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entitled 'Mortgage Financing: Actuarial Soundness of the Federal 
Housing Administration's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund' which was 
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United States General Accounting Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity, 
Committee on Financial Services, House of Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT: 	
Wednesday, April 24, 2002: 

Mortgage Financing: 

Actuarial Soundness of the Federal Housing Administration's Mutual
Mortgage Insurance Fund: 

Statement of Thomas J. McCool, Managing Director: 
Financial Markets and Community Investment: 

GAO-02-671T: 

Madam Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

We are here today to discuss H.R. 3995, the Housing Affordability for 
America Act of 2002, which amends certain laws concerning housing and 
community opportunity. Among other things, the act would establish 
risk-based capital requirements for the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund 
(Fund) of the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) 
Federal Housing Administration (FHA). Through the Fund, FHA operates a 
single-family insurance program that helps millions of Americans buy 
homes. The Fund, which is financed through insurance premiums, 
operates without cost to the American taxpayer. The Fund's estimated 
economic value increased dramatically in 1999, prompting proposals to 
spend some of the Fund's current resources or reduce net cash flows 
into the Fund. Concerned about the adequacy of the minimum 2-percent 
requirement set in current law and about proposals to spend what some 
were calling excess reserves, you asked us to determine the conditions 
under which an estimated capital ratio of 2 percent would be adequate 
to maintain the Fund's financial health. We first presented the 
results of this analysis last year and suggested ways to better 
evaluate the financial health of the Fund.[Footnote 1] My testimony 
today is based on that work and focuses on Section 226 of H.R. 3995. I 
will (1) briefly describe what the Fund represents, (2) discuss the 
results of our analysis of the adequacy of a 2-percent minimum 
requirement, and (3) explain how the current measures of financial 
soundness could be improved. 

In summary: 

* The economic value of the Fund consists of current capital resources—
primarily nonmarketable Treasury securities—plus estimates of the net 
present value of future cash flows from the existing portfolio. 
Deriving estimates of the value of future cash flows requires 
professional judgment and, in practice, relies on complex economic 
models. Last year, we reported that the Fund had an economic value of 
about $15.8 billion at the end of fiscal year 1999. This estimate 
implies a capital ratio of 3.20 percent of the unamortized insurance-
in-force—a ratio that exceeds the minimum required capital ratio of 2 
percent that Congress set in 1990. 

* Given the economic value of the Fund and the state of the economy at 
the end of fiscal year 1999, we concluded in our report that a 2-
percent capital ratio appeared sufficient to withstand moderately 
severe economic downturns that could lead to worse-than-expected loan 
performance. In other words, under the economic scenarios that we 
developed to represent the regional and national economic downturns 
the nation experienced between 1975 and 1999, the estimated capital 
ratio fell by only slightly less than 0.4 percentage points. Some more 
severe downturns that we analyzed also did not cause the estimated 
capital ratio to decline by as much as 2 percentage points. However, 
in the three most severe scenarios, an economic value of 2 percent of 
insurance-in-force would not have been adequate. Nonetheless, because 
of the nature of such analysis, we urged caution in concluding that 
the estimated value of the Fund today implies that the Fund would 
necessarily withstand any particular economic scenario under all 
circumstances. 

* Determining an appropriate capital ratio depends in part on the 
level of risk Congress wishes the Fund to withstand. While a 2-percent 
capital ratio appears to permit the Fund to withstand worse-than-
expected loan performance that we estimated would occur under most of 
the scenarios we tested last year, a 2-percent capital ratio would not 
be sufficient for the Fund to withstand the most severe scenarios we 
tested. Whether the same is true today depends on the level of the 
Fund today, any changes in how loans perform, and the way the Fund is 
managed in the future. For these reasons, we believe that maintaining 
a static 2-percent minimum capital ratio requirement would not mean 
that the Fund would always be able to withstand most of the scenarios 
we tested or any particular level of risk that the Congress wishes the 
Fund to withstand. FHA faces two principal risks: the failure of 
borrowers to perform, or credit risk, and the risk of managerial 
shortcomings, or operational risk. Section 226 of H.R. 3995
seeks to use risk-based concepts to better assess the financial health 
of the Fund. By defining the risk that the Fund must withstand, H.R. 
3995 will clarify what is meant by actuarial soundness and help FHA 
manage the Fund to achieve that goal. 

