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Private Mortgage Insurance is an insurance policy that is paid by homeowners for the benefit of lenders.
It's required for all conventional-mortgage homeowners whose loans exceed 80% loan-to-value.
Similar to homeowners insurance, private mortgage insurance gets "cashed in" when a loss occurs. In the case of the former, the loss may be storm damage; the latter, mortgage default.
With foreclosures proliferating, PMI defaults are up 26 percent over last year and double the levels from 2007. Private mortgage insurers are paying out on many more claims than was expected and, as a result, are booking huge losses.
Homeowners are about to pay the price. To shore up balance sheets and protect against future losses, mortgage insurers have raised insurance rates and toughened underwriting guidelines.
Some of the changes we're seeing include:
And, of course, insurance premiums are increasing for everyone.
It's a 2-pronged attack that will make a less-than-20%-downpayment more costly for Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-backed mortgage.
The alternative is to look to the FHA for a mortgage. There's 2 advantages here.
First, as compared to PMI rates, FHA mortgage insurance looks cheap. A $200,000 FHA home loan with 10% down can save as much as $400 in insurance costs. With 5% down, that number grows to $1,040 per year.
Second, with FHA mortgage rates running neck-and-neck with conventional ones, there's a lot of days when 30-year fixed mortgage rates are cheaper in the FHA market versus the conventional one.
The downside of FHA is that the government puts up to 1.750 percent insurance fee into your loan at the time of closing. It's a cost that doesn't exist in the conventional world and, for some people, the fee makes FHA an imperfect fit.
The key is to talk with your loan officer about Conventional and FHA mortgages to make sure you're making the right choice.
For help with your FHA vs Conventional decision,anytime with the details of your situation. I answer all of my own emails and am happy to help you with what I know.
Plus, my rates are really good.
Dan Green (NMLS #227607) is an active loan officer with Waterstone Mortgage. Email Dan ator call 513-443-2020.
Bonus: Click to get a free, no-obligation rate quote. I love to work with my readers!
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