A report from the American Banker publication indicates that the mortgage lending industry is barely coping with the surge in refinancing applications, and the ongoing social distancing measures add to its worries. Not only the U.S., but Canada as well, are witnessing a sudden rise in the number of loan applications after the recent rate cuts. Many people are rushing to make the most out of the current low-rate environment.
In the U.S., Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have introduced underwriting guidelines that require mortgage lenders to verify that all income and asset documentation for borrowers be dated within 60 days of the application (previously 120 days). Mortgage lenders are also changing credit guidelines for applicants by increasing down payment and FICO score requirements. Companies like J.P. Morgan have already made the switch in the U.S., and Canada’s largest mortgage insurer, CMHC, is also hinting at similar changes.
How do mortgage lenders cope with the sudden influx of applications and take care of these new underwriting rules?
By leveraging technology and digitizing their mortgage application process, mortgage lenders can be 8x more efficient.
A report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York analyzed FinTech lenders, and the results definitively showed that Fintech lenders are outperforming traditional lenders.
Here is what the report found:
As the entire mortgage lending industry experiences turmoil amid the ongoing coronavirus, now is the perfect time to fill in the existing processing loopholes and reduce processing periods through technology.
In order to understand the impact of technology better, it’s critical to analyze how it can transform the current mortgage underwriting process.
Boost Efficiency in Mortgage Underwriting
A loan underwriter takes care of a variety of tasks, with some having a high priority, whereas others are redundant. For instance, a careful analysis of all consumer data is critical for an underwriter. A single loan application might involve as many as 200 pages, which takes a considerable amount of time to process. The trick is to introduce technology to manage repetitive tasks and, gradually, to implement it into more expansive areas.
It is critical to understand that AI is already digitizing a sizable portion of the documentation process, including extracting information from documents, indexing it across various fields in the next stages, and making decisions based on this data.
The other side of the loan underwriting process is the customer experience. The increasing intervention of technology in daily lives has given birth to new expectations. Given the long, and, somewhat, infuriating mortgage lending process, customers often wonder why their lenders can’t use technology the same way as other providers.
The use of technology in mortgage lending can transform the user experience by improving transparency, introducing live tracking features, and helping lenders save resources throughout the application filing process. A self-guided, AI-driven application filing process allows consumers to apply online, saving their time and efforts in visiting a lender.
Also, consumers can track their application passing through various stages in real-time, making the entire process transparent.
Using technology across multiple stages can help lenders improve customer experience.
FundMore.ai is designed for mortgage lenders seeking to increase their underwriting capacity while keeping processing costs under control. FundMore uses AI and machine learning to upgrade its built-in features consistently.
Here is how FundMore’s automated underwriting assistant works:
The mortgage industry is changing, and with the insurgence from digital lenders, the traditional lenders can no longer afford to turn a blind eye to these disruptions. The best course of action is to introduce technology, in a limited role, within the mortgage lending process and, gradually, take it to the next level.
Do you have any questions about FundMore.ai? Please send us a query and our team will get in touch with your technology department.