Background: 

Before I describe what the Fund represents, let me provide a brief 
history of the Fund's financial health. 

Since 1990 the financial health of the Fund has been assessed by 
measuring the Fund's economic value—its capital resources plus the net 
present value of future cash flows—and the related capital ratio (the 
economic value as a percent of the Fund's insurance-in-force). For 
most of its history, the Fund has been relatively healthy; however, in 
fiscal year 1990 the Fund was estimated to have a negative economic 
value, and its future was in doubt. To help place the Fund on a 
financially sound basis, Congress enacted legislation in November 1990 
that required the secretary of HUD to, among other things, take steps 
to achieve a capital ratio of 2 percent by November 2000 and to 
maintain or exceed that ratio at all times thereafter. The legislation 
also required the secretary to raise insurance premiums and suspend 
the rebates, called distributive shares, that FHA borrowers had been 
eligible to receive under certain circumstances. 

The 1990 FHA reforms required that an independent contractor conduct 
an annual actuarial review of the Fund. Using expected economic 
conditions, these reviews have shown that during the 1990s, the 
estimated economic value of the Fund grew substantially. As figure 1 
shows, by the end of fiscal year 1995, the Fund had attained an 
estimated economic value that slightly exceeded the amount required 
for a 2-percent capital ratio. Since that time, the estimated economic 
value of the Fund has continued to grow and has always exceeded the 
amount required for a 2-percent capital ratio. In the most recent 
review, Deloitte & Touche (Deloitte) estimated the Fund's economic 
value at about $18.5 billion at the end of fiscal year 2001. This sum 
represents about 3.75 percent of the Fund's insurance-in-force—well 
above the required minimum of 2 percent. 

Figure 1: Comparison of Estimated Economic Value and 2 Percent of 
Insurance-in-Force, 1989-2000: 

[REfer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

The graph plots Estimate Value and 2% of insurance-in-force, in 
billions of dollars, for the fiscal years of 1989 through 2000. 

Source: GAO analysis of Price Waterhouse (now PricewaterhouseCoopers) 
and Deloitte & Touche data. 

[End of figure] 

The Fund's Capital Ratio Exceeds 3 Percent: 

The economic value of the Fund consists of current capital resources 
and the net present value of future cash flows. Current capital 
resources are largely composes of nonmarketable Treasury securities. 
Cash flows into the Fund from premiums and the sale of foreclosed 
properties; cash flows out of the Fund to pay claims on foreclosed 
mortgages, premium refunds, and administrative expenses. Estimating 
the net present value of future cash flows is a complex exercise that 
requires extensive professional actuarial judgment. 

At the end of fiscal year 1999, the Fund had capital resources of 
$14.3 billion. Using our models and forecasts of likely values of key 
economic variables, we estimated that the Fund had a net present value 
of future cash flows of $1.5 billion at that time. Thus we arrived at 
an estimated economic value of $15.8 billion and a capital ratio of 
3.20 percent. Given the inherent uncertainty of these estimates and 
the professional judgments involved, these numbers are comparable to 
those of Deloitte at the end of 1999, when Deloitte estimated that 
under expected economic conditions the economic value was $16.6 
billion and the capital ratio was 3.66 percent. More recently, 
Deloitte estimated that under expected economic conditions, the 
capital value was $18.5 billion at the end of fiscal year 2001
and the capital ratio was 3.75 percent. 

The Fund's economic value principally reflects the large amount of 
capital resources that the Fund has accrued. Because current capital 
resources are the result of previous cash flows, the robust economy 
and higher premium rates of most of the 1990s accounted for the 
accumulation of these substantial capital resources. Good economic 
times that are accompanied by relatively low interest rates and 
relatively high levels of employment are usually associated with high 
levels of mortgage activity and relatively low levels of foreclosure; 
therefore, cash inflows have been high relative to outflows during 
this period. 

