| WASHINGTON, D.C. -
In an effort to increase homeownership opportunity for many Americans,
the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced a far-reaching
proposal to modernize the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and make
it an important financing option in today's housing market.
Assistant Secretary
for Housing- Federal Housing Commissioner Brian D. Montgomery presented
the House Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity with the FHA
Modernization Act, a legislative proposal that would enable FHA to reach
deeper into the pool of prospective borrowers. Many of these borrowers
are currently willing to pay subprime rates to become homeowners because
they believe they have no other option.
"FHA was
created during the Depression to stimulate the housing market at a time
when homeownership simply wasn't a reality for most people," said
Montgomery. "FHA has been able to help over 33 million families
become homeowners since that time, but now it needs to be able to adapt
to today's marketplace. A new, modern-era FHA would offer many
hard-working Americans a variety of homeownership options that are safer
and at a fair price."
The FHA
Modernization Act would:
1) Create a
new, risk-based insurance premium structure for FHA that would match the
premium amount with the credit profile of the borrower
. It would replace the current structure, in which there is standard
premium amount for all borrowers, while still protecting the soundness
of its Insurance Fund. FHA would have the flexibility to charge
higher-risk borrowers a slightly higher premium, and to charge a lower
premium for low-risk borrowers.
2)
Eliminate the current statutory three percent minimum down payment,
reducing a significant barrier to homeownership
. FHA's existing down payment requirement does not meet the demands of
today's marketplace, where most first-time homebuyers put down two
percent or less. The "new" FHA would offer a variety of down
payment options.
3) Increase
and simplify FHA's loan limits
. FHA's loan limit in high-cost areas would rise from 87 to 100 percent
of the GSE conforming loan limit and in lower-cost areas from 48 to 65
percent of the conforming loan limit. This change is crucial in today's
housing market. In many areas of the country, the existing FHA limits
are lower than the cost of new construction, eliminating FHA financing
as an option for buyers of new homes in those markets. FHA has simply
been priced out of the market in other areas, such as California, where
FHA insured only about 5,000 home mortgages in all of 2005.
The legislation
would also expand the availability of the Home Equity Conversion
Mortgage (HECM) program for the elderly by eliminating the cap on the
number of these loans that FHA can insure. In addition, a new HECM for
Home Purchase product would enable the elderly to move from the family
home to housing more suitable for them as they age.
Other proposed
reforms would make it easier for FHA to serve purchasers of affordable
housing such as manufactured homes and condominiums. FHA would eliminate
a feature of its Manufactured Housing program that limits how much a
lender can recoup from mortgage defaults, providing greater incentive
for lenders to make these loans. The proposal would also increase the
loan limits to reflect the real cost of manufactured housing today. The
legislation would also eliminate burdensome statutory provisions for
insuring condominiums, which serve as one of the primary forms of
affordable housing for first-time homebuyers.
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