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Federal Housing Administration

The Federal Housing Administration (FHA), also known as the Office of Housing within the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), is a United States government agency founded by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, created in part by the National Housing Act of 1934. The FHA insures mortgages made by private lenders for single-family properties, multifamily rental properties, hospitals, and residential care facilities. FHA mortgage insurance protects lenders against losses. If a property owner defaults on their mortgage, FHA pays a claim to the lender for the unpaid principal balance. Because lenders take on less risk, they are able to offer more mortgages. The goal of the organization is to facilitate access to affordable mortgage credit for low- and moderate-income and first-time homebuyers, for the construction of affordable and market rate rental properties, and for hospitals and residential care facilities in communities across the United States and its territories.

Federal Housing Administration
Seal of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
Agency overview
Formed1934 (1934)
JurisdictionUnited States
HeadquartersRobert C. Weaver Federal Building
Washington, D.C.
Agency executives
  • Julia Gordon, Assistant Secretary for Housing and Federal Housing Commissioner
  • Lopa Kolluri[1], Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of Housing and the Federal Housing Administration
Parent departmentDepartment of Housing and Urban Development
Key document
Websitewww.hud.gov
Footnotes
Also known as the Office of Housing

It is different from the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which supervises government-sponsored enterprises.

Dana T. Wade was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on July 28, 2020 as the FHA Commissioner[2] and resigned on January 20, 2021. The FHA is currently led by a Senior Official Performing the Duties of Assistant Secretary and Commissioner, Lola Kolluri.[3]

History

New Deal origins

During the Great Depression many banks failed, causing a drastic decrease in home loans and ownership. At that time, most home mortgages were short-term (three to five years), with no amortization, and balloon instruments at loan-to-value (LTV) ratios below sixty percent.[4] This prevented many working and middle-class families from being able to afford home ownership. The banking crisis of the 1930s forced all lenders to retrieve due mortgages; refinancing was not available, and many borrowers, now unemployed, were unable to make mortgage payments. Consequently, many homes were foreclosed, causing the housing market to plummet. Banks collected the loan collateral (foreclosed homes) but the low property values resulted in a relative lack of assets. In 1934 the federal banking system was restructured. The National Housing Act of 1934 created the Federal Housing Administration. with the intention to regulate the rate of interest and the terms of insured mortgages. Before the FHA was established, many mortgages were balloon mortgages that required large payments at the end of the mortgage period, The mortgage period was typically 5 to 10 years. To secure a mortgage, people needed a large down payment of 30 to 50%. With the new FHA-secured loans, people now only needed a down payment as low as 10% and mortgage payment period went from 5–10 years to 20–30 years.[5]

Appraisal criteria and restrictions by race

The new practices were restricted only to white Americans. These new lending practices increased the number of white Americans who could afford a down payment on a house and monthly debt service payments on a mortgage, thereby also increasing the size of the market for single-family homes.[6] The FHA calculated appraisal value based on eight criteria and directed its agents (called "appraisers") to lend more for higher appraised projects, up to a maximum cap. The two most important were "Relative Economic Stability", which constituted 40% of appraisal value, and "protection from adverse influences", which made up another 20%. In 1935, the FHA provided its appraisers with an Underwriting Manual, which gave the following instruction: "If a neighborhood is to retain stability it is necessary that properties shall continue to be occupied by the same social and racial classes. A change in social or racial occupancy generally leads to instability and a reduction of values." Appraisers were then told to give higher property and zoning ratings where "protection against some adverse influences is obtained", and defined adverse influences as "infiltration by inharmonious racial or nationality groups".[7] Because the FHA's appraisal standards included a whites-only requirement, racial segregation became an official requirement of the federal mortgage insurance program, as the FHA frequently judged any properties in racially mixed neighborhoods or in close proximity to black neighborhoods as being high-risk.[8]

Fannie Mae and G.I. Bill

In 1938 Congress created the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) which helped establish a secondary mortgage market in which banks and investors could buy and sell current home loans. After the adoption of the Serviceman's Readjustment Act (known as the GI Bill) in 1944, the FHA brought together a system of long-term mortgages for the construction and sale of private homes. The Veteran's Administration's home-loan guarantee program through the GI Bill allowed veterans to put down a payment of only one dollar. These changes helped fuel a surge in American home ownership, with families living in owner-occupied homes increasing 44 percent to 63 percent from 1934 and 1972.[5]

