Cap on conforming mortgages to go from $417,000 to $625,000
The new stimulus package of the Bush administration (approved today) will increase the conforming mortgage cap backed by Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac to $625,000. This allows one to buy a decent house using just one conforming mortgage (current 30-year fixed-rate is 5.625%), i.e. no second mortgage (with PMI) or jumbo loans. This will last until Dec 31.
I would expect that this should stimulate RE buyers in the Seattle area.
I would expect that this should stimulate RE buyers in the Seattle area.
Comments
That said, if the limit is increased, interest rates on what were formerly jumbo loans should decrease.
It's a rhetorical question, no need to make the shameful answer explicit.
The only positive to be gleaned from the proposed stimulus package is an expansion of the role of the Federal Housing Administration, or FHA, which provides loans to certain subprime borrowers. Although the FHA means well and many of its programs do help low-income home owners, the implicit backing of the FHA gives loan originators no incentive to prudently underwrite a loan, inviting rampant fraud and predatory lending into the market for FHA loans.
Washington is caving to pressure from Wall Street and real estate groups that stand to lose if home prices continue their downward slide. The CFO at Los Angeles-based KB Homes (KBH) sums up the conflict of interest by saying the stimulus package "[is] a shot in the arm to the market. It's going to spur people to move up to a more expensive home, and that's going to get the new and used markets moving again."
By propping up home prices and lowering interest rates, policymakers push distressed homeowners deeper into trouble, while bailing out banks and homebuilders who profited from putting thousands of families on the streets."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080125/bs_ ... 9e5SUG1vAI
For loans over $417,001, even with adds, the rate will most likely be better than what the Jumbo Borrower might have received in present times (since August).