The Federal Housing Administration may be under-equipped to manage its exploding market share, according to an internal audit released last week. The report gave the FHA poor marks for its steps to screen lenders that are allowed to sell loans backed by the federal agency.Gee, you think?
The FHA’s market share has grown sharply as the private mortgage market collapsed over the past two years, and the FHA now insures around one-quarter of all U.S. mortgages, up from around 2% in 2006. The FHA doesn’t actually make loans, and instead insures lenders against losses. To make FHA-backed loans, lenders and brokers must apply to the FHA to become certified by the agency.
The audit, by the inspector general for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, found that the agency was under-equipped to manage a big inflow in applications by lenders to make FHA-backed loans. The number of FHA-approved lenders more than tripled in 2008 to around 3,300 from 1,000 in 2007.
The people what cheated honest folks during the housing boom are going where the money is.
It's another example of why the entire 60+ year focus on supporting home ownership of our government should be abandoned.
It gives us suburban sprawl, global warming, housing bubbles, mortgage fraud, and various other mishugas, all of it bad....He said from his home, which he bought with a mortgage, in a suburb of Baltimore, MD.
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