1 / 79

Lesson 10:

Lesson 10:. Conventional Financing. Introduction. In this lesson we will cover: conforming and nonconforming loans, characteristics of conventional loans, qualifying standards for conventional loans, and special programs and payment plans. Introduction.

perrin
Télécharger la présentation

Lesson 10:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lesson 10: Conventional Financing

  2. Introduction • In this lesson we will cover: • conforming and nonconforming loans, • characteristics of conventional loans, • qualifying standards for conventional loans, and • special programs and payment plans.

  3. Introduction • Loans made by mortgage lenders can be divided into two main categories: • conventional loans • government-sponsored loans

  4. Introduction • Conventional loan Any institutional loan that isn’t insured or guaranteed by a government agency.

  5. Conforming & Nonconforming Loans • Most conventional loans comply with underwriting guidelines set by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. • Conforming loan:complies with those guidelines. • Nonconforming loan:doesn’t comply.

  6. Conventional Loan Characteristics • Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac underwriting guidelines are widely followed in the mortgage industry because lenders want to be able to sell their loans on secondary market. • Many of the rules covered here are based on their guidelines.

  7. Conventional Loan Characteristics Topics: • Property types and owner-occupancy • Loan amounts • Repayment periods • Amortization • Loan-to-value ratios • Risk-based loan fees • Private mortgage insurance • Secondary financing

  8. Conventional Loan Characteristics Property types and owner-occupancy • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy loans secured by residential property: • detached site-built houses • townhouses • condominium units • cooperative units • manufactured homes

  9. Conventional Loan Characteristics Property types and owner-occupancy • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac don’t require owner-occupancy, but different (generally stricter) underwriting rules apply to investor loans. Investor loan: Borrower purchasing property doesn’t intend to occupy it.

  10. Conventional Loan Characteristics Property types and owner-occupancy • Conventional loan may be secured by: • Principal residence • Up to 4 dwelling units • Second home • No more than 1 dwelling unit • Investment property • Up to 4 dwelling units

  11. Conventional Loan Characteristics Loan amounts • Conforming loan limits are set annually by Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. • If loan amount exceeds applicable limit, the agencies won’t purchase the loan. • Different loan limits for different areas, based on area median home prices. • Different limits for one-, two-, three-, and four-unit dwellings.

  12. Conventional Loan Characteristics Loan amounts • 2009 conforming loan limits for one-unit dwellings • In most areas: $417,000 • In high-cost areas: 125% of area median house price, up to a maximum of $729,750. • Higher limits for Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, and Virgin Islands.

  13. Conventional Loan Characteristics Loan amounts • Loan that exceeds conforming loan limit is called a jumbo loan. • Typically, jumbo loans: • have higher interest rates and loan fees than conforming loans, and • are underwritten using stricter standards. • For example, lower maximum LTV, higher credit score requirements.

  14. Conventional Loan Characteristics Repayment periods • Repayment periods can range from 10 to 40 years. • 30-year loans are standard. • 15-year loans also popular.

  15. Conventional Loan Characteristics Amortization • Standard conventional loan is fully amortized. • Partially amortized and interest-only loans also available.

  16. Conventional Loan Characteristics Loan-to-value ratios • Traditional standard conventional LTV: 80% • Loans with LTVs up to 95% also available. • During subprime boom, higher LTVs were available: 97% or even 100%. Now uncommon. • Also, loans with LTVs of 90% or 95% are less easily obtained than they were a few years ago.

  17. Conventional Loan Characteristics Loan-to-value ratios • Conventional loans may be categorized by LTV ratio, with different underwriting rules applied to each category. • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac require any conventional loan with LTV over 80% to have private mortgage insurance.

  18. Conventional Loan Characteristics Loan-to-value ratios • High-LTV loans also usually have: • higher interest rates and fees, and • stricter underwriting rules.

  19. Conventional Loan Characteristics Combined loan-to-value ratios • If there are other mortgages against a property, lender will be concerned with the combined loan-to-value ratio (CLTV). • CLTV generally should not exceed usual LTV limit, but in some cases a higher CLTV is allowed.

  20. Conventional Loan Characteristics Risk-based loan fees • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac require most borrowers to pay risk-based loan fees called loan-level price adjustments (LLPAs).

  21. Conventional Loan Characteristics Risk-based loan fees • Loan-level price adjustments shift some of the risk (cost) of mortgage defaults onto borrowers. • Generally, the riskier the loan, the more the borrower will have to pay in LLPAs.

  22. Conventional Loan Characteristics Risk-based loan fees • Nearly all loans sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are subject to an LLPA that varies based on borrower’s credit score and loan-to-value ratio. • Example: • Borrower with 650 credit score and 80% LTV might be charged LLPA of 2.75% of loan amount. • But borrower with 710 credit score and 90% LTV might be charged only 0.5%.

  23. Conventional Loan Characteristics Risk-based loan fees • One or more additional LLPAs may be charged because loan is ARM, investor loan, interest-only loan, or some other relatively risky type of loan. • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac also levy a flat fee called an adverse market delivery charge on every borrower to help agencies recover losses caused by poor market conditions.

  24. Conventional Loan Characteristics Private mortgage insurance • Private mortgage insurance (PMI) helps protect lenders from risk of high-LTV loans. • Required for convention loans if LTV over 80%. • Makes up for reduced borrower equity.

