“After four straight years of growth and with sufficient
reserves on hand to meet future claims, it’s time for FHA to pass along some
modest savings to working families,” Julian Castro, secretary of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development, announced today.
NAR President Bill Brown praised the move. “Dropping
mortgage insurance premiums will mean a lot more responsible borrowers are
eligible to purchase a home through FHA,” he said. “That puts more money in the
fund to protect taxpayers, and it puts more families in homes so they can live
out the American dream.”
The new premium schedule, which takes effect for
residential mortgage loans that have an insurance endorsement date on or after
January 27, is expected to save the average home buyer $500 a year in
insurance costs.
In its announcement, HUD said the reduced premiums
reflect the healthy state of HUD’s mutual mortgage insurance fund, which is the
agency’s principle fund for insuring FHA mortgages. “We’ve carefully weighed
the risks associated with lower premiums with our historic mission to provide
safe and sustainable mortgage financing to responsible homebuyers,” said Edward
Golding, HUD principal deputy assistant secretary for housing. “This
conservative reduction in our premium rates is an appropriate measure to
support [home buyers] on their path to the American dream.”
Under the new schedule, a home purchase with a base loan
amount of up to $625,000, with an 85-percent loan-to-value ratio and a 30-year
loan term, will require an annual mortgage insurance premium of 55 basis
points, down from 80 basis points. A 15-year loan of that same amount and
with a 90-percent LTV ratio will require an MIP of 25 basis points, down from
45. Access the full schedule.
NAR is calling on FHA to take even more steps to help
home buyers, including eliminating FHA’s “life of loan” mortgage insurance
requirement, which forces borrowers to maintain mortgage insurance regardless
of their equity position. Borrowers with traditional mortgage insurance can
typically extinguish their mortgage insurance once they reach 20 percent equity
in the property. “Our work continues, but we’re encouraged by today’s
announcement,” Brown said.
—By
Robert Freedman, REALTOR® Magazine. Read
more about this premium change here.
No comments:
Post a Comment