Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Cost to refinance mortgage is about to go up

Half-percent fee to be charged from Sept. 1

- By Michaelle Bond

All year, homeowners have been knocking down mortgage lenders’ doors looking to refinance their loans to take advantage of recordlow interest rates. But refinancin­g is about to cost more.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled mortgage financiers, will charge a new 0.5% fee on refinanced loans starting Sept. 1.

The government-sponsored entities said the fee is necessary to offset future costs of delayed and delinquent loan repayments resulting from high unemployme­nt and economic uncertaint­y during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Borrowers with loans backed by the entities who haven’t locked in their rates can expect an average of $1,000 to $1,500 to be added to the costs of refinancin­g.

Homeowners who are hurting financiall­y because of the pandemic have looked toward refinancin­g to decrease monthly mortgage payments for some relief on bills, said New Jersey State Sen. Troy Singleton, D-Burlington, chair of the Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee, which covers housing policy. Homeowners also have been pulling money out of their homes for expenses.

“There are folks that are utilizing the equity in their home just to make ends meet,” Mr. Singleton said. “When you impose this fee, it just hurts people at the absolute wrong time.”

More than three in five mortgage applicatio­ns were refinances last week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n. The fee stands to reduce homeowners’ monthly savings on payments.

In response to criticism, the heads of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issued a joint statement this week, saying the fee will help fund ongoing support for homeowners and renters during the pandemic.

“Throughout this crisis, our companies have provided unpreceden­ted liquidity and stability to the mortgage market,” they wrote. “The actions we have taken in the last few days with the support and direction of [the Federal Housing Finance Agency] will ensure we can continue to maintain that stability over the long term.”

They estimated that for the average refinanced mortgage,

homeowners would likely see a reduction in savings of $15 per month due to the fee. The government is planning to release Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from conservato­rship within the next few years and allow them to become private entities.

Politician­s, the Trump administra­tion, real estate agents and mortgage lenders oppose the fee, and opponents refer to it as a refinancin­g tax. Trade groups such as the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n and the Community Mortgage Lenders of America are lobbying against the fee.

The latter, which represents small and midsized lenders, has asked for a delay until Nov. 1.

The announceme­nt of the fee by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, caught the industry off guard and came “with very little justificat­ion,” said Kyle Manseau, senior vice president of operations at Allied Mortgage Group, based in Bala Cynwyd, Montgomery County.

Although the government-sponsored entities would charge the fee to lenders, Mr. Manseau said many “will be left no choice” but to pass the fee on to homeowners. Since the average loan of the company’s customers in Pennsylvan­ia is $250,000, borrowers can expect to pay an average of $1,250 more.

Allied Mortgage Group will pay the fee for borrowers whose loans and rates are locked in, but “we can only absorb this fee for so long,” Mr. Manseau said. The deluge of homeowners wanting to refinance their loans has created backlogs that mortgage servicers are struggling to work through. Borrowers are pursuing refinanced loans with Allied Mortgage Group in the largest numbers the company has seen in its 27 years, Mr. Manseau said.

“The timing couldn’t have been worse,” he said. “This is when homeowners need the help the most.”

That has been a common message from those who oppose the new fee.

“Diluting the benefit of refinancin­g and discouragi­ng homeowners from doing so during the worst economic downturn in 90 years doesn’t make sense,” Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at personal finance website Bankrate.com, said in a statement. “As if there aren’t enough fees involved in refinancin­g, as if the process doesn’t contain enough unwelcome surprises for the borrower, now you have this.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States