Fannie Mae announced a new risk-based pricing model and additional mortgage delivery fees this week, adding to the cost of buying a home.
Risk-based pricing was first introduced by Fannie Mae this past April. It added new, mandatory loan fees for high-risk borrowers while rewarding a small group of low-risk borrowers with fee credits.
In the updated model, even 720 credit scores with a 20 percent downpayment won’t protect mortgage applicants from the risk-based fees and they can range as high as 2.750 percent, depending on credit scores and downpayment size.
Fannie Mae will continue the practice of rewarding high-downpayment borrowers with fee credits.
Fannie Mae’s second pricing change involves the Adverse Market Delivery Charge and it is not risk-based — it applies to all applicants equally.
First introduced in December 2007, Adverse Market Delivery Charges are mandatory surcharges on all conforming mortgages. The fee was initially a quarter-percent. It’s now doubled to 0.500 percent.
Combining risk-based pricing and delivery fees, mortgage applicants have two choices to pay them:
- As a one-time fee, paid at closing, payable to the lender
- As an interest rate increase, payable month-after-month to the lender
The one-time fee is calculated by multiplying to fee amount by the applicant’s loan size and dividing by 100. The interest rate increase is calculated as a general rule, where each 0.500 percent in fees can be substituted for a 0.125 percent increase to a mortgage rate.
The fees become “official” October 1, 2008, but lenders are expected to deploy them much sooner.