The estimated value of future cash flows also contributed to the 
strength of the Fund at the end of fiscal 1999. As a result of 
relatively low interest rates and the robust economy, FHA insured a 
relatively large number of mortgages in fiscal years 1998 and 1999, 
and these loans made up a large portion of FHA's insurance-in-force. 
Because of low interest rates, and because forecasts of economic 
variables for the near future showed house prices rising and 
unemployment and interest rates remaining fairly stable, our models 
predicted that these new loans would have low levels of foreclosure 
and prepayment. At the same time, we estimated that many FHA-insured 
homebuyers would continue to pay FHA annual insurance premiums. 
[Footnote 2] Thus, our models predicted that cash flowing into the 
Fund from mortgages already in FHA's portfolio at the end of fiscal 
year 1999 would be more than sufficient to cover the cash outflows 
associated with these loans. 

The future cash flows are estimates based on a number of assumptions 
about the future, including predictions of mortgage foreclosures and 
the likelihood that those holding FHA-insured mortgages will prepay 
their loans. These predictions are based on statistical models that 
estimate past relationships between foreclosures and prepayments and 
certain economic variables, such as changes in house prices. To the 
extent that these relationships are different in the future, the 
actual foreclosures and prepayments will differ from the estimates. 

The Actuarial Soundness of the Fund Depends on the Risks That Congress 
Wants the Fund to Withstand: 

Although our estimates and Deloitte's estimates of the Fund's capital 
ratio under expected economic conditions are well above the required 
minimum of 2 percent, we cannot conclude on the basis of these 
estimates alone that the Fund is actuarially sound. Instead, we 
believe that determining actuarial soundness requires, at a minimum, 
measuring the Fund's ability to withstand certain worse-than-expected 
conditions. According to our estimates, worse-than-expected loan 
performance that could be brought on by moderately severe economic 
conditions would not have caused the estimated value of the fund at 
the end of fiscal year 1999 to decline by more than 2 percent of 
insurance-in-force. Some more severe scenarios that we analyzed also 
did not cause the estimated capital ratio to decline by as much as 2 
percentage points. However, the most severe economic scenarios could 
result in such poor loan performance that the estimated value of the 
fund at the end of fiscal year 1999 could decline by more than 2 
percent of insurance-in-force. 

To help determine the Fund's ability to withstand certain worse-than-
expected conditions, we generated economic scenarios that were based 
on economic events in the last 25 years and other scenarios that could 
lead to worse-than-expected loan performance in the future. Under each 
of these scenarios, we used our models to estimate the economic value 
of the Fund and the related capital ratio (table 1). Most of the 
individual scenarios we looked at, by themselves, had only a small 
impact on the capital ratio. For example, the worst historical 
scenario we tested—one based on the 1981-82 national recession—lowered 
the capital ratio by less than 0.4 percentage points—about 20 percent 
of the required 2-percent minimum capital ratio. To see how the 
economic value of the Fund would change as the extent of adversity 
increased, we extended regional scenarios that were based on 
historical economic downturns experienced in three states—-the west 
south central downturn, based on Louisiana in the late 1980s; the New 
England downturn, based on Massachusetts in the late 1980s and early 
1990s; and the Pacific downturn, based on California in the 1990s-—to 
the nation as a whole.[Footnote 3] When we extended the west south 
central and Pacific downturns, the estimated capital ratio was about 1 
percentage point lower than in the base case. However, our models 
estimate that extending the New England downturn to the country as a 
whole would reduce the capital ratio by almost 2.4 percentage points. 
In another scenario, we specify that interest rates fall 
substantially, inducing refinancing, and then a recession sets in, 
leading to increased foreclosures. The estimated capital ratio in this 
case fell substantially—by over 1.8 percentage points. 

In one other scenario, the capital ratio fell by over 2 percentage 
points. In that scenario we assumed that for mortgages originated in 
1989 through 1999, the foreclosure rates in 2000 through 2004 would 
equal the foreclosure rates from 1986 through 1990 for mortgages 
originated in the 10-year period prior to 1986. 