  25. Private Mortgage Insurance How PMI works • Private mortgage insurance company assumes only a portion of risk of default and foreclosure loss. • PMI covers upper portion of loan. • Typically 25% to 30% of loan amount.

  26. Private Mortgage Insurance How PMI works • Upon default and foreclosure, lender makes claim for reimbursement of actual losses. • Or may relinquish property to insurer.

  27. Private Mortgage Insurance How PMI works • Insurers have own underwriting standards, which have been influential in mortgage industry.

  28. Private Mortgage Insurance PMI premiums • Mortgage insurance company charges risk-based premiums for coverage. • Variety of payment plans, including: • flat monthly premium; • initial premium at closing, plus renewal premiums; or • financed one-time premium.

  29. Private Mortgage Insurance PMI premiums • With some plans, borrower who pays off loan early is entitled to partial refund of initial premium or financed one-time premium. • But plans that don’t provide for refunds are less expensive.

  30. Private Mortgage Insurance Deductibility of PMI premiums • PMI premiums are currently tax-deductible. • No deduction if family income is over $109,000. • Deductibility set to expire in 2010.

  31. Private Mortgage Insurance Cancellation of PMI • Under federal Homeowners Protection Act, lenders must cancel loan’s PMI under certain conditions: • once loan has been paid down to 80% of property’s original value (upon borrower request); or • once loan reaches 78% of property’s original value (automatic cancellation).

  32. Private Mortgage Insurance Cancellation of PMI • Homeowners Protection Act applies only to loans on single-family dwellings occupied as borrower’s primary residence. • Depending on payment plan, cancellation of PMI may reduce monthly mortgage payment.

  33. Secondary Financing • Lenders generally allow secondary financing in conjunction with a conventional loan. • Most impose some restrictions to minimize increased risk that borrower will default on primary loan.

  34. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Examples of restrictions lenders may impose: • Borrower must qualify for payments on both first and second mortgages.

  35. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Examples of restrictions lenders may impose: • Borrower must qualify for payments on both first and second mortgages. • Borrower must make 5% downpayment.

  36. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Examples of restrictions lenders may impose: • Borrower must qualify for payments on both first and second mortgages. • Borrower must make 5% downpayment. • Scheduled payments must be due on regular basis.

  37. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Second mortgage can’t require balloon payment less than 5 years after closing.

  38. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Second mortgage can’t require balloon payment less than 5 years after closing. • If first mortgage has variable payments, second mortgage must have fixed payments.

  39. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Second mortgage can’t require balloon payment less than 5 years after closing. • If first mortgage has variable payments, second mortgage must have fixed payments. • No negative amortization.

  40. Secondary Financing Restrictions • Second mortgage can’t require balloon payment less than 5 years after closing. • If first mortgage has variable payments, second mortgage must have fixed payments. • No negative amortization. • No prepayment penalty.

  41. Secondary Financing Piggyback loans • Secondary financing is sometimes referred to as a piggyback loan, especially when it is used to either: • avoid paying private mortgage insurance, or • avoid jumbo loan treatment.

  42. Secondary Financing Piggyback loans • With piggyback loan, LTV of primary loan isn’t over 80%. • So PMI requirement doesn’t apply. • With piggyback loan, loan amount for primary loan doesn’t exceed conforming loan limit. • So higher costs and stricter rules for jumbo loans don’t apply.

  43. Secondary Financing Piggyback loans • Piggybacking was popular during subprime boom, but is no longer widely used. • Advantages of piggybacking reduced by: • tax deductibility of PMI premiums • loan-level price adjustments imposed on secondary financing

  44. Conventional Loan Characteristics Conventional loan Conforming loan Nonconforming loan Conforming loan limits Jumbo loan Loan-level price adjustment (LLPA) Adverse market delivery charge PMI Piggyback loan

  45. Conventional Qualifying Standards Evaluating risk factors • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have changed how they evaluate creditworthiness of applicants. • Newer methods influenced by automated underwriting systems and computer analysis.

  46. Conventional Qualifying Standards Evaluating risk factors • Fannie Mae uses “comprehensive risk assessment” to evaluate risk factors. • Two primary risk factors: • applicant’s credit reputation, and • the loan-to-value ratio.

  47. Conventional Qualifying Standards Evaluating risk factors • Fannie Mae uses “comprehensive risk assessment” to evaluate risk factors. • Two primary risk factors: • applicant’s credit reputation, and • the loan-to-value ratio. • Loans ranked as low, moderate, or high primary risk.

  48. Conventional Qualifying Standards Evaluating risk factors • Fannie Mae treats other aspects of application, such as debt to income ratio and cash reserves, as contributory risk factors. • Each factor assigned value depending on whether it: • satisfies basic risk tolerances, • increases risk, or • decreases risk.

  49. Conventional Qualifying Standards Evaluating risk factors • Freddie Mac’s underwriting guidelines call for separate evaluation of each component of creditworthiness: credit reputation, income, net worth. • Underwriter then considers overall layering of risk. • Weakness in one component can be outweighed by strength in another.

  50. Conventional Qualifying Standards Evaluating risk factors • Difference between Fannie Mae’s approach and Freddie Mac’s approach is mainly a difference in terminology. • Both agencies consider the borrower’s overall financial picture, with positive factors offsetting negative ones and vice versa.

More Related