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For Immediate Release:
Contact: Steve Adamske (202) 225-7141
or Heather Wong (202) 226-3314
March 13, 2008
FRANK ANNOUNCES NEW
ECONOMIC, MORTGAGE AND HOUSING RESCUE PROPOSAL
Washington, DC -- House Financial Services Committee Chairman
Barney Frank today announced new legislation to stem the significant rise in
mortgage foreclosures by allowing the Federal Housing Administration to
insure and guarantee refinanced mortgages that have been significantly
written down by mortgage holders and lenders. The following of a summary of
the proposed draft and the full text will be available later today on the
Financial Services Committee website at financialservices.house.gov. Mr.
Frank announced the proposal today, but warned that the bill text could
change before introduction. Mr. Frank will be seeking input and comments
regarding this proposal over the next few weeks.
FHA Housing Stabilization &
Homeownership Retention Act
(SUMMARY OF DISCUSSION
DRAFT)
I.
Expanded FHA-Refinance for Individual
Borrowers
Summary. Program would
permit FHA to provide [up to $300 billion] in new guarantees that would help
to refinance at-risk borrowers into viable mortgages. In exchange for the
acceptance of a substantial write-down of principal, the existing lender or
mortgage holder would receive a short payment from the proceeds of a new FHA
loan if the restructured loan would result in terms that the borrower can
reasonably be expected to pay. The existing lender or mortgage holder will
have a cash payment and no further credit exposure to the borrower. This
could potentially refinance between 1 and 2 million loans (and help these
families stay in their homes), protect neighborhoods and help stabilize the
housing market.
Under the program, a borrower or existing loan
servicer of an eligible loan would contact an FHA-approved lender, who would
determine the size of a loan that would be consistent with the requirements
of the program and that the borrower could reasonably repay. If the current
lender or mortgage holder agrees to a write-down that is sufficient to meet
the requirements of the program and make the new loan affordable, the
FHA-lender will pay off the discounted existing mortgage.
In addition to a first lien, the program gives
the government a soft second lien to help defer the government’s costs and
prevent unjust enrichment (e.g., borrower flipping). When the borrower
sells the home or refinances the loan, the borrower will pay from any
profits the higher of (1) an ongoing
exit fee equal to 3 percent of the original FHA loan balance; or (2) a
declining percentage of any profits (e.g., from 100 percent in year one to
20 percent in year five and 0 thereafter). After year five only the 3
percent exit fee will apply.
Eligibility Requirements for Existing Loans
(Requires All of the Following):
·
Owner-occupied principal residences only (no investors, speculators or
second homes);
·
[Existing senior loan being refinanced must have been originated between
January 1, 2005 and July 1, 2007];
· To
remove any incentive for borrowers to “purposely default,” the borrower must
have had a mortgage debt-to-income ratio of no less that 40 percent
as of March 1, 2008, and must
certify that he/she has not intentionally defaulted on existing mortgage(s).
Regulators can make exceptions for
involuntary changes after that date;
·
Participating mortgage holders/investors must waive any penalties or fees on
the existing mortgage and must accept proceeds of the new loan as payment in
full;
·
Existing mortgage holders/investors must accept their losses – taking
substantial write-down sufficient to establish a 5 percent loan loss reserve
for the FHA, bring the loan-to-value ratio on the new FHA-loan down to no
greater than 90 percent of property’s
current appraised value, result in a meaningful reduction in
mortgage debt service by the borrower, and to pay all up-front fees for the
new loan. Accordingly, to qualify, mortgage holders would need to accept a
substantial write-down, receiving no more than 85 percent of the property’s
current appraised value as payment in full for the existing loans.
