| July 31, 2006 |
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Prospects for reviving the long-slumping FHA (Federal Housing Administration) mortgage program took a big jump last week as the House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved reform legislation. By a 415-7 floor vote, the House sent the bipartisan "Expanding American Homeownership Act of 2006" (H.R.5121) to the Senate. The legislation would:
FHA Commissioner Brian D. Montgomery said the legislation will transform his agency and make it more directly competitive with subprime lenders. "We are now closer to a (new) landmark," he said, "a modernized, flexible FHA that can respond to the needs of today's low and moderate income home buyers who need a helping hand." Chartered by Congress in the midst of the Great Depression in 1934, FHA traditionally functioned as the go-to resource for mortgage financing for first-time buyers short of cash. It has also been a key homebuying portal for consumers with imperfect or minimal credit histories. As recently as the mid-1990s, FHA accounted for 10 to 12 percent of all mortgage originations, but that percentage has fallen sharply as subprime lenders using private mortgage insurance cherry-picked the agency's customer base with aggressive marketing campaigns, often through brokers who were effectively excluded from FHA participation. The legislation has potentially large significance for realty agents and brokers who specialize in serving first-time purchasers in general, or African-American, Hispanic and other minority groups. FHA's combination of low interest rates and substantial consumer protections -- no prepayment penalties, for example -- often offers clients superior terms compared with those available from subprime lenders. FHA has also adopted a series of administrative reforms designed to attract realty agents -- especially its termination of its long-controversial rules requiring repairs of property defects before closings, at the seller's expense. The outlook for final action in the Senate is uncertain at the moment. A companion bill is pending before the Senate housing subcommittee, but has not been reported out. After its August recess, Congress will only have about a month before its final recess for the election cycle. The situation is complicated by the go-slow approach of housing subcommittee chairman Sen. Wayne Allard (R-Colorado), who is no fan of government involvement in the mortgage market and is a political ally of the private mortgage insurance industry. FHA commissioner Montgomery, however, pledges an "all-out effort" to convince the Senate to pass the bill before its final recess. As a former White House aide -- secretary of President Bush's cabinet -- Montgomery brings political skills and the muscle of the Administration to the task. HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson, a personal friend and former Houston neighbor of the President's, also has pledged to work to push the bill through the Senate, underlying the White House's strong backing for FHA reform this year. |
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