Direct single family housing loans and grants; payment assistance,
[Federal Register: February 17, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 33)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Page 8523-8543]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr17fe06-21]
Proposed Rules Federal Register
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
[[Page 8523]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Housing Service
RIN 0575-AC59
Single Family Housing Loans, Payment Assistance
AGENCY: Rural Housing Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: The Rural Housing Service (RHS) proposes to amend its regulations for Single Family Housing Loans. This action proposes to amend only the amount of payment assistance for which a borrower qualifies. This action is taken to improve distribution of program benefits, simplify the application process, and improve customer service.
DATES: Written or e-mail comments must be received on or before April 18, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments to this rule by any of the following methods:
Agency Web site: http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/regs/. Follow
the instructions for submitting comments on the Web site.
E-Mail: comments@wdc.usda.gov. Include the RIN number (0575-AC59) in the subject line of the message.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Submit written comments via the U.S. Postal Service to the Branch Chief, Regulations and Paperwork Management Branch, U.S. Department of Agriculture, STOP 0742, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250-0742.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Submit written comments via Federal Express Mail or another mail courier service requiring a street address to the Branch Chief, Regulations and Paperwork Management Branch, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 300 7th Street, SW., 7th Floor, Suite 701, Washington, DC 20024.
All written comments will be available for public inspection during regular work hours at the 300 7th Street, SW., address listed above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael S. Feinberg, Chief, Loan Origination Branch, Rural Housing Service, USDA, Ag Box 0783, Room 2214, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250-0783. Telephone: 202-720-1474.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Classification
This rule has been determined to be significant by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under Executive Order 12866 and has been reviewed by OMB.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601- 602), the undersigned has determined and certified by signature of this document that this rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This rule does not impose any new requirements on Agency applicants and borrowers and the regulatory changes affect only Agency determination of program benefits for individual loans.
Environmental Impact Statement
This document has been reviewed in accordance with 7 CFR part 1940, subpart G, ``Environmental Program.'' It is the determination of RHS that this proposed action does not constitute a major Federal Action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment, and in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, Public Law 91-190, an Environmental Impact Statement is not required.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public Law 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal governments and the private sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA, the Agency generally must prepare a written statement, including a cost- benefit analysis, for proposed and final rules with ``Federal mandates'' that may result in expenditures to State, local, or tribal governments, in the aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100 million or more in any one year. When such a statement is needed for a rule, section 205 of the UMRA generally requires the Agency to identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives and adopt the least costly, more cost-effective or least burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for State, local, and tribal governments or the private sector. Therefore, this rule is not subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
Executive Order 13132
The policies contained in this rule do not have any substantial direct effect on States, on the relationship between the national government and States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government. Nor does this rule impose substantial direct compliance costs on State and local governments. Therefore, consultation with the States is not required.
Programs Affected
This program is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance under No. 10.410, Low Income Housing Loans.
Intergovernmental Consultation
For the reasons set forth in the final rule related Notice to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, this program is excluded from the scope of Executive Order (E.O.) 12372, which requires intergovernmental consultation with State and local officials.
Civil Justice Reform
This proposed rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform. In accordance with this Executive Order: (1) All State and local laws and regulations that are in conflict with this rule will be preempted, (2) no retroactive effect will be given to this rule, and (3) administrative proceedings in accordance with the regulations of the Agency at 7 CFR part 11 must be exhausted before bringing litigation challenging action taken under this rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements contained in these regulations have been approved by OMB
[[Page 8524]]
under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. chapter 35 and have been assigned OMB control numbers 0575-0172 in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act. This proposed rule does not revise or impose any new information collection requirements from those mentioned above.
GPEA Statement
RHS is committed to compliance with the Government Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA), which requires Government agencies, in general, to provide the public the option of submitting information or transacting business electronically to the maximum extent possible.
Background
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA's) Rural Housing Service (RHS) is proposing to revise the regulations for Direct Single Family Housing Loans. This action is being taken to improve distribution of payment assistance subsidies to its section 502 Single Family housing direct loan program borrowers and simplify the formula for determining the level of payment assistance granted to new borrowers.
