Borrowers Miss Out on Billions in Savings

By NICK TIMIRAOS

The Federal Reserve has pushed mortgage rates to near half-century lows, but millions of U.S. homeowners haven’t benefited from that because they can’t—or won’t—refinance.

Falling home prices have left many owners with little or no equity, making it harder to qualify for refinancing. Moreover, stricter lending standards and higher fees by banks and mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and declining incomes have made it tougher and less attractive for borrowers to seek new loans.

Around 37% of all borrowers with 30-year conforming fixed-rate mortgages—who collectively hold about $1.2 trillion of home loans—have mortgage rates of 6% or higher, according to investment bank Credit Suisse. Many could reduce their rates by a full percentage point if they refinanced at current rates, about 5%. More than half could lower their rates nearly three-quarters of a percentage point, according to Credit Suisse.

But new refinance applications in January stood near their lowest levels in the past year. Weekly data compiled by the Mortgage Bankers Association also show that refinance activity has been muted, considering that rates are so low.

“Traditionally, these borrowers would be aggressively refinancing,” said Mahesh Swaminathan, senior mortgage strategist at Credit Suisse.

One indicator of the economic impact of refinancing: Loans that refinanced in 2009 will result in $3.4 billion in savings for consumers this year, according to a report by First American CoreLogic, a research firm based in Santa Ana, Calif. That will return an additional $17.2 billion in savings to borrowers over the next five years. That’s money consumers can potentially use to help spur economic recovery.

About a quarter of all mortgage holders are “underwater”—they owe more on the house than it’s worth—which normally makes it impossible to get refinancing: Banks want collateral to back the value of home loans they make. The Obama administration recently extended a program intended to help underwater homeowners refinance, but few people have tapped it so far. The program has faced logistical hurdles, delays and confusion from brokers and lenders.

Some people are so far underwater, refinancing ends up being out of the question. John Albright, a retired Navy officer in Manassas, Va., hasn’t been able to refinance because the value of his home has plunged. He figures its market value is now around $275,000, but he and his wife still owe more than $500,000 on their mortgage.

Their refinance application was turned down last year because they lacked equity in the home. He says his lender told him he could refinance only if he could come up with about $200,000 to pay down his mortgage. So they are stuck with an interest rate of about 6.5% at a time when his wife’s income has declined. “We’re going from paycheck to paycheck, but what can you do?” Mr. Albright says.

Some mortgage bankers say higher fees by lenders have undermined the effort to encourage refinancing. Fees that Fannie and Freddie began imposing in 2008, as loan delinquencies began to rise, have made it unattractive for some borrowers to refinance. For example, a borrower with 20% down and a 695 credit score seeking to refinance must pay fees equal to 1% of the loan amount. Those fees rise for borrowers with weaker credit scores, higher loan-to-value ratios, or other risk factors.

Overcorrecting for the abuses of financial institutions “has defeated the Fed’s purchase program,” said Alan Boyce, a mortgage-securities-market veteran. Those loan fees, he said, are partly “responsible for why there’s been no refi boom.”

The higher fees and tight credit standards show the tensions facing Fannie and Freddie. As the government-controlled companies try to raise revenue to offset their losses, those efforts can conflict with their basic public-policy mission: to help stabilize the housing market.

Fannie and Freddie have to strike a balance between risk and access to credit. Figuring out “where that line is involves some trade-offs,” said Edward DeMarco, acting head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie and Freddie.

The last time mortgage rates were at current levels, in 2003, refinancing activity hit $2.9 trillion, according to trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance. Last year, refinance volume reached $1.2 trillion, the highest amount since 2003 but not nearly as much as expected, considering how low interest rates have fallen.

Traditionally, borrowers have an incentive to refinance when they can reduce their mortgage rate by one percentage point or more.

Borrowers who are refinancing tend to be those who need it least. Fannie and Freddie refinanced 4.2 million borrowers last year. On average, borrowers who refinanced through Freddie Mac saved $2,600 annually. But the savings on the whole have gone to “very, very good credit borrowers and it really isn’t going very far down the credit spectrum,” said Michael Fratantoni, the head of research and economics for the MBA.

