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FHA’s Montgomery: New HECM Appraisal Rules Less Impactful Than Other Changes

The Federal Housing Administration has been exploring potential options to stem the reverse mortgage program’s negative impact on the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, and its leader on Monday positioned the government’s new appraisal requirements as the best of multiple difficult choices.

“We do understand that our policy changes are going to be challenging initially for some of the lenders,” FHA commissioner Brian Montgomery said on a morning call with reporters. “But the reality is that the HECM appraisal submission and assessment changes are the least impactful of the other changes that were on the table.”

The FHA on Friday announced new rules regarding Home Equity Conversion Mortgage appraisals, under which borrowers with appraisals deemed to be potentially inflated will be required to receive a second opinion from an unrelated firm. In announcing that change, the FHA cited concerns over the HECM portfolio’s economic impact on the overall MMIF, which was pegged at negative $14.5 billion in the administration’s most recent report to Congress last November.

That figure also played a major role in the FHA and Department of Housing and Urban Development’s decision to lower principal limit factors and update the insurance premium structure last fall.

Montgomery on Monday said that while he couldn’t speak to specifics about the FHA’s upcoming report to Congress, due out next month, the PLF reductions were only one tool in the administration’s arsenal for shoring up the HECM program’s finances.

“I can tell you that the changes FHA made to the principal limit factors and the adjustments to the HECM insurance premium we instated in 2017 were designed to help, but did not, and were not intended to, and will not fully solve the financial volatility of the program,” Montgomery said.

But he also offered his full support for the HECM program going forward.

“Make no mistake: We are dedicated to bringing this program to a reasonable level of financial self-sufficiency,” he said. “We fully believe that for many seniors, the HECM provides a solution to help them age in place.”

Confidential thresholds

In its mortgagee letter announcing the appraisal requirements, the FHA didn’t elaborate on the exact overvaluation threshold that will trigger a review — and officials won’t be disclosing that information going forward.

“FHA will consider its assessment methodology and the validation tools to be used as proprietary and confidential,” deputy assistant secretary for single family housing Gisele Roget said during the call. “The disclosure of the tools and the methodology could result in appraisals being adjusted to conform to these factors.”

But Montgomery did offer some clues. In a retroactive review of around 134,000 HECM appraisals against data from an automated valuation model (AVM) program, the FHA determined that about 37% were at least 3% too high. During the peak era of inflated HECM appraisals — a period that spanned from 2008 to 2010 — some properties were over-appraised by upwards of 30%, Montgomery said. And while those figures have since come down significantly, the presence of any appraisal bias was enough to prompt the change.

“Since it’s not yet zero or close to zero, we felt it was prudent to initiate this policy change at this time,” he said. “It’s hard to say exactly what that percentage will be, although we will be monitoring it daily, and we will certainly be reporting that out as we get more results.”

Nuts and bolts

Montgomery also acknowledged the accelerated timeline associated with this most recent set of HECM program changes, saying the FHA condensed what would normally have been a yearlong rulemaking process into about three months.

An automated system for submitting appraisals for review won’t be on line until a target date of December 1; in the meantime, reverse mortgage lenders and originators will need to submit the first appraisal through the FHA’s Electronic Appraisal Delivery (EAD) portal. Should FHA determine that a second appraisal is necessary, the lender and borrower should be informed within three days.

“We plan on working very closely with our partners on the implementation, and we have exhorted our partners to continue to stay in constant contact with us about this policy,” Roget said. “This is a new policy, but again, the use of collateral validation tools is truly an industry best practice. FHA using this in the reverse mortgage space is bringing FHA in line with the rest of the mortgage industry.”

Written by Alex Spanko

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