Economic Impact Analysis
USDA contracted for a study of its payment assistance formula including the development of alternatives. This study is available for public inspection during working hours at Room 2214, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250-0783. Telephone: 202-720-1474. In its study of alternatives to the current payment assistance formula, RHS began with the premise that a new payment assistance formula must not increase the cost of the program (be subsidy neutral) and must serve the same target population. These conditions assure that there would be no significant economic impact resulting from a revision of the formula for payment assistance. The program will continue to assist very low- and low-income, rural residents to improve their living conditions and economic situation by building equity through homeownership. Based on an average loan in the range of $83,000 per home, for each $1.0 billion in program level, RHS provides financing for over 12,000 single-family homes. This investment is instrumental in creating over 14,000 direct and indirect jobs. Assuming an average salary of $20,000 per job created, $280 million in purchasing power is generated. Additionally, these jobs also generate additional tax revenue for Federal, State, and local governments, as well as aid in the stabilization or redevelopment of neighborhoods.
However, the proposed change will affect the level of payment assistance received by all new borrowers (in 2003 over 12,500) following the effective date of the rule, and for that reason, the proposed action has been determined to be significant. The effect of the proposed rule compared to that of the current formula and the other alternatives considered is discussed in detail below.
Discussion
During fiscal year 2004, RHS studied its payment assistance formula for the Direct section 502 Single Family Housing program and concluded that changes were needed.
Current Formula
RHS administers the single-family housing direct loan program authorized in section 502 of the Housing Act of 1949, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1472). The program provides loans to low- and very low-income households to purchase homes in rural areas, generally defined as cities, towns, and unincorporated areas with populations of 20,000 or less.\1\ These loans provide financing at reasonable rates and terms with no down payment required.
\1\ For the purposes of the section 502 program, rural areas are statutorily defined in section 520 of the Housing Act of 1949, 42 U.S.C. 1490 and its implementing regulation, 7 CFR 3550.9.
Pursuant to section 502, eligible families must be without adequate housing and unable to obtain credit through the private sector \2\ but able to afford the mortgage payments, taxes, and insurance on the houses financed by RHS. The interest rate on the loans can be subsidized to as low as one percent. Typically, the mortgage payments require 24 to 30 percent of an applicant's income. Although a 38-year term is available, most loans are issued with a term of 33-years, and the majority of homes initially financed by RHS are refinanced through conventional mortgages or repaid through property sales within eight to ten years.
\2\ Section 501(c) (42 U.S.C. 1471(c)).
For loans made prior to 1995, RHS subsidized using a program called ``interest credit.'' Borrowers made monthly payments that were the greater of (a) 20 percent of adjusted family income; or (b) payments based on the loan amortized at a one percent interest rate. RHS provided interest credit to make up the difference between this amount and the amount of the payment at the note rate.
One drawback of this method was that it provided little incentive for borrowers to shop for an inexpensive home since the borrower's payment did not increase significantly as a result of a higher loan amount. Another criticism was that it was inequitable. For example, families attempting to purchase inexpensive homes were denied assistance if the formula did not indicate principal, interest, taxes, and insurance (PITI) would exceed 20 percent of adjusted income while borrowers who purchased higher cost homes received the maximum level of subsidy allowed.
As a result of these and other limitations, RHS implemented a new subsidy program effective October 27, 1995. Under this program called ``payment assistance,'' the subsidy for each loan is based on the ratio of the household's annual adjusted income (AAI) to the area median income (AMI), a figure that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) publishes annually for all U.S. counties. To be eligible for payment assistance, household income must be within the low-income limit, defined as 80% of AMI. Once payment assistance is granted, the household remains eligible for payment assistance in accordance with the formula below. The payment assistance amount is the difference between the note rate payment and the greater of (a) the payment at an equivalent interest rate and (b) the floor payment.
The equivalent interest rate is derived from a scale based on the ratio of the borrower's AAI to AMI, as described in Exhibit 1 below:
[[Page 8525]]
Exhibit 1.--Equivalent Interest Rate Scale
When the borrower's adjusted income is
Then the Equal to or more than (percent)
equivalent But less than interest rate is * (percent)
0.0............................... 50 percent of AMI...
1 50................................ 55 percent of AMI...
2 55................................ 60 percent of AMI...
3 60................................ 65 percent of AMI...
4 65................................ 70 percent of AMI...