The experience of Connecticut resident Cathy Grandahl shows some of the trade-offs borrowers must grapple with in today’s low-interest-rate, high-fee environment. She wanted to refinance two loans on her West Simsbury, Conn., home: a fixed-rate mortgage with a 5.75% rate and a second mortgage with an adjustable rate that she worries will rise sharply in coming years.

Refinancing would save them around $125 a month on their first mortgage while providing a fixed rate on their second loan. But extinguishing that mortgage by refinancing into one larger loan—considered a “cash-out” refinance—would trigger an additional fee. That, plus several thousand dollars in closing costs, ultimately persuaded the couple not to refinance after all.

About a quarter of all mortgage holders are “underwater”—they owe more on the house than it’s worth—which normally makes it impossible to get refinancing: Above, homeowners work with Bank of America negotiators to restructure their mortgage loan during a “Save the Dream” tour stop by the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America last month in Palm Beach, Fla.

“It’s not a matter of our credit. We just can’t get a good enough rate to make the refi worth it,” says Ms. Grandahl, a 53-year-old land-records researcher who has three children in college.

Journal Community

 

“ We would consider it if we could somehow know that the transaction would be carried out efficiently and competently, but there are too many stories of good borrowers ending up in awful transactions because of lender performance problems. The process was tedious enough in the past, and I was told by a mortgage broker that it’s only getting worse. Don’t need the hassle. ”

—Jeffrey Loose

Her broker, Michael Menatian, said that sort of scenario “happens all the time” with qualified borrowers. “There’s nothing wrong with these people—good equity, good income—and you have to tell them, ‘I’m sorry, I can’t give you the low rate you thought you could get.’ “

Falling home values are one of the biggest factors raising borrowers’ refinancing costs. Borrowers with less than 20% equity may have to pay for mortgage insurance.

On Monday, the Obama administration said it would extend for a year a program launched last April to help homeowners with little or no equity to refinance. That program, which had been set to expire this June, was called a “failure” last week by analysts at Barclays Capital. While the administration had said it would benefit millions, so far just 188,000 borrowers who owe between 80% and 105% of the value of their homes had refinanced through December. Last September, it was expanded to include borrowers who owe up to 125% of their home value, but fewer than 2,000 borrowers have used that program through December.

The administration says it is also considering new ways to allow distressed homeowners to refinance through the Federal Housing Administration.

—James R. Hagerty contributed to this article.

Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com

Get ready for higher mortgage rates

By Chris Isidore, senior writerFebruary 23, 2010: 3:24 PM ET

 

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Even though signs of a housing recovery are uneven at best, the Federal Reserve is about to take off the training wheels it has had in place for more than a year to help the battered market.

The Fed has been buying mortgage-backed securities, the bundling of home loans that are used to fund mortgage lending, since late 2008. But next month it plans to complete its purchase of $1.25 trillion in mortgages.

That could be bad news. There is wide agreement that the removal of this support will mean higher mortgage rates, which could hit housing prices and sales hard. Some even worry that this could cause the broader economic recovery to stall.

The program was the largest single injection of cash into the economy by the Fed during the financial crisis, and it will be the longest-lasting source of funds as well. Even though the Fed intends to stop buying mortgages, few expect the central bank will start selling them to private investors any time in the next few years.

Higher rates on the way. But even if the Fed holds onto the mortgages it has already purchased, the act of no longer buying additional mortgages is likely to raise mortgage rates in the coming weeks. Experts say a jump of at least a quarter to a half percentage point is likely.

San Francisco Federal Reserve President Janet Yellen warned of higher rates in a speech Monday. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is likely to take questions about the Fed’s mortgage program when he testifies about economic conditions on Capitol Hill Wednesday and Thursday.

The spread between the interest on 30-year fixed rate mortgages and the benchmark 10-year Treasury note now stands at about 1.2 percentage points. Before the financial crisis, this spread was typically closer to 1.5 percentage points.

The worry is that high foreclosure rates and a still struggling economy will make investors demand a bigger spread than “normal”, since mortgages carry far greater risk in the current market.

Before the Fed started buying mortgages, the spread had climbed to about 2.5 percentage points. A return to that spread is unlikely, but there is uncertainty about how high it could go.

