Michael Clarkson is one of Denver's highest profile brokers. He’s been featured in Realtor® Magazine three separate times, Denver Post, Denver Business Journal, KOA Radio, KHOW Radio, and the Colorado Radio Network. Michael is a licensed Managing Broker in Colorado and a GRI (Graduate Realtor® Institute). He is also a partner in the firm, Cash Path Real Estate LLC. Michael has an MBA in International Business from Regis University in Denver.

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Sunday, May 20, 2007

So, When Would You Like to Schedule Your Foreclosure

Folks:

I came across this interesting article thanks to my good friend, and lender I highly regard and refer, Betsy Burns, at Englewood Mortgage Company.

 

You can contact Betsy directly at by clicking here. Or you can view here in my Professional Referrals page of my website: http://www.MileHighHomeHunter.com or http://www.MileHighForeclosure.com (for investors).

 

 

FHA steps in to emerging subprime lending void

Kenneth Harney

Sunday, March 18, 2007

(03-18) 04:00 PDT Washington -- With the subprime mortgage industry in virtual free fall, where do home buyers with less than perfect credit turn for financing?

The news reports are grim: Not only have dozens of subprime lenders closed their doors or cut back sharply on new mortgage offerings, but they're also severely tightening the loose underwriting standards that got them into trouble. As a result, many people who would have been approved for a loan months ago now find all the doors suddenly closed.

 

But here's some potentially helpful news: There is a mortgage source that is actually expanding its business nationwide for credit-impaired and first-time home purchasers. That source is the golden oldie of the mortgage arena -- the Federal Housing Administration, which recently has seen a doubling of customers refinancing out of private, subprime loans into its insured mortgage programs.

 

There's good reason: The FHA doesn't have problems with Wall Street investors who now see subprime mortgage bonds as toxic. FHA's bonds, by contrast, are gilt-edged and backed by the federal government, so there's no shortage of mortgage money.

Equally important: FHA-insured loans are more consumer-friendly than subprime offerings and come with interest costs roughly three percentage points below directly comparable subprime mortgages.

 

There are drawbacks, of course. FHA mortgage maximums top out just under $363,000. In the highest-cost markets, an FHA loan will let you buy only a starter home. Yet in more-typical markets, the FHA's limit does not pose a problem. And FHA's maximum loan amounts are likely to increase. Legislation to raise the loan ceiling to the full Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac limit -- $417,000 -- is expected to be introduced shortly and appears to have support for passage this year.

 

Another drawback for some borrowers is FHA's down payment requirement. The FHA does not allow consumers to buy a house without putting something into the deal. Down payments generally are 3 percent, although that could be lowered soon.

 

Additional differences between FHA mortgages and subprime: You can't just "state" your income and get a loan. You've got to show proof that you earn what you say. The FHA never has offered "payment option" plans that allow borrowers to send in almost nothing while adding to their debt through negative amortization.

 

The FHA is not known for razzle-dazzle, so don't look for controversial "2/28" or "3/27" adjustable-rate plans that feature low payments in the first two or three years followed by sharply higher payments later. Many subprime users of 2/28 adjustables, who made no down payments figuring they'd refinance before the first reset date, now face higher costs and negative equity positions in soft housing markets.

 

Unlike private competitors, the FHA does not set rates on the basis of FICO credit scores; it underwrites loans using what it calls a total scorecard that examines an applicant's full credit history, employment and nontraditional credit patterns such as rent and utilities payments.

It does not disqualify anyone automatically because of a bankruptcy, and it emphasizes a holistic "compensating factors" approach to credit decision making.

 

You might ask: If the FHA is so wonderful, why has the private subprime market boomed while the FHA's share of the market has withered -- at least until recently? Part of the reason is the FHA itself.

 

During the 1980s and '90s, the FHA developed a reputation for red tape, slow processing and excessive rules on mandatory fix-ups of properties prior to sale.

 

It also did not forge ties with the mortgage brokerage industry, which now originates nearly two-thirds of all new home loans. Instead, Wall Street seized the initiative and vacuumed up billions of dollars of broker-originated subprime loans through wholesale lenders, paying fat fees to keep the production lines rolling.

 

Many of those mortgages carried terms that credit-impaired applicants found hard to resist, especially in comparison with what the FHA offered: No money down, no asset or income verification, debt-to-income ratios in excess of 50 percent, negative amortization up to 125 percent of the home's value, interest only and other reduced-payment concepts.

 

Those easy-money, no-questions-asked loans for people with bad credit habits are now the dodo birds of the mortgage market. Meanwhile, the FHA is cutting out the red tape and speeding up processing and is eager to expand its business to credit-worthy borrowers who are willing to put a little of their money into home purchases.

 

E-mail Kenneth Harney at kenharney@earthlink.net.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/03/18/REG82OMQTS1.DTL

This article appeared on page K - 4 of the San Francisco Chronicle

 

 

1 comment:

N_Broughton said...

Great peak at the positives of FHA loans Kenneth. Let's hope they get ride of that 'red tape' and regain their place in the housing market. It certainly looks like they are on their way.


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