5 70................................ 75 percent of AMI...
6 75................................ 80 percent of AMI...
6.5 80................................ 90 percent of AMI...
7.5 90................................ 100 percent of AMI..
8.5 100............................... 110 percent of AMI..
9.0 110............................... or more than AMI....
9.5
* Or note rate, whichever is less. In no case will the equivalent interest rate be less than 1 percent.
The floor payment is also based on the ratio of the borrower's AAI to the AMI and is scaled to a minimum percentage of income that a borrower must pay for PITI.
Exhibit 2 shows this scale:
Exhibit 2.--Floor Payment Scale
Minimum percentage of AAI that a AAI as a percentage of AMI
borrower must pay for PITI (percent)
0.0 percent to 50 percent...............................
22 50.01 percent to 65 percent.............................
24 65.01 percent to 80 percent.............................
26
The following is the step-by-step process for determining a borrower's eligibility for payment assistance under the current formula, and the amount of payment assistance for which he or she qualifies, using the assumptions below:
Borrower Assumptions:
[cir] AAI: $19,000
[cir] AMI: $30,000
[cir] Is the borrower eligible? Yes, because AAI is 63 percent of AMI and the eligibility threshold is 80 percent.
Loan Assumptions:
[cir] Initial Principal Amount: $60,000
[cir] Loan Term: 33 Years
[cir] Market Rate: 7 percent
[cir] Monthly Taxes and Insurance: $90.00 (1.8 percent of Initial Principal/12 Months).
Exhibit 3.--Application of the Payment Assistance Formula Using the Above Assumptions
Explanation
Calculation
How Much Does the Borrower Pay to USDA for Principal and Interest Cost? The borrower pays the higher of the following two calculations: First Calculation:
Based on the ratio of Borrower AAI Applicable Interest Rate at 63% to AMI (Exhibit 1), the borrower's AAI to AMI Ratio yields 4% interest rate will be 4 percent, equivalent interest rate (from which equates to a monthly payment chart). of $273.00. Second Calculation:
The Floor Payment for principal and Initial Principal Amount percentage of borrower income or $273.00. the minimum the borrower is required to pay to USDA).
Applicable floor payment percentage Applicable percentage for 63% for PITI = 24 percent.
AAI to AMI ratio.
Monthly Floor Payment = $380.......
Monthly Floor Payment for principal 24% of AAI ($19,000) divided by and interest = $290.
12 months.
The borrower pays at Floor Payment PITI of $380 minus T&I of $90. for principal and interest = $290. The higher of the two calculations. the Note Rate of 7%? $389.
33 years).
Payment Assistance received from $389 - $290 = $99. USDA = $99.
Recently, RHS began to examine anecdotal evidence that suggested the current formula caused anomalies in the distribution of payment assistance to borrowers, was complicated and difficult to explain, and had other unintended consequences, such as encouraging borrowers to purchase more expensive housing to qualify for increased payment assistance.
RHS engaged a contractor with extensive experience in Federal housing programs and other lending programs to:
Assess the extent to which the current formula results in unintended treatment of borrowers;
Examine formulas used in other mortgage assistance programs; and
Develop a simpler and more equitable alternative that would not result in increased cost to the Government but would continue to serve the same target market.
RHS presented the findings and preliminary alternatives to a panel of
[[Page 8526]]
rural housing industry leaders and obtained their feedback. RHS then further analyzed two potential alternatives to the current formula. The results of these analyses follow.
Assessment Based on Historical and Sensitivity Analyses
The assessment RHS commissioned included a sensitivity analysis of the factors that comprise the payment assistance formula; a historical analysis of 219,218 loans closed between October 26, 1995 and November 5, 2003; and research on other affordable single-family housing loan programs. Affordable single-family programs researched include programs offered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, State agencies, and non-government entities. The historical analysis summarized borrower and loan characteristics and used the theoretical findings of the sensitivity analysis to evaluate whether borrowers with similar income characteristics received different levels of payment assistance. The results of the historical analysis support the theoretical findings of the sensitivity analysis.
