FHA Proposes Loosening its Flipping Rules

January 20, 2010

By Dean Tucker, Waterstone Mortgage – Prime Equity Group in Boise Idaho

It appears that starting February 1st, 2010, HUD / FHA is going to loosen their guidelines pertaining to property flips.

THIS IS HUGE!!! According to HUD’s Shaun Donovan, some of the restrictions will be temporarily lifted beginning February 1st to further promote home sales. Here are some basic guidelines we have been able to research:

  • The transaction must be “Arms Length”.
  • The seller MUST hold title to the property at the time of the sale.
  • There shall be no pattern or previous property flipping in the past 12 months.
  • The property must be marketed openly and freely (i.e. MLS).
  • If the home being “flipped” has a new sales price that is 20% + greater than the previous purchase price, then the seller must document any repairs and rehabilitation performed on the home and/or a 2nd appraisal will be needed and requested. (In these cases it should be expected that a home inspection will be required as well. Currently, FHA does not require home inspections OR termite / WDO inspections unless the contract calls for them. FHA only recommends the buyer order these services.)

Waterstone Mortgage Corporation is a true Mortgage Bankers, we underwrite and fund loans for over 30 of the top mortgage lenders in the country, the “Who’s Who” in mortgage lending. Our parent company, Waterstone  Bank, is $1.9 Billion strong.

(Home)


FHA Announces Major Changes, Effective Immediately

January 20, 2010

By Dean Tucker, Waterstone Mortgage – Prime Equity Group in Boise idaho

This morning the FHA announced a series of changes designed to protect the federal agency that has emerged as the cornerstone of the mortgage market as the housing sector wobbles toward recovery. 

Consumers, Lenders and Realtors may find some of these new rules painful — but necessary.  With FHA hovering around 40% of all new loan originations, even these small changes have a major impact on the continued health of the housing market.

Mortgage insurance premium (MIP) will be increased to build up capital reserves and bring back private lending.

  • The first step will be to raise the up-front MIP from 1.75% to 2.25% and request legislative authority to increase the maximum annual (paid monthly) MIP that the FHA can charge.
  • If this authority is granted, then the second step will be to shift some of the premium increase from the up-front MIP to the annual MIP.
  • This shift will allow for the capital reserves to increase with less impact to the consumer, because the annual MIP is paid over the life of the loan instead of at the time of closing
  • The initial up-front increase is included in a Mortgagee Letter to be released tomorrow, January 21st, and will go into effect in the spring.

Update the combination of FICO scores and down payments for new borrowers.

  • New borrowers will now be required to have a minimum FICO score of 580 to qualify for FHA’s 3.5% down payment program. New borrowers with less than a 580 FICO score will be required to put down at least 10%.
  • This allows the FHA to better balance its risk and continue to provide access for those borrowers who have historically performed well.
  • This change will be posted in the Federal Register in February and, after a notice and comment period, would go into effect in the early summer.

Reduce allowable seller concessions from 6% to 3%

  • The current level exposes the FHA to excess risk by creating incentives to inflate appraised value. This change will bring FHA into conformity with industry standards on seller concessions.
  • This change will be posted in the Federal Register in February, and after a notice and comment period, would go into effect in the early summer.

Waterstone Mortgage Corporation is a true Mortgage Bankers, we underwrite and fund loans for over 30 of the top mortgage lenders in the country, the “Who’s Who” in mortgage lending. Our parent company, Waterstone  Bank, is $1.9 Billion strong.

(Home)


New rules at FHA could change the way first time home buyers in Boise Idaho purchase homes.

January 19, 2010

David Stevens bought his first home almost 25 years ago, paying just 3% down with a loan backed by the Federal Housing Administration. “I had no money in the bank,” he says. “If it weren’t for the FHA, I wouldn’t have gotten that home.”

Now, as FHA commissioner, Mr. Stevens has to decide how many others to let through that door. Souring FHA-insured mortgages are threatening the agency’s finances. Congress is pressuring him to tighten the easy-money standards that once helped people like him, and he is expected to announce revisions as early as this week.

But raising the credit bar could have a dangerous side effect. In many of the nation’s hardest-hit housing markets, the FHA backs around half of all new home loans. If the agency pulls back too quickly, the nascent housing recovery could fizzle, endangering the economy.

