fannie mae and freddie mac

How To Know If You’re Eligible For A Making Home Affordable Refinance

April 7, 2009

April 4, 2009, marked the official start of the Making Home Affordable refinance program. Expected to help 5 million homeowners, the Making Home Affordable program “looks the other way” with respect to falling home values, approving mortgage applications based on borrower payment history and benefit to the homeowner.

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What To Do When Mortgage Rates Plummet

March 20, 2009

For the fifth time in a year, rate shoppers learned an important lesson this week: When mortgage rates plummet unexpectedly, they often recover just as fast. Wednesday, the Federal Reserve’s newest $750 billion mortgage market pledge helped to push conforming mortgage rates near their lowest levels since WWII. 24 hours later, however, those rates were expired.

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County-By-County: The 2009 “High-Cost” Conforming Loan Limits

February 24, 2009

As part of the stimulus package passed last week, Congress authorized a temporary increase to conforming loan limits in certain high-cost parts of the country. “High cost” is defined by a regions’ median sales price

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What The Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan Doesn’t Mean To Homeowners

February 19, 2009

In Mesa, Arizona, Wednesday, the President presented the Homeowner Affordability and Stability plan, a multi-pronged effort to support the housing market. The story made the front page of nearly every newspaper in the country . The president’s plan is sweeping: Incent mortgage servicers to work with at-risk homeowners before delinquency starts Let homeowners with good credit but little equity refinance to today’s low rates Fund Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to support mortgage markets It’s a broad plan with many positive angles, but for now, we can’t forget that it’s just a plan .

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Mortgage Rates Fell But Be Careful Of History Repeating Itself

November 26, 2008

Like everything else on Wall Street, mortgage markets are based on supply and demand. When demand outweighs supply, mortgage rates fall. So, Tuesday, when the government unexpectedly announced a $500 billion budget for buying mortgage debt from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the demand side of the mortgage market ballooned. The surprise demand helped push […]

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Why Mortgage Rates Haven’t Fallen As Expected

October 10, 2008

When the government nationalized mortgage lending in September, housing analysts predicted lower mortgage rates. For a brief two-week stint, they were right — post-takeover, the 30-year, fixed rate mortgage fell below 6.000 percent nationally for the first time in 7 months. Since then, however, mortgage markets have reversed. Rates are now at pre-takeover levels. Now, […]

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FHA Makes Homeownership More Affordable — But Not Until October 1, 2008

September 24, 2008

Earlier this year — and for the first time in its history — the FHA changed its funding fees and mortgage insurance structure. Effective October 1, 2008, it’s repealing those changes. Partly to keep FHA home loans affordable, and partly to comply with new laws, the FHA is rolling back its up-front fees and ongoing mortgage […]

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Why The Government’s Takeover Of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Is Lowering Mortgage Rates

September 9, 2008

When comparing two investments with equal risk, a rational person will choose the investment with a higher rate of return. This behavior is called Risk Aversion and is a basic tenet of personal investing. An off-shoot of Risk Aversion is that a rational person will only invest in an instrument of greater risk if the […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : September 8, 2008

September 8, 2008

Mortgage markets improved last week on Hurricane Gustav’s less-than-expected damages and a strengthening U.S. dollar. Even factoring in Friday’s 0.125 percent run-up on most mortgage products, rates improved overall. It’s the second straight week in which mortgage rates improved. But for all the news that we could dissect from last week, it should be the news […]

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Mandatory FHA Loan Fees Increase For Some, Fall For Others

July 18, 2008

For the first time in its history, the FHA changed its funding fees and mortgage insurance structure this week.  FHA-insured home loans are now subject to a risk-based pricing adjustment, as shown by the table above. Because of risk-based pricing, FHA home loans are now more expensive for borrowers with less-than-ideal credit profiles, and less expensive borrowers […]

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Fannie And Freddie Are Yesterday’s News, Says The Market

July 15, 2008

Mortgage markets have turned their attention back to the U.S. economy this morning, causing yesterday’s rate improvements to unwind a bit. Rates had fallen Monday after the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury’s joint announcement in support of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  Today, it’s the data that is taking center stage. Most notably, the U.S. […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : July 14, 2008

July 14, 2008

Mortgage rates fell slightly in a week that included a bank failure, more oil price spikes, and questions about the health of the nations’ mortgage market. Rates would have fallen more if not for a late-Friday sell-off that added 0.125 percent to most products. As financial markets fell under stress, most people missed the strong […]

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FHA Home Loans Emerge As A Cheap Alternative For Low-Credit Score Homeowners

April 1, 2008

FHA stands for Federal Housing Administration, a by-product of the National Housing Act of 1934 and now a sub-group within the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The FHA is not a lender nor does it build homes. The FHA exists to insure lenders against loss in the event that a homeowner defaults […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : March 24, 2008

March 24, 2008

Conforming mortgage rates edged slightly lower for the second week in a row. Mortgage rates fell for two main reasons: The Federal Reserve offered fiscal support for troubled mortgage-backed securities A government group gave Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac permission to lend more of money to American homeowners These two actions combined to make mortgage-backed securities safer […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : March 17, 2008

March 17, 2008

Mortgage rates fell last week on growing evidence of a recession, but far fewer Americans were eligible to take advantage. Mortgage lenders continue to reduce product menus and that is leaving homeowners with fewer mortgage financing options than before. As an added hurdle, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac recently added “risk-based” fees on all conforming […]

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Mortgage Rates Fell But You May Have A Higher Rate To Pay

March 13, 2008

When mortgages began to sour last Fall, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac instituted “loan-level pricing adjustments”. The concept is basic: For mortgage applicants with less-than-ideal credit profiles, mortgage pricing is adjusted to compensate for the added risks. It’s still a conforming loan, but with adjustments. Effective March 6, though, Fannie and Freddie’s definition of “high-risk” […]

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What The New Conforming Loan Limits May Mean To You

February 14, 2008

The $168 billion economic stimulus plan signed Wednesday includes a temporary increase to conforming loan limits in some parts of the country. Currently, many homeowners whose loans exceed $417,000 are paying higher interest rates because their loans are not securitized the way that smaller loans are. The loan limit increase is intended to make housing more […]

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Mortgage Rates Are Going Up — But Not For The Reason You’d Expect

December 13, 2007

Conforming mortgages are getting more expensive — but not because of mortgage rates. To protect against further weakness in the housing sector, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are instituting “delivery fees” on all conforming mortgages, effective March 2008. Fannie Mae’s Adverse Market Delivery Charge and Freddie Mac’s Market Condition Delivery Fee will add a one-time, quarter-percent […]

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Your Credit Score Doesn’t Cost You Today, But In Three Months It Could Cost You Plenty

December 6, 2007

Credit scores are the best predictor of how a homeowner will pay on a mortgage, so it’s no surprise that credit scores will play a bigger role in mortgage financing in 2008. Actually “that date” is more clearly defined.  It’s March 1, 2008. For loans closing on or after March 1, 2008, Fannie Mae and Freddie […]

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Mortgage Rates Fall For ARMs Faster Than For Fixed Rate Mortgages

November 8, 2007

After running neck-and-neck for several months, interest rates for fixed-rate mortgages and adjustable-rate mortgages are finally diverging. Despite pricing worse than its fixed-rate counterpart throughout much of August and September, ARMs are now close to 0.375 percent lower for conforming products sold through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This equates to roughly $25 per month per $100,000 […]

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