As Mortgage Contracting Services (MCS) began laying off people in November, their purchase of GIS Field Services has begun dragging profits downward. In fact, the inability to cover rural or even suburban assets has forced MCS to return their focus on a scattered network of misclassified employees as even the recently purchased Five Brothers is incapable of assisting. GIS Field Services was purchased by Littlejohn & Co., the owner of MCS in a secret deal that Foreclosurepedia exclusively reported on, last year. The problem was that Jonathan Dedman Dietz, the former owner of GIS Field Services, had woven a web of pump and dump pricing schemes that both left a bad taste in Labor’s collective mouth and set inspection pricing at $5.90 in many metro areas. And with more than 719 ACTIVE inspection openings at GIS Field Services — that is not a typo as seen from the image — the honeymoon effect is long gone.
MCS is not alone in the alienation of Labor. Spectrum Solutions just dropped their HUD M&M FSM inspection pricing down from the previous $35 per inspection to six dollars. No typo there, either. Both HUD and the Department of Labor are currently looking at claims from Labor that federal violations are occurring. And when you begin to see the drop in volumes at National Field Representatives (NFR) and Cyprexx, combined with the inability of firms like the recently hacked JGM Property Management incapable of completing HUD M&M FSM orders in a timely manner, it doesn’t bode well for Labor.
Enter Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS). As Wolf Street reported in yesterday’s article, Office CMBS Delinquency Rate Spikes to 10.4%, Just Below Worst of Financial Crisis Meltdown. Fastest 2-Year Spike Ever, there is a new game in town.
Inspections on distressed assets generally fall into a couple of categories. First, you have the residential assets that our Industry covers — forward and reverse. The latter is part of the reason MCS snapped up Five Brothers and why MCS CEO Craig Torrance and Chad Mosely, the MCS President of Mortgage Services, were recently talking about skewering Five Brothers like a Thanksgiving Day turkey. From a residential distressed side of things, the residential side is the little engine that couldn’t. While home sales are at their lowest level in decades and interest rates are at historic highs, the reality is that with plenty of equity backstopping another 2008 Crisis, foreclosures are expected to remain low. For October, foreclosure inventory increased by 1,000, but there are 28,000 fewer loans in active foreclosure activity overall. And Fannie Mae on Thursday issued revisions to its 2025 housing market forecast, dropping its estimated gain for existing-home sales next year from 11% to a more muted 4%.
And then you have the commercial side of things. The delinquency rate of office mortgages that have been securitized into commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) spiked by a full percentage point in November for the second month in a row, to 10.4%, now just a hair below the worst months during the Financial Crisis meltdown, when office CMBS delinquency rates peaked at 10.7%, according to data by Trepp, which tracks and analyzes CMBS.
While the threat to the US banking system is low, as many of the loans are spread across a wide array of providers, the salient fact is that they all need inspections and maintenance. This is not something that our Industry is capable of doing. The inspections are pretty straight forward and pay tremendously better; however, the maintenance and what small conversions that are ongoing are night and day when compared to residential assets.
Foreclosurepedia has been working with Labor, for years, in moving them away from the Industry. Through our subsidiary, Digital Matrix Group, we have additionally been doing web development as well as continuing our long and proven track record in the nonprofit sector. While some of our Recruitment postings are free, rebranding into the commercial segment requires a tremendous amount of time and effort. If you are ready to invest in your company and are tired of the Wal Mart greeter work and wages you receive now, feel free to reach out and discuss a Retainer.