Quantcast

New Jobs Report Shows Demand for Mortgage Brokers

JUL 6, 2012 7:56pm ET
Print
Email
Reprints

Total employment in the mortgage industry was flat in May, but the ground has been shifting over the past few months with brokerage firms hiring while other lenders have been cutting back, according to figures released Friday.   

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that employment in the mortgage banking and brokerage sector edged down to 266,500 full-time positions in May from 266,600 in April.

However, government figures show that brokerages have hired 6,000 employees since January while mortgage banking firms cut their payrolls by 6,100 full-time employees since March.

Overall, employment in the mortgage industry is down 1% from May 2011. (The residential finance jobs numbers lag that national ones by a month.)

Meanwhile, Friday's jobs report shows the U.S. economy created just 80,000 new jobs in June, up from a revised 77,000 in May. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 8.2%.   

Surprisingly, employment in the construction industry was flat in May despite encouraging signs in residential construction.

Single-family starts are running 20% ahead of their year-ago pace (through May) and multifamily starts are up an impressive 45%, according to a new report from Wells Fargo Securities.  

However, this year's jump in construction activity started from a low base and housing starts will make only a "modest contribution" to economic growth this year, WFS economists said in their July 5 "Housing Data Wrap-Up" report for June. 

“Even with recent gains, new home sales and residential construction remains shadows of their former selves,” write the Wells economists.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION

SEE MORE IN

RELATED TAGS

 

 
Mortgage Servicing's New Pecking Order
U.S. banks are expected to unload up to $2 trillion in mortgage servicing rights. Behind the sell-off are tough new Basel III capital requirements and the past failures in servicing troubled loans that has brought unwanted scrutiny. Picking up the slack are nonbanks like Nationstar (NSM), Ocwen Financial (OCN) and Walter Investment (WAC), all of which have been aggressively snapping up banks' servicing portfolios. Watch out, too, for Penny Mac, which plans to use the proceeds from its planned public offering to fund servicing acquisitions.

Related Articles: Servicing Rules Could Force Institutions Out of the Business

Break the Megabanks' Stranglehold on Mortgage Servicing

(Image: Thinkstock)
Comments (0)

Be the first to comment on this post using the section below.

Add Your Comments:
You must be registered to post a comment.
Not Registered?
You must be registered to post a comment. Click here to register.
Already registered? Log in here
Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.

Email Newsletters

Get the Daily Briefing and the Morning Update when you sign up for a free trial.

TWITTER
FACEBOOK
LINKEDIN
Marketplace
Fiserv is a leading global provider of information management and electronic commerce systems for the financial services industry.
Learn More
Informa Research Services is the premier provider of competitive intelligence, mystery shopping, and compliance testing services to the financial industry.
Learn More
CSC is a leader in private-label, third-party loan servicing with 30+ years of proven experience in delivering effective, cost-effective solutions.
Learn More
Already a subscriber? Log in here
Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.