The dilemma puts the 52-year-old former mortgage banker squarely in the middle of the debate over how much the government should do to prop up the housing market, and how much risk taxpayers should take on to do it.

“How big a role do we need to play to keep the housing system functioning?” says Mr. Stevens, referring to the FHA. “Overcorrecting in either direction would be a terrible thing to do right now.”

Mr. Stevens is finalizing possible revisions to credit standards. Options include raising the minimum down payment, establishing a minimum credit score, increasing the amount that borrowers have to pay for mortgage insurance, and reducing the amount of money sellers can kick in for closing costs.

The FHA, created in 1934 to heal the U.S. housing market during the Great Depression, traditionally has helped first-time home buyers and underserved segments of the market. It doesn’t lend money to home buyers, but insures lenders against default on loans that meet FHA criteria, collecting fees for that backing. For decades, thanks to a stable housing market, it turned a profit for taxpayers.

When the housing market was booming, subprime lenders drew away many of the borrowers who traditionally used FHA-backed loans by offering even more favorable terms. Unlike the FHA, subprime lenders didn’t require borrowers to document their incomes. The FHA saw its share of the mortgage market fall to 2% in 2006.

(More) (Home)


Taming the Wild West of FHA Lending

January 14, 2010

Some lenders fault the Department of Housing and Urban Development‘s plan to strengthen the Federal Housing Administration for — of all things — reducing regulation.

Waterstone Mortgage has a networth the exceeds the highest requirement as proposed by HUD.

HUD Secretary Shawn Donovan‘s road map, laid out in congressional testimony last month, was widely viewed as an attempt to raise the bar for companies to do business with FHA. Lenders’ net-worth requirements would rise, for example.

But critics of the proposal say HUD’s attempt to shift responsibility for supervising mortgage brokers from the department to FHA-approved lenders would eventually have the effect of lowering market standards. These lenders are urging HUD to keep its current requirement that brokers of FHA loans maintain a minimum net worth and provide the government with audited financial statements, just as lenders do.

Forcing lenders to monitor brokers without maintaining certain standards would result in a “race to the bottom,” said John Johnson, the president and chief executive of MortgageAmerica Inc., a Birmingham, Ala., lender.

Some lenders would ultimately give up standards to increase production, forcing others to do the same to compete, and repeating the cycle that helped to inflate the last housing bubble, he said.

“There should still be some standards to participate in FHA,” Johnson said. “Unless FHA revises the rule to include audited financials, then that will be the end of them because I can’t require them if the competition doesn’t.”

Similarly, Kevin Marconi, the chief operating officer at United Fidelity Funding, a wholesale and retail lender in Kansas City, Mo., said that rather than scrapping the net-worth minimum for brokers — as HUD has proposed doing — it should raise that requirement from the current $63,000 to somewhere between $100,000 and $150,000.

That would “weed out a lot of fly-by-night broker shops,” Marconi said.

Weeding out the chaff — among lenders and brokers — is certainly one of HUD’s goals.

Since the subprime market imploded in 2007, the FHA, once a mortgage industry backwater, has seen its volume explode.

FHA loans are pretty much the only product lenders can offer most borrowers who have little money for a down payment (unless they qualify for the government’s loan programs for veterans or rural residents).

FHA lending now accounts for 30% of all residential mortgages written, up from 3% in 2006, said Brian Chappelle, a partner at Potomac Partners, a Washington consulting firm.

Higher volume and share has come with higher defaults and losses. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, 8.67% of FHA loans were 90 days overdue or in foreclosure at the end of the third quarter, up from 5.66% three years earlier. In November, a long-awaited audit showed that in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the FHA’s capital reserve ratio had fallen to 0.53%, well below the congressionally mandated minimum of 2%.

The FHA now says it attracted companies with questionable practices during the growth spurt.

“The mortgage industry is coming out of an unprecedented period where unscrupulous players and institutions without capital, virtually anybody could put out a shingle and call themselves a mortgage lender,” Dave Stevens, the FHA’s commissioner, said in an interview in December.

The agency has stepped up enforcement actions against FHA lenders, including two that collapsed last year, Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. and Ideal Mortgage Bankers Ltd., better known as Lend America.