Major housing projects

 
FHA project great depression

In 1935, Colonial Village in Arlington, Virginia, was the first large-scale, rental housing project erected in the United States that was Federal Housing Administration-insured.[9] During World War II, the FHA financed a number of worker's housing projects including the Kensington Gardens Apartment Complex in Buffalo, New York.[10] During the Great Depression, Ohio Cities used federal government funds for building housing projects and first two of those projects completed in the United States were in Cincinnati and Cleveland.[11]

Establishment of HUD

In 1965 the Federal Housing Administration became part of the Department of Housing and Urban Development with the Passage of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965.[12] When the FHA became part of HUD, the FHA became a separate entity within HUD. A Federal Housing Commissioner who would also be an Assistant Secretary would head the FHA. The FHA and HUD have their similarities and differences. The Commissioner designated would administer all other departmental programs that relate to the private mortgage market in addition to duties as Assistant Secretary and FHA head.[13] The FHA and HUD both help borrowers with bad credit and insufficient down payment to be able to buy or repair a house.[14]

Subprime mortgage crisis

In the late 1990s, subprime mortgage products emerged and competed with the standard mortgages financed by the FHA. These products were typically poorly underwritten (if it all) and had higher profits for lenders. As a result lenders were motivated to turn borrowers toward subprime products even when qualified for FHA loans, which were safer. As the subprime mortgage market boomed, the FHA's market share of mortgages fell; in 2001 the FHA insured 14% of home-purchase loans, but by 2005 that number fell to less than 3%. The influx of these unregulated subprime loans helped fuel the United States housing bubble, which led to the subprime mortgage crisis and the near-collapse of the housing market.[15] Following the subprime mortgage crisis, FHA, along with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, became a large source of mortgage financing in the United States. The share of home purchases financed with FHA mortgages went from 2 percent to over one-third of mortgages in the United States, as conventional mortgage lending dried up in the credit crunch. By 2011 the FHA backed about 40% of all home purchase loans in America. Since 2008 the FHA has backed more than 4 million loans and helped 2.6 million families lower monthly payments through refinancing.[15] With the private subprime market, many of the riskiest buyers borrowed from the FHA instead, exposing the FHA to substantial potential losses. At the time, these possible losses were estimate as up to $100 billion.[16][17] The troubled loans weighed heavily on the FHA's capital reserve fund, which by early 2012 had fallen below its congressionally mandated minimum of 2%, in contrast to more than 6% two years earlier. By November 2012, the FHA was essentially bankrupt.[18][19][20]

Mortgage insurance

 
Visualization by the Government Accountability Office of FHA mortgage insurance claims from 2007 to 2015

Since 1934, the FHA and HUD have insured almost 50 million home mortgages. Currently, the FHA has approximately 8.5 million insured single family mortgage, more than 11,000 insured multifamily mortgages, and over 3,900 mortgages for hospitals and residential care facilities in its portfolio.[21]

FHA down payment

A borrower's down payment may come from a number of sources. The 3.5% requirement can be satisfied with the borrower using their own cash or receiving an eligible gift from a family member or other eligible source.[22]

FHA mortgage insurance

The FHA insurance payments include two parts: the upfront mortgage insurance premium (UFMIP) and the annual premium remitted on a monthly basis—the mutual mortgage insurance (MMI).[23] The UFMIP is an obligatory payment, which can either be made in cash at closing or financed into the loan.[22] If someone takes out a typical 30-year mortgage, the annual insurance premium will be like this, if the base loan amount is less than or equal too $625,500, and the LTV is greater than or equal to 95%, than the annual MIP will be 80 bps (0.80%). If the base loan amount is less than or equal too $625,500, and the LTV is greater than 95%, than the annual MIP will be 85 bps (0.85%). If the base loan amount is greater than $625,500, and the LTV is less than or equal to 95%, than the Annual MIP will be 100 bps (1.00%). If the base loan amount is greater than $625,500, and the LTV is more than 95%, than the annual MIP is 105% (1.05%). Homebuyers who are able to payoff their loans quicker, and want a 15-year mortgage, will have lower mortgage insurance premiums, like this if the base loan amount is less than or equal too $625,500, and the LTV is less than or equal to 90%, than the annual MIP is 45 bps (0.45%). If the base loan amount is less than or equal too $625,500, and the LTV is greater than 90%, thean the annual MIP is 70 bps (0.70%). If the base loan amount is more than $625,500, and the LTV is less than or equal to 78%, than the annial MIP will be 45 bps (0.45%). If the base loan amount is more than $625,500, and the LTV is 78.01% to 90%, than annual MIP will be 70 bps (0.70%). If the base loan amount is more than $625,500, and the LTV is greater than 90%, than the LTV will be 95 bps (0.95%). For loans with FHA Case Numbers assigned on or after June 3, 2013, The FHA will take the annual MIP and this is when people will pay for the FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums on your FHA loan, it goes like this, when the term is less than or equal to 15 years, when the LTV is less than or equal to 78% and there was previously no annual MIP, than the new time to pay is 11 years. When the term is less than or equal to 15 years, when the LTV is 78.01% to 90%, and previously cancelled at 78% LTV, than the new time to pay is 11 years. When the term is less than or equal to 15 years, when the LTV is more than 90%, and previously was paid at loan term, than norhing changes. When the new term is greater than 15 years, when the LTV is less than or equal to 70% and the previous time to pay was 5 years, than the new time to pay is 11 years. When the new term is greater than 15 years, when the LTV is 78.01% to 90%, and previously cancelled at 78% and 5 years, than new payment time is 11 years. When the new term is greater than 15 years, when the LTV is greater than 90%, and previously cancelled at 78% and 5 years, than the new payment time is the loan term. The current up-front mortgage insurance premium is 1.75% of the base loan amount. This is the case regardless of the amorization term or LTV ratio.[23]

