By a bipartisan vote of 46 to 21, the House Financial Services
Committee on Thursday approved H.R. 5830, the FHA Housing Stabilization
and Homeowner Retention Act. The bill, a top legislative priority for
NLC, is the final piece of the House plan to stabilize the housing
market and reign in the skyrocketing foreclosure rate. Passage paves the
way for a comprehensive package of housing legislation to come together
on the House floor in the coming weeks.
Under the bill, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) would set
up a new program to encourage lenders to voluntarily forgive a portion
of outstanding debt on troubled mortgages. In exchange for forgiving the
debt, those mortgages would be refinanced and guaranteed by the FHA. FHA
mortgage insurance guarantees that insured loans will be honored if
covered homeowners are ever unable to meet their mortgage obligations.
To qualify for the program proposed under the bill, lenders would
voluntarily accept a payment of no more than 85 percent of the currently
appraised value of the property as payment in full on the loan.
Homeowners would be eligible only if they could reasonably be expected
to repay the refinanced loan; and would have to share any profit from
future home appreciation with the government.
Given a recent Standard and Poor's report that home prices
have dropped by an average of 12.7 percent over the last 12 months, and
by as much as 20 percent in many larger cities where foreclosures are
often concentrated, the portion of debt lenders would have to forgive in
exchange for the guaranteed payment could be substantial. FHA would be
authorized to insure up to $300 billion worth of loans under the
program.
According to Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank
(D-Mass.), this and several other bills aimed at stabilizing the housing
market will likely be combined into a single comprehensive housing
stabilization measure that could be considered by the House as early as
this week.
In addition to the FHA Housing Stabilization and Homeowner
Retention Act, the measure will likely include: H.R. 5818, The
Neighborhood Stabilization Act, which would provide $15 billion in loans
and grants to state and local governments to purchase and rehabilitate
foreclosed, vacant properties and to rehabilitate and operate rental
properties; H.R. 5579, the Emergency Mortgage Loan Modification Act,
which would provide a legal safe harbor from investor lawsuits for
mortgage servicers that make certain loan modifications' to prevent
foreclosures; *and H.R. 5720, the Housing Assistance Tax Act, which
would allow state and local governments to sell an additional $10
billion in tax-exempt mortgage bonds to raise funds for refinancing the
subprime mortgage loans of borrowers at risk of default and would make
changes to the Low-Income Housing Tax Program to help stimulate the
construction of new affordable rental housing.
H.R. 1427, the Federal Housing Finance Reform Act, which would
reform the mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the
Federal Home Loan Banks and increase their ability to contribute to the
credit available to lenders making home loans, and H.R. 1852, the
Expanding American Homeownership Act, which would reform the Federal
Housing Administration and permit FHA to offer larger loans to a greater
number of borrowers, are also likely to be part of the housing
stabilization package.
The Senate, which has already passed one housing stimulus measure,
H.R. 3221, the Foreclosure Prevention Act, is readying a second bill
that would establish a similar expansion of FHA insurance.
Senate Banking Chairman Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) is writing the
legislation and expects his committee to consider the bill soon, so that
the Senate can include it in the House-Senate Conference negotiations
that will take place after the House passes its housing stabilization
package. Frank has stated he would like to send the legislation to the
President before the August recess.
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