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Housing relief earmarks $300B for bailout

Saturday, July 19, 2008


After six months of haggling and political gamesmanship, a massive housing relief bill is heading for final approval.

Though it has hundreds of pages and dozens of separate initiatives including revamping federal oversight of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the centerpiece is a $300 billion "HOPE" program designed to provide refinancing lifelines to as many as 400,000 home-owners in deep trouble on their current loans.

But what are the specifics? Who will be able to qualify for help? How quickly will HOPE be up and running, and how long will it run? Are there any key drawbacks or limitations?

Here's a quick overview:

Congress' basic idea is to save people on the edge of the waterfall: families and individuals at immediate risk of losing their houses but who could avoid foreclosure if their mortgage balances and interest rates were significantly reduced.

The program will be entirely voluntary, and that's a crucial limitation. Lenders and investors who own defaulting mortgages cannot be compelled to allow their borrowers to refinance. Lenders will have to agree to substantial write-downs of principal and penalty fees currently owed to them. The new maximum HOPE loan amount, insured by the Federal Housing Administration under a special new fund created by the legislation, will be 90 percent of the current market value of the property, not the value of the house when the lender originally made the loan.

There are important hurdles borrowers must get over to qualify as well. They must:

--Demonstrate a "lack of capacity" to pay their current mortgage but have enough income to make regular monthly payments on a smaller, fixed-rate FHA loan. Their current income-to-mortgage debt ratio must be above 35 percent.

--Certify to the government that they haven't "intentionally defaulted" on their current mortgage or on any other debt in order to refinance into a HOPE loan. They must also certify that they are telling the truth about all aspects of their financial status, and have never been convicted of a fraud. Anyone who lies on their application will be subject to severe penalties, including prison sentences up to five years.

--Agree to use and occupy the refinanced house as their principal residence, and not own any additional houses.

An important and somewhat unusual feature of the program is the federal government's requirement that homeowner beneficiaries share any appreciation profits or equity gains from sales of their houses in subsequent years. The message here is that HOPE is no free ride.

The refinancing process itself will essentially create new equity stakes for borrowers since the maximum loan amount will be 90 percent of the appraised market value of the property. Borrowers who had been underwater and in serious default will suddenly find themselves with 10 percent equity stakes overnight. But they won't be able to tap that money quickly. If the home is sold within the first year after the refinancing, FHA must be repaid the equity created in full.

Under the legislation, the HOPE program could start as early as Oct. 1, but must terminate on Sept. 30, 2011. The unanswerable questions hovering over the entire HOPE concept: Will enough lenders and investors agree to take the upfront losses, they call them "haircuts," required to participate? Congressional estimates suggest that up to 400,000 financially distressed borrowers could be assisted, but nobody knows for sure.

Also, will lenders send only the dregs of their portfolios, borrowers with the least likelihood of future success, to FHA? And if so, could the program end up being far more costly than Congress anticipated?

Kenneth Harney writes about real estate matters for the Washington Post Writers Group. His e-mail address is kenharney@earthlink.net.




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