I received an email from our Coldwell Banker Mortgage advisor today and thought it was a much better summary than I could provide. Feel free to contact him directly - his info is at the end...
From Steve Guenza:
As most of you have already heard, President Bush signed the Mortgage reform bill this morning. I confess, I have not read the entire 700 pages, but below is my take on the import issues that will affect all of our business.
The most important aspect of the bill is that is gives the federal government the authority to step in and infuse money into Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to keep them from going under. Over the last month, investors were selling off Fannie and Freddie stocks and not buying the mortgage backed securities for fear that they would lose money. Fannie and Freddie have bought over half of the mortgages in the US and their stocks have taken a huge hit due to the mortgage market mess.
In order for Fannie and Freddie to make their mortgage backed securities more attractive to investors. They started offering them at a higher yield to investors. They can’t offer a higher yield unless they get a higher yield themselves; hence, interest rates have gone up.
I believe this bill will calm investors down a little knowing that Fannie and Freddie won’t go under. That coupled with the new lending guidelines and rules set into place, should bring rates down as investors come back to the table. I have already seen rates drop twice already today.
The second most important thing is the new FHASecure loan. By now most of you know of Short Sales. Think of this as a ‘Short Sale’ refi. The current lender has to agree to take a 90% of the current value payoff and write off the rest, and FHA will come in and buy the reworked loan from the lender. Of course there are some conditions such as profit sharing of additional equity when the home is sold, and the lenders have additional fees to pay FHA. It is estimated that the lenders will save billions by accepting the ‘Short Sale’ refinance by not letting it go to foreclosure, but they will have to do a better job than they are doing now with all the problems we currently face with the Short Sale process.
What doe’s this mean for us?
It is estimate that this will help 400,000 U.S. homeowners currently facing foreclosure and that potentially means that we could have 400,000 less foreclosures and short sales on the market, and that’s a good thing.
A few other things included in the Bill:
- 10% or up to $7,500 tax credit for first time homebuyers (Although this needs to be paid back over 15 years with 0 interest)
- $7,000 tax credit for buyers that buy an REO
- Elimination of down payment assistance programs, such as Nehemiah, Ameridream and Genesis
- Tighter loan qualification guidelines
- Keeps the higher conforming and FHA loan limits, instead of just through this year.
- Increases FHA loan down payments from 3% to 3.5%.
- 4 billion dollars for states to buy and rehabilitate foreclosed properties
- Creates a national licensing system for Mortgage Brokers and lenders.
All in all, I really think that this is going to help. With all the good buzz in the media, I am even hearing more and more analyst piping up that this may well be the bottom……..Hang On!!!
Steve Guenza
Mortgage Advisor
Coldwell Banker Mortgage
707-765-4453 office
707-326-0814 cell
http://steveguenza.coldwellbankermortgage.com
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