FHA Home Loans Refinancing

FHA Mortgage Rates Drop Below 5%

03.19.09

Mortgage buyer, Freddie Mac, announced that FHA rates dropped to 4.98% from 5.03 % a week earlier.  The interest rate drop was just short of the record low 4.96 % touched the week of January 15th. Bloomberg reported that the average U.S. rate on a thirty-year fixed mortgage fell this week as the Federal Reserve announced it would double purchases of mortgage debt as part of its effort to lower rates and lure homebuyers to the market.

The Federal Reserve announced yesterday that it plans to buy up to $300 billion of Treasuries and increase purchases of mortgage-backed bonds. Falling real estate and stock prices, record home-loan defaults and job losses have cut demand for new and existing homes in the U.S.  The nation’s jobless rate rose to 8.1 % in February as employers reduced payrolls by 651,000, according to the Labor Department.

Home loan delinquencies jumped to a seasonally adjusted 7.88 % of all loans in the fourth quarter, the highest in records going back to 1972, the Mortgage Bankers Association said March 5th home loans in foreclosure rose to 3.30 %, also an all-time high.

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FHA Loans Gain Market Share in Mortgage Insurance Sector

03.18.09

The amazing expansion for FHA mortgage lending throughout 2008 was achieved mostly as a result from from the eroiding financial condition of the private mortgage insurance companies.  For the first time in over 20 years, are reporting that FHA loans have become a major force for home financing.

HUD’s FHA mortgages maintained a record 69% of new primary mortgage insurance written during the 4th quarter of 2008. That is the FHA loan product’s most significant share in the mortgage market in many years.

The Obama administration unveiled its $75 billion Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan earlier this month. The home refinancing programs will enable some homeowners to refinance their mortgages into lower-cost, thirty-year or fifteen-year loans featuring fixed interest rates by making mortgage compnaies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac refinance those mortgages that they have securitized on Wall Street.

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FHA Rumored to Tighten Cash Out Refinancing Guidelines

03.17.09

The Federal Housing Administration plans to make it tougher for borrowers to refinance a loan and take out cash as the agency tries to “limit its exposure to undue risk,” according to a letter that went out to FHA lenders this week. The decision comes at a time when defaults are rising in HUD’s flagship, FHA home loan insurance program, especially among borrowers who failed to make more than a single payment. The Washington Post reported recently that the quick loan defaults almost tripled in 2008 alone and more than quadrupled among FHA home refinancing.

FHA refinance loans now make up two-fifths of all the agency’s instant defaults, according to the Post analysis, and some lenders have singled out cash out refinance loans as especially risky. With conventional loans, many lenders now offer cash out mortgage only to borrowers with high credit scores and significant equity in their homes. The fear is that borrowers might otherwise take the cash and walk away from the mortgage.

Until now, the FHA has approved cash out refinancing for homeowners who have at least 5% equity in their properties and at least a one-year track record of on-time payments.  Starting with mortgage applications that FHA lenders receive April first, this type of mortgage refinancing will be restricted to borrowers with at least 15% equity in their homes.

The change will be temporary “while FHA further analyzes the housing and mortgage industry as well as its own portfolio to determine whether permanent measures should be taken,” said the letter, signed by departing FHA Commissioner Brian D. Montgomery.  The FHA does not lend money directly. It provides mortgage insurance for borrowers working with HUD-approved FHA mortgage lenders and uses the premiums to cover its losses.  The quick defaults suggest that some borrowers are taking out loans they do not stand a chance of repaying, raising questions about whether the abusive lending practices that helped topple the subprime mortgage industry are making their way into government-backed FHA lending.

The agency has come under increased scrutiny in the past years because its share of the mortgage market has shot up from about 2% three years ago to nearly a third of the mortgages made after the subprime market vanished and its loans became the only option for many borrowers who lack a hefty down payment or stellar credit.

But even before the FHA loan policy change, many lenders had moved beyond what the agency requires and instituted tougher qualifying standards for borrowers, especially those looking for cash-out refinance deals. Bank of America, which adopted tighter standards in the summer, yesterday applauded the agency’s decision.  “Safeguarding the FHA through this economic cycle is paramount to maintaining the liquidity FHA offers for home buyers today,” said Allen Jones, a government lending executive at Bank of America.

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Is the FHA Home Loan Program Helping Families Save Their Homes Act Working

03.15.09

The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act also contains a mixture of other housing and financial provisions, including a vain attempt to “fix” the failed FHA Hope for Homeowners program that Congress passed last summer. These include:  Liability waivers for mortgage servicers that modify home mortgages. Mortgage servicers receive payments from mortgages and forward them (after fees) to the owners of the mortgage loans.

 

As the main contact with homeowners, mortgage service companies should be able to refinance or modify mortgage loans in order to ensure that the owners get the best possible return, but many fear that unhappy banks that own the mortgage notes would sue them. The legislation provides these home loan servicing companies with a safe harbor so long as they act within certain specified boundaries.  Making $250,000 FDIC and NCUA deposit insurance levels permanent. Just last fall, Congress increased deposit insurance coverage by FDIC and NCUA to $250,000 until December 2009. This bill makes that change permanent and also increases the agencies’ borrowing authority to cover their losses.


In an effort to correct the Hope for Homeowners program, last summer, Congress created Hope for Homeowners, an FHA loan based program that it originally claimed would help up to 2 million homeowners. To date, according to the FHA, it has actually helped about 500 homeowners. The legislation makes a number of changes that will raise the cost of it by $2.3 billion but is unlikely to otherwise improve it. This would throw good money after bad.

 

Preventing predatory mortgage lenders from taking advantage of FHA home loan programs

Section 203 of H.R. 1106 makes it easier for FHA to stop predatory lenders from underwriting FHA-guaranteed home loans. This mortgage initiative is a needed reform.

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John Taylor on FHAs Hope for Homeowners and Loan Relief

03.08.09

John Taylor, President & CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, testified on the introduction of H.R. 703 and the need for a broader-scale loan modification program such as FHA Hope for Homeowners and Homeowners Emergency Loan Program (HELP Now).

NCRC’s John Taylor Testifies on HR703 with Improvements for FHA’s Hope for Homeowners  

 

We need the federal government to exercise its authority to purchase troubled assets in an effort to fight off the foreclosure crisis and the need for enhanced consumer protection through comprehensive anti-predatory lending legislation.  HUD continues to enhance FHA loan programs to meet the needs of homeowners.

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