Warehouse Lending

Warehouse Lending

Warehouse lending is a line of credit given to a loan originator. A small or medium-sized bank might prefer to use warehouse lending and to make money from origination fees and the sale of the loan rather than earn interest and fees on a 30-year mortgage loan. In warehouse lending, a bank handles the application and approval of a loan but obtains the funds for the loan from a warehouse lender. According to Barry Epstein, a mortgage lending consultant, bank regulators typically treat warehouse loans as lines of credit giving them a 100% risk-weighted classification. For this reason, the financial institution that provides the warehouse line of credit carefully monitors how each loan is progressing with the mortgage lender until it is sold.

Warehouse lending is a way for a bank to provide loans without using its own capital.

What Is Warehouse Lending?

Warehouse lending is a line of credit given to a loan originator. The funds are used to pay for a mortgage that a borrower uses to purchase property. The life of the loan generally extends from its origination to the time it is sold on the secondary market either directly or through securitization.

The repayment of warehouse lines of credit is ensured by lenders through charges on each transaction, in addition to charges when loan originators post collateral.

Warehouse lending is a way for a bank to provide loans without using its own capital.
Financial institutions provide warehouse lines of credit to mortgage lenders; the lenders must repay the financial institution.
A bank handles the application and approval of a loan and passes the funds from the warehouse lender to a creditor in the secondary market. The bank receives funds from the creditor to pay back the warehouse lender and profits by earning points and original fees.

Warehouse Lending Explained

A warehouse line of credit is provided to mortgage lenders by financial institutions. The lenders are dependent on the eventual sale of mortgage loans to repay the financial institution and to make a profit. For this reason, the financial institution that provides the warehouse line of credit carefully monitors how each loan is progressing with the mortgage lender until it is sold.

Warehouse lending is not mortgage lending. A warehouse line of credit allows a bank to finance a loan without using its own capital.

How Warehouse Lending Works

Warehouse lending can most simply be understood as a means for a bank or similar institution to provide funds to a borrower without using its capital. A small or medium-sized bank might prefer to use warehouse lending and to make money from origination fees and the sale of the loan rather than earn interest and fees on a 30-year mortgage loan.

In warehouse lending, a bank handles the application and approval of a loan but obtains the funds for the loan from a warehouse lender. When the bank then sells the mortgage to another creditor in the secondary market, it receives the funds that it then uses to pay back the warehouse lender. The bank profits through this process by earning points and origination fees.

Warehouse lending is commercial asset-based lending. According to Barry Epstein, a mortgage lending consultant, bank regulators typically treat warehouse loans as lines of credit giving them a 100% risk-weighted classification. Epstein suggests that warehouse lines of credit are classified in this way partly because the time/risk exposure is days while the time/risk exposure for mortgage notes in years.

Fundamentals

Warehouse lending is similar to accounts receivable financing for industry sectors, though the collateral is typically much more significant in the case of warehouse lending. The similarity lies in the short-term nature of the loan. Mortgage lenders are granted a short-term, revolving credit line to close mortgage loans that are then sold to the secondary mortgage market.

The housing market crash from 2007 to 2008 drastically affected warehouse lending. The mortgage market dried up as people could no longer afford to own a home. As the economy has recovered, the acquisition of mortgage loans has increased as has warehouse lending.

Related terms:

Accounts Receivable Financing

Accounts receivable financing is a type of financing arrangement in which a company receives financing capital in relation to its receivable balances. read more

Asset-Based Lending

Asset-based lending is the business of loaning money with an agreement that is secured by collateral that can be seized if the loan is unpaid. read more

Freddie Mac—Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. (FHLMC)

Freddie Mac (the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.) is a government-sponsored enterprise that purchases, guarantees, and securitizes home loans. read more

Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)

The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) is a federal law mandating lenders to maintain records on individual mortgages to help reveal whether they are complying with fair housing laws and meeting community needs. read more

Mortgage Company

A mortgage company originates and/or funds mortgages for residential or commercial property. read more

Origination

Origination is the process of creating a home loan or mortgage. It involves numerous steps and participants, and you can't get a mortgage without it. read more

Portfolio Lender

A portfolio lender is an institution that originates mortgage loans and holds a portfolio of loans instead of selling them in the secondary market. read more

Takeout Lender

A takeout lender is a type of financial institution that provides a long-term mortgage on a property, which replaces interim financing, such as a construction loan. read more

Truth in Lending Act (TILA)

The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) is a federal law enacted in 1968 to help protect consumers in their dealings with lenders and creditors. read more

Warehouse Financing

Warehouse financing is a form of inventory financing in which loans are made to manufacturers on the basis of goods or commodities held as collateral. read more