Daily Real Estate News | May 16, 2008
Fannie Mae Scraps Declining Markets
Policy
Fannie Mae will no longer require
borrowers to put up an extra 5 percent down payment when purchasing
homes in areas deemed "declining markets," the country’s largest
secondary mortgage market company said Friday.
Fannie Mae had been hearing concerns
from REALTORS® and others for months that its declining-markets
policy was bad for the housing market because it discouraged
consumers from buying homes in markets hardest-hit by foreclosures.
"It stigmatized communities with lower
sales and prices," said Dick Gaylord, president of the NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.
NAR met several times this spring with
Fannie Mae officials and sent letters reflecting members' unease
with the policy. “We heard the concerns of NAR and we reviewed and
determined that changes in our policy were needed,” Gwen MuseEvans,
Fannie Mae vice president for credit policy and controls, said in a
statement Friday.
Fannie Mae's announcement
comes as more than 8,000 REALTORS® are gathered in Washington, D.C.,
where Fannie Mae is headquartered, for NAR's 2008 Midyear
Legislative Meetings & Trade Expo.
Under the policy change, borrowers can
get loans up to 95 percent loan-to-value, even in markets in which
prices have been falling. Prior to the change, borrowers could only
get loans up to 90 percent to give lenders a 5-percentage-point
cushion to protect against possible price declines in the future.
“This new down payment policy reinforces
our goal to support successful home-owning,” says Marianne Sullivan,
Fannie Mae's senior vice president of credit policy and risk
management for single-family homes.
The new policy takes effect June 1.
— By Robert Freedman for REALTOR®
magazine online
Reprinted from
REALTOR® Magazine Online
May 16, 2008 with permission of the NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. Copyright 2008.
All rights reserved.