|
Raising conforming loan limit not a
simple task
Fannie, Freddie may have to tiptoe into 'jumbo light'
market
By Matt Carter, Inman News
While Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing
Administration will soon be allowed to dive into what
until now has been the jumbo loan market, it remains
to be seen how many borrowers will benefit.
Congress and the Bush administration have agreed to
raise the $417,000 conforming loan limit until the end
of the year, under a provision of the $150 billion economic
stimulus package approved by Congress last week (see
Inman News story).
But the devil, as they say, will be in the details.
The new formula for determining the conforming loan limit
will allow Fannie, Freddie and FHA to guarantee loans
of up to 125 percent of the median home price of an area.
While housing markets where the median home price exceeds
$216,840 will benefit from higher limits for FHA loan
guarantee programs, one analysis suggests Fannie and
Freddie will be able to tiptoe into the jumbo loan business
in only 19 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs).
The first step to be taken to implement the changes
will be determining median home prices. The Department
of Housing and Urban Development has been given 30 days
to publish median-home-price data once President Bush
signs the stimulus package into law.
But where will HUD get the data? And with prices falling
rapidly in many markets, will the data be updated monthly,
quarterly or annually?
HUD spokesman Lemar Wooley said FHA will use a combination
of existing government data sets and available commercial
information to determine the median sales price. He said
FHA loan limits are based on the county a property is
located in, except when the county is part of a larger
MSA, in which case the county with the highest loan limit
determines the limit for the entire MSA.
Not only does HUD have to come up with median-home-price
numbers for every housing market in America, but Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac will have to come up with credit
guidelines for a class of loans that, until now, has
mostly been off-limits. The government-chartered mortgage
financiers will have to decide what their standards will
be for the loans they will purchase, or securitize and
guarantee.
As they venture into the jumbo loan market, Fannie and
Freddie will have to decide if they need to be more cautious
about the minimum down payments they will accept, borrower's
credit histories, and the fees they charge for taking
on more risk. The task will be complicated by the fact
that the maximum loan size will vary from market to market,
instead of the uniform $417,000 limit in place today
in 48 states other than Alaska and Hawaii.
In high-cost markets, the $417,000 conforming loan limit
for loans eligible for purchase or guarantee by Fannie
and Freddie will be raised to 125 percent of the median
home price, with an upper cap of $729,750. That formula
means that the $417,000 conforming loan limit will remain
in place in markets where the median home price is $333,600
or less.
While there's no time limit for Fannie and Freddie to
publish guidelines for the new class of loans, the companies
have promised to work with regulators to expedite the
process. James Lockhart, director of the Office of Federal
Housing Enterprise Oversight, told members of the Senate
Banking Committee Thursday that the process could take
months.
The temporary increase in the conforming loan limit
is likely to have a bigger impact on FHA loan guarantee
programs, because the current limits for FHA are lower.
In high-cost markets, the current ceiling for FHA loan
programs is $372,790, and $200,160 in other markets.
The new ceiling for FHA loan programs in normal markets
will be $271,050 -- meaning that even borrowers in housing
markets where the median home price is below $216,840
may be eligible for FHA-backed purchase or refinance
loans up to that amount. In areas where the median home
price is above $216,840, the limit for FHA loan programs
will be 125 percent of the median home price, all the
way up to $729,750.
Fannie and Freddie will be allowed to buy and securitize
jumbo loans originated any time between July 1, 2007
and Dec. 31, 2008. That means jumbo lenders may be able
to sell some of the loans they've made in the last seven
months to Fannie and Freddie, freeing them up to make
more loans.
One reason Congress and the Bush administration agreed
to raise the conforming limit, at least for now, is that
Wall Street investors will no longer buy most mortgage-backed
securities that don't carry the backing of Fannie, Freddie
or FHA. That means borrowers are paying about 1 percent
more for jumbo loans that exceed the $417,000 conforming
loan limit.
But there's no guarantee investors will accept the jumbo
loans backed by Fannie and Freddie -- which are private,
publicly traded companies that face potentially billions
of losses in the current mortgage morass -- as safe investments.
They may also need some time to familiarize themselves
with how FHA is handling the larger loans, said Jaret
Seiberg, an analyst with Stanford Group Co. who follows
the secondary mortgage market.
"Investors understand the risk characteristics
of conforming mortgages that are securitized by Fannie
and Freddie, and they understand FHA-backed loans securitized
through Ginnie Mae," Seiberg said. "But they
don't have experience with jumbo loans coming out of
those channels. In a market with so much uncertainty,
it's a real question whether investors are going to have
an appetite for a new product."
If Wall Street investors don't snatch up the larger
loans backed by Fannie, Freddie and FHA after they are
securitized, that would limit the benefits to the secondary
mortgage market and do less to ease the credit crunch
than backers of the move have hoped.
As Fannie's and Freddie's losses mount and they bump
up against minimum capital requirements, their capacity
to purchase and guarantee loans is not unlimited. And
as Lockhart noted, it takes three times as much capital
to guarantee one $600,000 loan as it does one $200,000
loan.
While Seiberg is confident that HUD can implement higher
loan limits for FHA programs, he said Fannie and Freddie
have technological and capital issues to overcome before
they become "meaningful players" in the "jumbo
light" market.
As to which housing markets might benefit from higher
conforming loan limits, Seiberg said Stanford Group used
median-home-price data from the National Association
of Realtors to analyze where Fannie and Freddie might
be able to purchase or guarantee loans above the current
$417,000 limit.
Stanford Group identified 19 markets -- more than a
third of them in California -- where Fannie and Freddie
could enter the jumbo light market.
Estimated conforming loan limit increases
| Anaheim-Santa Ana, Calif. |
$700,700 |
$729,750 |
| L.A.-Long Beach-Santa Ana, Calif. |
$588,400 |
$729,750 |
| San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, Calif. |
$589,300 |
$729,750 |
| San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, Calif. |
$825,400 |
$729,750 |
| San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif. |
$852,500 |
$729,750 |
| Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif. |
$377,000 |
$471,250 |
| Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville, Calif. |
$335,700 |
$419,625 |
| Barnstable Town, Mass. |
$400,600 |
$500,750 |
| Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, Mass. |
$414,700 |
$518,375 |
| Boulder, Colo. |
$367,500 |
$459,375 |
| Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn. |
$491,100 |
$613,875 |
| Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Miami Beach, Fla. |
$346,800 |
$433,500 |
| New York-Northern N.J.-Long Island, N.Y./N.J. |
$476,100 |
$595,125 |
| New York-Wayne-White Plains, N.Y. |
$550,900 |
$688,625 |
| Edison, N.J. |
$391,800 |
$489,750 |
| Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y. |
$470,000 |
$587,500 |
| Newark-Union, N.J./Penn. |
$459,700 |
$574,625 |
| Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, Wash. |
$394,700 |
$493,375 |
| Wash. D.C.-Arlington-Alexandria, Va./Md./W.V. |
$438,000 |
$547,500 |
Source: National Association of Realtors, Stanford Group
|