pushed down borrowing<br />
costs and government refinancing programs encouraged lending. </p>
<p>The bank wants more. The Jan. 19 sales rally at the San<br />
Francisco Airport Marriott Waterfront hotel in Burlingame, about<br />
15 miles south of San Francisco, was billed as a “Purchase<br />
Stampede” in a memo e-mailed to employees, a copy of which was<br />
obtained by Bloomberg News. The invitation featured six horses<br />
pulling a stagecoach, the bank’s traditional logo, and trailing<br />
a banner with the words: “40% or BUST!!” </p>
<p>One man wore chaps and showed off a lasso, while some women<br />
wore corsets, one of the people said. </p>
<h2>Motivating Salespeople </h2>
<p>The rally was aimed at motivating salespeople to lend more<br />
for new-home purchases, national sales manager Greg Gwizdz said<br />
in a June 8 telephone interview. Wells Fargo doesn’t have a<br />
“stated market-share goal” and if its portion grows it’s “a<br />
result of customers choosing us,” he said. </p>
<p>The bank’s retail channel controlled 13.3 percent of the<br />
market for loans to buy a house in the first quarter, according<br />
to data compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance. The rally didn’t<br />
focus on other types of originations, including refinancings<br />
completed by Wells Fargo salespeople, or correspondent and<br />
wholesale channels, where the bank buys loans from other<br />
lenders, Gwizdz said. </p>
<p>“We are almost backing into this,” Gwizdz said. “If we<br />
had some crazy high market share number, in order to get that<br />
number a lot of people came here to get their mortgage and they<br />
came here to get their mortgage because we’re doing something<br />
right.” </p>
<h2>Skits, Discussions </h2>
<p>The event gathered salespeople for a day of motivational<br />
speeches, skits and discussions about ways to gain a greater<br />
slice of the market, the people said. </p>
<p>Senior mortgage executives attended the rally. Drew<br />
Collins, billed on the invitation as a “special guest,” is a<br />
division sales manager and senior vice president based in the<br />
Sacramento area, according to Vickee Adams, a spokeswoman.<br />
Arlene Allert, a retail regional sales manager and vice<br />
president based in the Bay Area, also attended, according to the<br />
people. Continental breakfast was served and the coffee ran dry,<br />
one person said. </p>
<p>Adams declined to make Collins and Allert available for<br />
interviews. </p>
<p>Salespeople elsewhere are receiving a similar message. In<br />
<a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/new-york/">New York</a>, loan officers are encouraged to reach for 40 percent<br />
or more, according to a person familiar with the strategy. In<br />
Atlanta, they’re induced with prize drawings to file more<br />
applications and meet more real-estate agents, according to<br />
another person, who described the efforts as aggressive. </p>
<h2>Customers’ Needs </h2>
<p>Stumpf has repeatedly said he doesn’t care about Wells<br />
Fargo’s market share, and is more concerned with serving the<br />
needs of customers. When pressed by analysts to comment on the<br />
lender’s growing investment bank, and its high growth rate and<br />
steady progress up the league tables, Stumpf said in January he<br />
couldn’t “care less.” He reiterated that view May 31, when<br />
asked by Sanford C. Bernstein  Co. analyst John E. McDonald<br />
about the company’s growing command of the mortgage market. </p>
<p>“I don’t care if we’re 20 percent of the market or 10<br />
percent or 30 percent,” Stumpf said. </p>
<p>Wells Fargo executives have said it wasn’t their goal for<br />
the company to become the largest lender. Refinancings have<br />
bolstered market share, according to Chief Financial Officer<br />
Timothy Sloan. These will account for about 68 percent of the<br />
market, or $870 billion this year, according to projections from<br />
the <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/mortgage-bankers-association/">Mortgage Bankers Association</a>. </p>
<h2>Market Position </h2>
<p>“If we’re talking about the business two years ago, I<br />
don’t think we would have imagined that our market share would<br />
be where it would be today,” Sloan said during a May 1 investor<br />
conference. “We’re going to continue to be focused in the<br />
business. We’re going to continue to want to grow it.” </p>
<p>In every investor presentation except one since the<br />
beginning of 2011, Wells Fargo has included an early slide<br />
listing the businesses where it holds a No. 1, No. 2 or No. 3<br />
market position. </p>
<p>“I’ve never been a big believer of market share for market<br />
share’s sake,” said <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/ralph-cole/">Ralph Cole</a>, a senior vice president of<br />
research at Portland, Oregon-based Ferguson Wellman Inc., which<br />
manages $3.1 billion, including Wells Fargo shares. “If their<br />
underwriting standards are dropping to achieve it, that’s what<br />
would worry us as investors.” </p>
<h2>Standards Maintained </h2>
<p>There aren’t signs those standards are slipping, said Cole<br />
and Lykken, as well as Clifford Rossi, a former risk manager and<br />