Table 1: Capital Ratios Under Expected and More Severe Economic 
Scenarios in Selected Locations: 

Scenario: Expected economic conditions; 
Description: Unemployment and interest rates vary as DRI forecasts; 
house price growth is adjusted for constant quality and slower 
growth.[A] 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): NA; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 3.20%. 

Historical regional downturns: West south central downturn; 
Description: House prices and unemployment rates change as they did in 
Louisiana from 1986 through 1990. 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): 3.06%; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 2.31%. 

Historical regional downturns: New England downturn; 
Description: House prices and unemployment rates change as they did in 
Massachusetts from 1988 through 1992.	
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): 3.14%; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 0.81%. 

Historical regional downturns: Pacific downturn; 
Description: House prices and unemployment rates change as they did in
California from 1991 through 1995. 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): 2.89%; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 2.16%. 

Other national scenarios: 1981-82 Recession; 
Description: For each state, house prices, unemployment rates, and 
interest rates change as they did from 1981 through 1985; 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): NA; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 2.81%. 

Other national scenarios: Induced refinancing, followed by a recession; 
Description: Mortgage interest rates fall, inducing borrowers to 
refinance, and then a recession sets in, with a rising unemployment 
rate and falling house prices; 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): NA; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 1.37%. 

Other national scenarios: Rising interest rate scenario; 
Description: Mortgage and other interest rates from 2000 through 2004 
are higher than under expected economic conditions; 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): NA; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 3.36%. 

Other national scenarios: Scenario with foreclosure rates from the 
1980s; 
Description: Foreclosure rates in 2000 through 2004 equal foreclosure 
rates from 1986 to 1990 for mortgages originated in most recent 10-year
period; 
Capital ratio for scenarios in one region (percent): NA; 
Capital ratio for national scenarios (percent): 0.92%. 

[A] Standard and Poor's DRI is a private economic forecasting company. 
Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table] 

Because none of our economic scenarios generated foreclosure rates as 
high as those experienced in the west south central states in the late 
1980s, we applied these rates directly to our models, assuming that 
for the next 5 years foreclosure rates in most cases would be 
equivalent to those experienced by these states in 1986 through 1990. 
Then we varied the proportion of FHA's portfolio experiencing these 
foreclosure rates. As figure 2 shows, if about 36 percent of the 
portfolio experiences these rates, the estimated capital ratio would 
be 2 percentage points lower than the expected case. And if 55 percent 
of the portfolio experienced these rates, the economic value of the 
Fund would fall to zero. 

Figure 2: Capital Ratios Resulting from Applying the Average 1986-90 
Foreclosure Rates in the West South Central Census Division to Varying 
Proportions of FHA's Insurance Portfolio in 2000-2004: 

[Refer to PDF for image: line graph] 

The graph depicts: 
Capital Ratio (percent); 
plotted as a Percent of FHA's Portfolio. 

Depicted are the following: 
* Point at which the capital ratio would fall by 2 percentage points; 
* Capital ratio with 1986 to 1990 foreclosure rates. 

Note: West south central mortgages made up 9 percent of FHA's 
portfolio in 1999. This analysis does not change foreclosure rates for 
streamline refinanced or adjustable rate mortgages, as little 
information is available on these products for the 10-year period 
prior to 1986. The west south central Census division includes 
Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of figure] 

As we have stated in the past, considerable uncertainty is associated 
with any estimate of the economic value of the Fund because of 
uncertainty about the performance of FHA's loan portfolio over the 
life of the existing loans, which in some cases can be 30 years. We 
believe that our models make good use of historical experience in 
identifying the key factors that influence loan foreclosures and 
prepayments and estimating the relationships between those factors and 
loan performance. In addition, we have relied on reasonable and in 
some cases conservative forecasts of economic variables, such as the 
rate of house price appreciation and the unemployment rate, in finding 
that the Fund's economic value in fiscal year 1999 appeared higher 
than what would have been necessary to withstand many adverse economic 
scenarios. 

