Saturday, February 21, 2009

Examples of the White House Mortgage Proposal

For full financial details go to:http://www.treas.gov/initiatives/eesa/homeowner-affordability-plan/HousingExampleSheet.pdf



Support Under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan: Three Cases
Family A: Access to Refinancing
��
In 2006: Family A took a 30-year fixed rate mortgage of $207,000 on a house worth $260,000 at the time. (The family put just over 20% down.) They received a Fannie Mae conforming loan with an interest rate of 6.50%.
��
Today: Family A has about $200,000 remaining on their mortgage but their home value has fallen 15 percent to $221,000.
o
Their “loan-to-value” ratio is now 90%, making them ineligible for a Fannie Mae refinancing.
��
Under the Refinancing Plan: Family A can refinance to a rate of 5.16%. This would reduce their annual payments by nearly $2,350.

Family B: Access to Refinancing
��
In 2006: Family B took a 30-year fixed rate mortgage of $350,000 on a house worth $475,000 at the time. (The family put just over 26% down.) They received a Fannie Mae conforming loan with an interest rate of 6.50%.
��
Today: Family B has about $337,460 remaining on their mortgage but their home value has fallen to $400,000.
o
Their “loan-to-value” ratio is now 84%, making them ineligible for a Fannie Mae refinancing.
��
Under the Refinancing Plan: Family B can refinance to a rate of 5.16%. This would reduce their annual payments by nearly $4,000.
Family C: Eligible for Homeowner Stability Initiative
��
In 2006: Family C took out a 30-year subprime mortgage of $220,000, on a house worth $230,000 at the time (they put less than 5% down). Their mortgage broker – Mom & Pop Mortgage – sold their loan to Investment Bank. The interest rate on their mortgage is 7.5%.
��
Today: Family C has $214,016 remaining on their mortgage but their home value has fallen -18% to $189,000. Also, in November, one parent in Family C was moved from full-time to part-time work, causing a significant negative shock to their income.
o
Their loan is now 113% the value of their home, making them “underwater” and unable to sell their house.
o
Meanwhile, their monthly mortgage payment is $1,538 and their monthly income has fallen to $3,650, meaning the ratio of their monthly mortgage debt to income is 42%.
��
Under the Homeowner Stability Initiative: Family C can get a government sponsored modification that – for five years – will reduce their mortgage payment by $406 a month. After those five years, Family C’s mortgage payment will adjust upward at a moderate, phased-in level.
Homeowner Stability Initiative: How the Program Works for the Lender, Government and Borrower
��
First, Investment Bank (working through a mortgage servicer) reduces the interest rate so that the Family C’s monthly debt-to-income ratio drops from 42% to 38%. This means that Investment Bank must reduce the interest rate from 7.50% to 6.38%, bringing down Family C’s monthly payment from $1,538 to $1,387.
��
Second, the government and Investment Bank share the cost of further reducing the interest rate so that the Family C’s monthly debt-to-income level is lowered to 31%. Any dollar the bank spends is matched by the government. At this stage, Family C’s interest rate is reduced from 6.41% to 4.43%. In total, Family C’s monthly payment has fallen from $1,538 to $1,132.
��
If Family C remains current on their payments, they will receive incentive payments up to $1,000 a year, or $5,000 over five years, that would go towards reducing the principal they owe. Additionally, the mortgage servicer can earn an up-front incentive fee of $1,000, plus up to $1,000 per year in “Pay for Success” fees for three years, so long as Family C remains current Sphere: Related Content

No comments: