Philip J LaTessa, Syracuse NY
The Funding Source, Syracuse NY 
 Is it worth doing FHA Loans anymore?   
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan stated The real question to me is, should we be in 
the FHA business at all?  during a conference call in July.    
That is the question many lenders are asking themselves.   And, it appears; HUD is 
seeing a drop in FHA loan originations across the board.   Loans to borrowers with 
lower credit scores dropped by almost 20% compared with one-year ago in July 
2013.   This is not good news for borrowers seeking to enter the housing market.  It 
certainly is a restriction of credit that, on another day, would have been extended to 
those same borrowers.  
FHA states that their minimum credit score is 580, however most lenders are 
reporting going no lower than 680.   Some mortgage bankers are at 640.  Very few 
are at the old norm of 620 or 600.     
There are many competing reasons for this.  For starters, all lenders are watching 
their HUD Early Warning page on FHA Connection to make sure their Early Payment 
Defaults are as low as possible without harming volume and profit.  FHA was very 
clear in 2010 that should any lender go above a certain threshold they would be 
swiftly exited from the FHA business.  Other lenders, regulatory agencies, 
warehouse lenders, investors who buy loans all look at the EPD of a lender to gauge 
if they want to continue to do business.   Credit scores play a big role in this.   And, 
thats why so many bankers stay at 640 while major banks stay at 680.  
Then theres the push back against the regulatory civil and criminal cases that burst 
through the dam between 2012 and 2014 against lenders by numerous states and 
the federal government.   Lawsuits have ranged from being based on fraud to the 
False Claims Act to  as in the case of Countrywide  just sloppy and fast 
underwriting that did not take into account basic underwriting.     
Lenders have been threatened with regulatory sanctions, fines and public whipping 
by over zealous regulators who are convinced that mortgage lending is a cesspool of 
fraud.    
And, the fines have risen.  In 2013 Bloomberg estimated US banks legal bills 
exceeded 100 billion dollars.  In 2014 Forbes estimated that banks have paid out 
251 billion to the government.     
While there was fraud by lenders, there certainly was fraud by borrowers.  And, for 
the most part, with the tightening of the regulations those who were in the business 
for a quick buck have exited.  Those remaining are paying financially and with their 
reputations.   Each time a fine is announced a major political figure releases a 
flowery press release wagging their fingers at the lenders.  
Meanwhile, the CPFB and new RESPA laws have made any simple mistake a very 
large one.   Lenders are acutely aware that they must lend to everyone without 
discriminating, they need to disclose and prove they disclosed in a 3-day period, 
they can not have rates and points exceed certain thresholds over the previous 
weeks average rate (regardless of what the market is doing) and they cant exceed 
certain percentage level in fee and rate on a loan.  If one thing goes wrong, they can 
be sued.  And, under the Deutsche Bank in 2011, banks and lenders realized they 
could face triple fines.  
And, lets not forget the ability to repay provision.  Based on the recent onslaught 
of lawsuits, who cant foresee a savvy borrower claiming that the lender 
miscalculated their income and they were 2% over the maximum DTI, therefore 
their loan is not a QM loan.   What are then the consequences for the lender?  Or, as 
is typical, what about that borrower whos income calculation can be done two or 
three different ways to come in a tad different each way for a monthly gross?  What 
if the borrower is on the max DTI threshold and some regulator determines that the 
borrower was actually over the max DTI and therefore the loan was not a QM?  
What then?  
It almost seems as if the government is raiding the bank accounts of the banks in 
order to continue the federal and state spending.  For each time a settlement is 
announced one never hears of the money going to the victims.  It typically ends up 
lost in some account that is swept into the government general fund and used 
otherwise.  
In the eyes of lady justice, it seems the balance between risk and reward is off kilter.  
Any lender can be accused of breaking a myriad of regulations and rules and face 
fines that can, without a doubt, wipe out years of earnings.  And, potentially, expose 
directors and officers to criminal actions.  
