40-Year Loans, Home Possible(SM) Upgrades, 20 Arm Structures on Tap for Freddie Mac Web-Based Selling System
09 May 2006 - 2:02AM
PR Newswire (US)
Maximum Insurance Deductible Hike Planned to Help Coastal Lenders,
Borrowers CHICAGO, May 8 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Freddie Mac
today announced that it is dramatically expanding the list of
mortgage products available through its web-based Selling System
this summer by adding a new array of 40-year fixed-rate mortgages,
20 more adjustable-rate mortgage products and federally insured
rural housing mortgage products to its Loan Prospector(R) automated
underwriting service and its on-line Selling System. Freddie Mac
officials also announced they are beefing up the company's flagship
suite of Home Possible(SM) affordable mortgage products by adding a
special 40-year fixed-rate option and providing lenders with more
competitive selling options. Separately, the company said it is
revising its property insurance requirements to facilitate mortgage
purchases in coastal markets where insurers are raising their
deductibles. "Today's announcements underscore our commitment to
respond quickly to our customers' call for more flexible products
and faster decisions on one easy- to-use web-based platform," said
Paul Mullings, senior vice president of Single Family Sourcing at
Freddie Mac, "and further fulfill our pledge to build new pathways
into the secondary market while delivering a superior business
experience to our customers." The enhancements announced today at
the Mortgage Bankers Association's National Secondary Conference
and Expo in Chicago are scheduled to begin rolling out this summer.
They are being announced now to give Freddie Mac customers and
other industry participants time to gear up to take full advantage
of them once complete product requirements are released. Fully
implemented, the enhancements will make it possible for lenders to
assess, price, and deliver on a flow basis virtually every mortgage
product offered in Freddie Mac's seller/servicer guide. Today's
announcement also brings Freddie Mac's legacy MIDANET(R) system one
step closer to final retirement. 40-Year Home Possible Mortgage:
More House with Less Income Freddie Mac is in the process of
rolling out a comprehensive line-up of 40-year mortgage options
beginning with a standard 40-year fixed-rate mortgage product, a
40-year version of the Freddie 100 no-downpayment mortgage product
and a 40-year Alt 97 mortgage. "This is just the beginning of a
robust product strategy designed to give lenders a highly flexible
array of 40-year products so more customers can better match their
home buying ambitions with their financial circumstances," said
James Cotton, vice president of Mortgage Sourcing at Freddie Mac.
The first set of planned enhancements include a 40-year fixed-rate
version of the Home Possible mortgage that builds on Home
Possible's standard low down payments, flexible credit
underwriting, and conforming conventional rates to give cash and
credit strapped borrowers even more buying power. For example, by
opting for a $200,000 40-year, no-downpayment Home Possible
mortgage at today's rates a borrower would need 3.5% less gross
monthly income to qualify and enjoy a 4.5% cut in their monthly
housing payment and 5% more homebuying power versus a 30-year
version of the same mortgage. "This is the next logical step for
giving more Home Possible borrowers a responsible way to lower
their monthly payment and make successful, long-term homeownership
a reality," explained Mullings. Announced in 2005, Home Possible
was designed to expand affordable homeownership opportunities by
enabling qualified borrowers to finance single family properties
with as little as $500 of their own funds for downpayments or
closing costs. Freddie Mac also said it is providing a servicing
released cash-sale option to lenders who deliver Home Possible
loans through Freddie Mac's web- based Selling System in response
to customer demands. Other Home Possible changes announced at the
MBA Secondary will cut the minimum borrower contribution for
financing 3-4 unit properties from 5% to 3% and enable borrowers to
use Mortgage Credit Certificates and Rural Housing Service
Leveraged Seconds. Helping Borrowers Cope With Rising Insurance
Deductibles Freddie Mac officials told the MBA conference the
company is in the process of aligning its underwriting policies to
accommodate recent property insurance deductible increases
triggered by the last two years of severe hurricanes in Florida and
along the Gulf Coast. Scheduled to take effect in July, the
modification will increase the maximum deductible in Freddie Mac's
guidelines from 2% to 5% for fire, water (not caused by flooding)
or wind damage coverage for 1- to 4-unit properties, condominiums
and Planned Unit Developments (PUDs). The change will give more
borrowers access to lower mortgage rates through Freddie Mac loans
and help support the housing recovery efforts along the Gulf Coast.
The higher deductibles are also expected to help borrowers lower
their annual insurance premiums. Freddie Mac estimates the lower
premiums could generate enough savings to offset the higher 5%
deductible within two to four years. Twenty Additional ARM
Structures Additional enhancements planned for this summer will
enable Freddie Mac customers to use Loan Prospector and the on-line
platform to assess, price and deliver twenty additional rate and
cap structures including ARMs with shorter lookback periods (first
business day of the preceding month) and five new fully amortizing
LIBOR-indexed ARMs with initial periods of 3- to 10-years, followed
by 6-month adjustment periods. These five new ARMs will be
available through the system's WAC ARM Guarantor execution. The
Selling System expansion will provide users, for the first time,
the capacity to assess, sell and deliver homeownership products
with a special focus on particular markets such as non-assumable
Guaranteed Rural Housing Mortgages and Section 184 Native American
Mortgages. Additional planned Selling System enhancements include
the ability to settle FHA and VA mortgage backed securities.
Freddie Mac is a stockholder-owned corporation established by
Congress in 1970 to support homeownership and rental housing.
Freddie Mac purchases single-family and multifamily residential
mortgages and mortgage-related securities, which it finances
primarily by issuing mortgage passthrough securities and debt
instruments in the capital markets. Over the years, Freddie Mac has
made home possible for one in six homebuyers and more than two
million renters across America. For additional information about
Freddie Mac, see the Company's web site: http://www.freddiemac.com/
DATASOURCE: Freddie Mac CONTACT: Brad German of Freddie Mac,
+1-703-903-2437 Web site: http://www.freddiemac.com/
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