managing director at <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/C:US" title="Get Quote" class="web_ticker">Citigroup Inc. (C)</a> who’s now at the University<br />
of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, and analysts<br />
including <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/paul-miller/">Paul Miller</a> at FBR Capital Markets in Arlington,<br />
Virginia. About 90 percent of Wells Fargo’s originations are<br />
sold to <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/fannie-mae/">Fannie Mae</a>, <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/freddie-mac/">Freddie Mac</a> or Ginnie Mae, <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/mike-heid/">Mike Heid</a>, the<br />
Des Moines, Iowa-based head of the mortgage business, said May<br />
22. </p>
<p>Wells Fargo shouldn’t be blamed for its dominance since<br />
it’s a function of rivals’ retreat and not its own actions,<br />
Pacific Investment Management Co.’s <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/scott-simon/">Scott Simon</a> said May 7 at a<br />
Mortgage Bankers Association conference in New York. </p>
<p>“It’s not Wells Fargo’s fault they got so big,” said<br />
Simon, the mortgage-debt head at Newport Beach, California-based<br />
Pimco. “If Wells Fargo went back to 20 percent, tried to cut<br />
themselves back more, it’d be hugely restrictive on credit.” </p>
<p>Regulators have taken notice of the concentration. DeMarco, acting director of FHFA, the overseer of Fannie and<br />
Freddie, has said he’d like to see a more diverse mortgage<br />
market. </p>
<h2>Origination, Servicing </h2>
<p>“We have seen a great deal of concentration in mortgage<br />
origination and in mortgage servicing in recent years,” DeMarco<br />
said May 15 at a speech in Washington. “Policymakers need to<br />
think hard about where and how regulatory requirements<br />
contribute to this growing concentration in the marketplace, and<br />
what might be done to reverse this.” </p>
<p>At a May 31 conference, Bernstein’s McDonald asked Stumpf<br />
whether the company was perhaps “getting too big.” It also<br />
raises questions about Wells Fargo’s status as a too-big-to-fail<br />
lender whose collapse could imperil the U.S. housing market,<br />
according to Mark Calabria, a director of financial regulation<br />
studies at the <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/cato-institute/">Cato Institute</a> in Washington. </p>
<p>“The more concentrated anybody is in a specific market is<br />
worth watching,” Calabria said in a phone interview. “This<br />
potentially increases the possibility that they are looked at as<br />
too big to fail. Were they to get into a lot of trouble the<br />
government would have to do something” to keep credit flowing<br />
to U.S. homebuyers, he said. </p>
<h2>Too Good </h2>
<p>Cole said Wells Fargo’s history of avoiding many of the<br />
mortgage pitfalls that felled rivals earns them “the benefit of<br />
the doubt.” In 2010, the Securities and Exchange Commission<br />
showed that Paulson  Co. had rejected subprime mortgage bonds<br />
from Wells Fargo when it was trying to find assets that the<br />
hedge fund could bet against because the quality of the<br />
underlying loans was too good. The bank hasn’t posted an annual<br />
loss for at least a decade. </p>
<p>Wells Fargo is the most creditworthy of the large U.S.<br />
lenders, according to credit-default swap prices and its stock<br />
is up 18 percent over the last 12-months, outpacing all lenders<br />
in the <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/BKX:IND" title="Get Quote" class="web_ticker">KBW Bank Index (BKX)</a> except for U.S. Bancorp. </p>
<p>Executives highlight the share they relinquished when firms<br />
such as Countrywide Financial Corp. offered cheaper pricing on<br />
loans with fewer document requirements and zero down payments.<br />
Heid pointed to the four-year period last month with a graphic<br />
titled “Industry leading market share.” Three arrows pointed<br />
to the years of 2004 to 2007 on a bar chart with the note:<br />
“Market share forgone when industry didn’t adhere to<br />
responsible lending principles.” </p>
<h2>Countrywide Fate </h2>
<p>Countrywide was the largest U.S. mortgage lender as<br />
recently as 2007 before billions of dollars in soured loans<br />
prompted its sale to <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/BAC:US" title="Get Quote" class="web_ticker">Bank of America Corp. (BAC)</a> Countrywide’s losses<br />
have continued to plague the Charlotte, North Carolina-based<br />
lender, leading to more than $40 billion in losses and its<br />
retreat from the market. The bank held 4.2 percent of the market<br />
in the first quarter, according to Inside Mortgage Finance. </p>
<p>Wells Fargo is the only mortgage company with a top-5<br />
ranking in originations and servicing each year since 1994,<br />
according to the bank. </p>
<p>“It will be harder for institutions to get by with a<br />
sizeable market share gain because regulators are watching these<br />
guys carefully,” Rossi said. “I’m less concerned than I would<br />
be if we were back in the days when they had all these other<br />
products. It’s the edgier stuff that got us all in trouble.” </p>
