Americans Shut Out of Housing as FHA Fees Jump: Mortgage

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By Kathleen M. Howley May 7, 2014 12:00 AM ET

The decline in first-time buyers is contributing to downturns in the housing and mortgage markets as rates rise. Lending volume plunged to its lowest level in 17 years in the first quarter.
After two months of looking for a home to buy, Brittani Kaufman walked into a townhouse under construction in Glen Burnie, Maryland, in April.

“This is it,” Kaufman said as she scanned the three-bedroom home after a construction crew had just finished erecting the interior walls.

Kaufman, a dental hygienist, said she planned to purchase her first home with a mortgage backed by the Federal Housing Administration, whose mandate is to help lower-income buyers. Days later, she found out that the FHA since 2010 had more than doubled its mortgage insurance fees, adding $340 a month to her payments instead of $125 a month. That was a deal killer.

“I was really shocked,” Kaufman, 27, said. “I hadn’t budgeted for that much.”

The FHA boosted its fees after a surge in defaults during the housing crash depleted its capital reserves. The increases, which have helped replenish the FHA’s coffers, have also prevented hundreds of thousands of first-time purchasers from getting FHA loans, according to an estimate from the National Association of Realtors. Now groups such as the Community Home Lenders Association and NAR are calling for the agency to partially roll back and restructure the fees.

“When you’re asking young families to pay a couple hundred extra dollars every month in new FHA fees, you’re keeping a lot of them from becoming homeowners,” said Brian Chappelle, a former FHA director and partner at Potomac Partners LLC, a consulting firm in Washington. “Yes, the insurance fund needed to raise more revenue, but using the monthly fees wasn’t the way to do it.”


Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
Potential home buyers view a model home in San Ramon, California.

First-Time Buyers
The decline in first-time buyers is contributing to downturns in thehousing and mortgage markets as rates rise. Lending volume plunged to its lowest level in 17 years in the first quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

The FHA, a primary source of loans to new buyers, provided them with about 27,100 mortgages in February, according to agency data. That’s the fewest since the onset of the financial crisis and a 32 percent decline from a year earlier, the data show.

The higher fees prevented new buyers from making as many as 375,000 purchasers in 2013, NAR said in a letter to FHA Commissioner Carol Galante in April. Ken Fears, an economist for the Realtors group, said he arrived at that estimate by measuring government income distribution data and historical first-time sales data in scenarios using the old and new fees.

Tipping Point
Galante, who oversees the FHA’s $1.1 trillion insurance portfolio, disputes the claim that the new fees are keeping Americans from becoming homeowners. The current premiums correctly reflect the risks assumed by taxpayers, she said in a speech at a MBA conference last month. Any additional increases would start pricing first-time buyers out of the market, she said.

“We’re reaching a tipping point where we believe that further increases would reduce access to credit,” Galante said. “However, now is not the time to roll those premiums back. Right now we are priced appropriately and are reaching out to creditworthy individuals.”

The FHA, which was created by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1934 during the Great Depression, got a $1.7 billion cash infusion last year -- the first in its history. The agency needed the bailout after more than a quarter of the mortgages it insured in 2007 and 2008 went bad as housing prices plunged.

Higher Risk
FHA loans are riskier than those backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the government-owned mortgage companies, because the agency’s underwriting standards are looser. The FHA allows down payments as low as 3.5 percent, and considers applicants with credit blemishes.

The average FICO credit score for an FHA mortgage to purchase a home was 686 in February, compared with 755 for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans, according to data compiled by mortgage processor Ellie Mae. About 80 percent of FHA loans go to first-time buyers.

Starting in 2010, the FHA began boosting its monthly fees that insure mortgages to help recoup losses. It now charges borrowers 1.3 percent of a mortgage’s balance per month, up from .5 in 2010.

Raymond Baldwin, 28, pays about $450 a month in fees for the $380,000 FHA loan he and his wife used to buy a house in Sykesville, Maryland, in November. They have a nine-month-old son and a German Shepherd puppy. Before the fees rose, the couple would have paid about $150 a month.

