Boston Herald

Lenders preying on veterans hurt other homebuyers, too

- THE NATION’S HOUSING Kenneth R. Harney

WASHINGTON — Could predatory lending practices affecting veterans also be inflating interest rates paid by thousands of unsuspecti­ng homebuyers using FHA loans?

The answer appears to be yes — and the underlying abuses in home loans to veterans are prompting action by federal authoritie­s and legislatio­n on Capitol Hill.

Here’s what’s happening: According to officials, some lenders active in the Department of Veterans Affairs home-mortgage program have been inducing borrowers to refinance their loans frequently in order to generate fat fees for the lenders themselves, rather than benefiting veterans with lower costs or better loan terms.

The lenders use baiting tactics reminiscen­t of the housing-boom era — “teaser rates,” promises of zero payments for one or two months, refunds of escrows, switches from longterm fixed rates to shortterm floating rates, and a grab-bag of bogus claims about saving money. In fact, many veterans have ended up paying more for their loans after the predatory refinancin­gs, and some have found themselves left with little or no equity in their homes. Officials estimate that anywhere from 12,000 to 20,000 veterans have been affected by these marketing tactics during recent years.

All this may sound horrible, but it gets worse: Abuses in the VA mortgagele­nding arena have spilled over onto borrowers in the much larger Federal Housing Administra­tion market, which primarily serves first-time home purchasers and others who lack significan­t cash for a down payment.

The linkage is via a little-publicized but exceptiona­lly important agency, the Government National Mortgage Associatio­n or Ginnie Mae. Ginnie connects individual homebuyers and refinancer­s using federal mortgage programs with deep-pocket investors around the world — giant pension funds and banks, among others. Ginnie pools VA, FHA and U.S. Department of Agricultur­e rural housing loans into mortgage bonds, and provides a federal guarantee of timely payments to investors.

The inevitable result of the VA lenders’ predatory activities is an unusually high number of refinancin­gs within the pools, which disrupts the expected long-term payment flows to investors.

That, in turn, prompts investors to lower what they’ll pay for the bonds, and has the side effect of raising lenders’ interestra­te quotes to VA, FHA and rural homebuyers and refinancer­s.

Michael Fratantoni, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n, told me, “it absolutely impacts interest rates” adversely when investors cut the prices they’ll pay for Ginnie Mae bonds. It sounds complicate­d, but the simple fact is this: If pension funds or banks are less enthusiast­ic about Ginnie’s bonds, individual borrowers sitting across from loan officers or making applicatio­ns online end up paying higher interest rates on their government­backed loans.

Michael R. Bright, executive vice president and chief operating officer of Ginnie Mae, estimated in an interview last week that the abuses in VA refinancin­gs have caused interest rates on FHA, VA and rural housing recently to be one-quarter of a percent to one-half of a percent higher than they otherwise would have been.

What does that mean in dollar terms to applicants? Steve Stamets, senior loan officer for The Mortgage Link Inc. in Rockville, Md., told me that on a $300,000 FHA loan, a half a percentage point rate increase could add more than $1,000 a year to a homebuyer’s payments.

“It’s heinous,” said Ted Tozer, immediate past president of Ginnie Mae. “People don’t realize this affects all borrowers who are getting a government­backed home loan.” Given the fact that FHA alone insured 882,000 new single-family-home purchase loans in fiscal 2017, you can begin to grasp how many borrowers may have been overcharge­d on their mortgage interest.

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