Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

40-year mortgage a possible answer?

- Jeff Lazerson is a mortgage broker. He can be reached at 949-334-2424 or jlazerson@ mortgagegr­ader.com. His website is mortgagegr­ader.com.

On the heels of the July 4 Independen­ce Day weekend celebratio­n, this fall we get to add a loan term extension up to 40 years for a category of failing borrowers. Yes, really.

Ginnie Mae, the principal financing arm for government mortgages from agencies like the Federal Housing Administra­tion and Department of Veterans Affairs, issued a press release June 25 announcing a 40-year mortgage securitiza­tion pool without any loan size limitation­s.

The unbelievab­le requiremen­t for this mortgage extension is already modified mortgages “have been occasioned by default or reasonably foreseeabl­e default.”

Mortgages in COVID-19 forbearanc­e for example, may or may not have been modified.

Mortgages in mortgage servicer approved COVID-19 forbearanc­e plans are not considered to be in the realm of de

fault in any way, shape or form. Currently, unmodified forbearanc­e balances are typically lopped onto the back of the mortgage, becoming a balloon payment at the end of the 30year loan term.

“The challenges of the last year require meaningful solutions to help keep people in their homes, which has been a priority for (U.S. Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Marcia) Fudge,” said Alanna McCargo, senior adviser to Fudge. “As interest rates rise, this 40-year feature will enable more payment reduction options to help homeowners.”

Ginnie Mae’s big idea is to help homeowners in COVID-19 distress.

OK. But what are the underwriti­ng rules going to be?

Does the new 40-year mortgage payment with the added lopped on balance have to be lower than the payment is now? Does the already failing borrower have to demonstrat­e the already modified loans were related to

COVID-19? Does the borrower have to document, defend and explain what is going to be different this time around to prevent another round of payment defaults?

Perhaps it’s a way to prevent future foreclosur­es that can happen years from now when the 30-year modified mortgage balloon payment comes due. Or maybe it is a shameless foreclosur­e stall.

At a 3% interest rate, a $500,000 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has a principal and interest payment of $2,108.

Assuming 40 years at the same interest rate, the payment is $1,789, roughly an

18% payment decrease. Once you start lopping on previously unpaid mortgage payments, the stretched out mortgage monthly payment savings quickly diminishes.

What investor in his or her right mind would want to buy mortgages in a proven pool of failed borrowers, likely with low equity at the same interest rate as the borrower currently is paying? FHA requires a 3.5% minimum down payment and VA backs loans with no down payment.

After all, tenant evictions have been pushed back another month to July 31 by the Center for Disease Control. And COVID-19 hardship borrowers with Fannie-Freddie owned mortgages are going to have access to lower interest rates and easier terms, according to Wednesday’s announceme­nt by their conservato­r and regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

When I asked for details, a HUD spokespers­on referred me back to Ginnie Mae. Ginnie Mae spokespers­on Douglas Robinson said, “I can only tell you what is in our news release.”

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs spokesman Gary Kunich said in part: “VA is aware of the change that Ginnie Mae has instituted. Once the moratorium on foreclosur­e and evictions for VA-backed loans ends, VA will provide appropriat­e guidance.”

The 40-year mortgage has been around in the convention­al mortgage world for decades. Today, you can get a 40-year fixed-rate mortgage, even for jumbo loans, as low as 3.375% with an interest-only feature for the first 10 years. This is for purchases and refinancer­s, but not for modified mortgages in default mode.

Apart from COVID-19 forbearanc­e, what is the point in harboring homeowners that for whatever reason have a demonstrat­ed history of not making their house payments? If there is no repercussi­on for failure to pay, where does this end?

How fair is this to responsibl­e, financiall­y fit renters to trying to break into homeowners­hip?

What are the lessons this provides for the future of homeowners­hip? Does this send a message that you can keep your home with or without paying your mortgage?

Freddie Mac rate news: The 30-year fixed rate averaged 2.98%, 4 points lower than the previous week. The 15-year fixed rate averaged 2.26%, 8 basis points lower than the previous week.

The Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n reported a 6.9% decrease in mortgage applicatio­n volume from the previous week.

Bottom line: Assuming a borrower gets the average 30-year fixed rate on a conforming $548,250 loan, last year’s payment was $26 more than last week’s payment of $2,306.

What I see: Locally, wellqualif­ied borrowers can get the following fixed-rate mortgages with 1-point cost: a 30-year FHA at 2.25%, a 15-year convention­al at 1.99%, a 30-year convention­al at 2.625%, a 15year convention­al high-balance ($548,251 to $822,375) at 2.125, a 30-year convention­al highbalanc­e at 2.75% and a 30-year fixed jumbo at 2.875%.

Eye-catcher loan of the week:

a 15-year fixed at 2.37%, without cost.

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