Posts Tagged ‘fha loan’

What the FHA Needs To Get the Job Done

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

In the current credit squeeze, if you have less than a 20 percent down payment, there’s pretty much only one major source of mortgage financing available: the Federal Housing Administration, the Depression-era home loan insurance agency that still offers 3 percent down, 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages with consumer-friendly credit standards, even on jumbo loans in high-cost areas of California and the East Coast.

But there is a potentially troublesome problem looming for the FHA: New loan volume is exploding — tripling in the past 12 months alone — and Congress has handed the agency the responsibility for almost all the government’s efforts to keep economically distressed homeowners out of foreclosure by refinancing their unaffordable loans.

The FHA says it needs to hire more staff and upgrade its technology to be able to handle the crush of new business, but it complains that Congress hasn’t appropriated the necessary funds — $65 million — to do the job fast enough. Capitol Hill appropriations committee staff dispute some of that, but the specifics of the arguments over dollar amounts aren’t the issue.

The real question is this: Can a government agency whose market share dropped below 3 percent during the heyday of the subprime boom now properly handle explosive volume rocketing it to an estimated market share of 30 percent this year? Are both the agency and Congress — which controls the purse strings — up to the task?

Mortgage industry, home building and real estate experts worry about the possible consequences of shifting too heavy a share of the mortgage market too quickly to an agency that may be inadequately staffed or funded. Howard Glaser, who served during the Clinton administration as acting general counsel for HUD, the parent department for the FHA, worries that loading on too much business without properly funding staff and technology upgrades raises the odds of breakdowns.

“FHA is assuming the risks of a mortgage market abandoned by private investors — without the risk management tools,” he said. “My fear is that next year at this time, we will be debating an FHA bailout.”

Steve O’Connor, senior vice president of the Mortgage Bankers Association, agreed there’s danger lurking in the massive increases in business going to the FHA. “You just can’t expect to fit that amount down the same size pipe — you’ve got to expand the size of the pipe” by funding additional staff and technology, he said. “It’s a very serious concern.”

Other industry groups, including the National Association of Home Builders and the National Association of Realtors voice similar worries. Dick Gaylord, president of the Realtors, said “if [the FHA] is truly going to serve its growing constituency,” it will need more money and people.

The FHA — for years the forgotten federally controlled stepchild of an industry dominated by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Wall Street mortgage bond machines — is now insuring more than 140,000 new loans a month, according to agency statistics. It has $400 billion in outstanding loans in its insurance portfolio and runs its home mortgage business with 937 employees in offices spread around the country. The agency wants authorization to add 160 employees immediately.

Though historically a resource for first-time buyers, minorities and people with imperfect credit, the FHA increasingly is the go-to place for people who have above-average credit backgrounds but lack — or choose not to use — large amounts of down-payment cash. In August, according to agency data, approximately 23 percent of new FHA home purchasers had FICO credit scores above 720 — far beyond the proportion of prior years. In the same month, just 12 percent had FICO scores below 600.

With mortgage limits extending into the jumbo category, the agency is attracting large numbers of customers from high-cost areas of the country, especially California and the mid-Atlantic states. One of 10 new borrowers in August was from California.

To some mortgage lenders and loan officers, the FHA is now the main game in town. “Nothing competes with them,” said Paul Skeens, chief executive of Colonial Mortgage Group in Waldorf.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both now in federal conservatorship, have steadily added fees to the point where “they just aren’t competing with FHA on down payments or costs,” Skeens said. In 2001 and 2002, Skeens’ firm did just one-quarter of 1 percent of its volume in the FHA. Now it’s 60 percent.

“The last thing we need right now, with the shape the housing market is in,” he said, “is for FHA not to function well.”

By Kenneth R. Harney

Oh Boy! More FHA Guideline Changes

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

This is the main reason you NEED to have an FHA EXPERT (such as us of course) working with you.

Can you imagine being 2 weeks into the process and your part-time Loan Officer calling and saying, “Hi Bob… um, we have a little issue?”

In our information age, you need what you want, and you need it NOW- but not so fast, Charlie.