Today 46% of all first-time home buyers use FHA loans. 1 in 16 FHA loan borrowers have a credit score below 600 and the average credit score of first-time FHA loan borrowers is 677. First-time home buyers used 82 percent of all FHA purchase loans. 23 percent of home buyers use an FHA loan as well as 28 percent of home buyers 37 and younger used an FHA loan. 13% of buyers and 24% of buyers under 37 said that the most difficult task. the average amount for a down payment is $6,624. The average debt-to-income ration for FHA Borrowers is 40.34%. The average FHA loan amount is $191,650. The minimum credit score required for an FHA loan with a down payment of 10 percent is 500.[24]

Legacy

The creation of the Federal Housing Administration successfully increased the size of the housing market. Home ownership increased from 40% in the 1930s to 61% and 65% in 1995. Home ownership peaked at nearly 69% in 2005, near the peak of the US housing bubble. By 1938 only four years after the beginning of the Federal Housing Administration, a house could be purchased for a down payment of only ten percent of the purchase price. The remaining ninety percent was financed by 25-year, self-amortizing, FHA-insured mortgage loan. After World War II, the FHA helped finance homes for returning white veterans and the families of white soldiers. It has helped with purchases of both single family and multifamily homes. In the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, the FHA helped to spark the production of millions of units of privately owned apartments for elderly, handicapped, and lower-income Americans. When the soaring inflation and energy costs threatened the survival of thousands of private apartment buildings in the 1970s, FHA's emergency financing kept cash-strapped properties afloat. In the 1980s, when the economy did not support an increase in homeowners, the FHA helped to steady falling prices, making it possible for potential homeowners to finance when private mortgage insurers pulled out of oil-producing states.[21][failed verification] The greatest effects of the Federal Housing Administration can be seen within minority populations and in cities. Nearly half of FHA's metropolitan area business is located in central cities, a percentage that is much higher than that of conventional loans.[25] The FHA also lends to a higher percentage of African Americans and Hispanic Americans, as well as younger, credit-constrained borrowers, contributing to the increase in home ownership among these groups. As the capital markets in the United States matured over several decades, the impact of the FHA decreased. In 2006 FHA made up less than 3% of all the loans originated in the United States.[26] In fiscal year 2019, FHA-insured mortgages comprised 11.41% of all single family residential mortgage originations by dollar volume. 82.84% of FHA insured single family forward purchase transaction mortgages in fiscal year 2019 were for first-time homebuyers. Overall, minorities made up 36.24% of FHA purchase mortgage borrowers in calendar year 2018, compared to 19.94% through conventional lending channels.[27]

