Dealing with the Post Mortgage Boom Squeeze
By Charlie Elliott, Jr., MAI, SRA
Not only
lemons and oranges get squeezed in this
ever-so-competitive world of ours, sometimes
lenders, appraisers and other closing service
providers get the same treatment. That is one of the
beauties or scourges of our capitalistic system,
depending upon where we are at the time. And, yes,
timing is everything.
At the very least, we as professionals get a chance
to live another day after we get squeezed – that is
if we have enough foresight to put on the brakes
before we smash head first into the economic train
wreck which so many fall prey to. While not all
lenders and service providers will feel the squeeze
as much as others, tough markets will affect us all.
If it has not yet affected you, stay tuned. The
Mortgage Bankers Association projects that the
mortgage market will continue to decline through
2005 and 2006, only to hit bottom in the early part
of 2007. For those who have been feeding exclusively
at the trough of refinancing, there is a more
immediate concern in that the trough is already
running low. They must get their house in order
soon.
It does not seem so long ago that most of us were so
covered up with business that we scarcely had time
to respond to a call to nature. Today many of us
find a different force of nature affecting our
business. It’s called “survival of the fittest.”
This force of nature developed from its origin of
physical fitness and has evolved to that of business
savvy. Said another way, the fitness issue has gone
from that of a physical one to that of an
intellectual one, that of demonstrating superior
managerial skills.
One need not look further back than the last refi
boom to see that these things are short lived, maybe
a year, perhaps a little longer, and that’s it. This
doesn’t happen just some of the time; it happens
each and every time we have a mortgage boom. It is
the responsibility of each of us with a little gray
on the temple even if our business has not become
soft yet, to pass the word to those less experienced
that the pie gets bigger and the pie shrinks.
Nothing is better than a pie getting bigger; we love
this environment. However, if it seems to be too
good to be true, it probably is.
How do we cope with this shrinking pie? We have two
options. When I was in college I learned that we
deal with such circumstances by either diminishing
our consumption or augmenting our means. In this
case we would interpret this theory to mean that we
cut back on our overhead or increase our ability to
capture business. While some of both will be
required, capturing more business or getting a
bigger piece of the pie sounds like more fun to me.
In order to do that, we must be better at what we
do. We can bet that customers will choose slow times
to demand better service and lower prices.
This is a food-chain issue, which is not isolated to
just one industry or service group. Everyone up and
down the economic ladder becomes affected by the
forces that cause change. An example would be that
the borrower is at the top of the food chain, next
is the lender, then comes the closing services
providers followed by the suppliers of these
venders, such as software providers and computer
companies.
For those of us in this chain, we find ourselves
getting squeezed from the top and in turn squeezing
those below us. An example would begin with a
borrower, who, for whatever the reason, seeks to cut
his cost and searches for the cheapest loan that he
can find. This forces the lender to reduce fees
while seeking ways to cut costs and the appraiser to
go back to the old fee he charged before he raised
it during the boom while fine-tuning his expense
budget. Then the computer software maker must think
twice before charging the appraiser high software
prices.
For some of us, tough times may just be a test to
determine whether we stay in business. If we are
individual practitioners, it may mean longer hours
or leaner personal budgets. For businesses employing
a staff of people, it could mean a cutback in
employees and other overhead, or it may mean an
aggressive initiative toward becoming more service
oriented in an attempt to earn a larger share of the
shrinking pie.
The bottom line is that all of us have to be more
efficient, work harder and longer for our fees and
to be more concerned about our customer’s wants and
needs during the post mortgage-boom. It would be
nice to be able to get through a lending recession
without cutting back on staff or being stingy with
our resources, however, such moves are usually
necessary.
Tough times represent a completely different kind of
challenge for many of us. It is a time to
demonstrate what we are made of and to get our house
in order for the better times to come. If we get
squeezed, we have the satisfaction of knowing that
our competitors are in the same boat. In a strange
sort of way, tough times serve as a proving ground
that can become a springboard for opportunities. It
is, furthermore, a time to keep a lean budget and
fight for a bigger piece of the pie by giving better
service than we ever thought we could, while
broadening our client base and our product line.
We must not do all of this just to survive. We must
do it to learn, to develop and to demonstrate
techniques of efficiency, which will serve us well
when opportunities are more bountiful. The old
adage, “the trend is your friend,” may just be more
appropriate here than many of us would have believed
at first blush.