GOP seeks housing-agency changes

— Republican lawmakers said Wednesday that they will seek changes at the financially troubled Federal Housing Administration as a first step toward a broader overhaul of the government’s role in housing finance.

The House Financial Services Committee held a hearing Wednesday on the role of the Housing Administration, the first in a series of panels that might lead to legislation that would shrink the government mortgage insurer’s market share and shore up its bottom line. That is a more urgent priority than winding down government-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which buy mortgages from lenders and securitize them, lawmakers said.

“It is going to be a priority of this committee to forge a sustainable housing finance system in this country,” Rep. Jeb Hensarling, the Texas Republican who leads the Financial Services panel, said at the hearing.

“Given their high loan to value, low credit score policies and high rates of default, it’s an open question whether FHA has now morphed into Countrywide,” Hensarling said, referring to the troubled mortgage bank that was purchased by Bank of America Corp. during the financial crisis. “Arguably the FHA has now become the largest subprime lender all with the blessings of the administration.”

President Barack Obama’s 2013-14 budget is expected to reflect that the Housing Administration will require a Treasury subsidy for the first time since it was founded in the 1930s, largely because of defaults on loans it insured as the housing market crashed. The agency could fall as much as $16.3 billion short of the cash it is required to keep on hand to cover all projected future losses, according to an independent actuary.

Any legislation that emerges from the House must eventually win support from Democrats who control the Senate and are also scrutinizing the agency. Democrats said Wednesday that they are eager to preserve the Housing Administration’s counter cyclical role of shoring up the housing market when private financing isn’t available.

“All the members here today are deeply concerned about the health of the FHA’s mutual mortgage insurance fund,” said Rep. Maxine Waters of California, the senior Democrat on the committee. “Along with that concern, I think it is important to recognize FHA’s crucial role in the housing finance system.”

Rep. Brad Sherman, a Democrat from California, said a previously passed bill in the House would strengthen the agency. He said his current concern is with its underwriting standards.

“We certainly want FHA to be guaranteeing loans to creditworthy borrowers, but they certainly themselves can make those changes,” Sherman said in an interview. “If we need to nudge them, we’ll nudge them.”

Together, the Housing Administration; Fannie Mae, the Federal National Mortgage Association; and Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., own or guaranteemore than 90 percent of all U.S. home loans. Lawmakers from both parties and Obama have called for an overhaul of housing finance that shrinks the government footprint.

At the same time, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have begun to post quarterly profits after drawing $190 billion in taxpayer aid, shifting lawmakers’ focus to the more immediate financial shortfall at the Housing Administration.

Legislation now under consideration by Republican lawmakers could set off a debate over whether the agency needs fundamental changes to shrink its traditional role supporting home lending to low- and moderate-income families. The agency insures $1.1 trillion worth of mortgages, almost quadrupling its share of insured loans from 4 percent in 2007 to more than 15 percent.

“Instead of ensuring our housing market is put on a more sustainable path forward, FHA decided to help thousands of borrowers get into homes that they couldn’t afford and that wound up going down in value, trapping them underwater,” said Rep. Scott Garrett, a Republican from New Jersey.

The agency already has taken some steps to shore up its finances. It raised the annual premiums borrowers pay to insure their mortgages against default, increased down-payment requirements and premiums for loans greater than $625,500, and required more scrutiny of loan applications for buyers with weak credit orhigh debt loads.

Supporters of the agency have said that should be enough.

“FHA has contributed to broadly shared prosperity in this country,” Julia Gordon, director of housing finance and policy at the Center for American Progress, a research group aligned with Democrats, said in testimony at Wednesday’s hearing. “The finances are not a reflection of a flawed business model but instead are consequences of the 100-year flood of the great recession.”

Gordon said the recovery in the housing market would also help the Housing Administration’s bottom line. The S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values in 20 U.S. cities increased 5.5 percent in the year through November, the biggest gain since August 2006, according to data released on Jan. 29.

Democrats and Republicans agree that the agency needs more authority to weed out bad actors among the lenders who issue loans it insures. That and other changes were written into a bill that passed the House with bipartisan support last year.

Republicans have said they want to go further, perhaps changing the agency’s accounting methods and requiring higher down payments on agency-insured loans. The Housing Administration currently insures mortgages with down payments as low as 3.5 percent for certain borrowers.

The agency also takes 100percent of the losses on the defaulted loans it insures. Lawmakers are investigating whether private interests should take on some of that risk.

“Reducing coverage levels will effectively cap the severity of loss on FHA loans and improve their underwriting by putting the lender at risk,” Basil Petrou, managing partner of Washington-based Federal Financial Analytics, which tracks housing policy, said in testimony at Wednesday’s hearing.

Senate Democrats probably won’t support all of the changes proposed by House Republicans. Still, they’re also scrutinizing the agency.

South Dakota Democrat Tim Johnson, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said at a hearing in December that he would seek legislation to restore the agency’s fiscal health “if the administration’s actions and proposals will not be sufficient.”

The Senate panel is expected to hold a hearing on the Housing Administration later this month, allowing the panel to “identify necessary legislative actions to address its troubling financial situation,” Sam Gilford, spokesman for the Banking Committee, said in an e-mail.

Johnson is looking forward to working with Republicans “toward a bipartisan agreement that protects taxpayers and restores the financial health of this critical piece of the nation’s housing finance system.”

Business, Pages 25 on 02/07/2013

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