Paul Kasriel, director of economic research at Northern Trust, said he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the spread widened by half a percentage point from current levels.

That can have a significant impact on prices by limiting what a buyer can pay for a home. Take the $178,000 median home price of existing homes sold in January. A buyer with a 20% down payment will pay just over $750 a month in mortgage payments for a 30-year fixed loan at today’s rate.

Raise that rate by a half point, and the same buyer will only be able to afford a home worth $170,000 to keep payments near the $750 a month level.

The other concern is that even if the spread doesn’t increase that much, mortgage rates could still shoot up simply if Treasury yields start to rise. That’s possible if the debt problems in Greece and other weaker European countries is resolved in the new few months and investors who moved to U.S. government debt in a flight to quality move out of Treasurys.

End of tax credit to add to problems. The worries about the Fed pulling back support for housing are compounded by the end of up to $8,000 in tax credits for home buyers. To qualify, buyers face an April 30 deadline to sign a sales contract.

Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, argues that the Fed’s program and tax credit for home buyers “ended the free fall in home prices.”

But he thinks that the removal of this support could mean that home prices could start to drop by as much as 1% a month again. He also thinks mortgage rates could climb by as much as a percentage point in the coming months.

Jay Brinkman, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association, said even if there isn’t a big impact on home sales and prices, higher rates will lead to a plunge in mortgage refinancings.

The MBA now forecasts refinancings will fall to a range of $500 billion to $600 billion this year from $1.4 trillion last year. That will mean even less cash available for homeowners to spend on other goods or to reduce debt.

But Brinkman said the Fed is right to do what it is doing, even if the housing market is still in tenuous condition.

“It’s kind of like a pain killer. If you stay on it too long, the withdrawal pains may be worse than the pain you were trying to deal with,” he said.

But David Wyss, chief economist with Standard & Poor’s, said he isn’t sure that the Fed will even follow through and stop buying mortgages. If home sales and prices start to tumble sharply once again, the central bank could be back buying mortgages fairly quickly.

“It’s like the parent who is teaching a child to ride a bike who carefully lets go while running along side,” he said. “The Fed thinks the child is able to balance by himself at this point, but it’s still going to be running alongside the bike, just in case.”

Home Sellers Still See Conditions as Unfavorable. Perspective on Shadow Inventory

by Jann Swanson on MND Newswire

A consumer survey conducted by Thomas Reuters and the University of Michigan indicates that it is sellers who are holding the housing market at low levels.

In survey results released today, approximately 75 percent of homeowners who participated in the survey viewed current home buying conditions as favorable because of attractive home prices and low interest rates. However, nine out of ten of those home owners viewed the conditions for the sale of their own home as unfavorable, not because of lack of buyers, but because of price declines.

The survey authors viewed these responses as predicting a long-term drag on the housing market for both economic and psychological reasons. There is, the report said, a significant barrier to purchasing a new home if the potential buyer’s current home is “under water,” that is more is owed on the house than the house can be expected to sell for. Even homeowners with equity will be constrained in providing a down payment for a new property if their equity has fallen below 20 percent.

The loss of value of the home also presents a psychological barrier because people are reluctant to sell houses at a value lower than it had in the past. The report likened it to stock market investors who sell their winners but hold on to the losers.

The authors said that one implication of their survey results is that “forecast models based on the past dominance of buying will overestimate future trends unless selling conditions are also incorporated.”

Homeowners do see some improvement in the market, however. 46 percent of survey respondents felt that their home had lost value in the last year, but in the survey conducted during the fourth quarter of 2009, 53 percent of respondents reported a decline and one year ago the figure was 60 percent. 14 percent felt that their home’s value had increased during the past year.

The number of homeowners who expected the home to gain value over both the short and long term also increased. 24 percent expected that the value would go up over the next year while 15 percent, the lowest response since early 2007, expected a further decline. This is a significant improvement over the attitude one year ago when 26 percent of respondents expected a loss in value at a mean average of -1.9 percent. Respondents to the most recent survey, however, aren’t looking for much of an increase in values; the average expected increase was 0.0 percent.