Redlining

The Federal Housing Authority established mortgage underwriting standards that significantly discriminated against minority neighborhoods. Between 1945 and 1959, African Americans received less than 2 percent of all federally insured home loans.[28][29] As the significance of subsidized mortgage insurance on the housing market grew, home values in inner-city minority neighborhoods plummeted. Also, the approval rates for minorities were equally low. After 1935, the FHA established guidelines to steer private mortgage investors away from minority areas. This practice, known as redlining, was made illegal by the Fair Housing Act of 1968.[30] Redlining has had long-lasting effects on minority communities.[31][32] The legacy of redlining can still be felt today as redlining is responsible for the modern wealth gap between African and White Americans.[33]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Lopa P. Kolluri | HUD.gov / U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)". www.hud.gov. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  2. ^ "Senate confirms Wade as FHA commissioner". American Banker. July 28, 2020. Retrieved August 21, 2020.
  3. ^ "Leadership | HUD.gov / U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)". www.hud.gov. May 14, 2018.
  4. ^ Monroe 2001, p. 5
  5. ^ a b Fritz, Marie Justine (October 4, 2016). "Federal Housing Administration (FHA)". britannica.com. Retrieved March 3, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ Garvin, Alexander (2002). The American City: What Works, What Doesn't. 2nd Edition. New York: McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 9780071373678.
  7. ^ "UNDER WRITING MANUAL UNDER WRITING AND VALUATION PROCEDURE UNDER TITLE II OF THE NATIONAL HOUSING ACT FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION" (PDF). Federal Housing Administration Under Writing Manual. HA Form NO.2019: 439. 2019.
  8. ^ Rothstein, Richard (2017). The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America. New York: Liverlight Publishing. p. PT 51. ISBN 9781631492860. OCLC 959808903.
  9. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (May 1980). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Monroe Courts Historic District" (PDF).
  10. ^ Jason Wilson; Tom Yots; Daniel McEneny (June 2010). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Kensington Gardens Apartment Complex". Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  11. ^ "Federal Housing Act". Ohio History Central. Retrieved March 3, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ "HUD History". HUD.gov / U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). September 20, 2017. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  13. ^ "CQ Almanac Online Edition". library.cqpress.com. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  14. ^ Pirraglia, William. "FHA vs HUD". homeguides.sfgate.com. Retrieved May 5, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ a b Griffith, John (October 11, 2012). "The Federal Housing Administration saved the Housing Market". americanprogress.orh. Retrieved March 3, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  16. ^ Joshua Zumbru, Maurna Desmond. "Lending Over Backward", Forbes, August 25, 2008.
  17. ^ "The Next Hit: Quick Defaults", Washington Post, March 7, 2009.
  18. ^ "F.H.A. Hopes to Avoid a Bailout by Treasury". New York Times. November 16, 2012.
  19. ^ "F.H.A. Audit Said to Show Low Reserves". New York Times. November 14, 2012.
  20. ^ "Bet the house: why the FHA is going (for) broke". American Enterprise Institute. January 19, 2012.
  21. ^ a b . Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. September 6, 2006. Archived from the original on January 5, 2010. Retrieved December 10, 2009.
  22. ^ a b "FHA Rules: Sources of Your Down Payment". www.fha.com. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  23. ^ a b "FHA Requirements: Mortgage Insurance for 2022". www.fha.com. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  24. ^ "HOW TO QUALIFY FOR A FHA LIAN -- FHA loans require a 500 credit score with 10% down, or 3.5% down with a 580 score. See all requir… | Fha loans, Mortgage loans, Fha". Pinterest. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  25. ^ Monroe, Albert. "How the Federal Housing Administration Affects Homeownership." Harvard University Department of Economics. Cambridge, MA. November 2001.
  26. ^ Elboghdady, Dina. "The FHA's balancing act". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  27. ^ "Annual Report Fiscal Year 2019" (PDF). archives.hud.gov. p. 13.
  28. ^ Hanlon, Bernadette; Short, John Rennie (2020). "Housing Policy and the Suburban Metropolis: A Focus on the United States and France". In Anacker, Katrin B.; et al. (eds.). The Routledge Handbook of Housing Policy and Planning. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-1381-8843-3.
  29. ^ Hanchett, Thomas W. (2000). "The Other 'Subsidized Housing': Federal Aid to Suburbanization 1940s-1960s". In Bauman, John F.; et al. (eds.). From Tenements to the Taylor Homes: In Search of an Urban Housing Policy in Twentieth Century America. Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 163–179. ISBN 0-2710-2012-1.[page range too broad]
  30. ^ "Housing discrimination underpins the staggering wealth gap between Blacks and whites". www.louisianaweekly.com. April 15, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  31. ^ Hillier, Amy. . Cartographic Modeling Laboratory. University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original on March 3, 2007.
  32. ^ Coates, Ta-Nehisi (June 2014). "The Case for Reparations". The Atlantic.
  33. ^ "Housing discrimination underpins the staggering wealth gap between Blacks and whites". www.louisianaweekly.com. April 15, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2021.

