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Articles Tagged With: FHA Loan News

FHA Mortgage Rate Trends: Lower After Fed Minutes Are Released

Mortgage loan rates have been in a back-and-forth mode this week. One day they rise, altering closing costs for the most part rather than the actual best execution rate, the next day they fall, with the same result. On Wednesday all eyes were on the release of Fed minutes, which detail the meeting held last month. The details of that report sent investors into activity that benefits mortgage rates, and while the best execution numbers we reported in our last blog post haven’t changed, some borrowers may notice the alterations in the form of lower closing costs as previously mentioned. 30-year fixed rate conventional mortgages were reported at 4.0% best execution at mid-week, with some lenders coming in at sub-four percent best execution rates. Best execution rates are not available | more...

 

FHA Mortgage Rate Trends: Higher Ahead Of Fed

Mortgage loan rates have been trading higher days with lower days; Monday say rates move low enough to wipe out the losses seen on Friday, but Tuesday had rates moving higher, erasing Monday’s progress. For Tuesday, rates moved higher partially in anticipation of the Fed minutes release scheduled for Wednesday. Those minutes will have details of the July Fed meeting and we may gain a bit of insight as to the Fed’s posture on the upcoming meeting. There’s been a lot of “Will they or won’t they?” type talk about a Fed interest rate hike, and any discussion of that hike is a potential market mover. So there’s been a bit of advice against floating into the release of those Fed minutes tomorrow, and it’s easy to see why, given | more...

 

FHA Streamline Refinance Loans: Basics For Credit Qualifying Streamline Refinancing

In our last blog post we discussed some basics on FHA Streamline Refinance Loans. The FHA Streamline Refinance loan program permits lenders to process the loan paperwork for these refinances (FHA-to-FHA only) with no credit check in most cases. But lenders are free to require a credit check, and there are some cases where the credit check is required if add-ons to the loan cause the borrower’s monthly payments to increase by 20% or more, but there are other circumstances that may also require credit-qualifying. HUD 4155.1 states: “A credit qualifying streamline refinance must be considered: –when a change in the mortgage term will result in an increase in the mortgage payment of more than 20% –when deletion of a borrower or borrowers will trigger the due-on-sale clause –following the | more...

 

FHA Mortgage Loan Interest Rate Trends: Higher, Lower, Higher, Lower…

Mortgage rates had a back-and-forth week, with rates starting off higher, wiping out the gains seen on the previous Friday. Then on Tuesday, news of China’s currency policies pushed rates back down into the high three percent range (best execution) for 30-year fixed rate conventional mortgage loans. FHA rates stayed in their comfort zone of 3.75% that day in spite of the improvements; FHA rates tend to take longer to adjust until there’s been a sustained move in one direction or the other, or a dramatic change in rates on a single day or two. Overseas currency drama over the value of the Yuan had an effect on rates all week–either waxing or waning influence, depending on the day and sometimes even the time of day. On Wednesday, rates began | more...

 
Who can qualify for an FHA loan?

FHA Loans, Debt-To-Income Ratios, and Cosigning

We received an excellent reader question recently about how being a co-signer on someone else’s financial obligation might affect a borrower’s chances for an FHA mortgage loan. Does being a co-signer have any influence on how the lender views your credit? Your debt-to-income ratio? FHA loan rules published in HUD 4155.1 address these issues. Chapter Four Section C has a heading titled “Contingent Liability On Cosigned Obligations” and addresses this reader question directly. The rules begin by describing what is considered a contingent liability for the purposes of processing an FHA mortgage loan appication: “A contingent liability exists when an individual is held responsible for payment of a debt if another party, jointly or severally obligated, defaults on the payment.” Simple enough. But the FHA goes further in the next | more...

 

FHA Loans And Derogatory Credit Information

Many borrowers want to know what might be considered a problem when it comes to the lender’s review of credit histories and FICO scores. Lender standards apply in all such situations, so FHA minimums aren’t the only requirements to be concerned with, but in general there are some credit issues that could require the lender to process your loan paperwork “by hand” or take a closer look at your financial qualification data. What are these issues? According to the FHA/HUD official site, delinquency is an important factor: –Bankruptcy, foreclosure, collection account, charge-off, tax lien, or judgment; –Any mortgage trade line including mortgage line-of-credit payments, during the most recent 12 months, consisting of: –3 or more late payments of greater than 30 days, or –1 or more late payments of 60 | more...

 
Mortgage Loan Rate Trends

Applying For An FHA Loan

When you apply for an FHA home loan, what is your lender going to require of you besides the information you put on the application itself? Some requirements may vary from lender to lender, but in general you will need to be prepared to furnish bank statements, tax data, and information on any additional sources of income you want to be counted along with your primary earnings. The lender will ask for tax data for a variety of reasons, but the tax data is especially important if you are an independent contractor, freelancer, or small business owner. Your bank statements can also be important–the lender may require two months or more in order to get a more complete picture of your spending habits. Your income needs to be verifiable–any part | more...

 

FHA Mortgage Loan Interest Rate Trends: 60-Day Lows

Mortgage loan rates have been in a recovery mode of sorts over many days–tiny increments of rate improvements have brought closing costs down over time but the basic best execution rates we’ve been reporting on here haven’t changed–until Friday, when a weaker-than-expected jobs data report brought a more dramatic move lower for mortgage rates. The move was sharp enough to pull both conventional 30-year fixed rate mortgage loan interest rates and FHA loan interest rates out of their previously reported best execution range of rates and back into a single number on Friday. Conventional 30-year fixed rate mortgages are now reported at, best execution, 4.0% with some more aggressive lenders offering borrowers with the best FICO scores and credit histories rates in the high three percent range. FHA mortgage loan | more...

 
What is an FHA loan down payment?

FHA Loans, Escrow Accounts, And Real Estate Taxes

There are many FHA loan questions regarding the use of escrow accounts, especially when it comes to new purchase loans. Applicants sometimes get confused when the lender requires an escrow account. Since FHA loan rules do not require the use of escrow, some borrowers may wrongfully believe they don’t have to use them, period. But your lender may require the use of escrow and this is fully permitted under the FHA loan program. In fact, FHA loan rules anticipate some lenders requiring escrow for a variety of loan transactions; one use of escrow is to collect and pay property taxes. According to the FHA/HUD official site, “It is the lender’s decision whether the borrower must maintain an escrow account for the purpose of paying taxes and other items. The HUD | more...

 

FHA Mortgage Loan Interest Rate Trends

For about ten business days now we’ve watched mortgage loan interest rates either hold steady or make small improvements. The gains aren’t dramatic enough from day to day to force much change in the best execution numbers we report here; instead borrowers likely notice the difference in closing costs. But whatever the case, ten days of rates that aren’t getting any higher is a good thing after the sustained upward trend we’ve witnessed this summer. Yesterday (Tuesday July 28) we saw the first day of slightly higher rates since that holding-to-slightly-improved trend began. The move higher certainly wasn’t enough to push rates out of their current comfort zones, so we have 30-year fixed rate conventional mortgage loans holding steady (best execution) at the 4.0% to 4.125% range we’ve been discussing | more...