The FDIC recently lost a lawsuit against the former executives of North Carolina 
Community Bank.  The FDIC, in an attempt to take the assets of the former 
executives of a Community Bank in NC that had failed argued that the executives did 
not lend in good faith and caused the bank to fail.  The Judge in the case actually 
cited the FDIC by stating the evidence proved the bank and executives followed due 
diligence and if one was to buy into the FDIC argument, then the FDIC expects the 
executives to have had better knowledge of the economic calamity about to hit when 
luminaries as Ben Bernake stated there was no way anyone could have expected the 
crisis to occur.   
So,  lenders see the government as simply suing in order to beef up their coffers and 
offer, perhaps, red meat to the average citizen who blamed the economic crisis on 
the backs of banks and mortgage lenders.  
In this political environment, why would a lender put themselves at risk of being 
blamed for something 5 years from now that they had no way to know would occur 
when making a business decision today?  Banks dont want to be targeted for 
clerical errors or to be the whipping boys for a crisis that was caused by exuberance 
across the board.  Even the New York Times reveled in 2005 how low income 
buyers were able to buy into the American dream and become financially stable as if 
it were a good thing.  By 2008 they were stating quite the opposite.  Its tough to be 
the subject of someone doing a Monday Morning Quarterback moment when they 
never once played football.  
And that brings us back to doing FHA loans.  Because of the aggressive tactics, 
lenders simply have pulled back from doing HUD based loans.  Credit has tightened.    
So, lenders like Wells Fargo have pulled back  as in 82% less FHA lending in 2014 
as compared to 2013 according to Bloomberg.  Thats a normal response to having 
faced regulators stating a lender broke a rule and to pay large fines.   
Its almost as if the government wants to have their cake and eat it too.  Lending to 
low to moderate borrowers is critical to the economy and critical to government so 
that there is economic mobility.  Think if we lived in a society where people knew 
they had no opportunity to move anywhere from their current socio-economic 
standing.   The government would be seriously threatened.  So, their interest is to 
provide opportunity and FHA lending makes perfect sense to provide this.  
However, the regulators and politicians have gone too far in their hubris and press 
releases lauding their investigations and pointing out small warts of lenders who, in 
many cases, did not harm any consumer.  The days of subprime lending, neg amort 
loans and 120% LTV loans are over  which is stemming the tide of any future under 
water homes while current ones are recovering to pre-recession pricing levels 
bringing them back to par for the most part.    
So, weve reached the abyss.  The government has formed their joint mortgage fraud 
task force and is going after large and small lenders with threats looking to shut 
down lenders, publicly cite lenders, fine some and criminally indict others.  Those 
actions certainly play to main street and fills the kings coffers.   But, now the 
government is surprised that lenders no longer want to engage in anything that 
would put them in the same position going forward.  That falls under the insanity is 
defined as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different 
result  
So, what will it take?   The safe harbor offered by HUD under the QM rule does not 
feel so safe the to the average reader as it is clear that while there is a safe harbor, 
youre still in  (hot) harbor water if accused of violating QM rules by a borrower.  
That did not make me, as an owner, feel very comfortable.   
Bankers typically have a one-year agreement with investors.  Your borrower stays 
compliant for one-year,  theres no recourse for buy backs (which is another hot 
topic).   So, why does HUD not offer large lenders a three or five year no recourse 
contract?  How can a JP Morgan tell if Jane and Joe, two long term teachers with 
tenure, dont get into a car accident in year 6 and default on their mortgage by year 
7?   Is that then cause to sue JP Morgan for egregious underwriting, loose standards 
or sending the FDIC after Jamie Morgan?  
I dont think HUD Secretary Castro  who admittedly had to ask Congress for almost 
2 billion dollars in 2013  would want his decisions at HUD, made on the best 
available information to him today in 2014 that he honestly believes is in the best 
interest of HUD and the FHA lending system to just not work out in 2020 and have 
some regulatory agency strip him of his home, bank accounts and paste his picture 
and name on the front page of the paper with serious egregious allegations  when 
all he was doing was his honest best.  
There has to be a better way