Fannie Mae Tightens Guidelines On ARMs And Interest Only Products

May 4th, 2010 By Ginger Wilcox

Fannie Mae tightens its mortgage guidelinesFor the first time this year, Fannie Mae announced significant updates to its mortgage underwriting guidelines.

The changes include newer, harsher ARM qualification standards, the elimination of a once-popular loan product, and tighter rules for interest only mortgages.

Fannie Mae made its official announcement April 30, 2010.  The changes will roll out to home buyers and homeowners in Tiburon and everywhere else over the next 12 weeks.

The first guideline change is tied to ARMs of 5 years or less.

Mortgage applicants must now qualify based on a mortgage rate 2% higher than their note rate.  For example, if your mortgage rate is 5 percent, for qualification purposes, your rate would be 7 percent.

The elevated qualification payment will disqualify borrowers whose debt-to-income levels are borderline.

The second change is Fannie Mae’s elimination of the standard 7-year balloon mortgage.  Balloon mortgages were popular early last decade.  Lately, few borrowers have chosen them, though.  Mostly because rates have been relative high as compared to a comparable 7-year ARM.

And, lastly, Fannie Mae is changing its interest only mortgages guidelines.

Effective June 19, 2010, Fannie Mae interest only mortgages must meet the following criteria:

  1. The home must be a 1-unit property
  2. The home must be a primary residence, or vacation home
  3. The borrower’s FICO must be 720 or higher
  4. The mortgage must be a purchase, or rate-and-term refinance. No “cash out” allowed.

Furthermore, borrowers using interest only mortgages must show two full years of mortgage payments “in the bank” at the time of closing.

Earlier this year, Fannie Mae-sister Freddie Mac announced that as of September 2010, it will stop offering interest only loans altogether.

Between Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the FHA, and other government-supported entities, the U.S. government now backs 96.5% of the U.S. mortgage market.  So long as mortgage default rates are high, expect approvals for all borrower types to continue to toughen.

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  1. suepearlstein

    In addition to the changes by Fannie on IO and ARM products…Freddie has implemented conservative changes to existing guidelines with a move to cap DTI at 50.49% down from 55%. Fannie still remains at 45% DTI.

  2. Eric in Silicon Valley

    Hi Dean,

    I have to say, I enjoy this format of top ten articles. I tried that on my own blog for a very short spell but couldn’t seem to get into a rhythm, and I could never really figure out the right tone to set – how much I should simply provide quick links, how much I should restate or paraphrase, how much I should try to inject a forceful opinion, etc?

    Could you perhaps discuss some of the challenges and decision process you went through to arrive at where you are now? For example, I followed your link to your other blog — noticed you discontinued your daily top-ten column — two hours a day is a real commitment. On that one, how did you strike the right balance of local and national news? And how were you using that RSS Reader you mentioned?

    Thanks and good luck!

    This comment was originally posted on Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

  3. WeHaltDefaults

    Housing market: Fannie Mae tightens lending guidelines…and government controls 96.5% of mortgage market http://ow.ly/1IQl3

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

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