Freddie Mac Launches "3% Down" Mortgage With No Income Restrictions

EGO-TRIP

Rising Star
Registered
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018...unches-3-down-mortgage-no-income-restrictions

Freddie Mac Launches "3% Down" Mortgage With No Income Restrictions


by Tyler Durden
Sun, 04/29/2018 - 08:28
3.2K
SHARES
Twitter Facebook Reddit Email Print
It's been a while since the US made a wholesale push to get more cash and income-strapped households into the ever more unaffordable American dream of owning a house, three years to be exact, which is when nationalized housing agency Freddie Mac last rolled out a conventional mortgage that only required a 3% down payment for certain borrowers.

The problem is that what modest requirement the mortgage program had back in 2015, meant that most Americans who needed access would be excluded. The program, which as we described at the time was designed for qualified (that being the key word) low-and moderate-income borrowers - i.e., Millennials - saw limited progress over the last few years, with FHFA Director Mel Watt telling Congress last year that Freddie’s 3% down program (along with a similar one from Fannie Mae) was continuing to grow.

It just wasn't growing fast enough, because while putting 3% down may not have been especially challenging for most Americans, having even the modest income required to go along with it, was.

So fast forward to last week, when Freddie Mac announced on Thursday it was about to supercharge its 3% down program and launch a widespread expansion of the offering, when it announced that it is rolling out a new conventional 3% down payment option for qualified first-time homebuyers, - effectively the same as the 2015 program... with one small difference: there would be no geographic restrictions; more importantly there no longer will be any income restrictions. To wit:

Freddie%20home%20one.jpg


In other words, whereas many Americans could not qualify for the original 3% down program because, well, they lacked virtually any income, that will no longer be a hindrance and the government will effectively backstop the lack of income as a new wave of 'income-challenged' Americans rushes in to buy houses.

home%20one%20mortgage.jpg


Amusingly, the new program, which is called HomeOne (full brochure below), puts Freddie Mac in direct competition for mortgage business with the Federal Housing Administration, which also only requires 3% down on some mortgages.

Furthermore, according to Freddie Mac, this new offering is not replacing its Home Possible 3% down mortgages. Rather, the program is meant to complement the Home Possible program, which will still be available to low-and moderate-income borrowers.

“Freddie Mac’s HomeOne mortgage is part of the company’s ongoing efforts to support responsible lending, provide sustainable homeownership and improve access to credit,” Danny Gardner, senior vice president of single-family affordable lending and access to credit at Freddie Mac, said in a statement.

It was not quite clear how it is responsible to lend money to households which have saved only enough to put down 3% equity value, oh, and which have no income to even give the false impression their equity stake may grow in the future.

It gets better. As Housing Wire summarizes the terms of HomeOne, Freddie Mac said that the new mortgage is designed for first-time homebuyers, who currently make up nearly half of all home purchases.

According to Freddie Mac, a HomeOne mortgage must be underwritten through its Loan Product Advisor, which makes a complete risk assessment based on several factors as it relates to credit, capacity and collateral.

Additionally, the HomeOne mortgage is offered only for conforming fixed-rate mortgages that are secured by a 1-unit primary residence. And, at least one of the borrowers must be a first-time homebuyer.

There is one potential hurdle: when all the borrowers are first-time homebuyers, at least one borrower must participate in homeownership education in order to qualify for the mortgage.

Yes, one may have no income and still qualify as long as one watches a few videos explaining why having an income is critical to avoid having another housing market crash, or something.

None of that matters however, as the US government is once again clearly more interested in well and truly blowing another housing bubble, where not Countrywide or New Century, but the government itself is issuing NINJA loans.

"The HomeOne mortgage will provide our customers the flexibility they need to help borrowers anywhere in the country achieve the milestone of homeownership and overcome the common down payment resource hurdle,” Gardner continued. “HomeOne is a great solution for aspiring homebuyers to grab that first rung of the property ladder and enjoy the financial and social benefits of participating in homeownership.”

What was unsaid is that now that rates just happen to be rising, making homes even more unaffordable and resetting ARM mortgages higher, the generously funded by taxpayers HomeOne also assures another housing crisis, and even more GSEs/Fredde/FHA bailouts in the near future.

The fun beguns on July 29, 2018, when the new HomeOne mortgage will become available. For more, check out the program detail and marketing materials from Freddie Mac.
 
If you are black, I would stay as far as possible from mortgages. You need liquidity and the way they structure these products is not conducive to us.

Many times we are exposed to messaging that is applicable to whites and not us. You see an ad for Starbucks thinking you can sit around like everybody else. Than SWAT shows up and fires a couple of bullets

Let say you get a house and get foreclosed on with negative or no equity from the sale, than you really lived in an expensive apartment all those years. Mortgages, student loans, and other debt financing are Weapons of Mass Destruction to the black community.

wfpg1.jpg


Look at all the people that were steered into subprime loans when they qualified for prime loans with their credit score. Now with President Trump in office, expect these practices to slowly creep back knowing there is no enforcement from the top. If you got a family than you have no choice, but I would try to get a high ratio of cash to your mortgage balance. If you got $200,000 loan, and put 3% down, than I am having $50,000 or more banked up. Do not live paycheck to paycheck gettting a mortgage, any default will mean you just rented a house rather than bought a home. If you try to get another mortgage in seven years, you will be stuck with a subprime loan paying a whole lot of interest, making you even more likely to have negative equity.

