Monday, September 21, 2009

FW: fha changes coming

FHA is going the way of HVCC appraisal requirements soon.

 

 

A story in "Inside Mortgage Finance" from August 31st stated, "The Federal Housing Administration is not considering adopting the Home Valuation Code of Conduct appraisal system now in place at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Coming from a recent meeting with FHA executives, top officials of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers said they were assured by FHA Commissioner Dave Stevens that the HVCC is not in the agency’s plans."

Friday, however, the FHA Commissioner announced that after January 1, the FHA will require appraisals to be ordered via HVCC, and that instead of a net worth of $250,000 lenders must have a net worth of $1 million sometime in the next year. The FHA sent out a Mortgagee Letter to all lenders that they are adopting HVCC in most of its current form – the same one adopted by Fannie & Freddie in May. Mortgage originators will no longer be able to order appraisals from appraisers, but instead use AMC’s, which contributed to some of the popularity of FHA loans. Appraisers stand to make a little more, brokers will have less control, FHA appraisals will only be good for 4 months and not 6, and the FHA will allow appraisals to be transferred to another lender. Realtors can still give appraisers comparable sales data, but just not value: a fine distinction. In addition, the FHA said it may fall below its mandated capital level (2% reserves) for the first time in its history, but it will not require a taxpayer bailout, and that they will be hiring a chief risk officer. (Talk about a piece of cake job, right?)


Mini-eagle questions?
“Lenders seeking approval to originate, underwrite, or service an FHA loan must meet the eligibility criteria for a supervised or non-supervised mortgagee. Mortgagees with this approval status must assume liability for all the loans they originate and/or underwrite. Loan Correspondents (mortgage brokers) will continue to be able to originate FHA-insured loans through their relationships with approved mortgagees; however they will no longer receive independent FHA approval for origination eligibility. Check it all out at: http://portal.hud.gov/portal/page/portal/HUD/press/press_releases_media_advisories/HUDNo.09-177

Why the changes? According to the MBAA, almost 20% of FHA loans are delinquent in some form. The number of loans that they insure has grown from slightly more than 4 million 3 years ago to almost 5 ½ million now. Many originators view FHA loans as a substitute for the subprime loans from days gone by and some analysts feel that these loans will cause a huge negative impact on the industry and on the taxpayer. (Not everyone deserves a home loan, right? Why allow DTI’s above 36%? 3.5% or less down?) eceive it, let me know.)

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