Requirements for New FHA-Insured Loans:
· New
FHA loans must be properly underwritten and must be based on
current appraised value of the
house and borrower’s documented income (borrowers with higher (but not
disqualifying) debt levels would need to make six months of timely payments
at the new FHA payment level to qualify for the guarantee);
· New
FHA loan must extinguish all existing liens and meaningfully reduce the
borrower’s mortgage debt service;
· New
FHA loan must be within applicable FHA loan limits;
· HUD
will set reasonable limits on loan fees and interest rates; and
-
To reduce costs to the government – and
avoid inappropriate enrichment to the borrower – the government will
retain a second lien on the property. When the borrower sells the home or
refinances the loan, the borrower will pay from any profits the higher of
(1) an ongoing exit fee
equal to 3 percent of the original FHA loan balance; or (2) a declining
percentage of any profits (e.g., from 100 percent in year one to 20
percent in year five and 0 thereafter). After year five only the 3 percent
exit fee will apply.
Coordination of Existing Lien-Holders.
The Secretary of HUD will be authorized to take action to facilitate
coordination among different existing lien-holders.
Separate FHA Fund. To
protect the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, these new loans will exist
in a separate fund in FHA – and will be permitted to be resold (together or
separately) through GNMA.
Improving FHA Capacity. The
FHA shall take actions as necessary to increase its capacity, including:
·
Contracting for the establishment of underwriting criteria, pricing
standards, and other factors relating to eligibility;
·
Contracting for independent quality reviews of the underwriting of these
mortgages; and
·
Increasing personnel.
Increased Fraud Prevention/Oversight
-
The HUD Secretary shall establish
independent quality reviews to determine underwriter compliance, and rates
of delinquency, claims and losses;
-
Submit semi-annual reports to Congress; and
-
HUD Inspector General shall conduct annual
audit of the program.
Sunset. The program will
run for 2 years (with flexibility for the Secretary to make additional 6
month extensions not to exceed 2 more years).
II. FHA
Bulk-Refinance Facility
Summary. The legislation
would permit the loan program under title I of the bill to be used to
refinance and guarantee mortgages through a facility that would provide for
auction or other mechanism to refinance loans on a bulk basis.
A “Refinance Program Oversight Board”
consisting of the Secretary of Treasury, Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development, and Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board would be required to
develop a potential structure for conducting auctions or other bulk
refinancing within 60 days of enactment. The program would not
commence operations, however, unless the Oversight Board determined that
there was a feasible auction or other bulk refinancing structure would
provide an effective and efficient system for bulk loan refinancing and was
needed to stabilize the housing markets and reduce impact on the U.S.
economy.
Under the program, the Oversight Board would
appoint and oversee an auction agent that would solicit bids from lenders
and servicers for delivery of restructured loans for insurance by the FHA.
Bidders could compete to offer mortgages based on criteria to be
established. Only loans eligible for refinancing under title I of this
legislation would be eligible.
III. Loans and
Grants to States for Foreclosure Relief/Mitigation
-
The plan would provide $10 billion in loans
and grants for the purchase and rehabilitation of vacant, foreclosed homes
with the goal of occupying them as soon as possible.
-
Each state’s loan and grant authority will
be based on the state’s percentage of nationwide foreclosures adjusted to
account for the state’s median home price. States can allocate funds to
government entities (e.g., housing authorities), nonprofits, and
private-sector entities for the purchase and resale of homeownership
housing. However, only government entities and nonprofits can receive
these funds for rental housing developments.
-
Loans will be non-recourse, zero-interest
loans to finance acquisition and rehabilitation costs. The government
will be paid back from resale or, in the case of rental properties,
refinance proceeds. Loans for homeownership properties must be repaid
within two years. For rental properties, the maximum loan term will be
five years. In addition, the federal government will receive 20 percent
of any appreciation a property owner realizes at resale.
-
25 percent of the state’s funding authority
could be used grants, for purposes which include property taxes and
insurance during the pre-occupancy phase; operating costs such as property
management fees, property taxes and insurance during the period a property
is rented costs incurred related to property acquisition; and
administrative costs by the state and grantees to run the program. Grants
could also cover down payment and closing cost assistance.
-
Homes purchased for resale must be sold to
families having incomes that do not exceed 140 percent of area median
income. Properties purchased for rental must serve families having
incomes at or below area median income. However, states are required to
give preference to entities that will use the funds to serve the lowest
income individuals for the longest periods.
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