Summary of Loan Characteristics
Of the 219,218 loans, 70 percent (152,830 loans) were non-leveraged loans, and 151,107 of those were analyzed. Leveraged loans were analyzed and will be discussed separately below because of the way the Agency considers these loans for payment assistance. The balance of the non-leveraged loans were excluded because of missing data. Of the 151,107 observations, 54 percent of the borrowers have housing costs at or below 26 percent of their AAIs.
Exhibit 4 presents loan characteristics of borrowers based on payment calculation methods: Effective interest rate (EIR) and floor payment.
Exhibit 4.--Key Characteristics of RHS 502 Direct Loan Borrowers (Non-Leveraged Loan Agreements)
Average borrower Average
Average Average PITI cost Percent Average Average AAI as Average Average Average payment borrower with Payment calculation method
Count of total AAI
AMI percent EIR initial borrower assistance PI assist. of AMI
principal contribution amt. portion as percent of AAI
EIR................................................................ 95,248
62 $14,102 $38,348
38 1.61 $77,587
$260
$236
52
47 Floor.............................................................. 57,582
38 20,439 41,080
50 2.09 70,329
310
142
69
25
Total/Avg...................................................... 152,830
100 16,489 39,377
42 1.79 74,852
279
201
58
39
The table shows that 62 percent of the borrowers have principal and interest payments based on the EIR. These borrowers have lower annual adjusted incomes, live in areas with lower area median incomes, and have higher initial principal amounts, all of which cause their total housing cost to average 47 percent of their income, as opposed to a portfolio average of 39 percent. Conversely, borrowers with higher incomes pay only 25 percent of their incomes toward housing costs.
Historical and Sensitivity Analyses
Four factors determine the payment assistance amount that RHS Single Family housing direct loan program borrowers receive: (1) AMI, (2) borrower's AAI, (3) the initial principal amount of the loan, and (4) taxes and insurance cost. The purpose of the sensitivity analysis was to evaluate how changes in each of the four factors affect the borrower's contribution and the level of payment assistance, holding the other three factors constant. The baseline assumptions for this analysis represent a typical 502 loan and are used as examples in the RHS section 502 servicing handbook. They are as follows:
Borrower's AAI: $19,000
AMI: $30,000
Initial Principal Amount: $60,000
Loan Term in Years: 33
Market Rate: 7 percent
Monthly Taxes and Insurance: $90 (1.8 percent of Initial Principal Amount/12 months)
The results of the sensitivity analyses are as follows. Where relevant, historical data has also been included.
Changing AMI, Holding Other Factors Constant
An RHS borrower who decides to buy a home in a county with a lower median income receives less payment assistance than he or she would in a higher income county, even when the home price, taxes, and insurance are exactly the same in the two counties. Similarly, when an RHS borrower whose income stays constant lives in a county where the AMI increases, he or she receives additional payment assistance; and if the county's economy declines and the AMI drops, he or she receives less payment assistance. This occurs because payment assistance is determined by the ratio of the borrower's AAI to the county's AMI.
The actual examples in Exhibit 5 illustrate the way in which AMI skews the amount of payment assistance a borrower receives, all other factors being equal. The first example shows this dynamic by examining two borrowers in different counties. The second example shows what happens to the amount of payment assistance a borrower receives from one year to the next when income stays constant but county AMI changes.
Exhibit 5.--Impact of Changes in AMI on Payment Assistance, Current Formula
Initial Adjusted Area AAI as a
Payment Example
Borrower
County and state principal annual median percent of Original assistance amount income income
AMI
PITI
amount
1.................... A....................... Kingfisher County, OK.... $56,000 $20,440 $31,300
65
$446
$4 B....................... Suffolk County, VA....... 56,000 20,440 44,400
46
446
70
Difference.............. ......................... ........... ........... 13,100 ........... ...........
66 2.................... C....................... Tulare County, CA........ 54,431 19,330 38,600
50
425
39 D....................... Tulare County, CA........ 54,431 19,330 39,200
49
425
71
[[Page 8527]]
Difference.............. ......................... ........... ...........
600 ........... ...........
32
In addition to showing the discrepancies in payment assistance for similar borrowers under the current formula, these examples highlight the formula's inefficiencies. In Example 1, the borrower in the lower income county receives considerably less payment assistance-in this case, Borrower A receives 17.5 times less assistance than Borrower B, yet their AAI is identical. Example 2 shows how small changes in AMI can lead to significant changes in payment assistance. The AMI in Tulare County increased by 1.5 percent from one year to the next, yet Borrower C's payment assistance increased by 82 percent. Even if the cost of living increased with the rise in AMI, it is unlikely that Borrower C needed an 82 percent increase in assistance in order to adjust to this change.
