On Tuesday the House
Financial Services Committee approved a request by the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) to raise the ceiling on annual FHA mortgage insurance premiums
from its current level of 0.55 percent.
FHA had requested the increase as one part of a plan aimed at shoring up
its capital reserves which have dropped below the 2 percent required by
law. The agency already raised the up-front
premium charged to borrowers closing effective April 9. If the full Congress approves the annual
increase, FHA will then shift some of the upfront premium to an annual premium
to reduce the burden on borrowers at closing.
FHA says it intends to gradually raise
the annual premium to 1.5 percent.
FHA revealed late last year
that its current reserves are at .53 percent, but officials have said that
their tightened lending requirements as well as the increase in premiums would
allow them to restore the levels by collecting an additional $5.8 billion over
the next few years. The Congressional
Budget Office has put the number at a much more conservative $1.9 billion.
While approving the
increase, the Committee defeated a proposal sponsored by Scott Garrett (R-NJ)
which would have increased the minimum down payment for FHA guaranteed loans
from 3.5 percent to 5 percent. It also
would have prohibited sellers from participating in the buyer's closing costs
and prohibited the inclusion of any initial services charges such as appraisal,
inspections, and other fees in the principal amount of an FHA mortgage loan. The FHA has already reduced the amount that a
seller can contribute to the buyer's closing costs from 6 percent of the loan
amount to 3 percent. Garrett has also submitted
separate legislation which would prohibit the buyer from rolling the upfront
premium into the loan which would effectively increase the cash required of the
borrower at closing.
Had the Garrett Amendment survived
the Committee vote it could have had a considerable negative effect on the
housing market. FHA guaranteed loans
have historically been a minor factor in mortgage financing, but in the last few years, as
credit tightened, the FHA was forced to increase its funding efforts up to 25 percent of all
mortgage loans and an even high proportion of loans to first time home buyers. READ MORE