What we see (and later save), day in and day out, is inexperienced Loan Officers wanting to get the “deal” in faster than they can ask your name, only to realize that they forgot to ask you that one “deal-killer” of a question at the beginning, and now everyone is out of time, and money- but has plenty of frustration.

So to ease everyone’s minds, we are here to help and want you to know that we have our fingers on the markets, the economy, rates, and guidelines; but most importantly, we are here to GIVE YOU CORRECT AND INFORMED ADVICE ON ALL FHA LOANS.

So with that being said, here’s the scoop on the new change in FHA guidelines:

As of October 1, 2008, all Up Front Mortgage Insurance Premiums (UFMIP) for purchases and full-credit qualifying refinances will be 1.75%.

For streamline refinances, UFMIP will be 1.50%.

For all FHASecure, you are looking at 3%.

As for the MONTHLY mortgage insurance premiums, as they have had some slight changes as well, but nothing too major.

Here is the link directly to HUD Memo detailing these changes:

FHA GUIDELINE CHANGES

As always, we’re here to help and welcome any questions you may have!

HUD's NEW Proposed Refinance Program

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

WASHINGTON — The Department of Housing and Urban Development launched a program Wednesday to help underwater borrowers refinance their mortgages, but its details appeared to pose fresh challenges for servicers and lenders.

The agency said borrowers with payment- and debt-to-income ratios over a certain threshold must complete a three-month trial period in a new loan before the Federal Housing Administration would insure it. Some analysts said that stipulation could cause problems.

“Some folks thought the credit ratios would have been a little more liberal, particularly in light of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s experience with the IndyMac portfolio,” said Brian Chappelle, a partner at Potomac Partners LLC and former HUD official.

The Hope for Homeowners program allows borrowers to take out FHA-insured mortgages, relieving the owners of the old mortgage of a delinquent loan in exchange for writing its value down to 90% of the current home value and waiving any prepayment or late payment fees. The FHA in turn will pay off the old loan and give second lien holders a share in the possible future appreciation of the home’s value.
Though the program was created by a bill passed in July, it left most of the details to HUD and an oversight board of federal regulators.

Under those details, which were released Wednesday, the borrower’s payment-to-income ratio cannot exceed 31%, and the debt-to income ratio cannot exceed 43%, for the FHA to insure a new mortgage immediately. Borrowers with higher ratios — up to 38% for payments and 50% for debt — may still participate, but the FHA would require the three-month trial.

Rod Dubitsky, the head of Credit Suisse Group’s asset-backed securities research division, said the requirement that servicers try a payment plan before turning the borrower over to an FHA-insured loan left room for the original servicer and the new lender to clash over decision-making authority.

“There’s a ‘he said, she said’ potential from the borrower’s standpoint,” he said. The setup “requires the servicer and the FHA lender to work hand in glove.”

Observers said the FHA’s underwriting procedures for the program are also strict. New lenders must obtain two year’s worth of tax returns on the borrower from the Internal Revenue Service, among other things.
The eligibility requirements released Wednesday also dictated that loans be originated before this year. Borrowers must have made at least six payments and must not be able to make more. Borrowers are banned from participation if the mortgage is not on their primary residence or if they own a second home. The new loans cannot exceed $550,440.

At a press conference announcing the details, HUD Secretary Steve Preston said it was open to improvments. “We will continue to listen to the industry as they adopt the program and experience homeowner needs.”
HUD officials and observers said they were hoping that the passage of a bailout bill for the financial industry would make the program more efficient.

Under the existing program, lenders considering making new loans to struggling borrowers would not have any up-front financial incentive. They would only be able to share in the possible future appreciation of the borrower’s home. The bailout bill, which the Senate was expected to pass Wednesday, would authorize the FHA to pay the new lender up front instead. The bill also would encourage servicers to use the program for eligible loans purchased by Treasury as part of its proposed facility to buy $700 billion of troubled mortgage assets.

FHA Commissioner Brian Montgomery would not comment specifically on the fate of the two changes to the plan that are in the bailout bill, but he said HUD was still making improvements to the plan.

“We’re kind of flying the plane and fixing it at the same time,” he said. “Our work doesn’t end today. A good bit of it does, but this product is out there for the next three years, so as we go forward we’ll adjust as we need to.”

