Friday, May 9
Posted 2 p.m. EDT
SCOOP ON RATES: If you're a diligent Bankrate reader, you already know that long-term fixed rates dipped this week, after three straight weeks of small rate rises. The 30-year fixed fell 3 basis points, to 6.13 percent, in Bankrate's weekly survey that was conducted Wednesday.
Since then, the benchmark rate has dropped a little lower, but hardly enough to notice. You might be getting a slightly better bang for the buck when you pay discount points.
I regret the dearth of posts lately. Last week was jury duty, and this week I'm at the National Association of Real Estate Editors, or NAREE, conference in Dallas, and every day the schedule is full. There are lots of interesting panel discussions and tours, but little time to think or to blog. Or, for that matter, to follow the news.
ABOUT THE NEWS: The House has passed a bill to encourage lenders to forgive delinquent borrowers' debt enough to allow those borrowers to qualify for FHA-insured loans. The administration says the bill is unacceptable as passed. I have a hunch that a compromise measure will become law this summer, in time for the Republican convention.
The bill that was passed by the House yesterday was crafted by Barney Frank, D-Mass., who is a serious legislator, not a posturer, and who will search for mutually acceptable compromises among the House, Senate and White House. As far as the White House goes, I think the most important negotiating point will be "risk-based pricing" of FHA mortgage insurance premiums.
The federal housing commissioner, Brian Montgomery, appeared at NAREE yesterday and said that the Bush administration has two demands for overhaul of the FHA, or Federal Housing Administration.
First, Montgomery said, Congress needs to allow the FHA to charge higher insurance premiums to riskier mortgage borrowers. Right now, FHA insurance premiums are the same for everyone -- those with credit scores of 550 who are borrowing 97 percent of the home's value, and those who have credit scores of 680 who are borrowing 90 percent.
Montgomery implied that the FHA might reduce premiums for less-risky borrowers, compared to the premiums charged today.
Second, Montgomery said the Bush administration wants to ban seller-funded down payment assistance. This would end the down payment assistance programs pioneered by Nehemiah and Ameridream, in which sellers indirectly fund buyers' down payments. Montgomery said the delinquency and foreclosure rates on those properties are much higher. The down payment assistance industry disputes that assertion.
Key Democrats are loath to ban down payment assistance programs, and risk-based pricing hasn't had a particularly warm reception, either. My guess is that the Dems will agree to phase out down payment assistance, and to agree to a pilot FHA program with risk-based pricing, and both parties will go into the fall campaigns with the ability to brag that they did something to address foreclosures.
Friday,
May 2
Posted
11 a.m. EDT
EXPECTATIONS
GAME:
It's kinda weird to go
to Marketwatch and read
a big headline that says:
"April drops just
20,000 jobs." Nonfarm
jobs shrank by 20,000
in April, which isn't
good news, especially
for those 20,000 people.
But the consensus forecast
among economists was that
nonfarm payrolls would
drop by about 80,000.
So a net loss of 20,000
jobs doesn't seem so bad.
The unemployment
rate fell, too -- from
5.1 percent in March to
5 percent in April. That
number seems to be depressed
because a lot of people
have part-time jobs, even
though they would prefer
to work full-time.
When looking
at this news, the bond
market regards the glass
as half-full. Mortgage
bond yields are rising
a bit, which adds to the
upward pressure on rates
that we've been seeing
lately.
HOP
ALONG: The FDIC
wants homeowners "with
unaffordable mortgages"
to be able to borrow directly
from the U.S. Treasury
to pay down up to 20 percent
of the principal. Then
homeowners would refinance
their mortgages to borrow
the rest. The idea of
the Home
Ownership Preservation, or HOP, program would be
to get problem loans off
servicers' books, mark
home values to market
and, in the FDIC's words,
"avoid unnecessary
foreclosures."
(There are
certain combinations of
adjectives and nouns that
we seldom recognize as
propaganda: "free"
trade, tax "burden"
and "unnecessary"
foreclosures are examples.
In the last case, it would
be good to know how "unnecessary"
is defined, and whether
someone with another viewpoint
would have a different
definition.)
Under the
FDIC's proposed guideline,
an "unaffordable"
mortgage would be one
where the mortgage payment
was more than 40 percent
of the borrower's income
when the loan was originated.
Does that include pick-a-payment
mortgages? The FDIC doesn't
say. More important, the
FDIC doesn't address fraud.
What about people who
exaggerated their incomes
a few years ago?
A lot of
folks with "unaffordable"
mortgages were people
with bad credit, or who
exaggerated their incomes
so they could qualify
for unwieldy loans. Among
those borrowers, most
foreclosures are going
to be necessary.