Title: Financing Affordable Housing in the US
1Financing Affordable Housing in the US
- by
- Michael Stegman,
- MacRae Professor of Public Policy, Planning, and
Business - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Presented at National Affordable Housing
Conference - Affordable HousingMaking it Happen
- Innovations in Policy and Practice
- Sydney, Australia
- June 21-23, 2005
21. Housing Prices Have Been Rising Exponetially
3The rich get richerhome equity rises but what
happens to affordability?
4US housing prices rising faster than rental
value A housing bubble?
5Nationally, affordability rising due to income
gains and historically low interest rates
6But this is not true in some overheated markets
72. How are Lenders and the Government Dealing
with Affordability in High-Cost Markets?
8Lenders are introducing new mortgage
productsOutstanding Questions Do these
products heighten default risk and fuel further
price increases?
9Some of the newer mortgage products
- Forty Year Fixed Rate Mortgage
- Interest-Only Adjustable Rate Mortgage (IO)
- Interest-Only Hybrid Mortgage
- The Pay Option Mortgage Loan
10How government is responding
- Downpayment assistance grants
- Builder/developer-linked down payment gifts tied
to Government-backed mortgage loansindirectly
finances the downpayment into the mortgage via a
price increase - Proposed Government-backed zero down payment, 30
year fixed rate mortgage.
11But zero down payment loan would significantly
raise default risk
- By design, anticipates about twice the proportion
of home owners to go into foreclosure than is the
case under Federal Governments mainstream
low-downpayment mortgage program - Congressional Budget Office projects defaults at
1 of borrowers each year, with a cumulative
default rate of more than 30 over 30-year loan
term
123. Penetrating Emerging Market Requires New
Partnerships
13Expanding lending opportunities to immigrants and
minorities creates new opportunities for
nonprofits
- The 21st Century Homebuyer Different needs,
anxieties, preferences, understanding, levels of
trust - Emerging Trend Nonprofit providers as first
point of contact, and conduit to mortgage
originators - Why Now?
- Minority homebuyers will be the majority of new
homeowners - The homeownership counseling industry is maturing
- Growth in the number of community-based
nonprofits - Emergence of one-stop homeownership centers
- New technology tools for education and mortgage
preparation
14New education /outreach approaches
- Need to think creatively use nontraditional
intermediaries - Freddie Mac created 100 pages of web content for
consumers on homeownership and credit - First Venue McDonalds Technology Centers
- Focus on minority communities
- Outreach effort to bridge the digital divide
- Facilitate the creation of cyber cafes in
McDonalds - Empower residents with information on financial
literacy, use of computers and the web, and
homeownership
15What does it look like?
16What does it look like?
174. The Rise of Subprime and Predatory Lending
18Improved risk assessment technology expands
subprime lending, while victimizing the unwary
- In 2004, there was a record 530 billion in
subprime originationsa 60 percent increase over
the previous year, and a ten-fold increase in the
past decade. - Subprime lenders originated 19 percent of all
mortgages in 2004, more than double the market
share in 2003. - The surge in subprime lending partially accounts
for the significant rise in minority
homeownership.
19Improved risk assessment technology expands
subprime lending, while victimizing the unwary
- Accompanying this surge in lending to
credit-impaired borrowers has been an epidemic of
unethical, and in some cases, fraudulent, and
illegal lending practices. - Some recent headlines
- Predatory Lending and Foreclosure Fraud Impacts
Minorities Most, Consumer Education, Feb. 18,
2005 - Con Artists Play Troubling Game Grand Theft
Home, Washington Post Saturday, June 4, 2005 - Ehrlich Signs Bill Targeting Foreclosure Scams,
Washington Post Friday, May 27, 2005 Homeowners
victimized by foreclosure resuce scam, Minnesota
Public Radio, Oct. 22, 2003 - Predatory Lending in New Jersey The Rising
Threat to Low-Income Homeowners, New Jersey
Institute for Social Justice, Feb. 2002.