Posts Tagged ‘FHA minimum credit score’

FHA Considering “Tightening the Belt” – do not make it harder for buyers to borrow!

FHA Considering “Tightening the Belt” – do not make it harder for buyers to borrow!FHA Financing

The FHA reserves are below the required minimum, and here are some of the Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan’s recommendation to correct that issue:

  • Raise the required minimum down payment from 3.5% to 5%
  • Lower the maximum seller contribution from 6% to 3%
  • Establish a required minimum credit score
  • Eliminate the ability to finance the Up Front Mortgage Insurance Premium (UFMIP) into the loan
  • Raise the cost of FHA mortgage insurance (higher premiums)

According to Vicki Cox Golder, President of the National Association of REALTORS, “FHA’s decline in reserves is in part a reflection of a projected change in home price values, and is not tied to excessive increases in defaults or unsound underwriting practices.” In citing the recent FHA audit, Golder said, “If FHA makes no changes to the way it does business today, the reserves will actually exceed 2 percent in the next several years. FHA has sufficient reserves.”

Let’s discuss a little history of the FHA (Federal Housing Administration).

Created in 1934 to help our country recover from the Great Depression, the FHA encourages growth of our housing market and stabilizes it during difficult times. It has helped millions of people enter the home-ownership market who would otherwise never be able to afford to own a home.

So when our country is in a state of recession and continued unemployment, the FHA is considering making it more difficult to purchase a home??? Leave the requirements as they are so that FHA financing can continue to do what it was intended to do – make more affordable mortgage financing available to homeowners.

Lori Cain is a residential Realtor with Chinowth & Cohen Realtors serving the greater Tulsa Oklahoma area, including midtown Tulsa, Owasso, Broken Arrow, Bixby, Sand Springs and Jenks. Please visit Lori’s web site, LoriCain.com or call 918-852-5036.

Google BuzzRetweet this post

Foreseeably Harder Approvals: FHA gets tough

Will keep you posted as this progresses. Lori

Via Ken Cook, FHA Home Loans 678-439-8683:

For many years home mortgage insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) have made home ownership possible for millions of home owners. During the “boom” FHA loans lost a lot of ground in the marketplace because non-conforming loans were often easier to get and cost the borrower less scrutiny and often less out of pocket. (More on Examiner.com from my article this morning.)

ar125987349326711 Foreseeably Harder Approvals: FHA gets toughWelcome the day when Housing and Urban Development Secretary (HUD) Shaun Donovan stood in front of Congress and reported the reserves of the FHA insurance pool to be only .53% – far below the federally mandated, by law, 2% reserves. As you may imagine Mr. Donovan, in an effort to save his job, is now scrambling for good ideas to get those reserves back to the minimum legal level. Let us all observe as the fireman tries to put out a big fire while his own pants are on fire.

Here are some of the recommendations thus far:

  1. Raise the required minimum down payment from 3.5% to 5%
  2. Lower the maximum seller contribution from 6% to 3%
  3. Establish a required minimum credit score
  4. Eliminate the ability to finance the Up Front Mortgage Insurance Premium (UFMIP) into the loan
  5. Raise the cost of FHA mortgage insurance (higher premiums)
Currently it is much more difficult to be approved for a home loan, purchase or refinance, than it was two years ago or even six months ago. Mortgage brokers are not dropping like flies they have already dropped like flies and the remaining small percentage are having great difficulty getting loans underwritten and closed when they involve lower credit, lower income borrowers. Mid-level lenders are now the ones who are disappearing as they still lose warehouse lines of credit at an astonishing rate. This week saw the demise of LendAmerica.
Judging from the applications I have accepted and closed over the last few months these changes will absolutely impact at least 25% of the borrowers who have successfully purchased or refinanced their homes in the last few months. In fact I have two borrowers today who easily qualify who will likely not qualify if these changes are made. Considering I’m one out of tens of thousands go ahead and do the math. 
Just wait … it’s not only FHA – it’s Fannie, then Freddie and Ginnie. We predicted it a few months ago that it would not be long until buyers would need a minimum of 5% down, a minimum of a 640 credit score and rates would start to rise.
Are you ready to pay attention even if you don’t get CEs for participating in the conference calls? If I were an agent I would be – I would want to be ahead of the curve!

Ken Cook – Georgia – FHA, USDA, VA and Conventional Home Loans (678) 439-8683

Google BuzzRetweet this post
MortgageCalculator.org
Input Information
Loan Amount ($)
Interest Rate (%)
Length of Loan (Yrs)
Quick SMS

160
 
Archives