By Emily Flitter

FHA Underwriting Changes – Rental Income

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

The FHA is now taking steps to respond to “unhealthy” practices regarding the housing market, especially with FHA and FHA Approved Lenders.

We have seen first-hand, and taken hundreds of applications on, homeowners that are vacating their current residences to purchase another property. Due to rising fuel costs, most people have been relocating to be closer to their work and other great home buying opportunities in their local areas, and in turn, do not want the responsibility of having to pay 2 mortgage payments per month. This being said, the average consumer is under the impression, that with FHA, their rental income should count in qualifying for the NEW home that they are buying- but that MAY not be the case in the near future.

Essentially what is happening is that the Federal Housing Administration is cracking down on their guidelines in regards to potential home buyers that are planning on qualifying on the new home by using the rental income from their current house. Effective immediately,  RENTAL INCOME from their current residence cannot be used in order to qualify for the new home.

We are closely monitoring the temporary underwriting change to see if this will soon evolve into a permanent rule.

There are 2 exceptions to this, however, and they are :

1.) Relocations – The home buyer is relocating with their current employer, or being transferred to an area not within reasonable and locally recognized commuting distance.

2.) Sufficient Equity in Vacant Property – The home buyer has at least 25% equity in the property, as determined by a residential appraisal no more than 6 months old.

If the applicant ALREADY OWNS rental properties that are disclosed on the application, that is OK; this rule ONLY applies to a principal residence being vacated in favor of another principal residence.

Rest assured that you will be the first to know on the ongoing process of guideline changes, as we at FHALoanHouston.com are your FHA Loan Experts!

FHA Modernization

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

FHA Modernization

Brian Montgomery, Assistant Secretary for Housing, has testified before the House Financial Services Committee that modernizing the Federal Housing Administration is of paramount importance for America’s “troubled subprime borrowers.” The FHA has been insuring mortgage loans for low and moderate income families since the depths of the Great Depression, but these loans became unpopular with the advent of the subprime market.

However, subprime mortgage loans have proven to be extremely risky for borrowers with bad credit or low income, a problem which has resulted in a recent surge of foreclosures. Home foreclosures not only force borrowers out of their place of residence, but also cost the lender an average of $40,000 and can wreck havoc on real estate investors, lenders, and communities at large.

By approving of the modernization reforms, Montgomery claimed that the “FHA could potentially assist tens of thousands more borrowers who need an exit strategy from their subprime mortgages.” Some of the proposed changes include:

- Removal of the mandatory 3% down payment, which many low income borrowers cannot afford. The FHA plans to switch to a more flexible down payment option.

- Increasing the limits of FHA mortgage loans. Traditionally, FHA had standard loan limits which were often lower than those of subprime mortgage loans. In areas of the country where housing costs are relatively high, many individuals looking to purchase a home could not, as the old FHA loan limits were below the median house prices. With these changes, people in states like New York and California will be able to obtain an FHA loan that will have a loan limit high enough for homes in those areas.

- Creating a new risk-based structure. Currently, all borrowers who apply for an FHA loan are subject to a standard premium. In the new structure, the premium would be based on the credit profile of the borrower and would shift up or down based on that borrower’s level of risk to the lender.

All of these modifications are part of the Expanding American Homeownership Act which passed the House last year by an overwhelming majority. With this new structure, the FHA would not only be able to reach thousands more borrowers, but it would present “a safer, more affordable financing option than many subprime loans,” according to Montgomery. By modernizing its practices and requirements, the Federal Housing Administration will be able to continue increasing homeownership among low-income Americans, minorities, the homeless and the elderly.

Though these sweeping changes to FHA policy will give the most aid to first-time home buyers and families without previous mortgages, the FHA will also continue to offer refinancing options for those who are still working on another loan. As previously noted, many low and moderate income families have found themselves unable to make monthly mortgage payments, mainly due to risky and financially unsound loans. As more and more individuals wish to refinance to a safer, more stable loan, the FHA is there to assist. The number of conventional to FHA refinances has almost doubled in the last year, and as long as borrowers meet a few simple requirements, they will qualify for a more reliable FHA refinance.

- MortgageLoanPlace.com