The historical analysis found that a difference of $244 was the largest difference in the amount of payment assistance two borrowers received who had the same incomes, principal amount, and taxes and insurance. The smallest difference was $14.
Changing AAI, Holding Other Factors Constant
Two noteworthy phenomena occur when AAI changes while the other three factors are held constant: First, borrowers who pay the equivalent interest rate (those with very low incomes) receive a fixed amount of payment assistance, regardless of income; while those who pay based on the floor payment receive payment assistance that varies with their income.
Exhibit 6 illustrates this result.
Exhibit 6.--Impact of Changes in Income on Borrower's Payment and Payment Assistance, Current Formula
Borrower's Borrower's PITI cost AAI as a Applied
Floor
Borrower's
PITI
with AMI
floor (percent) total PITI P&I
EIR contribution amount portion
as a payment
(percent) percent of AAI
$13,000.....................................................
44
22
1
479
148
178
178
211
56
25 $13,300.....................................................
45
22
1
479
154
178
178
211
56
24 $13,600.....................................................
46
22
1
479
159
178
178
211
56
24 $13,900.....................................................
47
22
1
479
165
178
178
211
56
23 $14,200.....................................................
48
22
1
479
170
178
178
211
56
23 $14,500.....................................................
49
22
1
479
176
178
178
211
56
22 $14,800.....................................................
50
22
1
479
181
178
181
208
57
22 $15,100.....................................................
51
24
2
479
212
207
212
177
63
24 $15,400.....................................................
52
24
2
479
218
207
218
171
64
24 $15,700.....................................................
53
24
2
479
224
207
224
165
66
24 $16,000.....................................................
54
24
2
479
230
207
230
159
67
24 $16,300.....................................................
55
24
2
479
236
207
236
153
68
24 $16,600.....................................................
56
24
3
479
242
239
242
147
69
24 $16,900.....................................................
57
24
3
479
248
239
248
141
71
24 $17,200.....................................................
58
24
3
479
254
239
254
135
72
24 $17,500.....................................................
59
24
3
479
260
239
260
129
73
24 $17,800.....................................................
60
24
3
479
266
239
266
123
74
24 $18,100.....................................................
61
24
4
479
272
273
273
116
76
24 $18,400.....................................................
62
24
4
479
278
273
278
111
77
24 $18,700.....................................................
63
24
4
479
284
273
284
105
78
24 $19,000.....................................................
64
24
4
479
290
273
290
99
79
24 $19,300.....................................................
65
24
4
479
296
273
296
93
81
24 $19,600.....................................................
66
26
5
479
335
310
335
54
89
26 $19,900.....................................................
67
26
5
479
341
310
341
48
90
26 $20,200.....................................................
68
26
5
479
348
310
348
41
91
26 $20,500.....................................................
69
26
5
479
354
310
354
35
93
26 $20,800.....................................................
70
26
5
479
361
310
361
28
94
26 $21,100.....................................................
71
26
6
479
367
348
367
22
95
26 $21,400.....................................................
72
26
6
479
374
348
374
15
97
26 $21,700.....................................................
73
26
6
479
380
348
380
9
98
26 $22,000.....................................................
74
26
6
479
387
348
387
2
100
26
This outcome is not undesirable: borrowers with higher incomes receive less assistance as their incomes increase, while borrowers at the lower end of the spectrum receive a capped amount of assistance, helping to ensure that the housing needs of low-income families are met at reasonable cost to the taxpayer and the level of assistance provided decreases as family income increases.