Many people move up in a company and get an inflated salary through seniority that if they lost their job, will mean you start at the bottom somewhere else. Your mortgage will be based on this good salary you have no chance of getting again.
 
Last edited:
You can thank the GOP for killing DonFrank. These greedy bankers need new revenue so let’s give out loans to people who can’t afford houses in the first place.

Did they not remember what happen in 2008
Dodd-Frank isn't the cause. It's only to bring forth accountability and transparency.

But SubPrime Mortgages are coming full force because banks are basically fucked with so many in debt and not repaying shit cause of this recession we never came out of. So now Freddie Mac is releasing this band aid on a shot gun blast.

Just not gonna help this economy. Will just put more people who can't afford a home, in debt.

People will get in which is great that they will get into home ownership, but bankers well know ahead what this will be a train wreck and will benefit by having tons more social security numbers accountable for more US Debt selling treasury bills.

We're about to head into a worse recession/depression then previous which we never came out of, just adjusted.
 
If you are black, I would stay as far as possible from mortgages. You need liquidity and the way they structure these products is not conducive to us.

Many times we are exposed to messaging that is applicable to whites and not us. You see an ad for Starbucks thinking you can sit around like everybody else. Than SWAT shows up and fires a couple of bullets
Please stop.
Life in the US is not rocket science. It’s the easiest place on earth to live in. You only have to know how to take advantage of stuff.

Also, how the hell can you be liquid when you’ve put all your money in a house?
 
Last edited:
If you are black, I would stay as far as possible from mortgages. You need liquidity and the way they structure these products is not conducive to us.

Many times we are exposed to messaging that is applicable to whites and not us. You see an ad for Starbucks thinking you can sit around like everybody else. Than SWAT shows up and fires a couple of bullets
Huh!
 
Mannnnnn, so much craziness here I don't know where to start...ya got a POTUS loosening financial regulations...and I KNEW housing would be part of it eventually...it's like 08 never happened. Is that a true NINA loan? Welcome back to the Wild West of mortgages. ALT loans are back!

Somebody HAS TO KNOW or think that housing is being overbuilt...so ya gotta put somebody..anybody in those homes, even if only temporarily, so the builders and bankers get paid. And when these borrowers default...and they will, the houses are snapped up for pennies on the dollar, AGAIN, by the same companies that bought up the foreclosures and rented them en masse, during the last recession.
 
Does this mean that more people will need to buy PMI? If so, who gets the benefit of all that new business? Will we be finding out a couple of years from now Trump or someone close to him has large investments in PMI companies and services?
 
Apparently Wells Fargo started this 2 years ago. The only difference this article states you will need to purchase PMI with this type of loan.


https://www.cnbc.com/2016/05/26/wells-fargo-launches-3-down-payment-mortgage.html
Wells Fargo launches 3% down payment mortgage
Diana Olick | @DianaOlick
Published 6:30 AM ET Thu, 26 May 2016 Updated 2:21 PM ET Thu, 26 May 2016CNBC.com

Well Fargo introduces 3% down payment mortgage 7:05 AM ET Thu, 26 May 2016 | 01:20



First-time buyers and low- to moderate-income buyers have largely been sidelined by today's housing recovery.

The common cry is too-tight credit. Lenders have kept the credit box restrictive because they are gun-shy from the billions of dollars in buy backs and judicial settlements stemming from the mortgage crisis that they still face today. Now, the nation's largest lender, Wells Fargo, says it is opening that box with a new low down payment loan — a loan it claims is low-risk to the bank.

"We are fully underwriting the borrowers, we are partnering with Fannie Mae to originate and sell these loans, we are ensuring the borrowers have an ability to repay and that they're qualified for home ownership, but we're simplifying things for the homebuyer," said Brad Blackwell, executive vice president and portfolio business manager at Wells Fargo.



Getty Images
A Wells Fargo home mortgage office in San Francisco.
Branded "yourFirstMortgage," Wells Fargo's new product has a minimum down payment of 3 percent for a fixed-rate conventional mortgage of up to $417,000. Down payment help can come from gifts and community-assistance programs. Customers are not required to complete a homebuyer education course, but if they do, they may earn a 1/8 percent interest rate reduction. The minimum FICO score for these loans, which are underwritten according to Fannie Mae standards, is 620. Mortgage insurance can either be rolled in to the cost of the loan or purchased separately by the borrower.

Blackwell said either way, the monthly payment is less than a government-insured FHA loan. More importantly, it's simpler than other 3 percent down payment products already in the market, some of which have specific income and counseling requirements.

"We've taken all the complexity of the home mortgage lending process, removed it from the front-line consumer, so that it's easy for them to understand and Wells Fargo is taking care of all the capital markets and other types of complexities behind the scenes," added Blackwell.