Nonetheless, several additional factors lead us to believe that 
Congress and others should apply caution in concluding that the 
estimated value of the Fund today implies that the Fund could 
withstand the economic scenarios that we examined under all 
circumstances. Our estimates and those of others are valid only under 
a certain set of conditions, including that loans FHA insured in 
recent years and loans it insured in the more distant past have a 
similar response to economic conditions, and that cash inflows 
associated with future loans at least offset cash outflows associated 
with those loans. Some specific factors beyond those incorporated in 
our models that could determine the extent to which the Fund will be 
able to withstand adverse economic conditions include the performance 
of recent loans, changes in FHA's insurance program, and the impact of 
future loans. 

Measures of Actuarial Soundness Should Be Based on a Defined Level of 
Risk: 

As a result of the 1990 housing reforms, the Fund must meet not only 
the minimum capital ratio requirement but also operational goals, 
before the secretary of HUD can take certain actions that might reduce 
the value of the Fund. These goals include meeting the mortgage credit 
needs of certain homebuyers while maintaining an adequate capital 
ratio, minimizing risk, and avoiding adverse selection. However, the 
legislation does not specify the economic conditions that the Fund 
should withstand. We believe that actuarial soundness depends on a 
variety of factors that could vary over time and that the degree of 
risk the Fund is expected to be able to withstand must be specified. 
Therefore, setting a minimum or target capital ratio will not 
guarantee that the Fund will be actuarially sound over time. For 
example, if the Fund comprised primarily seasoned loans with known 
characteristics, a capital ratio below the current 2-percent minimum 
might be adequate. But under conditions such as those that prevail 
today, when the Fund is composed of many new loans, a 2-percent ratio 
might be inadequate if recent and future loans perform considerably 
worse than expected. 

Price Waterhouse (now PricewaterhouseCoopers) concluded in 1989 that 
for the Fund to be actuarially sound, it should have capital resources 
that could withstand losses from reasonably adverse, but not 
catastrophic, economic downturns. The Price Waterhouse report did not 
clearly distinguish adverse from catastrophic downturns; however, it 
said that private mortgage insurers are required to hold contingency 
reserves to protect against catastrophic losses. One rating agency 
requires that private mortgage insurers have enough capital on hand to 
withstand the severe losses that would occur if the loans they insure 
across the entire nation performed as poorly as those in the west 
south central states in the 1980s. 

There are reasons why the capital standards for FHA might differ from 
those imposed on private mortgage insurers. FHA is expected to meet a 
public purpose, increasing the number of Americans who can afford to 
own their own homes and helping to cushion the impact of economic 
downturns on housing markets and the building trades. In contrast, 
private insurers tend to cease insuring new business when mortgage 
markets go bad. Ultimately, if the Fund were to exhaust its resources, 
it could rely on the taxpayer, while private insurers would cease to 
exist. 

We believe that to evaluate the actuarial soundness of the Mutual 
Mortgage Insurance Fund, one or more scenarios that the Fund is 
expected to withstand need to be specified, as a single, static 
capital ratio does not measure actuarial soundness. Once the scenarios 
are specified, it would be appropriate to calculate the economic value 
of the Fund or the capital ratio under the scenarios. As long as the 
scenarios result in a positive estimated economic value, the Fund 
could be said to be actuarially sound. However, it might be 
appropriate to leave a cushion to account for the factors not captured 
by the model, especially those related to managing the Fund and the 
inherent uncertainty attached to any forecast. 

Our view is that Section 226 of H.R. 3995 will permit FHA to develop 
capital standards that more adequately reflect the risks the Fund 
faces. It recognizes that FHA faces two principal risks: credit risk 
and operational risk. By establishing what it calls a "minimum risk-
based capital ratio" that is based upon economic scenarios that could 
adversely affect defaults and prepayments, the act would more fully 
capture the credit risk the Fund faces. By establishing a 1 percent 
"minimum basic capital ratio," the act recognizes the unknown risk, 
such as operational risk, the Fund faces. Overall, Section 226 of H.R. 
3995 seeks to provide a method for determining whether the Fund has 
capital adequate to cover its credit risk under defined conditions and 
provides a cushion to cover continuing operational risk. By defining 
the level of risk that the Fund must withstand, Section 226 will 
clarify what is meant by actuarial soundness and help FHA manage the 
Fund to achieve that goal. 