Further reading

Sources

  • Brown, Christopher C. "The Virtual Reference Desk". Federal Housing Administration.
  • . The Federal Housing Administration. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Archived from the original on January 5, 2010. Retrieved November 21, 2006.
  • Monroe, Albert (November 2001), (PDF), Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Department of Economics, archived from the original (PDF) on October 22, 2006
  • Wright, Kai (April 29, 2009). "More Mortgage Madness". The Nation.

External links

  • Official website
  • National Housing Institute

federal, housing, administration, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Federal Housing Administration news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Federal Housing Administration FHA also known as the Office of Housing within the Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD is a United States government agency founded by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt created in part by the National Housing Act of 1934 The FHA insures mortgages made by private lenders for single family properties multifamily rental properties hospitals and residential care facilities FHA mortgage insurance protects lenders against losses If a property owner defaults on their mortgage FHA pays a claim to the lender for the unpaid principal balance Because lenders take on less risk they are able to offer more mortgages The goal of the organization is to facilitate access to affordable mortgage credit for low and moderate income and first time homebuyers for the construction of affordable and market rate rental properties and for hospitals and residential care facilities in communities across the United States and its territories Federal Housing AdministrationSeal of the U S Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentAgency overviewFormed1934 1934 JurisdictionUnited StatesHeadquartersRobert C Weaver Federal BuildingWashington D C Agency executivesJulia Gordon Assistant Secretary for Housing and Federal Housing CommissionerLopa Kolluri 1 Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of Housing and the Federal Housing AdministrationParent departmentDepartment of Housing and Urban DevelopmentKey documentNational Housing Act of 1934Websitewww hud govFootnotesAlso known as the Office of HousingIt is different from the Federal Housing Finance Agency FHFA which supervises government sponsored enterprises Dana T Wade was confirmed by the U S Senate on July 28 2020 as the FHA Commissioner 2 and resigned on January 20 2021 The FHA is currently led by a Senior Official Performing the Duties of Assistant Secretary and Commissioner Lola Kolluri 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 New Deal origins 1 2 Fannie Mae and G I Bill 1 3 Major housing projects 1 4 Establishment of HUD 2 Subprime mortgage crisis 3 Mortgage insurance 3 1 FHA down payment 3 2 FHA mortgage insurance 4 Legacy 4 1 Redlining 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditNew Deal origins Edit During the Great Depression many banks failed causing a drastic decrease in home loans and ownership At that time most home mortgages were short term three to five years with no amortization and balloon instruments at loan to value LTV ratios below sixty percent 4 This prevented many working and middle class families from being able to afford home ownership The banking crisis of the 1930s forced all lenders to retrieve due mortgages refinancing was not available and many borrowers now unemployed were unable to make mortgage payments Consequently many homes were foreclosed causing the housing market to plummet Banks collected the loan collateral foreclosed homes but the low property values resulted in a relative lack of assets In 1934 the federal banking system was restructured The National Housing Act of 1934 created the Federal Housing Administration with the intention to regulate the rate of interest and the terms of insured mortgages Before the FHA was established many mortgages were balloon mortgages that required large payments at the end of the mortgage period The mortgage period was typically 5 to 10 years To secure a mortgage people needed a large down payment of 30 to 50 With the new FHA secured loans people now only needed a down payment as low as 10 and mortgage payment period went from 5 10 years to 20 30 years 5 Appraisal criteria and restrictions by raceThe new practices were restricted only to white Americans These new lending practices increased the number of white Americans who could afford a down payment on a house and monthly debt service payments on a mortgage thereby also increasing the size of the market for single family homes 6 The FHA calculated appraisal value based on eight criteria and directed its agents called appraisers to lend more for higher appraised projects up to a maximum cap The two most important were Relative Economic Stability which constituted 40 of appraisal value and protection from adverse influences which made up another 20 In 1935 the FHA provided its appraisers with an Underwriting Manual which gave the following instruction If a neighborhood is to retain stability it is necessary that properties shall continue to be occupied by the same social and racial classes A change in social or racial occupancy generally leads to instability and a reduction of values Appraisers were then told to give higher property and zoning ratings where protection against some adverse influences is obtained and defined adverse influences as infiltration by inharmonious racial or nationality groups 7 