Fannie mae is getting desperate.

in mortgage •  7 years ago 

The housing market is going downhill fast.They are getting desperate for buyers in the housing market. They realize people and especially milleniels are too broke and have too much debt to buy a home.
Here is what they are trying now....

WASHINGTON – June 9, 2017 – Government-sponsored financing giant Fannie Mae will ease its requirements next month, raising its debt-to-income ceiling from 45 percent to 50 percent on July 29. The move could pave the way for a larger number of new buyers to qualify for a mortgage, particularly millennials who may be saddled with student loan debt.

The debt-to-income ratio compares a person's gross monthly income with his or her monthly payment on all debt accounts, including auto loans, credit cards, and student loans. It also factors in the projected payments on the new mortgage. Lenders see applicants with lower debt-to-income ratios as less at risk of defaulting.

Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration have exemptions that allow them to buy or insure loans with higher ratios than the federal rules, which are set at a maximum of 43 percent. The FHA allows debt-to-income ratios of more than 50 percent in some cases.

In a recent study, Fannie Mae researchers looked at more than a decade and a half of data from borrowers with debt-to-income ratios in the 45 percent to 50 percent range. They found that a significant number of these borrowers had good credit and were not prone to default.

"We feel very comfortable" with the increased debt-to-income ratio ceiling, says Steve Holden, Fannie Mae's vice president of single-family analytics. "What we're seeing is that a lot of borrowers have other factors" in their credit profiles that reduce the risks associated with slightly higher debt-to-income ratios. For example, these borrowers may make higher down payments or have cash reserves of 12 months or more.

Many lenders say they're happy to see Fannie loosen up their debt-to-income guidelines a bit. Joe Petrowsky, owner of Right Trac Financial Group in Hartford, Conn, calls the move "a big deal" for potential buyers who are currently being rejected for mortgages: "There are so many clients that end up above the 45 percent debt ratio threshold."

But that doesn't mean that anyone with a debt-to-income ratio of below 50 percent will be approved. Borrowers will still be closely vetted by Fannie's underwriting system to examine their complete application, including income, down payment, credit scores, and more.

Source: "Fannie Mae Will Ease Financial Standards for Mortgage Applicants Next Month," The Washington Post (June 6, 2017)

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Interesting, mark my words we will have another collapse like the sub-prime of 2009. I think AS early as 2021-2 is the time to be carefull about!

Here's a thought: Get the government out of the housing finance business, period. The problem will then solve itself.

Where are the NINJA loans? LOL

They are coming soon i'm sure........
They have also changed formula to make credit scores higher and require lower scores to get a loan.

I just bought a house back in October, after a decade of renting. Before that, I owned three houses, buying my first one in 1997 when I was REALLY young. After a while of buying, selling, moving, I became tired of the responsibilities of home ownership, and just wanted someone else to be responsible for fixing anything that needed repairing, and to pay all the property taxes.

After a decade of terrible landlords, including one place I rented for five years just before buying the house I now own, I realized no one wants to take care of their houses, and the landlords will only do the minimum required to keep you from bitching at them (or calling Code Enforcement on them, like I did with my last landlord, when he refused to fix a leaky roof and a broken AC....then Code Enforcement made him do it). So, I delved back into being a homeowner. The requirements to get a mortgage have always been a pain in the ass, but it's changed a lot since the last time I purchased a home. There were many surprise requirements I didn't know about this time.

There's no really good solution to housing. Either you own and are responsible for everything, or you rent and are at the whim of some person who doesn't really want to do anything that costs them money. I don't think I'll ever sell this house, though, even if I don't always live in it. It was too hard to get in the first place!

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