<p>For now, Wells Fargo will continue to motivate salespeople<br />
to expand the business: another rally is scheduled for June 21. </p>
<p>To contact the reporter on this story:<br />
Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at<br />
dcampbell27@bloomberg.net </p>
<p>To contact the editors responsible for this story:<br />
<a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/david-scheer/">David Scheer</a> at<br />
dscheer@bloomberg.net;<br />
Rob Urban at<br />
robprag@bloomberg.net. </p>
<p>                    <a class="enlarge_image" rel="#193498" href="/photo/wells-fargo-bankers-toting-guns-aim-at-40-of-market-/193498.html" target="_blank"><br />
                    <span>Enlarge image</span><br />
                    <img alt="58342 i7oBc3apr7B0 Wells Fargo Bankers Toting Guns Aim at 40% of Market: Mortgages" class="small_img img_keep_size" src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/58342_i7oBc3apr7B0.jpg" title="Wells Fargo Bankers Toting Guns Aim at 40% of Market: Mortgages" /></a></p>
<h3 class="image_title">Wells Fargo Bankers Toting Guns Aim at 40% of Market </h3>
<p>                      <img alt="69e03 ify9792VyVNI Wells Fargo Bankers Toting Guns Aim at 40% of Market: Mortgages" class="img_keep_size" height="427" src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/69e03_ify9792VyVNI.jpg" width="640" title="Wells Fargo Bankers Toting Guns Aim at 40% of Market: Mortgages" /></p>
<p class="photographer_attr">Scott Eells/Bloomberg</p>
<p class="caption_only">Pedestrians walk past a Wells Fargo  Co. bank in New York.</p>
<p class="caption">Pedestrians walk past a Wells Fargo  Co. bank in New York. Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg </p>
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<p>Article source: <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-12/wells-fargo-bankers-toting-guns-aim-at-40-of-market-mortgages.html">http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-12/wells-fargo-bankers-toting-guns-aim-at-40-of-market-mortgages.html</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>San Francisco Area Home Sales Climb on Investor Purchases</title>
		<link>http://homesmillbrae.com/1368/san-francisco-area-home-sales-climb-on-investor-purchases/</link>
		<comments>http://homesmillbrae.com/1368/san-francisco-area-home-sales-climb-on-investor-purchases/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2012 09:54:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Home sales in the San Francisco Bay Area rose 14 percent last month from a year earlier as investors bought a record share of properties, DataQuick said. A total of 5,702 new and resale houses and condominiums sold in the &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/1368/san-francisco-area-home-sales-climb-on-investor-purchases/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Home sales in the <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/san-francisco/">San Francisco</a> Bay<br />
Area rose 14 percent last month from a year earlier as investors<br />
bought a record share of properties, <a href="http://www.dqnews.com" title="Open Web Site" rel="external">DataQuick</a> said. </p>
<p>A total of 5,702 new and resale houses and condominiums<br />
sold in the nine-county region, the eighth straight year-over-<br />
year increase and a 4.1 percent gain from January, the San<br />
Diego-based data seller said today in a statement. Foreclosures<br />
and short sales, where the price is less than the amount owed,<br />
made up half of all purchases. Cash buyers accounted for a<br />
record 32 percent of deals. </p>
<p>Prices fell to a median $325,500, down 0.3 percent from<br />
January and 3.6 percent from February 2011. It was the 17th<br />
consecutive decline on an annual basis. Absentee buyers, mostly<br />
investors, accounted for 26 percent of sales last month, a<br />
record, said DataQuick, which began compiling real estate<br />
information in 1988. </p>
<p>“Many potential buyers are still waiting for the lending<br />
spigot to open more,” <a href="http://topics.bloomberg.com/john-walsh/">John Walsh</a>, DataQuick’s president, said<br />
in the statement. “Drum-tight credit conditions continue to<br />
undermine housing, along with negative equity and the various<br />
uncertainties plaguing would-be buyers.” </p>
<p><a href="http://www.acgov.org/" title="Open Web Site" rel="external">Alameda County</a> led the region with a 33 percent sales gain<br />
from a year earlier, and Marin County had the largest price<br />
increase, climbing 7.6 percent to a median $535,500. San<br />
Francisco rose 5.9 percent to $624,000. </p>
<p>To contact the reporter on this story:<br />
Dan Levy in San Francisco at<br />
dlevy13@bloomberg.net </p>
<p>To contact the editor responsible for this story:<br />
Daniel Taub at<br />
dtaub@bloomberg.net </p>
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<p>Article source: <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-15/san-francisco-area-home-sales-climb-on-investor-purchases.html">http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-15/san-francisco-area-home-sales-climb-on-investor-purchases.html</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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