However, the second phenomenon that occurs with certain increases in income is problematic: for borrowers whose payments are based on the floor payment, a small increase in income can lead to a large decrease in payment assistance. This happens because the required floor payment is divided into three tiers that increase at a much greater rate than income. For example, when a borrower's income increases from 50 percent of AMI to 50.01 percent, the required floor payment jumps from 22 percent of income to 24 percent; when borrower income increases from 65 percent of AMI to 65.01 percent, the floor payment jumps to 26 percent of income. Exhibit 7
[[Page 8528]]
illustrates the impact on payment assistance of a $300 increase in AAI that also pushes the borrower into the next tier of floor payments:
Exhibit 7.--Impact of Marginal Increases in Income on Payment Assistance, Current Formula*
PITICost with
Annualized Adjusted AAI as a
assistance Payment payment Net Loss of Example
annual percent of PITI
as a assistance assistance annual income
AMI
percent of amount amount income AAI
Income....................................................... $14,800
50
$479
22
$208 $2,496 ........... Increase 1................................................... 15,100
51
479
24
177
2,124 ........... Change.......................................................
300
1 ...........
2
-31
-372
$72 Income....................................................... 19,300
65
479
24
93
1,116 ........... Increase 2................................................... 19,600
66
479
26
54
648 ........... Change.......................................................
300
1 ...........
2
-39
-468
$168
* Some figures are rounded.
The first income increase of $300 gets offset by a loss of $372 in payment assistance, while the second income increase of $300 gets offset by a loss of $468 in payment assistance. The overall trend to decrease payment assistance as income increases is logical; as borrowers' earnings increase, they need less Government assistance. However, the unfortunate consequence of staggering the floor payments in two percent increments is that borrowers who are already at the lower end of the income scale can suffer a financial setback when they earn a pay increase; sometimes they have more to lose than gain when their AAI rises. A more equitable formula would leave the borrower at least as well off as he or she was before the pay increase.
Changing the Initial Principal Amount, Holding Other Factors Constant
When only the principal amount varies and all other factors are held constant, payment assistance increases at a faster rate relative to increases in principal when the borrower pays based on the floor payment than when he or she pays based on the equivalent interest rate.
The following exhibit illustrates this dynamic.
Exhibit 8.--Impact of Changes in Principal Amount on Borrower's Contribution, Current Formula
Borrower's Borrower's PITI cost Initial principal amount
note rate PITI payment of payment of EIR contribution amount portion assistance PITI
PI
to PI
(percent) as percent of AAI
$50,000...........................
$324
$414
$380
$290
$228
$290
$34
92
24.0 52,400............................
340
430
380
290
239
290
50
88
24.0 54,800............................
355
445
380
290
249
290
65
85
24.0 57,200............................
371
461
380
290
260
290
81
82
24.0 59,600............................
386
476
380
290
271
290
96
80
24.0 62,000............................
402
492
380
290
282
290
112
77
24.0 64,400............................
417
507
380
290
293
293
124
76
24.2 75,200............................
487
577
380
290
342
342
145
75
27.3 86,000............................
557
647
380
290
391
391
166
74
30.4
The exhibit shows that, given the formula inputs used in the sensitivity analysis, when the principal amount is between $50,000 and $62,000, the borrower's PITI cost with payment assistance equals 24.0 percent. Within this range of principal amounts, the borrower's contribution for principal and interest is fixed at the floor payment of $290 per month, while payment assistance increases to make up the difference between the borrower's contribution and the note rate. Thus, the borrower has the strongest incentive to purchase the $62,000 house rather than a cheaper one within the 24 percent range. Once the principal is greater than $62,000 and the borrower pays based on the EIR, the borrower's contribution is no longer fixed but increases as principal increases. Payment assistance also increases with principal, but not as quickly as when the borrower pays at the floor rate.
Thus, the current formula provides an incentive to borrowers to purchase the most expensive home within a fixed range of principal amounts'in this example, the $62,000 house. It is important to note, however, that the optimal purchase price has nothing to do with the housing market and will vary with each buyer's income, AMI, taxes and insurance, and the market rate on the loan--it is not uniform across RHS borrowers. In addition, while the inputs to the formula create an economically optimal purchase price for each borrower, this price is not necessarily the one at which a buyer will purchase a house. There are many other important and potentially overriding factors in the borrower's decision-making process, including the availability of appropriate housing at a price he or she can afford, the location of the housing, quality of the neighborhood and schools, and safety, among others. It is possible that a house at the buyer's optimal price is not available and does not meet his or her other criteria. The optimal price is solely based on the four inputs to the
[[Page 8529]]
payment assistance formula and does not reflect any market or quality factors.
