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FHA to step in,
finance at-risk loans
WASHINGTON Aug. 31, 2007 Some homeowners with risky subprime
adjustable-rate mortgages will be able to refinance before they lose their home to
foreclosure, with the help of steps President Bush will announce today, senior
administration officials said Thursday night.
An estimated 80,000 homeowners with bruised credit and subprime ARMs they can no longer
afford will be able to refinance loans, which the Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
would insure.
The move marks a historic expansion of the role of the FHA, a Depression-era agency that
has traditionally served low- and moderate-income families and first-time buyers, but not
delinquent borrowers. Nearly 16 percent of subprime borrowers are behind on their ARMs,
and an estimated 2 million subprime ARMs totaling about $600 billion will reset to higher
rates through the end of next year.
To qualify for the new benefit, homeowners would have to prove they paid their loan on
time before it reset to a higher rate and must have at least 3 percent equity in the home.
The program, which doesnt need congressional approval, should take effect early next
year.
Under current rules, the maximum loan the FHA can guarantee is $202,000 in most states and
up to $362,000 in high-cost states such as California and New York.
The officials said Bush will also call on Congress to pass his proposal to overhaul the
FHA, in part by raising those loan limits to $262,000 in most states and $417,000 in
pricier areas. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they werent
authorized to speak on the record.
Bush also wants the FHA to be able to help other risky borrowers, beyond the 80,000, by
broadening its lending criteria. To compensate for the added risk that the borrowers might
default, the FHA would charge them higher premiums on the loans. Also, he wants to
eliminate the 3 percent downpayment requirement, though borrowers would have to pay at
least some of the closing costs to secure the loan.
The senior officials avoided using the word bailout, but the plan is sure to
incite critics.
If youre going to help someone to refinance, youre going to bail out the
person who financed him in the first place, Peter Wallison of the American
Enterprise Institute said Thursday night. This will only cause the problem to arise
again.
Wallison said the lenders who provided the financing in many of these cases likely knew
that the borrowers couldnt meet the financial obligations of the loan.
If were going to allow (lenders) to be refinanced out, what were doing
is saving them from their own greed. ... It might be good politics, but its very bad
policy.
In another bold step, Bush will propose a temporary change in tax law. It would let
homeowners avoid taxes on forgiven debt if a lender agrees to alter the terms of a loan.
Copyright 2007 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc., Noelle Knox. Contributing
writer, Alan Gomez.
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