18 governors urge Joe Biden to end mortgage rule for those with good or poor credit

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The Federal Housing Finance Agency headquarters offices in Washington, D.C. Bob Korn / Shutterstock

Eighteen governors sent a letter to President Joe Biden requesting a change in a policy regarding mortgage fees.

Earlier this year, the Federal Housing Finance Agency changed pricing used by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, government-sponsored companies that guarantee most of the nation’s mortgages. By instituting a loan-level pricing adjustment, critics and the governors believe the FHFA will be overcharging borrowers with good credit and undercharging those with bad credit.

“In short, the new LLPA framework will inevitably increase mortgage costs for lower-risk individuals and handicap those borrowers with larger down payments,” the governors wrote to President Biden and FHFA Director Sandra Thompson. “Further, the changes provide no incentive to borrowers to maintain good credit and will confuse borrowers at all credit levels.”

Republican Govs. Mike Parson of Missouri and Brian Kemp of Georgia are leading the coalition against the policy.

“There is never a good time for bad policy, and this measure by the Biden Administration is certainly bad policy,” Parson said in a statement. “This backward policy only serves to punish hard-working Americans who follow good financial practices, all while worsening overall housing market conditions. Only the Biden Administration would think it can solve a supply issue by subsidizing demand and bad credit.”

However, the Urban Institute in April said the criticism of the policy was “misplaced” and doesn’t provide a comprehensive assessment.

“FHFA is not raising fees on borrowers with good credit to lower them for those with bad credit,” Jim Parrott wrote in a blog post. “It is raising fees on loans there is little reason to discount so that it can better serve those who need the help.”

Parrot said borrowers who put down less than 20% on a home will still pay more in total mortgage fees because they will pay a private mortgage insurance premium in addition to either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac fees. Private mortgage insurance protects the lender if borrowers stop making loan payments.

“So if the cost of mortgage insurance is added to the (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) pricing grid, the borrowers’ costs will track their risk as one would expect: those with lower credit scores will pay more than those with higher credit scores, and those with higher loan-to-value ratios will pay more than those with lower loan-to-value ratios,” he said.

The governors stated interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve and record inflation during the last year are additional reasons to stop the policy. If Biden doesn’t change the rule, they advocated for Congressional action.

“Your actions are threatening the American housing system,” the governors wrote. “By upending the existing financing model that relies on individual financial responsibility, you are increasing uncertainty in the housing market and our nation’s economy.”

In addition to Missouri and Georgia, governors from Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming signed the letter.

Republished with the permission of The Center Square.