MND’s Adam Quinones adds…

“There has been much debate as to the amount of shadow inventory that has yet to hit the housing market. Many analysts speculate that a continued rise in prime mortgage delinquencies and high non-prime loan foreclosure rates will add to an already inflated level of housing inventory and pressure home prices lower. I have a slightly different perspective. To reduce the cost of maintaining the condition of foreclosed properties, banks have delayed the liquidation process and allowed delinquent borrowers to remain in their homes. In addition to that, by delaying the liquidation of foreclosed properties, banks have avoided large asset value write-downs .  I expect banks to continue to utilize this strategy, but it won’t last forever.  Once the housing market starts to pick up recovery momentum, banks will begin to slowly liquidate their inventory of foreclosed properties. Hopefully they will do so in a manner that does not greatly disrupt local supply/demand.”

Over the next five years 59 percent of respondents expect to see a rise in the value of their houses albeit a small one.  The mean increase was estimated at 2.7 percent. 7 percent expected that their house would decline over the next five year. Last quarter 63 percent were looking for an improvement over 5 years and 9 percent expected a decline.

Here is a table summarizing the survey results:

Mortgage Rates Rise Ahead of FOMC Meeting and Treasury Auctions

byVictor Burek –

For mortgage rate watchers and interest rate shoppers, last week was rewarding. Lenders were able to offer progressively lower mortgage rates as prices of mortgage backed securities moved higher and higher over the course of the week. By Friday lenders had passed along the best rates of 2010.

Improvements to consumer borrowing costs were partially a function of weakness in the equities market. Stock selling was sparked by political headlines including the Massachusetts Senate election, the announcement of new bank reforms, and growing debate surrounding the renomination of Ben Bernanke, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.  All of these events combined to create a great deal of uncertainty in financial markets which forced investors to sell risky assets and re-allocate funds into risk free assets like of US Treasuries and Agency MBS.   By week’s end, most lenders were offering 4.75% as par for a 30 year conventional rate mortgage.

The week ahead is filled with influential data points and noteworthy events. There is an FOMC meeting, $118 billion in Treasury auctions, several housing market indicators, and a read on Gross Domestic Product as the week comes to a close. All very influential events!

The week did start slow, the only report released today was Existing Home Sales. This data set totals the number of existing homes, not new construction, in which a sale closed in the prior month.  Recent reports have shown existing home sales moving higher thanks to near record low mortgage rates and government stimulus for home buyers.  Last month’s report surged 7.4% higher to an annual sales rate of 6.54 million units. Economists surveyed were expecting the pace of existing home sales to slow down in December. This was a factor of many buyers rushing to beat the expiration of the first time home buyer tax credit in November (which has been extended). Consesus was for an annualized pace of 5.90 million existing home sales.

At 10am the NAR reported that existing home sales fell more than expected in December to an annualized pace of 5.45million.   This is the largest monthly decline since 1968!   More bad news from the report was the rise in supply of homes from a 6.5 months in November to 7.2 months in December.  READ THE MND STORY

Following the release, there was not much reaction in the marketplace as most investors are on the sidelines, waiting for an action packed week of data and events…

Tomorrow brings us another look at the housing sector with the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index. This data tracks the monthly change in the value of single family residences across the country.  Many economists believe that until home prices stabilize and start to increase, it will be very difficult for our economy to sustain growth.  This makes tracking home sales data much more important.   In addition to this data, we also get Consumer Confidence, a 2 year note auction totaling $44billion, and the beginning of the Federal Open Market Committee’s two day meeting where our nation’s monetary policy is set.

Wednesday brings us MORE home sales data with the weekly Mortgage Bankers’ Associations Application index and New Home Sales.   This data will be followed by testimony from Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to the House Oversight Committee and an auction $42billion 5 year treasury notes.  At 2:15pm eastern, the Fed Statement will be released. This statement sets the Federal Fund rate and gives an economic outlook and announces any changes to quantitative easing programs such as the MBS buying program.  Later in the evening, President Obama delivers the State of the Union address to Congress.