Other 3 percent down payment products from Bank of America with Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae's HomeReady program have not been popular because lenders find them bureaucratic and hard to use.

"To the extent that Wells is using this product as liberally as they can, that's a positive for most borrowers," said Guy Cecala, CEO of Inside Mortgage Finance.


Homebuying, not refinancing, drives mortgage applications up 2.3%

Cecala, however, questions whether any borrower with a 620 FICO score would really qualify for Wells' program. Other programs have that minimum, but the average borrower score on loans actually made is closer to 750.

"I don't know what offsetting factors you have for a 620 credit score with such a low down payment. Unless you require them to have a million dollars in the bank, I'm not sure what else you can do," said Cecala, who notes that a 620 credit score usually denotes someone who has an inability to manage credit. "I think it's problematic to make a loan to borrowers in a subprime credit range with a very low down payment like 3 percent down."

Wells Fargo will service the loans, but Fannie Mae will buy them, and that means the loans must be underwritten to Fannie Mae's standards, which are high. Jonathan Lawless, vice president of product development at Fannie Mae, admits that a borrower with a 620 score would be unlikely to qualify.


"It is true that it's a rare event that we see borrowers at that low a FICO score," he said. "There needs to be compensating factors — one is to have a lot of money in the bank or a very good debt to income ratio."

In other words, the borrower would have to have a very high income to negate the credit risk. Lawless does think the Wells Fargo loan will be far more popular than others on the market because of the financial incentive for homeowner education, the lack of restrictions on funding the down payment and the sheer simplicity of the product. Liking the loan is easy enough, but for first-time, low- to moderate-income borrowers, qualifying for the loan may be harder.

"Loans today are remarkably safe because the underwriting has improved so much. That will be the test with this," said Cecala.



Diana Olick
CNBC Real Est
 
Tyler? From Zero Hedge? That guy and his website is an outhouse for conservative ideology.

Fuck that site and anyone who thinks they’re real.
I thought it was strange when I googled this story no real news organization did a report on this (nothing came up from CNBC, Forbes, etc). However, I did find a legit story from 2 years ago talking about this very service. See my previous post.
 
Where is Obama when you need him!!











Obama come back brotha!!!!

Funny thing is we have the exact opposite of BO running things this go round...its almost like "they"said we need someone to be at the helm when this country truly goes to shit..stock market crash, another housing bubble burst, racial unrest...etc. the 1%ers get even more ridiculously rich and the middle class is gone and become serfs...
And somebody said, Trump. He can do it.
 
Dodd-Frank isn't the cause. It's only to bring forth accountability and transparency.

But SubPrime Mortgages are coming full force because banks are basically fucked with so many in debt and not repaying shit cause of this recession we never came out of. So now Freddie Mac is releasing this band aid on a shot gun blast.

Just not gonna help this economy. Will just put more people who can't afford a home, in debt.

People will get in which is great that they will get into home ownership, but bankers well know ahead what this will be a train wreck and will benefit by having tons more social security numbers accountable for more US Debt selling treasury bills.

We're about to head into a worse recession/depression then previous which we never came out of, just adjusted.
People going in house broke. Likely got a variable interest rate. Already said most don’t have income. First time home buyers. Should work out well :hmm:

Is there ANY way for a middle class first time home buyer to take advantage of this at ALL WITHOUT getting caught up in a bad situation down the line?

bookmarked
 
Last edited:
Does this mean that more people will need to buy PMI? If so, who gets the benefit of all that new business? Will we be finding out a couple of years from now Trump or someone close to him has large investments in PMI companies and services?
Yes. Years of it. And it’s a stock pump play. Stocks is around &1.40. Should hit $3-4 on folks rushing in.
 
Sure. Know how much you can afford to buy and pay monthly..even under worst case scenario and don't exceed that amount.
Simple. Read the terms of the loan agreement and if you can afford it, take it. Otherwise, pay cash as BGOL would advise.

^^^^^^^

Funny how the simplest advice is usually best...and the one that goes the MOST unheeded

thanks.

But I think a lot of young people (or just the financially uneducated) may have an issue really UNDERSTANDING the loan agreement...

and NOT asking the right questions from jump.

That is why I always think bgol is special, the space to not only ask ANY kind of question, but to have EDUCATED people to give you a proper response.
 
The trick with PMI was you could get it removed fairly quickly, in the past with an appraisal showing enough appreciation. Then they cracked down on appraisals..cuz they were fraudulent as HELL!
 
^^^^^^^

Funny how the simplest advice is usually best...and the one that goes the MOST unheeded

thanks.

But I think a lot of young people (or just the financially uneducated) may have an issue really UNDERSTANDING the loan agreement...

and NOT asking the right questions from jump.

That is why I always think bgol is special, the space to not only ask ANY kind of question, but to have EDUCATED people to give you a proper response.
In that case, they should consult a Black learned Attorney and not rely on their loan officer. It only cost less than $500 for document review and advice. I’m not trying to be smart but people pay $600 documentary fee fir their KIA but they hem and haw at paying $500 for legal advice.

Your agent and loan officer do not have your best interest in mind. You need a competent third party as an attorney or accountant.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top