Closing Costs Set to Rise: Buy Sooner Rather than Later
Reprinted as written
by Jeff
Brown of MainStreet.com
Now that the Federal Reserve has finally announced the start of its "taper," should mortgage shoppers get a move on to beat higher rates?
They
probably should, but not because mortgage rates will spike. Instead, borrowers
might want to beat fee increases this coming spring from Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, the two firms that back most new mortgages. The hike could add thousands
of dollars to your closing costs.
The smart
money says mortgage rates will probably drift up, but slowly; the Fed's
decision to cut back on its bond-buying program has been expected for some time
and is baked into current mortgage prices.
In fact,
the financial markets were thrilled last month when the Federal Open Market
Committee said the taper would take all of this year to reduce the monthly bond
purchases, now at $85 billion a month, to zero. Those purchases have been
designed to keep long-term interest rates low.
The FOMC
also signaled that it probably would not start raising short-term rates for two
years. So not many experts foresee a spike in loan rates.
But Fannie
and Freddie, the government-owned companies, are raising a key fee to offset
risks and help a government effort to rekindle the market for loans that are
not backed by these two firms. As a result, closing costs will rise as lenders
work the new fees into loan prices, perhaps as soon as March.
The fee,
called a "risk based premium" or "loan level pricing
adjustment" will be large enough to more than offset the elimination of another
fee, the Adverse Market Delivery Charge of 0.25% of the loan amount. The new
fees will be higher for borrowers with low credit scores or who make low down
payments.
An example
prepared by HSH.com, the mortgage information service, shows the effect on a
borrower with a good credit score of 740 who puts 20% down. Currently, that
borrower would be charged $250 each in AMDC and LLPA for every $100,000
borrowed, for a total of $500.
With the
changes, the AMDC fee will disappear but be replaced by a 1.5% LLPA, for a
total of $1,500 per $100,000. That could raise the losing costs on a $300,000
loan by $3,000.
While
borrowers with higher credit scores will pay slightly less, the size of the
down payment is a bigger factor in setting the fee level. That's because a
lower ratio between the loan amount and the home's value reduces the lender's
risk of loss in a foreclosure.
A borrower
with a 740 credit score would pay a 1.5% fee with a down payment of 15% or
less, but only 0.75% with a 20% down payment. If that buyer could increase his
or her credit score to 779, the fee would still be 0.75%. with 20% down.
Many
lenders, of course, will offer to include the new fee in the loan, but will
charge a higher mortgage rate as a result, HSH says.
So any
homeowner thinking of refinancing should try to beat this fee increase, and
should try to work toward a loan-to-value ratio of less than 80%. And anyone
looking for a new home might do well to start hunting in the winter rather than
wait until the traditional home shopping season begins in the spring.
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