More Trouble: Mortgage insurers not sure about insuring …
By: Myles, February 18th, 2008
Looking to purchase a house? It may prove to be even more difficult, with this news hot off the press — if that was humanly possible. The following article is courtesy of SF Gate.
First it was the lenders. Now it’s the mortgage insurance industry:
Entire product lines are being yanked off the real estate financing shelf, potentially squeezing large numbers of buyers and refinancers out of the marketplace.
On Feb. 6, the oldest and largest private insurer of home loans -
The bans, which take effect March 3, cover four states in their entirety, the District of Columbia, plus 25 other major real estate markets. The states are:
- Arizona,
- California,
- Florida
- Nevada.
Metropolitan markets on the list include:
- Denver;
- Maryland and Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C.;
- Atlanta;
- Baltimore;
- Boston;
- Chicago;
- Detroit;
- Minneapolis;
- the Long Island and New Jersey suburbs of New York;
- Portland, Ore.; and
- Tacoma, Wash.
MGIC also tightened eligibility standards nationwide on a number of low-down-payment loan categories:
– Home buyers who seek mortgages with less than 5 percent down must now have minimum Fair Isaac Corp. (FICO) credit scores of 680, up from the previous 620.
– Cash-out refinancings on all nonowner-occupied rental or investment properties no longer will be eligible for insurance, no matter how high the borrower’s credit scores.
– Borrowers who seek to use reduced documentation plans must now make minimum down payments of 10 percent, have FICO scores of 660 or higher, and be able to demonstrate that at least 50 percent of their annual income is derived from self-employment. The income restriction is intended to discourage stated income applications from people who could readily furnish pay stubs or W-2 tax forms but choose not to do so.
– All buyers of condominiums in declining markets will now need to come up with 10 percent down payments. Buyers of single-family homes in those areas with less than 10 percent down payments will need FICOs of 680 or higher.Milwaukee’s
What are the emerging cutbacks likely to mean in practical terms?
- They could be felt almost immediately by buyers who can’t come up with substantial down payments.
- They’ll need higher FICO scores, plus they may find certain types of loans - for vacation condos and small-scale rental investment properties, to cite just two - unavailable.
The bright spot still left for purchasers seeking a home with low down payments: FHA.
- The Federal Housing Administration’s insurance program has no connection with private insurance. Borrowers can still put 3 percent down and qualify for a fixed-rate, 30-year FHA loan that comes with consumer-friendly credit, debt-ratio and other underwriting terms.
- The new federal economic stimulus package raises the maximum mortgage amounts for FHA - great news for California, the Northeast, Florida and the mid-Atlantic states. Pending congressional legislation would even sweeten the deal by reducing minimum down payments well below 3 percent.
- On the flip side, FHA is a little old-fashioned in some respects. Be prepared to document your income, your assets and debts. And don’t even think about payment-option plans, interest-only, negative amortization and other funny-money techniques that were all the rage a few years ago.
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December 31st, 2008 at 2:35 pm
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