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Park Ridge, Illinois, United States
Gerard Scheffler has been very actively involved in the real estate profession for over seven years. In 2005, immediately after receiving his Broker’s License, he established his first Chicago based brokerage company. The company turned out to be very successful with hundreds of satisfied customers and millions of dollars in closed real estate transactions. Over the years, Gerard has developed a network of returning customers who always refer his services to their family and friends. He is presently a managing broker at Home Gallery Realty brokerage firm specializing in default and distressed property sales. Regardless of his professional development and success, Gerard is constantly looking for ways to improve his skills as well as build his company image and reputation. He is very hardworking and aggressive when it comes to representing his customers ‘ real estate needs and doing his job right. He will work with you to ensure that your property is sold for the highest price possible in the shortest amount of time with the least amount of inconvenience to you. Area of service includes Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake and Mchenry County in the State of Illinois.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

FHA to deny mortgage backing for credit disputes above $1,000

 

Beginning April 1, potential borrowers with ongoing credit disputes totaling more than $1,000 will not be able to get a mortgage insured by the Federal Housing Administration.

The rule marks a significant belt-tightening at the FHA whereas the adminstration earlier held no such requirement that disputed credit accounts needed to be paid off. Before this rule, a direct endorsement underwriter could determine if any of the borrower's outstanding debts should impact the approval of the FHA-backed mortgage.

After April 1, the borrower must either pay off the outstanding balance on these collections accounts or document a payment arrangement that the lender must then submit to the FHA before closing. The payment arrangement will be counted into the debt-to-income ratio for the new home loan.

Jeremy Radack, a real estate attorney who helps builders in Houston get buyers financed, expects between a 33% and a 50% reduction in FHA originations this year because so many borrowers in the 650 to 680 FICO score range have a past due collections account.

"Take the 750 borrower with a medical collection outstanding from five years ago when they were in college for $5,000. Is that really a bad loan? I don't think FHA looked at how much of their performing borrowers have collections accounts," Radack said. "There are so many other things they could do to mitigate risks to the fund."

The rule excludes disputed accounts from more than two years ago, along with those related to theft. But the lender must document an identity theft or police report on the fraudulent charges.

The unintentional consequences could be severe for those still originating mortgages.

"We expect this revision will certainly kick some buyers out of the marketplace, and we’re in ongoing efforts to quantify how extreme the impact will be," said Lisa Jackson, senior vice president of research at John Burns Real Estate Consulting. "We did a quick sample of some of our builder clients focused on the entry level. They cited impact to varying degrees, with one reporting the new rule would disqualify 60% to 84% of his buyers currently under contract at specific communities."

An FHA spokesman said the rule was designed as another protection for the FHA emergency fund. The fund levels slipped to 0.2% of at-risk insurance last year, well below the 2% mandated by Congress. The FHA will raise insurance premiums on April 1 as well to boost the fund by $1 billion.

"When performing loan-level reviews of FHA loans, we found that many borrowers with mortgage payment delinquencies had prior credit deficiencies including unpaid collections and unresolved disputed accounts prior to the approval of their loan," the spokesman said. "This change was made to eliminate this layer of risk to FHA-insured loans and help protect our insurance fund."

Because of the FHA insurance premium raises to 1.75%, Radack expects the more qualified borrowers to go to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac loans, which have smaller charges for private market insurance premiums.

"FHA is not going to be in my vocabulary," Radack said.

Source HousingWire, March 26, 2012 ,By Jon Prior