Because the FHA s appraisal standards included a whites only requirement racial segregation became an official requirement of the federal mortgage insurance program as the FHA frequently judged any properties in racially mixed neighborhoods or in close proximity to black neighborhoods as being high risk 8 Fannie Mae and G I Bill Edit In 1938 Congress created the Federal National Mortgage Association Fannie Mae which helped establish a secondary mortgage market in which banks and investors could buy and sell current home loans After the adoption of the Serviceman s Readjustment Act known as the GI Bill in 1944 the FHA brought together a system of long term mortgages for the construction and sale of private homes The Veteran s Administration s home loan guarantee program through the GI Bill allowed veterans to put down a payment of only one dollar These changes helped fuel a surge in American home ownership with families living in owner occupied homes increasing 44 percent to 63 percent from 1934 and 1972 5 Major housing projects Edit FHA project great depression In 1935 Colonial Village in Arlington Virginia was the first large scale rental housing project erected in the United States that was Federal Housing Administration insured 9 During World War II the FHA financed a number of worker s housing projects including the Kensington Gardens Apartment Complex in Buffalo New York 10 During the Great Depression Ohio Cities used federal government funds for building housing projects and first two of those projects completed in the United States were in Cincinnati and Cleveland 11 Establishment of HUD Edit In 1965 the Federal Housing Administration became part of the Department of Housing and Urban Development with the Passage of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 12 When the FHA became part of HUD the FHA became a separate entity within HUD A Federal Housing Commissioner who would also be an Assistant Secretary would head the FHA The FHA and HUD have their similarities and differences The Commissioner designated would administer all other departmental programs that relate to the private mortgage market in addition to duties as Assistant Secretary and FHA head 13 The FHA and HUD both help borrowers with bad credit and insufficient down payment to be able to buy or repair a house 14 Subprime mortgage crisis EditMain article Subprime mortgage crisis In the late 1990s subprime mortgage products emerged and competed with the standard mortgages financed by the FHA These products were typically poorly underwritten if it all and had higher profits for lenders As a result lenders were motivated to turn borrowers toward subprime products even when qualified for FHA loans which were safer As the subprime mortgage market boomed the FHA s market share of mortgages fell in 2001 the FHA insured 14 of home purchase loans but by 2005 that number fell to less than 3 The influx of these unregulated subprime loans helped fuel the United States housing bubble which led to the subprime mortgage crisis and the near collapse of the housing market 15 Following the subprime mortgage crisis FHA along with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac became a large source of mortgage financing in the United States The share of home purchases financed with FHA mortgages went from 2 percent to over one third of mortgages in the United States as conventional mortgage lending dried up in the credit crunch By 2011 the FHA backed about 40 of all home purchase loans in America Since 2008 the FHA has backed more than 4 million loans and helped 2 6 million families lower monthly payments through refinancing 15 With the private subprime market many of the riskiest buyers borrowed from the FHA instead exposing the FHA to substantial potential losses At the time these possible losses were estimate as up to 100 billion 16 17 The troubled loans weighed heavily on the FHA s capital reserve fund which by early 2012 had fallen below its congressionally mandated minimum of 2 in contrast to more than 6 two years earlier By November 2012 the FHA was essentially bankrupt 18 19 20 Mortgage insurance Edit Visualization by the Government Accountability Office of FHA mortgage insurance claims from 2007 to 2015 Since 1934 the FHA and HUD have insured almost 50 million home mortgages Currently the FHA has approximately 8 5 million insured single family mortgage more than 11 000 insured multifamily mortgages and over 3 900 mortgages for hospitals and residential care facilities in its portfolio 21 FHA down payment Edit A borrower s down payment may come from a number of sources The 3 5 requirement can be satisfied with the borrower using their own cash or receiving an eligible gift from a family member or other eligible source 22 FHA mortgage insurance Edit The FHA insurance payments include two parts the upfront mortgage insurance premium UFMIP and the annual premium remitted on a monthly basis the mutual mortgage insurance MMI 23 The UFMIP is an obligatory payment which can either be made in cash at closing or financed into the loan 22 If someone takes out a typical 30 year mortgage the annual insurance premium will be like this if the base loan amount is less than or equal too 625 500 and the LTV is greater than or equal to 95 than the annual MIP will be 80 bps 0 80 If the base loan amount is less than or equal too 625 500 and the LTV is greater than 95 than the annual MIP will be 85 bps 0 85 If the base loan amount is greater than 625 500 and the LTV is less than or equal to 95 than the Annual MIP will be 100 bps 1 00 If the base loan amount is