Page 33 - February 2018 Disruption Report Flip Book
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EQUIFAX’S “WATERSHED MOMENT” JANUARY 2018
GINNIE MAE
FHA struggles to win lenders back
In the American Budget Analytical Perspectives for Fiscal Year 2019, the Office of Budget and Management wrote:
...During the financial crisis, starting at the end of 2007, the availability of credit guarantees from the FHA and Government National Mortgage Association (which supports the secondary market for Federally-insured housing loans by guaranteeing securities backed by mortgages guaranteed by FHA, VA, and USDA) was an important factor countering the tightening of private-sector credit. The annual volume of FHA’s single-family mortgages soared from $52 billion in 2006 to a high of $330 billion in 2009.
Although loan volume has declined since its 2009 peak, FHA continued to experience strong demand in 2017 as mortgage rates remained low and the improving economy brought new homebuyers into the market. FHA’s single-family origination loan volume in 2017 was $251 billion, and FHA’s market share of home financing by dollar volume was 15 percent. For 2019, the Budget projects FHA volume will be $230 billion.
FHA Home Equity Conversion Mortgages
Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs) are designed to support aging in place by enabling elderly homeowners to borrow against the equity in their homes without having to make repayments during their lifetime (unless they move, refinance or fail to meet certain requirements). A HECM is also known as a “reverse” mortgage because the change in home equity over time is generally the opposite of a forward mortgage. While a traditional forward mortgage starts with a small amount of equity and builds equity with amortization of the loan, a HECM starts with a large equity cushion that declines over time as the loan accrues interest and premiums. The risk of HECMs therefore is weighted toward the end of the mortgage, while forward mortgage risk is concentrated in the first 10 years. FHA recently took steps, including lowering the share of home equity a homeowner can borrow against (the “principal limit factors”), to mitigate the risk of losses on HECMs, and FHA is exploring additional risk mitigation measures for 2019. HECM origination volume was $18 billion in 2017, and the Budget projects $12 billion in 2019.
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