Thursday brings us

  • Durable Goods Orders
  • Jobless Claims
  • $32billion of 7 year notes to be auctioned

Friday we get…

  • GDP, the initial estimate of fourth quarter growth
  • Chicago PMI
  • Consumer Sentiment

For more on the week ahead, check out the MND STORY. AQ also wrote an outlook. READ MORE

Reports from fellow mortgage professionals indicate lender rate sheets to be worse than Friday.   The par 30 year conventional rate mortgage has risen to the 4.875% to 5.125% range for well qualified consumers.These rates are the most aggressive in the mortgage market, only very well qualified consumers will have access to these borrowing costs.  To secure a par rate you must have a FICO credit score of 740 or higher, a loan to value at 80% or less. These quotes also assume the borrower is willing to pay all closing costs including an estimated one point loan origination/discount/broker fee.  Your mortgage professional should be able to provide you with a breakeven analysis to determine the optimal fee vs interest rate.

If you didn’t follow our LOCK advice from last week, that means you are still floating today. While lenders were likely conservative today, we are feeling extra defensive of last week’s improvements. I am still favoring locking in loans. If you decide to float, keep a watchful eye on stocks. If they start to recover from last week’s losses, mortgage rates should increase.

On a side note, I would like to wish Matt Graham a happy 30th birthday.

Harder to get an Uncle Sam mortgage

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — It’s going to be harder to get a government-backed mortgage from now on.

Looking to shore up its weakening finances, the Federal Housing Administration is set to announce stricter standards on Wednesday.

The agency, which insured nearly a third of new mortgages in 2009, will increase the premium it charges for its mortgage insurance and require those with weaker credit scores to come up with larger downpayments.

The FHA will also reduce the amount of money a seller can provide a homebuyer for closing costs, as well as tighten its enforcement of lenders.

“Striking the right balance between managing the FHA’s risk, continuing to provide access to underserved communities, and supporting the nation’s economic recovery is critically important,” FHA Commissioner David Stevens said in a statement. “Importantly, FHA will remain the largest source of home purchase financing for underserved communities.”

FHA loans have skyrocketed in popularity during the mortgage crisis since the agency backstops banks if borrowers stop paying. But housing experts are growing increasingly concerned about the agency’s ability to handle rising numbers of defaults.

In November, the agency reported that its reserve fund has dropped to .53% of its insurance guarantees, well below the 2% ratio mandated by Congress and the 3% ratio it had last fall. The fund covers losses on the mortgages the agency insures.

Federal housing officials, who took several steps to shore up the agency’s finances last year, promised to do more. The new announcement is the latest set of changes to FHA policies.

What the new rules mean

The agency will increase its up-front mortgage insurance premium to 2.25%, from 1.75%. It will also ask Congress for the right to hike its ongoing premium, currently between .5% and .55% monthly.

The FHA will also require borrowers to have at least a credit score of 580 to qualify for the agency’s 3.5% downpayment program. Those with lower scores will have to pay at least 10%. However, this rule may have little practical effect since Stevens recently said the average borrower score is 693.

The new policy also will reduce the amount of money sellers can provide to homebuyers at closing to 3%, down from 6%, of the home’s price. That change will bring the agency in line with industry standards and remove the incentive to inflate appraisals.

Finally, officials plan to clamp down on lenders offering FHA mortgages. It will more closely monitor their performance and compliance with agency rules, as well as seek legislative authority to require mortgage firms to assume liability for all loans they originate and underwrite.

One thing the agency did not do is to broadly increase the downpayment requirement. Many industry observers said such a step is necessary to reduce the risk the FHA faces.

Agency plays crucial role

As banks have clamped down on mortgage lending, the FHA program has emerged as one of the few ways people can buy a home.

Banks are more willing to make FHA loans because they come with a federal guarantee to cover losses if the borrower defaults. And borrowers can more easily qualify for FHA loans because they only need 3.5% down and can have lower credit scores.

As a result, demand for FHA loans has exploded. The agency guaranteed more than $360 billion in single-family mortgages in fiscal 2009, which ended Sept. 30, more than four times the volume in 2007.

The agency insured about 30% of home purchases and 20% of refinanced mortgages in 2009. Nearly 50% of first-time homebuyers go through the agency.

The agency, however, has also seen a spike in delinquencies amid the mortgage meltdown. Some 14.36% of FHA loans were past due in the third quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. This compares to 9.64% of all loans.