Opponents and supporters of HUD’s proposed rule agree on one thing: It would make the government mortgage market look more like the conventional one, as large bank-owned lenders gained share.

“HUD wants the bigger, more sophisticated, better-capitalized players out there,” said Paul T. Bossidy, the president and CEO of Clayton Holdings LLC, a Shelton, Conn., company that provides underwriting, due diligence and other services to lenders. The agency is looking for companies with the resources to invest in training and technology, he said.

As a wholly-owned subsidiary of a mid-sized depository Bank, Waterstone Mortgage is a fully approved HUD-FHA Lender. Our networth exceeds the higher $2.5M that HUD is proposing. The raised requirements are an excellent way to improve loan quality and help strengthen HUDs balance sheet. — Dean Tucker

Many small lenders said the proposed hike to their minimum net worth would put them out of business. HUD wants to raise the requirement from $250,000 to $2.5 million over three years. That would disqualify 70% of the FHA’s current roster of lenders (assuming none of them raised their net worth in the meantime).

“Big banks have a lot of expenses and no need to be competitive,” said Jeff Lewis, the chairman of Generation Mortgage Co., an Atlanta lender. “But there’s a mind-set right now in Washington that the best way to protect consumers is to restrict competition.”

Yet even some of the largest lenders want HUD to let brokers continue closing loans in their own name and maintain case numbers, to help the Goliaths manage their own risk.

For example, many lenders said they rely on the FHA’s Neighborhood Watch Web site to monitor and compare the default ratios of brokers.

“If HUD stopped providing compare ratios for correspondents, it is quite possible that loan quality would suffer,” Rick Aneshansel, the chief financial officer at U.S. Bank Home Mortgage, a unit of U.S. Bancorp, wrote in a comment letter — one of about 250 HUD has received since it issued the proposed rule in November.

David Moskowitz, deputy general counsel at Wells Fargo & Co., recommended in a comment letter that HUD maintain a recertification program for brokerages that includes background checks of key officers and directors and an assurance that brokers are not on any previous list of debarment.

Other changes to the FHA are coming quickly this year as well. Donovan has indicated that HUD may try to raise the current cap on annual mortgage insurance premiums, which would require congressional approval.

Policymakers also are considering increasing the minimum down payment for FHA borrowers and adopting a minimum FICO score for the first time.


Some Federal Reserve Policymakers Conflicted

January 12, 2010

Some Federal Reserve policymakers last month were conflicted over whether to expand or cut back a program intended to drive down mortgage rates and bolster the housing market, according to a document released Wednesday.

Waterstone Mortgage - Prime Equity Group brings the latest FHA and IHFA Mortgage News to Bosie Idaho

Minutes of the Fed’s closed-door meeting on Dec. 15-16 revealed that a “few members” thought that the Fed’s $1.25trillion program to buy mortgage securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac might need to be expanded and extended beyond its current end date of March 31. Such an additional dose of stimulus would be especially needed if the economic recovery were to weaken, they argued.

However, one member thought the program could be “scaled back” given the improvement in economic and financial conditions.

The debate over the future of the program comes amid uncertainties about the vigor of the budding economic recovery.

At the December meeting, Fed policymakers decided not to make any changes to the program. At their September meeting, they opted to slow the pace of the purchases, wrapping them up by the end of March, rather than the end of 2009.

The minutes don’t identify speakers by name but seeks to provide a more detailed account of the Fed’s private discussions.

Some Fed officials remained concerned about the economy’s ability to mount a self-sustaining recovery once government supports are removed. To that end, those officials worried that improvements seen in the housing market might be “undercut” this year as the Fed’s mortgage-buying program winds down, the government’s home buyer tax credits expire at the end of April and home foreclosures grow.

Getting the housing market back on firm footing is a key ingredient to a lasting recovery. The collapse of the housing market, which dragged down home prices with it, was the catalyst for the longest and worst recession to hit the country since the 1930s.

“Generally the outlook was for gains in housing activity to continue. However, some participants still viewed the improved outlook as quite tentative and again pointed to potential sources of softness,” the minutes said.

