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PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 4:45 pm
by LongTimeListener
I've searched, and if this has been addressed...let me know.
Is the assumption correct that most persons who put down less than 20 percent, are required to pay PMI?
PMI is expensive, approx 0.5% of the loan, burdens the homeowner, and insures the mortgage for the lender if the buyer defaults right?
edit: In other words, did something happen and everyone opt out of PMI (buyer or lender paid) who received these high risk loans? Why aren't the insurance companies covering these loans and protecting the lenders?
Is PMI just a big scam? If they aren't protecting the lenders...why burden the buyer?
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 5:20 pm
by ira s
PMI is insurance to offset losses in the case where the buyer is not able to repay the loan AND the lender is not able to recover its costs after foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged property, so it doesn't simply cover the lender if the buyer can't make the payments....And yes, I always thought of it as something of a scam.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 5:32 pm
by Alan
That is a very good question. PMI should prevent the banks from losing their money.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 6:31 pm
by The Tim
To my knowledge, most buyers in the bubble years of '03-'06 that did not have a 20% down payment were avoiding PMI by doing the piggy-back 80/20 loan arrangement. The monthly cost may have been roughly the same as PMI (in the short term anyway), but the perceived benefit of the 80/20 was that interest paid on the 20% loan was tax-deductible, while PMI payments were not (though I believe they are now).
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 6:53 pm
by LongTimeListener
It still seems odd to me, that with all the talk of a bailout, little mention has been made of PMI.
It burdens the homeowner, and IS supposed to mitigate the risk assumed by the lender making higher risk loans.
Tim, with your skill at finding data...is there any way to determine the percentage of default/at risk mortgages that were/are paying PMI?
It would be nice to hear.....someone at the decision making level address PMI, and why it failed to work, AND why I assume millions of Americans continue to pay for it...
1 million Americans X $100 PMI/month ~ 600 years to cover the cost of the bailout.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 8:51 pm
by rose-colored-coolaid
LongTimeListener,
I think you are confused by what PMI is. Nobody ever paid it because they wanted it to protect them. It's there to protect banks. The bank forces you to take out PMI if you get a larger than 80% mortgage.
Is it helping banks not lose as much money? The banks are probably secretive about that. Regardless, it would never help out the borrowers. That's why people always try to have 80% down.
Tim had a good response about how people avoided PMI during the boom.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 9:11 pm
by Alan
The bank that lended the 80% of an 80/20 loan should still have that equity cushion (unless prices dropped past that). The 20% loaner is the one that loses all his money.
For the 3% and 5% downers, they should have been paying PMI and the losses should go to the insurance company.
What companies offer PMI insurance? I think I want to short them or something.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 10:06 pm
by LongTimeListener
RCC,
I must not be saying this very well. If lenders protect themselves by having the buyer purchase PMI, and this protects the lender, why are the taxpayers on the hook for $700B?
In addition, PMI consumes $$ from the buyer. Money, that could be used to make their mortgage payment.
If PMI doesn't protect the lender, hence the need for a government bailout, I guess PMI can be considered a recurring service fee, for which no service is provided...
It doesn't make sense to me unless, as Tim said, most borrowers avoided PMI through 80/20 loans offered thru their banks.. but this would have to include all the ARM loans, etc in addition to the 80/20 variety. Isn't it the ARM's that are failing miserably? Was PMI not required on ARM's? If PMI was required, why the need for a bailout?
Am I making any sense?
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Mon Oct 20, 2008 10:40 pm
by Charles Dean
from 2002 - 2006 there were virtually no loans written with PMI. Almost all of them were 80/20's. PMI companies almost went out of business during this period of time.
As a loan officer, the last 80/20 loan that I wrote was in April 2007.
So you have two mortgages, usually owned by two different bond investors when a home goes into foreclosure right now. The last of the subprime ARMs will be resetting in Dec/Jan here. Foreclosures from those should be all worked thru the system by this time next year.
Most 2nd mortgages were actually fixed for 15 years, so are typically a more stable loan than the 1st mortgages that were written at the time.
It's interesting, but now that 1-2 combos don't exist anymore and everyone is going back to having PMI, the PMI companies probably have more influence than anyone else over underwriting guidelines on mortgages now. Right now they set the rules as they see fit and the lenders and borrowers just have to conform to what they say.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Tue Oct 21, 2008 7:36 am
by rose-colored-coolaid
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Tue Oct 21, 2008 7:49 am
by WestSideBilly
PMI always struck me as a scam. Or at the very least, a completely illogical service fee, as mentioned. It didn't make sense to make the lender pay more to hedge against the lender defaulting during the time when the lender is most likely to default. The difference is not huge, but if someone is on the edge, PMI could ironically put them over it.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Tue Oct 21, 2008 8:25 am
by ira s
WSB: Absolutely!
If a lender deems you a good enough risk to loan money to, why do they need this "protection"?
I'd be interested in seeing how much $ PMI paid out and to whom, and what kind of financial shape those companies who received PMI money are in now, what they did with that money ( Buy overpriced real estate, put it under mattresses, spend it on whores and booze..etc.)
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Tue Oct 21, 2008 9:23 am
by rose-colored-coolaid
I think it depends a lot on the lender. If you are borrowing from a small local bank, maybe they need the protection. If you are borrowing from BOA, they don't really need the insurance, since they are already spread wide enough to cover some losses.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Wed Oct 22, 2008 1:07 pm
by Charles Dean
I can see why people would think of it as a scam, since you are essentially paying for an insurance policy that protects the lender and not you. But if you didn't have PMI on your house, then what would end up happening is that you would then be charged a higher interest rate in order to level out the risk. With 80/20's the 1st mortgage was usually a decent rate, say 6%, then the 2nd mortgage would be much higher. Say like 8.5%. They're making more for their money, but their risk is also greater. If the house goes into foreclosure the 1st note gets paid off first, then if anything else is left it goes towards paying off the second. Higher risk=higher reward.
Someone who puts 5% down is more likely to default and walk away than someone who puts 20% down. Thus the increase in risk.
There are actually loan programs out there where you can do a loan with no MI in exchange for a higher interest rate. There are pros and cons to this either way.
If you had a loan with no MI, but a higher rate, you would be able to have more deductions from your mortgage. However, if you have PMI, and you're in an appreciating market and you don't refinance, you can have the MI removed from your loan once your loan to value ratio gets below 80%.
So yeah, it does kind of suck, but if you didn't pay it as an insurance policy, then you'd be paying for it in some other way. At least this way the cost is upfront.
Re: PMI...What's the Point?
Posted:
Wed Oct 22, 2008 2:46 pm
by rose-colored-coolaid