By Tami Luhby, senior writerJanuary 19, 2010

CNNMoney.com

Mortgage Rates End Week at Best Levels

All week we said “wait until Thursday to lock”, “mortgage rates will improve after the bond auction on Thursday”, “the end of the week will be the best time to lock in your loan”.

The Treasury auction came and went. After the last round of debt was sold, $13 billion of 30 year bonds yesterday, everything that was supposed to happen in order for mortgage rates to improve…happened. Everything except mortgage rates moving lower that is!

Although prices of mortgage backed securities rallied immediately after the auction, prices soon lost progress and most lenders were not able to  improve mortgage rates. To remind readers, as the prices of MBS move higher lenders can offer lower consumer borrowing costs.

This was a huge letdown for us. But we were still hopeful we might see improvements today. We had some hurdles to get through first: INFLATION DATA

The Bureau of Labor Statistics released the Consumer Price Index this morning.  This report is a measure of the average price change of a fixed basket of goods and services purchased by consumers.  In other words, it gives us a reading on inflation at the consumer level.  If inflation is on the rise, interest rates will follow.    Most economic data  to date has indicated inflation to be of very little concern today which is also supported by recent Fed statements; however, we are starting to hear more and more about inflationary pressures.

Both the headline and the core inflation reading, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, indicated consumer prices increasing 0.1% in December.  This follows a 0.4% increase last month for the headline and 0.0% reading for the core.

Year over year, overall prices increased 2.7% while the core rate increased only 1.8% in 2009. This year over year gain is more a function of record low levels of inflation last year as opposed to rising inflation this year.

Overall the report was in line with economist expectations. Below is a table summarizing the data. I called attention to housing related price index. Notice all were UNCHANGED in December.

Once again we have economic data supporting inflationary pressures are in check despite the economic recovery which should allow the Fed to maintain the current accommodative stance with monetary policy.

Released at the same time as the CPI report was the Empire State Manufacturing Survey which is conducted by the New York Fed.  This monthly survey of around 175 manufacturing executives gives market participants a gauge into the strength of manufacturing in the New York region.   The bond market prefers slower growth which keeps inflationary pressures in check so they generally move higher when the report is less than expected.  This survey plunged last month to a 2.55 reading after November’s 23.51 and October’s 34.57.  Economists surveyed prior to the release expected a rebound to 12.0.  The release of the survey indicated higher than expected optimism with manufactures posting a reading of 15.92.   Since this is the lowest impacting report of the day, it had no affect on the markets.

The next report of the day was Industrial Production, which measures output at U.S. factories, utilities and mines.   The report indicated Industrial Production increased 0.6% matching economists’ expectations.

The final report for the week lets us know how you, the consumer, is feeling: the Consumer Sentiment report.  The University of Michigan’s Consumer Survey Center questions 500 households each month on their personal financial condition and attitudes about the overall economy.  An optimistic consumer is much more likely to spend money while a pessimistic consumer is more likely to save.   Since our economy is driven by consumer spending, stocks generally improve with optimistic consumers while bonds benefit with pessimism.   The release indicates consumer sentiment holding steady but below expectations at 72.8 following last month’s 72.5.  Market was looking for a 74.0 reading.

Ok so what happened to mortgage rates after this morning’s economic data?

WE GOT THOSE MORTGAGE RATE IMPROVEMENTS WE WERE EXPECTING YESTERDAY!

Reports from fellow mortgage professionals indicate lender rate sheets to be at their best levels in a month. While the most aggressive lenders were offering 4.75% today, most lenders still have 30 year conventional par mortgage rates in the 4.875% to 5.125% range for well qualified consumers.  To secure a par rate you must have a FICO credit score of 740 or higher, a loan to value at 80% or less and pay all closing costs including an estimated one point loan origination/discount/broker fee.

While I am comfortable with a float recommendation into next week, I must share with you that we are very defensive of these mortgage rate improvements. We don’t see gains being a long lasting trend. With that in mind, if you are closing in the next month, you should be looking to lock in soon. If you are a “fence sitter” or have an Interest Only ARM that is about to adjust,  you should be considering a refinance before interest rates start rising. I hope its obvious how defensive we are…floating one day at a time.

I hope everyone has a fantastic weekend. All markets will be closed on Monday in honor of  Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

by Victor Burek

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.