HomePath loan with no appraisal and no mortgage insurance!

05 February 2010 Categories: Appraisals, FHA, First Time Home Buyer, Foreclosures

HomePath loans are great options for those buyers or investors looking to purchase a foreclosed home owned by Fannie Mae. Here’s the rundown:

Eligible Properties:

  1. All properties designated by Fannie Mae at www.homepath.com as eligible are good to go
  2. Primary residences
  3. Second homes
  4. Investment properties

*Notice that there are NO condos, cooperatives or manufactured homes allowed by Fannie Mae for a HomePath loan.

Program Details

  1. No appraisal required
  2. No mortgage insurance required
  3. Low down payments (minimum 5%)

This is a GREAT program for anyone looking to aggressively shop foreclosed properties. And not just that, but HomePath and Fannie Mae are offering the following incentives on top of the above:

  1. 3.5% incentive for buyers who purchase and close between January 28, 2010 and April 30, 2010. The 3.5% can be used for:
    • Closing costs
    • Purchase of new Whirlpool® appliances
    • A mix of closing costs and appliances, up to a maximum of 3.5%.

*Sorry investors, only owner-occupied primary residences are eligible for the 3.5% closing costs credit.

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FHA Guideline Changes Incoming

18 September 2009 Categories: Appraisals, FHA

FHA has a problem. There is a Congressionally mandated reserve amount for covering bad loans that is fast approaching. 17% of FHA loans are in foreclosure, compared with 13% of the entire market. Thus, FHA’s cash reserves as a percentage of their loan portfolios has declined below acceptable levels. As a result, change is coming:

  1. FHA will hire first Chief Risk Officer in almost 75 years.
  2. FHA will increase audited financial net worth requirement of approved FHA lenders by 4x – from $250,000 up to $1 million.
  3. FHA will increase minimum credit score standards.
  4. FHA will enact New requirements for ordering appraisals. Not quite HVCC-strict, but closer.
  5. FHA will now require income verification on Streamline FHA refinances.

What does this mean? Those buyers on the brink of qualifying might lose their ability to buy a house due to credit restrictions. I would also expect to see tightened loan guidelines beyond just credit – big losses usually points to stricter standards.

The good news: Premier Mortgage isn’t going anywhere and can still do FHA loans. Our FHA appraisals still only take a few days…AND I can still qualify buyers who are close to debt-to-income limits using the PDC’s Mortgage Credit Certificate program. If someone can’t quite afford a home, let me know and I’ll see what we can do.

If you are interested, check out the full HUD press release.

Note: These changes won’t take place until January 1, 2010, so there is some breathing room still. Then again, that’s only 3 short months away.

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HVCC Appraisal Rules – Reality Check

05 August 2009 Categories: Appraisals, Economy, Regulations

Everyone is STILL talking about HVCC, the new Home Valuation Code of Conduct, and how it affects appraisals. Fannie and Freddie put this into effect earlier this year and the negative repercussions have been striking, especially in extremely depressed markets with lots of foreclosures and short sales.

The issue is low valuations and the new rules guiding appraisers in both price-depressed and rebounding markets.  Out-of-town appraisers appointed by an Appraisal Management Company come in for a quick assessment (or don’t even go to the property and handle it online) and then dish out low valuations. Their comparables are often poor-condition short sales, distressed properties or just plain unrelated area or style-wise. A ranch home should not be compared to a vintage Victorian!

Complaints about lowballed appraisals – from builders, real estate brokers, consumers and mortgage companies – have erupted since May 1, when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac instituted their new laws. Critics charge that the new system is fostering the use of appraisers willing to work for low fees – sometimes 50 percent below previous standards – and who are willing to conduct home appraisals far outside their typical areas of activity.

Under the code, appraisers are now randomly assigned by Appraisal Management Companies rather than being selected by mortgage companies or loan officers. The management companies pocket as much as 40 to 50 percent of the appraisal fee. Just another party in the system adding another layer of complexity to the process.

Frustration with the new system boiled over and made its way to Capitol Hill at the beginning of summer. The National Association of Home Builders called for an immediate change in the rules governing the use of foreclosures, short sales and other distress transactions as comparables for appraisals on non-distressed, typical homes, whether new or resale.

Two congressmen – Travis Childers, D-Miss., and Gary Miller, R-Diamond Bar (Los Angeles County) – have introduced legislation calling for an 18-month moratorium on the appraisal code. In identical letters to James Lockhart, the top regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the National Association of Realtors also requested a moratorium and complained that the code is raising costs to borrowers, distorting property values and killing sales.

Asked for comment, Lockhart said through a spokesperson that his agency is monitoring the situation, and considers “the views of market participants important.”

One positive to all this is that FHA loans allow any appraiser to be selected by the loan officer. This means I can work with my most capable appraisers who know the subject property area and will deliver accurate results.

However, for conventional loans, learn how the HVCC affects you and continue to jump through the hoops. Keep an eye on Congress – some things do change, it just takes time.

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Strategic Home Mortgage Defaults

01 August 2009 Categories: Appraisals, Economy

What would push you to default on your mortgage, even if you could afford to pay for it? According to new research from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business and Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, a surprising number of Americans are doing just that.

