Tougher Standards For Bad Borrowers Who Don't Exist
A new Housing and Urban Development rule requiring home borrowers with severely impaired credit to make larger down payments in order to qualify for taxpayer-funded loan guarantees will not apply to many people, and possibly not to a single human being.
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) last month announced that it would raise the minimum down payment required to secure an FHA-backed mortgage from 3.5 percent to 10 percent, but only for borrowers with credit scores below 580.
"Striking the right balance between managing the FHA's risk, continuing to provide access to underserved communities, and supporting the nation's economic recovery is critically important," FHA Commissioner David Stevens said in a statement.
The announcement seemed underwhelming: Who is getting a mortgage with a FICO score of 580? A Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) spokesman says the government has not "run down" the numbers of how many FHA-guaranteed loans are for people with below-580 credit scores, but allows that the "vast majority" are above 580, adding, "It's safe to say most of our numbers fall above it."
The December FHA Outlook for Single-Family Homes [pdf] says that of the 179,155 loans FHA guaranteed that month (at a total cost of $32.5 billion, for an average loan value of $181,407), the weighted average FICO score was 694, up 5 percent from an average 661 in December 2008.
That's all good news. (For why a 3.5 percent down payment is extremely dangerous to taxpayers, read Steve Chapman's column on FHA policy. Here I am explaining why low or negative equity is by far the most reliable indicator of default.) But why would anybody give a mortgage to a borrower with such a well-below-subprime credit score, and why are you and I forced to get anywhere near that stink bomb? Another HUD spokesman emails a helpful response:
Today, there is very little loan activity below 620 (let alone 580), because lenders tightened their own underwriting in 2008. The new policy change is primarily to protect us when conventional sources of credit return to the market. We are protecting the MMI Fund from "adverse selection," which is a statutory requirement for the Secretary. It means that, when private capital comes back, we don't want to pushed back into having a significant share of business with low FICO scores. Just two years ago our average score was around 625.
I'll take their word for it that few or no loans are currently being insured at taxpayer expense for borrowers with 580 credit scores. But I think my new friend at HUD is being coy with his reference to the return of "conventional sources of credit." In a conventional credit market (that is, one with no support from the government), nobody would be giving mortgages at all to people with credit ratings that bad.
This is not to put much confidence in the hocus-pocus by which Equifax, Experian and TransUnion determine credit scores. (In a world where no lender could bail out on Uncle Sam, banks would be doing a lot more due diligence than simply getting reports from those three robonic stooges.) But there is no planet on which it's a good move to lend a whole lot of money to a person with an extensive history of not paying it back, whether that person can put down 3.5 percent or 10 percent. You can't keep encouraging lower lending standards and also bragging that you're bringing them up.
Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for the Three Robonic Stooges:
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Sorry Folks, The FHA Is Still Going To Melt Down
Hey Taxpayers! Get Ready To Bail Out The FHA
You don't sound like a believer.
WSJ: Barney Frank, Predatory Lender
... Thus, almost two-thirds of all the bad mortgages in our financial system, many of which are now defaulting at unprecedented rates, were bought by government agencies or required by government regulations.
The role of the FHA is particularly difficult to fit into the narrative that the left has been selling. While it might be argued that Fannie and Freddie and insured banks were profit-seekers because they were shareholder-owned, what can explain the fact that the FHA?a government agency?was guaranteeing the same bad mortgages that the unregulated mortgage brokers were supposedly creating through predatory lending? ...
I don't understand why so many people want other people to be homeless. Where's the compassion?
This may come as a shock to you, but it is actually possible to not have a mortgage, yet still not be homeless.
My parents havent had a mortgage since before I was born. Technically, they never had a mortgage, they just signed for a 5 year note with quarterly payments from the bank.
In a world where no lender could bail out on Uncle Sam, banks would be doing a lot more due diligence than simply getting reports from those three robonic stooges.)
Or the stooges would be less robonic or less stoogey. Ricardo is still vaild.
Nuck Nuck . . . Nuck!
Am I the only one who wonders how many billions a government program that covers no-one is going to cost?
Not on this board, but the trolls won't care and call you racist for real.
Go kill yourself, racist!
Before, you HAD to have 620 (which is a pretty terrible score) to get the government to subsidize your house in which you have negative equity on day one. Now they're letting people with really terrible 580's in, but at least making them come up with a portion of the expected losses. It's an intermediate step towards 580 with 3.5% down.
Man, that image, and all its manifestations, is getting old.
Real old.
OT, but I can't believe this passage from a DrudgeReport link:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a124.....ab49a.html
Has the world gone Bizarro?
Oops, I forgot the punchline, in the next paragraph:
Really? Government debt is "safe", and gold and oil are "risky"?
Yes, the world really has gone bizarro.
Only Zorro can save we the sheeple now.
If you think Gold and Oil are on sale, buy.
I need to ask Zorro what he would do first.
I think I understand. The government has to do everything it can to stop anyone with savings to buy a home at its fair market value. Home owners vote and all of the gerrymandering legislators do to ensure their re-election gets upset by people moving around.
Pretty much. Every new home buyer must buy at an insanely inflated price that will not be realized in the real market until the Black Oak tree in the front yard is purchased by the British Navy to build a Friggate.
Most racist article ever on reason. The new guy comes through.
Is that Curly Hank or Curly Tim in this version of the Stooges?
(And by Curly Tim, I mean Curly Tim Geithner, natch)
"the weighted average FICO score was 694, up 5 percent from an average 661 in December 2008."
Isn't this more like 10% or more, considering the scale? The nominal range is about 500-800 but this is effectively 0-300 for the math. This doesn't even take the distribution or the fact that a score >750 is effectively perfect into account. This also puts the 625 avg from 2 years ago in perspective.
The credit bureaus are in fact a bunch of clowns. No other private company can approximate government red tape quite like those guys.
Looks like those clowns in Congress have done it again. What a bunch of clowns!
Wow! How does it keep up with the news like that?
*sotto voce* Don't praise the machine!
I don't get why the Green Bay team is cheating to win when they are clearing much bigger and stronger than the Crackers. Why not try to win fair and square at first and if you are losing then start all the cheating....Like a politican going drty if they get sown in the polls.
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