Lifetime Insurance
“That’s $300 a month we’re not saving for our son’s college education, or going out to spend at local restaurants,” said Baldwin, a manager at Koons Ford of Baltimore.

The FHA also changed its policy to require monthly fees for the life of the mortgage. Until last year, borrowers could cancel the insurance payments after five years if they reduced their loan balance to 78 percent of the original amount. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac borrowers can end their private mortgage insurance after the property gains 20 percent equity.

The agency’s lifetime insurance policy makes the loans even less affordable, said Dee Sodano, vice president of lending at Community HousingWorks, a non-profit group in San Diego, California, that promotes homeownership. Someone with a $275,000 mortgage who keeps it for 30 years will end up paying about $90,000 more than if they had been able to cancel the insurance after five years, according to data collected by Bloomberg.

Bye, FHA
“People are going to refinance out of those FHA loans as soon as they can, as soon as their home value rises, and say ‘Bye, thanks for the help,’” said Sodano. “The FHA could have found a happy medium by moving the target to 70 percent instead of going to the life of the loan.”

The FHA is set to regain its financial footing this year as fee increases boost revenue and higher housing values reduce defaults. The agency will have a capital reserve balance of $7.8 billion in 2014, according the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which oversees the FHA.

Now that the FHA has recovered, the Mortgage Bankers Association, the Community Home Lenders Association and NAR are pressuring the agency to reduce the cost of borrowing. In letters to HUD and the White House, the groups said the FHA should lower fees and shift the costs to the one-time premium borrowers pay at origination and that can be financed as part of the loan.

“The current premium structure is pricing many creditworthy first-time buyers out of the market,” the mortgage bankers group wrote in an April 2 letter to HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan.

Pilot Program
About 28 percent of people buying their first home last year used an FHA loan, according to Bloomberg data. Before the fee increases began in 2010, that share was 43 percent.

Sales of U.S. homes in March fell to 4.59 million at an annual pace, the lowest level since mid-2012, after dropping in seven of the last eight months, NAR said in an April 22 report. The median price of an existing home grew 7.9 percent from a year earlier to $198,500.

“You’re stripping out a lot of people when you increase FHA fees so high, and without first-time buyers it’s not possible to have a healthy real estate market,” said Richard Green, a loan officer at Presidential Mortgage Group in Bowie, Maryland.

The Obama administration’s budget proposal submitted to Congress in March includes funding for an FHA pilot program called Homeowners Armed With Knowledge, or Hawk. It will grant monthly-fee reductions to borrowers who attend housing counseling. HUD hasn’t specified when the program would start, how many buyers it would help, or the size of the fee reductions.

Expanding Access
“We believe this initiative has a double benefit of expanding access to credit but also strengthening the FHA” insurance fund, HUD’s Donovan said on a call with reporters in March.

Kaufman, the dental hygienist, said she may have to wait to buy a home until she saves more money. She’s now living with her mother near Baltimore and working 55 hours a week between two jobs.

“I’ve always wanted to own my own home, and it’s a dream I’m not going to give up on,” said Kaufman.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kathleen M. Howley in Boston atkmhowley@bloomberg.net

Americans Shut Out of Housing as FHA Fees Jump: Mortgages - Bloomberg
 

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In other news

FHFA Official Faces Felony Charge
Federal Housing Finance Agency COO Charged With Threatening Former Director
By
ALAN ZIBEL and
NICK TIMIRAOS
CONNECT
Updated May 6, 2014 5:32 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON—The chief operating officer of the Federal Housing Finance Agency faces a felony charge after he allegedly made violent threats concerning the regulator's former director, according to a police report and court records.

Richard Hornsby, the agency's chief operating officer, was charged last Wednesday with one felony count of threatening to kidnap or injure a person, court records show. He was ordered to stay away from the FHFA and from former director Edward DeMarco, who retired from the agency last week, court documents state.

