FHA is not Fannie Mae
"Borrowers with subprime loans are now ending up in foreclosure twice as often as borrowers with FHA-insured loans, said Brian D. Montgomery,
assistant secretary for housing and the federal housing commissioner for HUD.
Of the 10 states with the highest percentage of FHA-insured loans, only three (Texas, Indiana and Utah) also rank among the top 10 for foreclosures, new federal data show. The FHA's current strong position follows a sharp dip in its market share. Between 1996 and 2006, the FHA's share dropped 25 percentage points, from 32% to 7%, among minority borrowers, the same class of borrower that (according to the Center for Responsible Lending) provided the single-largest rush into the subprime mortgage market.
The GAO report linked the drop in FHA's share of the overall mortgage market to the popularity of adjustable-rate mortgages and other unconventional loan products generally disallowed in the FHA program, and the hassle of filing the paperwork to do an FHA loan.
Many originators found the fees on interest-only and zero-down payment loans, which the FHA won't insure, higher than with government loans. In an interesting footnote, the National Association of Mortgage Brokers told GAO that many of its members couldn't afford to meet the FHA's financial requirements for brokers writing FHA-insured loans: a brokerage business must have a minimum net worth of $63,000 and provide annual audited financial statements. "
While this is the National story, the local or Bay Area spin is that FHA (and it's loan limits) will not work with so many of our local loan amounts.
Fees aside, financial requirements aside. FHA will work for the 1 Bdrm Condo in Bay Point or Oakland, but it won't work for the 4 bdrm Rancher in Walnut Creek. The loan amounts are simply too high. The same can be said for VA. FHA has some great programs and really can do some great things.
The buzz in the media these days seems to be "FHA, It's your answer to the subprime collapse" .
The truth is, while that's correct it just doesn't apply to the bay area for so many situations.
Remember, a Conventional, Conforming Fannnie Mae (or Freddie Mac) loan is capped at $417,000. Anything above that falls into a Jumbo Loan. There's plenty of loan programs that will do that.
FHA is not Fannie or Freddie. The two are completely different, not connected. There is no Jumbo FHA.
Labels: A Paper, Alameda, Bay Area, contra costa, diablo valley, pleasant hill, Points of View, prime, purchase, walnut creek
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