greater than 625 500 and the LTV is more than 95 than the annual MIP is 105 1 05 Homebuyers who are able to payoff their loans quicker and want a 15 year mortgage will have lower mortgage insurance premiums like this if the base loan amount is less than or equal too 625 500 and the LTV is less than or equal to 90 than the annual MIP is 45 bps 0 45 If the base loan amount is less than or equal too 625 500 and the LTV is greater than 90 thean the annual MIP is 70 bps 0 70 If the base loan amount is more than 625 500 and the LTV is less than or equal to 78 than the annial MIP will be 45 bps 0 45 If the base loan amount is more than 625 500 and the LTV is 78 01 to 90 than annual MIP will be 70 bps 0 70 If the base loan amount is more than 625 500 and the LTV is greater than 90 than the LTV will be 95 bps 0 95 For loans with FHA Case Numbers assigned on or after June 3 2013 The FHA will take the annual MIP and this is when people will pay for the FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums on your FHA loan it goes like this when the term is less than or equal to 15 years when the LTV is less than or equal to 78 and there was previously no annual MIP than the new time to pay is 11 years When the term is less than or equal to 15 years when the LTV is 78 01 to 90 and previously cancelled at 78 LTV than the new time to pay is 11 years When the term is less than or equal to 15 years when the LTV is more than 90 and previously was paid at loan term than norhing changes When the new term is greater than 15 years when the LTV is less than or equal to 70 and the previous time to pay was 5 years than the new time to pay is 11 years When the new term is greater than 15 years when the LTV is 78 01 to 90 and previously cancelled at 78 and 5 years than new payment time is 11 years When the new term is greater than 15 years when the LTV is greater than 90 and previously cancelled at 78 and 5 years than the new payment time is the loan term The current up front mortgage insurance premium is 1 75 of the base loan amount This is the case regardless of the amorization term or LTV ratio 23 Today 46 of all first time home buyers use FHA loans 1 in 16 FHA loan borrowers have a credit score below 600 and the average credit score of first time FHA loan borrowers is 677 First time home buyers used 82 percent of all FHA purchase loans 23 percent of home buyers use an FHA loan as well as 28 percent of home buyers 37 and younger used an FHA loan 13 of buyers and 24 of buyers under 37 said that the most difficult task the average amount for a down payment is 6 624 The average debt to income ration for FHA Borrowers is 40 34 The average FHA loan amount is 191 650 The minimum credit score required for an FHA loan with a down payment of 10 percent is 500 24 Legacy EditThe creation of the Federal Housing Administration successfully increased the size of the housing market Home ownership increased from 40 in the 1930s to 61 and 65 in 1995 Home ownership peaked at nearly 69 in 2005 near the peak of the US housing bubble By 1938 only four years after the beginning of the Federal Housing Administration a house could be purchased for a down payment of only ten percent of the purchase price The remaining ninety percent was financed by 25 year self amortizing FHA insured mortgage loan After World War II the FHA helped finance homes for returning white veterans and the families of white soldiers It has helped with purchases of both single family and multifamily homes In the 1950s 1960s and 1970s the FHA helped to spark the production of millions of units of privately owned apartments for elderly handicapped and lower income Americans When the soaring inflation and energy costs threatened the survival of thousands of private apartment buildings in the 1970s FHA s emergency financing kept cash strapped properties afloat In the 1980s when the economy did not support an increase in homeowners the FHA helped to steady falling prices making it possible for potential homeowners to finance when private mortgage insurers pulled out of oil producing states 21 failed verification The greatest effects of the Federal Housing Administration can be seen within minority populations and in cities Nearly half of FHA s metropolitan area business is located in central cities a percentage that is much higher than that of conventional loans 25 The FHA also lends to a higher percentage of African Americans and Hispanic Americans as well as younger credit constrained borrowers contributing to the increase in home ownership among these groups As the capital markets in the United States matured over several decades the impact of the FHA decreased In 2006 FHA made up less than 3 of all the loans originated in the United States 26 In fiscal year 2019 FHA insured mortgages comprised 11 41 of all single family residential mortgage originations by dollar volume 82 84 of FHA insured single family forward purchase transaction mortgages in fiscal year 2019 were for first time homebuyers Overall minorities made up 36 24 of FHA purchase mortgage borrowers in calendar year 2018 compared to 19 94 through conventional lending channels 27 Redlining Edit Main article Redlining The Federal Housing Authority established mortgage underwriting standards that significantly discriminated against minority neighborhoods Between 1945 and 1959 African Americans received less than 2 percent of all federally insured home loans 28 29 As the significance of subsidized mortgage insurance on the housing market grew home values in inner city minority neighborhoods plummeted Also the approval rates for minorities