FHA Home Loans Refinancing

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.

Stocks Rise After a Month-long Decline

10.14.08

Investors reacted enthusiastically to the U.S. government’s plans to spend $250 billion to buy stock in private banks. The Dow Jones industrial average rose about 120 points a day after its record 936-point jump. Investors are hoping that these extraordinary steps by the government will help revive the stagnant credit markets. The Dow’s advance Monday by far outpaced its previous record for a one-day advance, 499.19, scored during the last days of the dot-com boom in 2000.

President Bush said Tuesday the government will use a portion of the $700 billion bailout to inject capital into the nation’s major banks, which have been slammed by souring mortgage investments. The move follows a similar one announced Monday by European governments to invest about $2 trillion in their own troubled banks.

Stocks are seeing increases in the Asian and European markets, as well. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rose 3.19 percent, after a more than 10 percent increase on Monday. Japan’s Nikkei index, catching up from the country’s market holiday Monday, jumped 14.15 percent — the largest increase ever. In afternoon trading in Europe, Britain’s FTSE 100 jumped 5.57 percent, Germany’s DAX index rose 5.26 percent, and France’s CAC-40 rose 4.97 percent.

Banks appear to be growing somewhat more willing to lend to one another. The London interbank offered rate (LIBOR) for three-month dollar loans fell to 4.64 percent from 4.75 percent, after a 0.07 percentage point dip on Monday. LIBOR is important because many consumer loans, including about half of all adjustable-rate mortgages, are tied to it.  Even FHA home refinancing has slowed as borrowers wait to see what the Federal Reserve has up his sleeve.

“This begins to penetrate the core of the problem,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at New York-based brokerage house Avalon Partners Inc.  But, he said, “There will be a point in time where the euphoria of the bailout plan begins to wear off and the market begins to face reality. And that reality is likely to be a sour earnings season, and that the economy is in recession.”

All we can do is wait to see if the stock market continues its ascent and if banks begin FHA mortgage lending to consumers again. This won’t happen immediately, but at least there seems to be light at the end of the tunnel. At this point, conventional lenders are still not lending to anyone with a credit score of less than 700. If you’re looking to purchase or refinance your loan, FHA loans still remains the best bet.



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