The study found that 26 percent of the record numbers of home mortgage defaults across the country are “strategic” – that is, calculated economic decisions to bail out of loans by owners who actually have the money to make the payments but can’t stomach the negative equity in their homes caused by a declining housing market.

Nationwide, according to data from Zillow.com, 22 percent of all homeowners were “underwater” in negative equity positions during the first quarter of 2009, with mortgage debts that exceed their home values.

Co-authors Paola Sapienza, Luigi Zingales and Luigi Guiso used interviews with 2,000 American households in December 2008 and March 2009 to explore the “moral and social” dynamics of strategic defaults. The two 1,000-person samples came from the Chicago Booth/Kellogg School Financial Trust Index, which monitors the level of trust households have in the financial system.

Their research not only represents the first attitudinal study of the phenomenon of widespread strategic walkaways from home loan commitments, but also has implications for federal policies seeking to limit the numbers of foreclosures – which are on pace for a record 3.1 million filings this year, according to RealtyTrac Inc.

Some of the study’s findings:

– Fully 81 percent of household heads said they believe intentional defaults on mortgages to be “morally wrong.” But that high percentage begins to crumble as negative equity grows increasingly larger.

When negative equity rose to $50,000, 7 percent of those who consider strategic defaults to be immoral said they’d walk away. At $100,000 negative equity, 22 percent would do so. At negative $200,000, 37 percent of those with moral objections would nonetheless default, and at $300,000, 38 percent said they would.

– Among those who had no moral reservations, the percentages were much higher. At $50,000 negative equity, 20 percent said they’d walk. At negative $100,000, 41 percent would do so, as would 59 percent at negative $200,000 and 63 percent at $300,000.

– The researchers found that age, tenure of homeownership, the frequency of foreclosures in a person’s zip code and even politics influence an owner’s willingness to bail out of a mortgage. Owners under age 35 are less likely to have moral problems with strategic defaults, as are self-described political “independents,” compared with Republicans and Democrats.

– An important factor in walkaways, according to the researchers, is the level of foreclosures owners observe in their local community and their personal acquaintance with owners who have defaulted. If you know someone who has defaulted, you are 82 percent more likely to do so yourself!

– The higher the number of foreclosures in a given zip code, the higher owners’ willingness to walk away, the researchers found, suggesting what they call a “contagion effect that reduces the social stigma associated with default as defaults become more common.” High numbers of foreclosures also appear to create a “vicious circle” that increases neighboring owners’ negative equity and greatly raises the probability of additional defaults, foreclosures and equity destruction in the area.

Though the authors offer no specific remedies – they are behavioral researchers, not policy advisers – they argue that the traditional assumption that borrowers default because they can’t afford their monthly payments needs to be re-examined in light of accelerating foreclosures in some markets combined with plummeting equity.

The Obama administration appeared to take a step in that direction on July 1 when it allowed refinancings of Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-owned mortgages where owners have up to 25 percent negative equity. Previously the limit was 5 percent.

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Report: Green Homes Selling for More

10 July 2009 Categories: Appraisals, Green Building

I recently received an official copy of Earth Advantage’s certified home performance study, which so far had only been a press release on their website.

For a breakdown of how much more green homes in Portland and Seattle are selling for, here is a full copy of the report. For a synopsis of the report, read my blog post on green home valuation.

Keep in mind that I am in no way affiliated with the production of the report, I just want to educate all you green buyers, sellers, developers and Realtors with some cold, hard facts!

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HERA HVCC New Lending Laws and Regulations

20 June 2009 Categories: Appraisals, Regulations

Banks are still dealing with fallout from the subprime mortgage crisis, and this post covers a few of the most recent changes stemming from that. Many of them dictate a transaction’s closing date, so make sure you know how the new laws work. Below is a synopsis of the recent changes.

First up is the Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC), which was recently adopted by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. When you hear HVCC, think “appraisals.” Effective May 1, 2009, appraisers are “shielded” from the influence of 3rd parties who have an interest in the transaction.

The new process for ordering appraisals involves an independent third party who acts as a broker between the lender and the appraiser. Also, the borrower must receive the appraisal at least 3 days prior to the loan closing (unless they sign a waiver, which I see happening frequently if time is crunched).

Another recent act is the Housing and Economic Recovery Act (HERA), which, effective July 30th, 2009, changes requirements about when disclosures and initial fees can be charged to the buyer.

A summary of these two acts:

  1. The earliest any transaction can close is 7 business days after initial disclosures are sent to the buyer.
  2. Upfront fees cannot be collected until 3 days after initial disclosures are issued. This means appraisals will have to wait at least 3 days after the initial loan application.
  3. The borrower must get a copy of their appraisal at least 3 days prior to close.
  4. If the Annual Percentage Rate (APR) increases more than .125% compared to the initial Truth in Lending (TIL) disclosure, the borrower will need to sign a revised form at least 3 days before closing…and a TIL disclosure isn’t considered “received” until 3 days after mailing, so it’s really a week!

Any of the following can impact the APR, so watch out for them:

  • Unlocked rate
  • Change in loan amount
  • Closing date change
  • Change in the loan product
  • Changes to fees

The biggest thing to take away? 10 day closes are NOT going to happen any more – negotiate for at least a 30 day close, and probably closer to 45 days. The positive side to all this is that it is getting rid of the lending practices and shenanigans that got us here in the first place, which I definitely see as a good thing.

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