Madam Chairman, this concludes my statement. We would be pleased to 
respond to any questions that you or Members of the Subcommittee may 
have. 

Contact and Acknowledgments: 

For further information regarding this testimony, please contact 
Thomas J. McCool at (202) 512-8678. Individuals making key 
contributions to this testimony included Nancy Barry, Jay Cherlow, and 
Mathew Scire. Our work was conducted in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Mortgage Financing: Actuarial Soundness of the Federal Housing 
Administration's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-527T], Mar. 20, 2001. 

Mortgage Financing: FHA's Fund Has Grown, but Options for Drawing on 
the Fund Have Uncertain Outcomes [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-460], Feb. 28, 2001. 

Mortgage Financing: Financial Health of the Federal Housing 
Administration's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-RCED-00-287], Sept. 12, 2000. 

Mortgage Financing: Level of Annual Premiums That Place a Ceiling on 
Distributions to FHA Policyholders [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-00-280R], Sept. 8, 2000. 

Single-Family Housing: Stronger Measures Needed to Encourage Better 
Performance by Management and Marketing Contractors [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-RCED-00-180], May 16, 2000, and 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-00-117], May 12, 2000. 

Single-Family Housing: Stronger Oversight of FHA Lenders Could Reduce 
HUD's Insurance Risk [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-00-112], Apr. 28, 2000). 

Homeownership: Information on Single-Family Loans Sold by HUD 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-99-145], June 15, 
1999. 

Risk-Based Capital: Regulatory and Industry Approaches to Capital and
Risk [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-98-153], July 20, 
1998. 

Homeownership: Achievements of and Challenges Faced by FHA's Single-
Family Mortgage Insurance Program [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-RCED-98-217], June 2, 1998. 

Homeownership: Results of and Challenges Faced by FHA's Single-Family 
Mortgage Insurance Program [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-RCED-99-133], Mar. 25, 1999. 

Homeownership: Management Challenges Facing FHA's Single-Family 
Housing Operations [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-RCED-98-121], Apr. 1, 1998. 

Homeownership: Information on Foreclosed FHA-Insured Loans and HUD-
Owned Properties in Six Cities [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-98-2], Oct. 8, 1997. 

Homeownership: Potential Effects of Reducing FHA's Insurance Coverage 
for Home Mortgages [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-97-93], May 1, 1997. 

Homeownership: FHA's Role in Helping People Obtain Home Mortgages 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-96-123], Aug. 13, 
1996. 

Mortgage Financing: FHA Has Achieved Its Home Mortgage Capital Reserve 
Target [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-96-50], Apr. 
12, 1996. 

Homeownership: Mixed Results and High Costs Raise Concerns about HUD's 
Mortgage Assignment Program [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-96-2], Oct. 18, 1995. 

Mortgage Financing: Financial Health of FHA's Home Mortgage Insurance 
Program Has Improved [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-95-20], Oct. 18, 1994. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Mortgage Financing: FHA's Fund Has 
Grown, but Options for Drawing on the Fund Have Uncertain Outcomes, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-460] (Washington, D.C.: 
Feb. 28, 2001). 

[2] Most borrowers with FHA-insured loans who received them prior to 
September 1983 were required to pay an annual insurance premium for 
the life of the loan. In addition, most borrowers who received FHA-
insured loans after June 1991 and before January 2001 were required to 
pay an annual insurance premium for up to the life of the loan, 
depending on loan type and the initial loan-to-value ratio. Borrowers 
who received FHA-insured loans between September 1983 and June 1991 
were not required to pay annual mortgage insurance premiums. 

[3] The west south central region is comprised of Arkansas, Louisiana, 
Oklahoma, and Texas. The Pacific region is comprised of Alaska, 
California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington. The New England region is 
comprised of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode 
Island, and Vermont. 

[End of section]