Mortgage Financing: Opportunities to Enhance Management and Oversight of FHA's Financial Condition
Highlights
The Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has helped millions of families purchase homes through its single-family mortgage insurance programs. In recent years, FHA has experienced a dramatic increase in its market role due to the contraction of other mortgage market segments. FHA insures almost all of its single-family mortgages under its Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (Fund), which is reviewed from both an actuarial and budgetary perspective each year. On the basis of an independent actuarial review, FHA reported in November 2009 that the Fund was not meeting statutory capital reserve requirements as of the end of fiscal year 2009, as measured by the Fund's estimated capital ratio (i.e., economic value divided by the unamortized insurance-in-force). Additionally, although the Fund historically has produced budgetary receipts for the federal government, a weakening in the performance of FHA-insured loans has heightened the possibility that FHA will require additional funds to help cover its costs on insurance issued to date. In light of FHA's changing market role and financial condition, Congress asked us to examine (1) how estimates of the Fund's capital ratio have changed since 2001, the primary factors contributing to recent changes, and the budgetary implications of changes in the Fund's financial performance; (2) how FHA and its actuarial review contractor evaluate the financial condition of the Fund, including the Fund's performance under different economic scenarios; (3) the steps FHA has taken to improve the financial condition of the Fund, and how it has interpreted statutory requirements pertaining to the Fund; and (4) the performance of FHA's mortgage portfolio from 2005 through 2009, and the extent to which key characteristics of FHA-insured mortgages have changed in recent years.
We found the following: (1) After increasing earlier in the decade, the Fund's capital ratio dropped sharply in 2008 and fell below the statutory minimum in 2009, when a combination of economic and market developments created conditions that simultaneously reduced the Fund's economic value (numerator of the ratio) and increased the insurance-in-force (denominator of the ratio). According to annual actuarial reviews of the Fund, from 2001 through 2006, the capital ratio rose from 3.8 percent to 6.8 percent, but fell to 3.0 percent by the end of 2008 and to 0.5 percent by the end of 2009. Major factors contributing to the declines in 2008 and 2009 included the following: (1) More pessimistic forecasts of economic conditions--house prices, in particular--which increased the number of predicted insurance claims and losses associated with those claims, thereby reducing the Fund's economic value. (2) The contraction of other segments of the mortgage market and legislated increases in the loan amounts eligible for FHA insurance, which resulted in higher demand for FHA-insured mortgages and increased FHA's insurance-in-force. At the same time, the Fund's condition from a budgetary perspective also has worsened. In recent years, the Fund's capital reserve account has covered large upward reestimates of FHA's credit subsidy costs (through transfers to the financing account). As a result, balances in the capital reserve account have fallen dramatically. At the end of 2007, the balance stood at $22.0 billion, but it is estimated to drop to $3.5 billion by the end of 2010. If the reserve account were to be depleted--a scenario that an FHA budget official told us was a possibility within the next few years--FHA would need to draw on permanent and indefinite budget authority to cover additional increases in estimated credit subsidy costs. (2) FHA and its actuarial review contractor have enhanced their methods for assessing the Fund's financial condition but still are addressing other methodological issues that could affect the reliability of estimates of the Fund's capital ratio. However, FHA, its financial statement auditor, and mortgage market and budget analysts have identified a number of potential issues with the current review methodology. FHA officials told us that they were planning to require the actuarial review contractor to use a stochastic simulation model for the 2011 actuarial review. These officials said that the model would be used to examine the implications of extreme economic scenarios on the Fund but that decision about whether to use the model to estimate the Fund's capital ratio had not been made. (3) To help improve the financial condition of the Fund, FHA has raised premiums and made or proposed policy and underwriting changes, but certain legislative requirements concerning FHA's administration of the Fund provide limited direction and have required interpretation by FHA. In the absence of more explicit directions, the priority that FHA should place on restoring the capital ratio versus its operational goals may be unclear, and Congress may not be receiving all of the information that it would find useful to monitor the Fund's financial condition. (4) Data on the performance and characteristics of FHA-insured mortgages illustrate the challenges and uncertainties facing the Fund as well as improvement in certain risk factors. As in other segments of the mortgage market, the performance of FHA-insured mortgages deteriorated as the economy weakened and home prices fell in 2008 and 2009. FHA is closely monitoring the early performance of the 2009 loan cohort, which will have a major influence on the Fund's financial condition because of its large size (35 percent of the amortized insurance-in-force as of May 31, 2010). The 2009 cohort was projected to perform better than the 2006 cohort in the long run. However, it is unclear from the early performance of the 2009 cohort whether this projection will hold.
Recommendations
Matter for Congressional Consideration
Matter | Status | Comments |
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To strengthen accountability and transparency in FHA's management of the Fund, Congress may wish to consider establishing a minimum time frame for restoring the capital ratio to 2 percent should the ratio fall below that level, taking into account FHA's statutory operational goals and role in supporting the mortgage market during periods of economic stress. | In December 2011, Senator Vitter introduced S. 1997, which, among other things, would have required the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development to return the Fund's capital ratio to the statutory required level within 2 years. The bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, but it was not reported out of committee. | |
To strengthen accountability and transparency in FHA's management of the Fund, Congress may wish to consider clarifying (1) the definition of the Fund's capital ratio--specifically, whether the denominator of the ratio was intended to be the amortized insurance-in-force; (2) the definition of the phrase "established target subsidy rate" used in HERA; and (3) the nature and extent of information that FHA should be reporting on subsidy rates pursuant to HERA, recognizing that subsidy rates are generally only reestimated once a year under current budget processes. | As of March 2024, Congress had not acted on this matter for consideration. |
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
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Department of Housing and Urban Development | To enhance actuarial assessment of and reporting on the Fund, that the Secretary of HUD should (1) require FHA's actuarial review contractor to use stochastic simulation of future economic conditions, including house prices and interest rates, to estimate the Fund's capital ratio and (2) include the results of this analysis, whether used as a replacement for or supplement to the current methodology, in FHA's annual report to Congress on the financial status of the Fund. |
In the fiscal year 2012 actuarial review of the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (issued in November 2012), FHA's contractor used stochastic simulation of house prices and interest rates to estimate the economic value of FHA's single-family insurance portfolio. FHA used the contractor's estimates to calculate the Fund's capital ratio. FHA reported the capital ratio and other results of the stochastic analysis in its November 2012 annual report to Congress on the status of the Fund.
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