To nurture the recovery, the Fed at the December meeting kept its key bank lending rate at a record low near zero and pledged to hold it there for an “extended period.” The goal: low interest rates will entice people and businesses to boost spending, which will fuel economic growth.

RATES REMAIN NEAR ZERO: Fed left rates unchanged at Dec. meeting

Economists said the Fed is all but certain to leave rates at record lows at its next meeting on Jan. 26-27 and probably for a good chunk of this year.

“Overall, there is nothing here to suggest that interest rates will rise for quite some time,” Paul Ashworth, economist at Capital Economics., said of the Fed minutes. Ashworth is among the economists predicting economic growth will slow in the second half of this year as President Barack Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package of tax cuts and increased government spending fades.

Most Fed officials don’t currently see inflation as a problem because companies have “little ability to raise their prices” in the fragile economic environment. But they had mixed views about inflation risks.

Some noted that rising prices of oil and other commodities could boost inflation pressures down the road. Others thought investors’ expectations of inflation could edge up because of large federal government budget deficits and vast sums of money the Fed pumped into the economy to fight the financial crisis.

However, others predicted that the sluggish recovery and “slack” in the economy — meaning factories operating well below capacity and the weak labor market — would keep inflation under wraps.

At the December meeting, Fed staff gave several presentations on research into “inflation dynamics.”

The biggest challenge facing Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues is to decide when to start boosting interest rates. Moving too soon could short-circuit the recovery. Waiting too long could unleash inflation.


NAR Survey Shows First-Time Home Buyers Set Record in Past Year

December 10, 2009

First-time home buyers reached the highest market share on record during the past year, according to the latest consumer survey of home buyers and sellers. The study was released here today at the 2009 REALTORS® Conference & Expo.

The 2009 National Association of Realtors® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers is the latest in a series of large national NAR surveys evaluating demographics, preferences, marketing and experiences of recent home buyers and sellers. Among national surveys, NAR’s Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers is unprecedented in size and scope.

Paul Bishop, NAR vice president of research, said several factors have been at play. “Tax incentives, record high affordability conditions and a pent-up demand brought a record share of first-time home buyers into the market,” he said. “These buyers are critical to housing and a general economic recovery because the market always heals from the bottom up – they absorb inventory, free existing owners to make a trade and stimulate related goods and services.”
The number of first-time home buyers rose to 47 percent of all home sales from 41 percent of transactions in last year’s study, and was the highest on record dating back to 1981. The previous high was 44 percent in 1991. “It’s interesting to note the last cyclical peak of first-time home buyers was during the last noteworthy economic downturn, with first-time buyers starting the chain reaction that led the nation out of recession,” Bishop said.

Find me at: (Home)


Forecast Hopeful with First-Time Home Buyers Leading the Way

December 10, 2009

(Boise Idaho) Aided by the home buyer tax credit, the outlook for housing and the economy appears headed for a sustainable recovery, according to the National Association of Realtors®.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the projections are enhanced by a tax credit expansion to more home buyers through the middle of 2010. “Given the success of the first-time buyer tax credit to date, and the need for qualified buyers to continue to absorb inventory that will include additional foreclosures over the coming year, we are hopeful about the impact of the expanded tax credit because it will stabilize home prices,” he said. “In fact, the credit is working better than first projected – it now looks like we’ll have 2.3 to 2.4 million first-time buyers this year.”
A large consumer study being released later today, the 2009 National Association of Realtors® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, shows first-time buyers accounted for a record 47 percent share of home sales over the past year, up from 41 percent in the 2008 survey. The share has risen steadily since a cyclical low of 36 percent in 2006.
Existing-home sales are expected to total 5.01 million in 2009, a gain of 2.0 percent over last year, and then are forecast to rise 13.6 percent to 5.69 million in 2010. “A steady draw down of inventory will help home values to turn positive in 2010, but risks such as unemployment remain in the economy,” Yun said.
New-home sales are projected at 397,000 this year, recovering to 549,000 in 2010. Housing starts, including multifamily units, should total 564,000 units this year but grow to 752,000 in 2010.
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage will probably average 5.3 percent in the fourth quarter, rising gradually to 5.8 percent by the end of next year. NAR’s housing affordability index will set a record in 2009, averaging 30 percentage points higher than 2008. Affordability will decline from record highs next year but will remain at historically attractive levels for home buyers.
“We’ve seen a steady downtrend in housing inventory for well over a year and home prices appears to be in the early stages of stabilizing. With expansion of the tax credit to additional buyers through the middle of next year, and no major unforeseen events impacting the economy, home prices should rise between 3 and 5 percent in 2010, but with wide geographic differences,” Yun said.
He expects growth in the U.S. gross domestic product to be at a pace of 2.5 percent in the current quarter, with GDP up 2.8 percent in 2010.
The unemployment rate is close to peaking and is projected to ease to 9.5 percent by the end of next year.
“The size of the U.S. budget deficit is a concern going forward, and carries the risk of higher inflation. At this point, that risk appears to be restrained,” Yun said. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, is seen contracting 0.4 percent this year, then rising 1.6 percent in 2010. Inflation-adjusted disposable personal income is estimated to grow 0.4 percent this year and 1.2 percent next year.
The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.2 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