The FHFA is the regulator of mortgage companies Fannie Mae FNMA +0.99% andFreddie Mac. FMCC -0.49%



Mr. Hornsby didn't respond to requests for comment, including messages left on a cellphone and a visit to his apartment. A woman who answered the phone at a California number associated with his name hung up when informed the caller was from The Wall Street Journal.

Mr. DeMarco declined to comment Tuesday. An FHFA spokeswoman said the agency wouldn't comment on personnel matters.

Mr. Hornsby allegedly threatened to shoot Mr. DeMarco after making increasingly threatening comments about him for several weeks, according to court records and a Metropolitan Police Department report.

FHFA officials notified the agency's inspector general about the threats on April 28, after an incident at the agency's headquarters in which Mr. DeMarco was "escorted to a secure location following a report of a threat," the court document said. An FHFA employee, who wasn't named in the report filed in court, said Mr. Hornsby had threatened to harm Mr. DeMarco and to kill himself.

The incident occurred two days before Mr. DeMarco's previously announced retirement from the agency. The unnamed FHFA employee told the inspector general that the threats against Mr. DeMarco stemmed from disputes about Mr. Hornsby's job performance ratings, the court document stated. A spokeswoman for the inspector general declined to comment.

At a D.C. Superior Court hearing last Wednesday, Judge Karen Howze issued the restraining order directing Mr. Hornsby to stay away from his workplace and from Mr. DeMarco, court records said. Mr. Hornsby, 58 years old, was released without being required to post bond. Another hearing in the case is set for May 14.

Employees were notified last Wednesday that Mr. Hornsby had been placed on leave, according to an email sent by agency Director Mel Watt and reviewed by the Journal. Mr. Hornsby joined the FHFA in November 2011 after 26 years at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

Mr. DeMarco served as the agency's acting director from August 2009 until this past January. He previously had announced that he would stay at the agency until April 30 as a senior adviser to Mr. Watt, a former North Carolina congressman.

In Wednesday's notice, Mr. Watt told employees that Mr. Hornsby's duties would be assumed for now by Eric Stein, a former Treasury Department official who was brought on board by Mr. Watt in January.

Write to Alan Zibel at alan.zibel@wsj.com and Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications
Richard Hornsby is the chief operating officer of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. In an earlier version of this story that appeared online, he was erroneously identified as the chief executive officer in a headline.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303417104579546150537366882

@Domingo Halliburton work for the government, breh
 

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@Domingo Halliburton work for the government, breh

i gotta sub for later. seems like housing is stalling. which everyone was kind of counting on turning the economy around for the middle class. I guess those critics are right all this stimulus is just helping everyone at the top.

that story with the FHA looks good though.
 

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i gotta sub for later. seems like housing is stalling. which everyone was kind of counting on turning the economy around for the middle class. I guess those critics are right all this stimulus is just helping everyone at the top.

that story with the FHA looks good though.
I bought my house back in 2009 and I was thinking about selling. I ain't selling shyt. I'm keeping my shyt. Why is housing stalling though? Is it that no one is buying or are people trying to buy and the qualifications are outrageous? I don't understand.
 

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I bought my house back in 2009 and I was thinking about selling. I ain't selling shyt. I'm keeping my shyt. Why is housing stalling though? Is it that no one is buying or are people trying to buy and the qualifications are outrageous? I don't understand.

With fha loans you pay an insurance fee every month on top of the mortgage which often pushes the people using them, middle to lower income buyers out of the market. In effect it can double or triple your mortgage. The qualifications also can prove difficult for middle to lower income buyers again as previously mentioned the people they're aimed at. The article does a decent job explaining it. Buying is stalling because banks aren't lending because of credit/risk like they were in the past and due to banking reform. People also don't have as much disposable income 20% on a lot of mortgages is a nice a heap of money and then the money required to have after close. A lot of buying is still happening in hot markets but it's mostly cash.
 

