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Posts tagged ‘FHA loans’

14
Sep

FHA Loan Limits

San Diego real estate agent

San Diego real estate agent

In just two weeks, the availability of safe, affordable, reliable mortgage financing will diminish. If this happens, many home buyers run the risk of being priced out of the American Dream of home ownership. Even worse, this could hold back the housing recovery. Read more »

13
Jun

FHA’s 90-day Property Anti-Flipping Rule

FHA home loans

FHA home loans

In January, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) instituted a one-year moratorium on the FHA’s 90-day anti-flipping rule. As a result, beginning Feb. 1, buyers could use FHA-insured financing to purchase properties resold through private developers and investors, providing access to a broader array of recently foreclosed properties. Under the temporary waiver all transactions must be arm’s-length, and most properties will require additional documentation of improvements and justification of the price increase. Additional documentation may include a second appraisal and a property inspection ordered by the lender. Read more »

2
May

New FHA Home Loan Changes

  • In January, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) instituted a one-year moratorium on the FHA’s 90 day anti-flipping rule. As a result, beginning Feb. 1, buyers could use FHA-insured financing to purchase properties resold though private developers and investors, providing access to a broader array of recently foreclosed properties. Under the temporary waiver, all transactions must be arms length, and most properties will require additional documentation or improvements and justification of the price increase. Additional documentation may include a second appraisal and a property inspection ordered by the lender.
  • FHA loans come with mortgage insurance, regardless of the down payment, for at least five years, and the premium drops off only when the loan amount hits 78 percent of the purchase price. The Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premium was raised in January from 1.78 percent of the loan amount to 2.25 percent, starting April 5, 2010.
  • Three to eight month’s worth of property taxes are collected at closing, depending on the month of closing, to set up a mandatory impound account for property taxes.
  • The minimum down payment requires is 3.5 percent, which can be fully gifted from help from friends and family.
  • New borrowers will be required to have a minimum FICO score of 580 to qualify for the FHA’s 3.5 percent down payment program. New borrowers will less than a 580 FICO scored will be required to put down at least 10 percent. FHA expects this to take effect in early summer after it goes through the normal regulatory process.                                         San Diego estate planning lawyers
10
Mar

New FHA Home Mortgage Rules

FHA home loans

FHA home loans

Today, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) issues apprx. 40% of home mortgages. On April 5, the FHA Up-Front Mortgage insurance premium increase goes into effect.  The FHA is raising up its  upfront mortgage insurance premium to 2.25 percent from 1.75 percent, boosting the minimum down payment to 10 percent for borrowers with a credit score of 580 and below (it stays at 3.5 percent for everyone else), and reducing permissible seller concessions from 6 percent to 2 percent.

Read more »

1
Feb

FHA Home Loan Policy Changes

FHA home loans

FHA home loans

The new FHA policy changes are as follows:

1)  Borrowers with less than 580 credit scores will be required to put 10% down instead of 3.5%.

2)  Upfront mortgage insurance, MI, will increase to 2.25% from 1.75%.

3)  The maximum seller contribution is now 3% rather than 6%.

4)  Lenders will now be graded and performance reported.  Lenders found violating FHA rules will no longer be allowed to make FHA loans.

To understand the reasons behind these changes, I would suggest one read my 9-20-09 post “FHA Home Loans in Worst Shape in 75 Year History” or my 12-16-08 post “FHA Home Loans – The Next Bailout?

San Diego California real estate lawyers

20
Sep

FHA Home Loans in Worst Shape in 75 Year History

FHA home loans

FHA home loans

This latest FHA loan news should come as nothing new for all our long time readers. On 12-16-08 I published a post entitled  FHA Home Loans – The Next Bailout? and than on 7-2-09, I published: FHA Home Loans Headed for Trouble? Just yesterday,  the FHA said its financial reserves had sunk below mandatory levels for the first time in its 75-year history. While officials insist the agency won’t require a taxpayer rescue, falling home prices, rising unemployment and shady lenders continue to drive up default rates.

Read more »

2
Jul

FHA Home Loans Headed for Trouble?

On 12-16-08 I published a post entitled FHA Home Loans – The Next Bailout? . In that post I noted that the FHA insurance fund had dropped 39% since last year, raising concerns for the FHA requiring its own bailout. Currently, I’m receiving information from FHA insiders that since March, FHA loans are going from current status to 30 days delinquent on a monthly basis almost as fast as sub-prime, and certainly worse than any of the other types of loans.

FHA home loans allow borrowers to buy a home with only 3.5% of the sales price as a down payment (and that can be a gift). The seller can pay all the closing costs (up to 6% of the sales price which usually covers all closing fees and escrows for taxes and insurance). HUD does not require monthly payment reserves in the event the borrower gets laid off, gets hurt and is out of work or incurs some other financial stress. In some cases, the 3.5% down is ALL they have. No safety net is a big problem. In addition many of the people getting FHA mortgages tend to be lower on the socioeconomic scale and are blue collar workers. This leads to higher percentages of layoffs, firings, and injuries which can have a dramatic impact on income.

When you make high loan to value ratio loans the default rate rises. This is very predictable and therefore you must assume that this is a policy choice by FHA leadership. We will pay for this as usual.