Find me at: (Home)


FHA Head Praises Realtor Role in Recovery

December 10, 2009

Realtors® are the face of the housing market, the focal point of information, involvement and inventory, and the Federal Housing Administration is committed to help them be successful, FHA Housing Commissioner Dave Stevens told more than 1,000 Realtors® at a gathering here today.
“You help to stabilize the community, and without homeownership, there can be no stability in communities,” Stevens said. “Together, we must never let overexuberance overtake the housing market again, and interrupt the housing market and the lives of untold millions of Americans. Our goal must be nothing less than to craft a solid, sustainable housing market, a market with a secure foundation for the future.”
Stevens said he and Shaun Donovan, secretary of the Housing and Urban Development, recognize that the National Association of Realtors has been at the forefront of efforts to address the housing crisis, and he has met with NAR on several occasions to consider their concerns. FHA has taken direct action on a number of those concerns.
Stevens announced that effective Monday, Nov. 16, FHA will no longer require a second appraisal on high-balance loans for properties in declining markets. “We did not find our previous policy to be particularly helpful and were very concerned about the additional burden on lenders and consumers,” Stevens said. He noted the policy change will bring industry alignment, streamline loan processing and reduce costs to consumers.

Find me at: (Home Page)


FHA boss: FHA is not the new subprime

November 16, 2009

SAN DIEGO (AP) – Federal Housing Administration Commissioner David Stevens said Saturday that concerns the agency is headed for the same financial trouble that snared Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the subprime sector are unwarranted.

Stevens made the remarks during a speech at the National Association of Realtors’ annual conference and expo in San Diego.

His comments come days after the agency revealed its financial reserves have fallen to a dangerously low level due to more homeowners defaulting on their loans. The FHA does not make loans, but rather offers insurance against default.

That’s led to mounting concerns that it will eventually need an infusion of cash like government-controlled mortgage finance companies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

But Stevens sought to dampen those concerns, noting that despite the most severe housing recession in decades, the agency has $31 billion in capital – $3.5 billion more than it had a year ago.

FHA is “the only participant in home financing services in the U.S. economy that hasn’t needed a bailout, hasn’t needed (funds from the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program), hasn’t needed special assistance and is still completely self-sustaining,” Stevens said.

“Without FHA there would be no (housing) market, and this economy’s recovery would be significantly slower,” he said.

The FHA has insured nearly a quarter of all new loans made this year, and about 80 percent of that business is from first-time homebuyers.

The agency’s dominant role in first-time home purchases has raised questions about whether it taking on too much risk. Some have drawn comparisons between FHA and the subprime market, which collapsed due to homebuyer defaults on risky loans.

Stevens rejected such comparisons, stressing that the agency has far more stringent guidelines for the loans it insures.

“Nothing could be further from the truth,” he said.

FHA’s losses have increased with the unemployment rate as more homeowners default on their loans. About 17 percent of FHA borrowers are at least one payment behind or in foreclosure, compared with 13 percent for all loans, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

An independent audit shows FHA’s reserves have fallen to $3.6 billion, compared with $685 billion in outstanding insured loans for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30. That’s a ratio of 0.53 percent and far below the 2 percent threshold required by Congress.

(More)   (My Home)   (Twitter)


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.