Mortgage Guidelines Get Tougher

by Dan Krell
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Like bears awakening from their hibernation, home buyers are slowly emerging from the holiday season and begin to look for a home to purchase. Many home buyers will find that that the challenge of buying a home this year will be more than finding the perfect home, but finding financing. Many home buyers expecting the mortgage process to be quick and painless may find that it is neither quick nor painless; others, expecting to be approved with a sub-prime mortgage, will be turned down. In the recent past, most home buyers found a way to obtain financing; this year may be different as the mortgage crisis fallout has changed the way lenders underwrite their programs.

Ask anyone in the mortgage industry and they will tell you that the entire mortgage landscape has changed. Some popular mortgage programs are no longer available, while other programs have been significantly changed. It may be a challenge for home buyers to locate a lender that offers a reduced documentation mortgage. These programs still exist, but have more restrictive guidelines; reduced documentation mortgages are requiring more verifications, higher credit scores and larger down payments.

Self employed home buyers will find that the popular “No Doc” is no longer available. The “No Doc” loan required no documentation or verifications from the borrower, hence the name. Although the program typically required a higher credit score, the “No Doc” loan was popular with self employed borrowers because employment, income, or asset verifications were not required.

Home buyers who need a low or no doc loan will have to look hard for alternatives. Most “liar loans” are no longer offered, or are offered with some type of verification. If you come across a stated income mortgage program, be prepared to sign an IRS form 4506 that will allow the mortgage company to verify the stated income. You should also expect a higher down payment and a higher than average interest rate.

As a way to assist home buyers with less than perfect credit, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac created their expanded criteria programs in the mid to late 1990’s. These programs offered these home buyers a mortgage with minimal down payment and a reasonable interest rate; however the interest rate varied on the borrower’s credit score. However, like other mortgage programs, these expanded programs have also changed their requirements which include, among other items, increasing credit score requirements.

As the sub-prime mortgage industry has all but dried up, the FHA mortgage (HUD.gov) has picked up the pace. But even the venerable FHA loan is changing; FHA approved lenders are also tightening up their lending guidelines (in anticipation of new FHA guidelines). Some of the changes include credit score driven approvals as well as variable loan pricing (the interest rate will vary based on the borrower’s credit score).

For home buyers considering purchasing a home this spring (or any other time), talking to a lender should be their first priority. The mortgage crisis has changed the way mortgage lenders operate, including how lenders view borrowers. Home buyers should be prepared to provide more documentation and information to their lenders, as well as a possible higher down payment.

This article is not intended to provide nor should it be relied upon for legal and financial advice. This article was originally published in the Montgomery County Sentinel the week of January 14, 2008. Copyright © 2008 Dan Krell.

FHA Comes of age

by Dan Krell

Congress recently passed H.R. 1852, The Expanding American Homeownership Act of 2007. The act is a move forward for a seventy-three year old program federal program called the Federal Housing Administration, also known as the FHA. The recent legislation was devised in the spirit of the FHA and looks to assist millions to obtain home ownership.

The FHA mortgage program (administered through the department of Housing and Urban Development since 1965) was created in 1934 when about only ten percent of Americans owned their home. At a time when home buyers needed a fifty percent down payment to obtain a three year balloon mortgage, the FHA’s progressive mortgage programs provided a spark for the nation’s stagnant housing industry (HUD.gov).

Through the years, the FHA provided progressive programs to assist those in need. The FHA took part in financing military housing in the 1940’s. During the 1950’s and 1960’s, the FHA made funds available for adult, handicapped, and low income apartments. When rising inflation and energy costs threatened many apartment buildings in the 1970’s, the FHA made emergency funds available to assist in keeping these properties operational. In the 1980’s, when lenders pulled out of oil producing states because of falling home prices, the FHA offered mortgages to those who could not otherwise buy a home.

H.R. 1852 comes at a time when the mortgage industry is in crisis and home ownership is threatened for those who need financing alternatives. The bill expands the mortgage program to offer more financing options as well as increasing FHA mortgage originators.

Reforming the FHA mortgage program will expand the program and allow home buyers who do not qualify for a conforming loan (Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac) have access to alternatives to sub-prime lending. The FHA mortgage program will be expanded by increasing loan limits, eliminating the three percent down payment requirement, and implementing a risk based pricing system.

When home buyers do not qualify for a conforming loan, they turn to a sub-prime lender. Unfortunately, many sub-prime mortgages have high interest rates and other possible unfavorable terms. By increasing FHA loan limits in high cost areas these home buyers would possibly be able to obtain more favorable mortgage rates and terms through FHA.

Additionally, many first-time home buyers do not have the funds for a down payment or closing costs. These home buyers are typically driven to the sub-prime mortgage market as well. However, eliminating the FHA three percent down payment requirement will allow many more home buyers to obtain a FHA mortgage as well.

Many credit worthy home buyers who do not qualify for conforming mortgages due to mitigating circumstances are also forced to use sub-prime lending. Implementing risk based pricing may allow many of these home buyers to obtain a more favorable mortgage through FHA.

Presently many mortgage brokers do not originate FHA mortgages because of the restrictions and rigorous qualifications. However, increasing mortgage broker participation by reducing broker requirements and eliminating mandatory auditing would increase home buyer access to the FHA program.

The expansion of FHA programs may seem counterintuitive in a time when the industry is in turmoil. However, these reforms to a venerable housing program are welcome by many as well as being reminiscent to its legacy of commitment to home ownership.

This column is not intended to provide nor should it be relied upon for legal and financial advice. This article was originally published in the Montgomery County Sentinel the week of May 14, 2007. Copyright © Dan Krell 2007.