Non-agency participants maintain that the reinstatement of emergency high-cost loan limits for FHA loans but not Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will not impede originations of non-agency jumbo mortgages. Meanwhile, some housing trade groups and congressmen representing high-cost districts continue to push for a reinstatement of the government-sponsored enterprises high-cost loan limits. In November, President Obama signed legislation that restored the maximum $729,750 loan limit for the highest-cost FHA markets ...
Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan this week told Congress that the FHA is considering a number of policy options, including further premium increases, to bolster the long-term health of the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. Testifying before the House Financial Services Committee, Donovan said he expects to address premium increases in HUDs FY 2013 budget proposal given the concerns raised by lawmakers regarding the impact of the reinstated maximum loan limits on the FHAs declining capital reserves. Having higher loan limits than Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will result in ...
Contrary to what critics claim about the recent increase in the FHAs loan limits, high-balance mortgage loans insured by FHA have shown historically lower delinquency rates and, therefore, pose no significant risk to taxpayers or the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, said Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan. Notwithstanding the agencys opposition to legislation reinstating the pre-Oct. 1 temporary maximum loan limits for FHA, Donovan said early evidence, so far, shows that high-balance loans perform better than other FHA-insured loans. Last month, Congress enacted legislation reinstating ...
Jumbo lenders do not expect the higher FHA loan limits to have any adverse impact on their GSE business. Anyone seeking a loan above $625,500 only has one choice, and that is FHA, but the real question is how much business the conventional market would lose to FHA, lenders said. In addition to the higher loan limit, the FHA insures loans of more than 80 percent loan-to-value ratio and requires a 3.5 percent downpayment. The GSEs require a 20 percent downpayment on their jumbos. On the other hand, the private market offers loans above the GSE limits but does not originate loans in excess of 80 percent LTV. For people seeking under-80 LTV loans, it is unlikely that ... [Includes one data chart]
A coalition of 34 industry trade and affordable housing groups, housing and community reinvestment advocates has endorsed the nomination of Carol Galante as the Department of Housing and Urban Developments deputy assistant secretary for housing and FHA commissioner.In a recent letter to both the chair and ranking minority member of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, the coalition voiced its strong support for Galante, who is currently serving in both positions on an acting basis. The coalition cited Galantes experience as well as her previous job as HUD assistant secretary for multifamily housing. Her backers also point to her 31-year experience in private real estate as president and chief executive of BRIDGE Housing, Californias largest nonprofit housing development corporation, and its affiliate companies. In particular, the coalition underscored ...
The seasonally adjusted delinquency rates for single-family FHA and VA mortgage loans fell in the third quarter of 2011 as did those for all other first-lien residential mortgages covered by the Mortgage Bankers Associations National Delinquency Survey. According to the survey, the third quarter saw a 45-basis point drop from 8.44 percent to 7.99 percent from the previous quarter in overall delinquencies on a seasonally adjusted basis. For FHA loans, the rate declined 53 bps to 12.09 percent from 12.62 percent, while VAs rate fell 47 basis points to 6.58 percent from 7.05 percent. On a year-over-year basis, the seasonally adjusted delinquency rate decreased ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is pondering its next move after a federal district court judge in Houston reversed a suspension order against Allied Home Mortgage Corp., an authorized FHA lender, and its chief executive officer, last week. In a Nov. 15 ruling, U.S. District Court Judge Melinda Harmon granted a motion by the Houston-based mortgage banker and its CEO, James Hodge, to temporarily stop HUD from enforcing a suspension of the plaintiffs authority to underwrite and originate FHA loans until a related lawsuit is resolved. On Nov. 1, the government intervened in a False...
President Obama this week signed into law a stop gap spending measure, which, among other things, reinstates temporary higher limits for loans insured by FHA. The minibus bill, which combines several appropriations bill, passed the house on a vote of 298-121. The Senate approved previously approved it 70-30. The measure raises the FHAs maximum loan limit back up to $729,750 after it had fallen to the permanent statutory level of $625,500 on Oct. 1, and extends it through the end of 2013. The new limit is effective immediately. After being extended three times in 2008, 2009 and 2010 the higher loan limits finally expired on Oct. 1 this year and were ...
The FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund for single-family loans again fell short of minimum capital standards, spurring renewed warnings of a taxpayer bailout if losses continue to mount. According to FHAs annual report to Congress on its financial status and the condition of the MMI Fund, reserves dropped to 0.24 percent in 2011 from 0.50 percent last year. This means that the agency is holding only $2.6 billion of excess reserves, down from $4.7 billion the year before, against roughly $1.1 trillion of FHA-insured loans. The report also noted that unless housing prices stabilize and losses drop, the fund has a 50 percent chance of a taxpayer bailout. The negative effects in the reports base case scenario were caused by ...
The fallout from Taylor, Bean & Whitakers collapse in 2009 continues to haunt Ginnie Mae after a recent independent auditors report found a potential overstatement of the agencys portfolio of mortgages-held-for-investment (MHFI) apparently linked to the TBW debacle.The report by Clifton Gunderson, a Fairfax, VA-based certified public accounting firm, attributes the apparent portfolio anomaly to the current document custodians failure to complete a review and provide a final certification on the non-performing TBW loans. Ginnie Mae repurchased the loans from the defaulted TBW mortgage-backed securities pools and reclassified them as MHFIs. Overall, independent auditors signed off on Ginnie Maes FY 2011 balance sheet and found no material weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting or any instance of noncompliance. Auditors, however, noted ...