were equally low After 1935 the FHA established guidelines to steer private mortgage investors away from minority areas This practice known as redlining was made illegal by the Fair Housing Act of 1968 30 Redlining has had long lasting effects on minority communities 31 32 The legacy of redlining can still be felt today as redlining is responsible for the modern wealth gap between African and White Americans 33 See also EditGinnie Mae New Deal Levittown Mortgage insuranceReferences Edit Lopa P Kolluri HUD gov U S Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD www hud gov Retrieved July 10 2021 Senate confirms Wade as FHA commissioner American Banker July 28 2020 Retrieved August 21 2020 Leadership HUD gov U S Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD www hud gov May 14 2018 Monroe 2001 p 5 a b Fritz Marie Justine October 4 2016 Federal Housing Administration FHA britannica com Retrieved March 3 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Garvin Alexander 2002 The American City What Works What Doesn t 2nd Edition New York McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 9780071373678 UNDER WRITING MANUAL UNDER WRITING AND VALUATION PROCEDURE UNDER TITLE II OF THE NATIONAL HOUSING ACT FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION PDF Federal Housing Administration Under Writing Manual HA Form NO 2019 439 2019 Rothstein Richard 2017 The Color of Law A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America New York Liverlight Publishing p PT 51 ISBN 9781631492860 OCLC 959808903 Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff May 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Monroe Courts Historic District PDF Jason Wilson Tom Yots Daniel McEneny June 2010 National Register of Historic Places Registration Kensington Gardens Apartment Complex Retrieved December 22 2010 Federal Housing Act Ohio History Central Retrieved March 3 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link HUD History HUD gov U S Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD September 20 2017 Retrieved May 2 2022 CQ Almanac Online Edition library cqpress com Retrieved May 5 2022 Pirraglia William FHA vs HUD homeguides sfgate com Retrieved May 5 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Griffith John October 11 2012 The Federal Housing Administration saved the Housing Market americanprogress orh Retrieved March 3 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Joshua Zumbru Maurna Desmond Lending Over Backward Forbes August 25 2008 The Next Hit Quick Defaults Washington Post March 7 2009 F H A Hopes to Avoid a Bailout by Treasury New York Times November 16 2012 F H A Audit Said to Show Low Reserves New York Times November 14 2012 Bet the house why the FHA is going for broke American Enterprise Institute January 19 2012 a b HUD Federal Housing Administration Washington D C U S Department of Housing and Urban Development September 6 2006 Archived from the original on January 5 2010 Retrieved December 10 2009 a b FHA Rules Sources of Your Down Payment www fha com Retrieved May 9 2022 a b FHA Requirements Mortgage Insurance for 2022 www fha com Retrieved May 9 2022 HOW TO QUALIFY FOR A FHA LIAN FHA loans require a 500 credit score with 10 down or 3 5 down with a 580 score See all requir Fha loans Mortgage loans Fha Pinterest Retrieved May 2 2022 Monroe Albert How the Federal Housing Administration Affects Homeownership Harvard University Department of Economics Cambridge MA November 2001 Elboghdady Dina The FHA s balancing act washingtonpost com Retrieved May 9 2022 Annual Report Fiscal Year 2019 PDF archives hud gov p 13 Hanlon Bernadette Short John Rennie 2020 Housing Policy and the Suburban Metropolis A Focus on the United States and France In Anacker Katrin B et al eds The Routledge Handbook of Housing Policy and Planning New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 1381 8843 3 Hanchett Thomas W 2000 The Other Subsidized Housing Federal Aid to Suburbanization 1940s 1960s In Bauman John F et al eds From Tenements to the Taylor Homes In Search of an Urban Housing Policy in Twentieth Century America Pennsylvania State University Press pp 163 179 ISBN 0 2710 2012 1 page range too broad Housing discrimination underpins the staggering wealth gap between Blacks and whites www louisianaweekly com April 15 2019 Retrieved January 19 2021 Hillier Amy Redlining in Philadelphia Cartographic Modeling Laboratory University of Pennsylvania Archived from the original on March 3 2007 Coates Ta Nehisi June 2014 The Case for Reparations The Atlantic Housing discrimination underpins the staggering wealth gap between Blacks and whites www louisianaweekly com April 15 2019 Retrieved January 19 2021 Further reading EditSources Edit Brown Christopher C The Virtual Reference Desk Federal Housing Administration Homes and Communities The Federal Housing Administration U S Department of Housing and Urban Development Archived from the original on January 5 2010 Retrieved November 21 2006 Monroe Albert November 2001 How the Federal Housing Administration Affects Homeownership PDF Cambridge MA Harvard University Department of Economics archived from the original PDF on October 22 2006 Wright Kai April 29 2009 More Mortgage Madness The Nation External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Federal Housing Administration Official website National Housing Institute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Housing Administration amp oldid 1130180368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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