Looking
for a mortgage that exceeds $729,750?
Not long ago, you would have been charged about
8 percent interest on a loan that large -- if you
could find a lender willing to grant you one.
Now, rates on these "jumbo" loans are much more
affordable, having settled in the low 6 percent
range, on average, for the past few weeks. But taking
advantage of the lower rates remains tough. "Availability
is still an issue, and the bar is higher in terms
of down-payment requirements and credit scores,"
said Greg McBride, a senior financial analyst at
Bankrate.com, a personal finance Web site.
After the mortgage market began unraveling in late
2007, rattled investors stopped buying jumbos. Instead,
they turned to loans that met the requirements of
mortgage financers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. At
the time, the two companies did not buy loans that
exceeded $417,000. Rates on loans larger than that
shot up. And borrowers in pricey areas like Washington
got shut out of the housing market or lost a chance
to refinance.
To help lower borrowing costs, the federal government
temporarily raised the limit for loans Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac could buy. Now the ceiling is $729,750
on single-family homes in some of the nation's most
expensive counties, including many in the Washington
region. The higher ceiling, due to expire Dec. 31,
also applies to mortgages backed by the Federal
Housing Administration.
To check the limits in your area, go to the Department
of Housing and Urban Development Web page https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/hicostlook.cfm
In
areas where the $729,750 ceiling applies, there
is now a three-tiered mortgage market. It is structured
so that the size of the loan is a main factor in
determining its rate.
On a 30-year, fixed-rate loan up to $417,000, the
average rate this week was 5.44 percent, according
to the research firm HSH Associates. The next best
rates apply to loans from $417,000 to $729,750,
which averaged 5.72 percent this week. Loans larger
than that get hit with the highest rates, which
averaged 6.37 percent for the week.
To avoid the highest rates, some borrowers are trying
to stay beneath the $729,750 ceiling by taking out
two loans while still making a down payment: one
loan for $729,750 and another for the balance, said
Kerry White, a loan officer at Prosperity Mortgage,
a joint venture of Long & Foster and Wells Fargo.
These "piggyback" mortgages are difficult to arrange.
But for those who can get them, they are generally
a cheaper alternative than taking out a single jumbo
loan because they do not expose borrowers to the
same stringent credit-score, down-payment and savings
requirements, White said. At Wells Fargo, for instance,
a borrower willing to make a 20 percent down payment
on a jumbo loan must also prove that he or she has
enough savings to cover at least 40 percent of the
loan amount, not including whatever is stashed away
in retirement accounts, White said.
But getting a second loan is not as easy as it once
was. In the past, when home prices were climbing,
piggybacks enabled borrowers to avoid down payments
by using two loans to cover the entire cost of a
home. Many of these loans went bad when the housing
market soured. Most lenders now demand a down payment
and shy away from making second loans.
White managed to help a Washington area lawyer secure
a second mortgage recently to help pay for a $2.5
million house. "But he got it only because he was
putting 30 percent down," she said. "The small bank
that made the second loan was comfortable with that."
These standards are not out of line with current
norms, said Bob Walters, chief economist at the
online mortgage firm Quicken Loans.
"Borrowers are going to be putting down 20 percent
at the very least on a jumbo, and once [the loan
amount] gets past $1.5 million, the down-payment
requirements go to 30 percent and even 40 percent,"
Walters said. "The more you're borrowing, the more
skin in the game you have to have."
The National Association of Realtors said these
requirements have stalled the sales of high-priced
homes and hampered the housing market's recovery.
The supply of expensive homes is growing, adding
to an already bloated housing market, the group
said.
Meanwhile, the default rates among jumbo borrowers
have been rising because those homeowners lack refinancing
opportunities, the association said.
Against that backdrop, Bank of America sees opportunity.
In January, the company started offering jumbos
with rates in the high 5 percent range for borrowers
who pay one point, a fee equal to 1 percent of the
loan that helps lower the rate charged. Borrowers
who take out jumbos that are fixed for five years
and then adjust every year thereafter are priced
in the low 5 percent range. Those jumbo loans are
limited to $1.5 million, and Bank of America plans
to raise the amount to $2 million in the next few
weeks.
"All of us have heard the same complaint: Jumbo
buyers with good incomes and strong credit deserve
better rates," Vijay Lala, a mortgage-product executive
for the bank, said at a recent National Association
of Realtors conference.
But anyone who takes out a
loan for more than $1 million must have enough cash
in reserve to cover at least a year's worth of principal
and interest payments, Lala said. Borrowers must
also show proof of income and assets to qualify.
Consumers who can meet these
criteria have performed well historically, which
is why Bank of America is willing to take a chance
on them, Lala said.
Bank of America and most lenders
that offer jumbos these days are holding on to them
instead of selling them to investors, as they did
about two years ago. That's because few investors
are willing to buy them, said Keith Gumbinger, a
vice president at the research firm HSH.
By keeping these loans in
their own portfolios, lenders have discretion on
what standards they want to impose on borrowers,
so it pays to shop around, Gumbinger said. "Lenders
can have very different ideas for what they find
to be acceptable."
Don't limit your search to
big banks, either, said Guy Cecala, publisher of
Inside Mortgage Finance. Take a look at community
banks.
"Generally, they would like
to make a loan locally to someone they know," Cecala
said. "You should milk any banking relationships
you've got. People who keep their life savings at
a community bank have more leverage than somebody
walking off the street."
Source:
By Dina ElBoghdady Washington Post Staff Writer
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Rory S. Coakley
Coakley Realty, Inc.
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www.coakleyrealty.com