The facts are simple. As an American, you do not have the right to OWN a home. Life choices and social status should limit a purchase such as this, just as one would with regards to a yacht.

When food, gas, and utility costs go through the roof with Cap and Trade, more people will be renting. We have to start facing the facts here.

Another FHA loan problem seems to be the fact that many real estate investors used sub-prime loans to flip their properties. However, the sub-prime  loans have vanished and it’s speculated that now these real estate speculators are using FHA loans. To flip their properties, these real estate speculators  gift the borrower the 3.5% down payment, pay their closing costs, even do credit repair to put buyers into their property, so they can turn a quick profit. A lot of this is done with fake pay stubs, W-2’s and falsified gifts. These straw buyers make a few payments and then default.

Even if the buyer’s intent is to make the payments,  many of them are obviously failing at being responsible homeowners.

San Diego home listings

4
Jun

FHA To Allow $8k Credit to be used for Purchase Fees

San Diego California real estate

San Diego California real estate

U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan recently announced that the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) will allow home buyers to apply the administration’s new $8,000 first-time home buyer tax credit toward the purchase costs of a FHA-insured home. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 offers home buyers a tax credit of up to $8,000 for purchasing their first home. Families can only access this credit after filing their tax returns with the IRS. Home buyers using FHA-approved lenders can apply the tax credit to their down payment in excess of 3.5 percent of appraised value or their closing costs, which can help achieve a lower interest rate.

Currently, borrowers applying for an FHA-insured mortgage are required to make a minimum 3.5 percent down payment on the purchase of their home. Current law does not permit approved lenders to monetize the tax credit to meet the required 3.5 percent minimum down payment, but, under the terms of the announcement, lenders can now monetize the tax credit for use as additional down payment, or for other closing costs, which can help achieve a lower interest rate.

San Diego housing market
26
Dec

California existing home sales increased 83.2% in November

California home saleWho says the laws of supply and demand do not work in today's real estate market? California home sales increased 83.2 percent in November compared with the same period a year ago, according to the latest housing report from the California Association of Realtors.

In my opinion, the main factors for this huge pick up in real estate sales are the very attractive prices combined with exceptional low 30 year fixed rate mortgages and the availibality of 3% down FHA financing.

From my estimates, the majority of these existing home sales are foreclosures or pre-forclosures. Plus, keep in mind, a pick up in sales is only the first step in forming a bottom to our real estate bust. 

The other part of the California Association of Realtors report shows the median price of an existing, single-family detached home in California during November 2008 was $285,680, a 41.8 percent decrease from the revised $490,511 median for November 2007. The November 2008 median price fell 5.3 percent compared with October's revised $301,740 median price.                                                    San Diego Realtors

27
Aug

Must One be an Attorney to Understand the FHASecure Program?

In Mortgagee Letter 2007-11, the Federal Housing Administration announced FHASecure, a temporary initiative to permit lenders to refinance delinquent adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) and/or to offer new subordinate financing where the combined loan-to-value ratio exceeds the applicable FHA loan-to-value ratio and geographical maximum mortgage amount. 

The Department has decided to expand FHASecure as follows: To include borrowers delinquent on their non-FHA ARMs due to a rate reset or the occurrence of an extenuating circumstance but experienced no more than two 30-day or one 60-day late payment in the 12 months prior to the rate reset or extenuating circumstance that caused the delinquency; or to include borrowers delinquent on their non-FHA ARMs due to a rate reset or the occurrence of an extenuating circumstance but experienced no more than one 90-day late payment or no more than three 30-day late payments prior to the=2 0rate reset or extenuating circumstance that caused the delinquency provided the loan-to-value on the FHA insured first mortgages does not exceed 90 percent.

Borrowers delinquent on their interest-only and/or payment option ARMs are not eligible for this expansion. Borrowers with these types of mortgages must demonstrate that a rate reset caused the delinquency and that they were making the monthly mortgage payments within the month due during the 6 months prior to the rate reset. For borrowers refinancing delinquent non-FHA ARMs the Up-front mortgage insurance premium (UFMIP) is set at 2.25 percent of the base loan amount (loan amount excluding UFMIP) regardless of the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio. For LTV ratios greater than 95 percent (excluding UFMIP) the Annual premium (collected monthly) is set at .55 percent. This mortgagee letter replaces the specific guidance regarding FHASecure issued in Mortgagee Letter 2007-11 and is effective for case numbers assigned on or after July 14, 2008.

Many thanks to our guest author, Mr.Greg Brooks Southwest area manager San Diego Mortgage Network for this enlightening post.   A few our prior popular posts on the FHA were:  

Summary of the “Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008

FHA Takes $4.6 BILLION Hit … It’s Just Taxpayer Money

Fed Approves New Rules For Mortgage Loans … Too Little Too Late

A NEW LOOK AT FLIPPING PROPERTIES & FHA

Goverment to Use FHA Bail Out Homeowners

Goverment’s FHASecure Refinances 200,000th Mortgage

FHA Home Mortgage Insurance Claims Skyrocket

FHA Boost Loan Limits to $729,750 For California