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With fha loans you pay an insurance fee every month on top of the mortgage which often pushes the people using them, middle to lower income buyers out of the market. In effect it can double or triple your mortgage. The qualifications also can prove difficult for middle to lower income buyers again as previously mentioned the people they're aimed at. The article does a decent job explaining it. Buying is stalling because banks aren't lending because of credit/risk like they were in the past and due to banking reform. People also don't have as much disposable income 20% on a lot of mortgages is a nice a heap of money and then the money required to have after close. A lot of buying is still happening in hot markets but it's mostly cash.
Investor driven. Are they trying to prevent another bubble you think?
 

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Houses in Tracy are going for 500k. A nicca gotta have 100k to even think of approaching the bank. Insanity
 

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I bought my house back in 2009 and I was thinking about selling. I ain't selling shyt. I'm keeping my shyt. Why is housing stalling though? Is it that no one is buying or are people trying to buy and the qualifications are outrageous? I don't understand.

they kind of hint at it in the beginning of the article...rates have risen, first time buyers haven't been as much of the market as usual, credit standards are still tight.

what @ 88m3 said.

"they" are trying to help by keeping rates as low as they can.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Houses in Tracy are going for 500k. A nicca gotta have 100k to even think of approaching the bank. Insanity

is Tracy in cali?


yeah a typical local bank deal is going to be 80/20. You bring at least 20% of the value to the table, they'll finace 80. At least bring 10 if you're looking for something decent.
 

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Investor driven. Are they trying to prevent another bubble you think?

I think that was the idea. They've already failed at preventing another bubble in the markets I follow. The banks were also greedy and kept lending extremely tight when interest rates were low. This has also blown rent through the roof in a lot of urban areas which I frankly don't think is sustainable. I don't really know what the end game will be there. It's a serious structural issue. You wont see urban flight again imo because that's where everyone wants to be young and old, for school and work. At the same time there's a large part of urban populations who need to be able to keep cities running that are being pushed further and further away from where they work because of home costs and renting. End result...

If pay doesn't catch up with inflation and the cost of living I don't see how America will be able to have a cohesive society.

Maybe things are different in other areas of the country if they're in some 1940's America time warp but this is what I know and see.
 

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I think that was the idea. They've already failed at preventing another bubble in the markets I follow. The banks were also greedy and kept lending extremely tight when interest rates were low. This has also blown rent through the roof in a lot of urban areas which I frankly don't think is sustainable. I don't really know what the end game will be there. It's a serious structural issue. You wont see urban flight again imo because that's where everyone wants to be young and old, for school and work. At the same time there's a large part of urban populations who need to be able to keep cities running that are being pushed further and further away from where they work because of home costs and renting. End result...

If pay doesn't catch up with inflation and the cost of living I don't see how America will be able to have a cohesive society.

Maybe things are different in other areas of the country if they're in some 1940's America time warp but this is what I know and see.
What markets do you follow? Bay Area rent is astronomical
 

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is Tracy in cali?


yeah a typical local bank deal is going to be 80/20. You bring at least 20% of the value to the table, they'll finace 80. At least bring 10 if you're looking for something decent.
Yes Tracy Cali. Me and the wife were looking at some design ideas. That's a load of cash man, to move into a house. Between 50-100k??? But do you think a buyer should have 20% down and no less? A lot of people feel that way
 

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What markets do you follow? Bay Area rent is astronomical
Primarily NYC, tri state, and where I have property in NY. I follow the PNW and Cali to a lesser extent but have no real interest in living there at the moment or if ever.

I read that article about Oakland over the weekend in the NYT and felt bad.

The rent in the bay has been for awhile from everything I've read. Is it the whole bay now?
Whats a 1/2 bedroom rental in a nice area these days?
 
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Domingo Halliburton

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Yes Tracy Cali. Me and the wife were looking at some design ideas. That's a load of cash man, to move into a house. Between 50-100k??? But do you think a buyer should have 20% down and no less? A lot of people feel that way

you're talking about some of the most populous areas in the country and demand is sky high.

like you just said they wanna see you're worth 100k for a 500k house.

I dont necessarily agree. If you have a good credit profile the standards are less strict.
 
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