Changing Tax and Insurance (T&I) Cost, Holding Other Factors Constant
The analysis indicates that when a borrower's payment is based on the floor payment, the payment assistance amount matches the increase in T&I dollar-for-dollar. When a borrower's payment is based on EIR, the payment assistance amount is not affected by the change in T&I. As a result, very low-income borrowers must bear the burden of increased taxes and insurance without an increase in payment assistance, while low income borrowers receive a dollar-for-dollar match. This formula characteristic makes it difficult not only for very low-income borrowers to adjust to increased tax and insurance costs, but also for RHS to provide servicing assistance to very low-income borrowers who get behind in their payments as a result of a tax or insurance increase. Sixty-two percent of borrowers in the historic dataset pay based on the EIR and thus do not receive extra payment assistance when their T&I amount increases.
Market Research
Included in the assessment of the payment assistance formula was a comparative analysis to identify other affordable housing programs whose features could be compared to and contrasted with the section 502 program. None of the programs reviewed offered the same depth of subsidy available through the section 502 program, although many were similar in other respects. The single most important differentiating factor is the target market served by the section 502 program. The following programs were the primary focus of the comparative analysis:
HUD Housing Choice Voucher Programs--Homeownership and Tenant Based
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency, Minnesota Mortgage Program, Homeownership Assistance Fund
HUD Home Investment Partnerships Program (HOME)
Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development-- Share Homeless Intervention Program
Habitat for Humanity International
City of Longmont/Boulder County, Colorado Downpayment Assistance Program
City of Livermore, California Downpayment Assistance Program
Illinois Housing Development Authority, First Time Homebuyer Program (Revenue Mortgage Bond Program)
Exhibit 9 shows how key features of these various programs compared to those of the section 502 program.
Exhibit 9.--Program Features of the Section 502 and Comparable Affordable Single Family Housing Programs
Comparative analysis Program feature
Section 502
observations
Use of HUD AMI.............. HUD AMI is used as --Eligibility an eligibility
criterion. criterion, for --Assistance limits. targeting purposes, --Financing terms. and as a payment --Targeting. assistance formula factor. Use of Housing Cost-PITI-to- PITI-to-income
--Repayment ability. Income Ratios.
ratios are used --Program during the
eligibility. underwriting
--Assistance process to
eligibility. determine repayment --Participant ability.
contribution. Assistance Calculation...... Payment Assistance --Participant need is calculated by is met up to a first determining limit. the borrower's PI --Participant need contribution.
is met up to a Payment Assistance limit after a covers the
required difference between participant PI and this
contribution. contribution. Assistance Administration... Continual
--Continual Assistance, given assistance. that borrowers meet --Limited income and
assistance. occupancy
--Limited, deceasing eligibility
assistance with requirements.
eventual cut-off. --One time assistance. Assistance Recapture........ Entire amount of --Entire amount. payment assistance --Pro-rated is subject to
percentage. recapture, given --Recapture due that it is less within a finite than the adjusted timeframe. appreciation value. Payment assistance is always subject to recapture.
The most noteworthy finding of the market research was that while all of the homeownership and rental subsidy programs used income as a percentage of AMI as an eligibility criterion, none of the programs used the figure as a determinant of the amount of assistance received, as under the section 502 Program.
Other uses of AMI in program administration include:
Income eligibility, including income floors, to determine repayment capacity and program eligibility;
Assistance limit/financing term determination; and
Targeting specific parts of the population for assistance.
Public Forum
On February 3, 2004, RHS hosted a forum of rural housing industry leaders at which it presented the findings of the sensitivity and historical analyses and market research, proposed preliminary alternatives to the current payment assistance formula, and solicited feedback from the participants to address inequities in the current formula.
Preliminary Alternatives for Calculating Payment Assistance
RHS directed that alternatives to the current payment assistance formula meet the following criteria:
Alternatives must provide service to the same target market currently eligible to receive assistance,
Alternatives must be subsidy neutral, and
Alternatives must simplify the method of determining the levels of payment assistance received.
Given these criteria and the feedback from the industry forum, five alternatives were developed. Because of the distributional inequities created by
[[Page 8530]]
basing payment assistance on AMI, and the lack of precedent for using AMI as a determinant of payment assistance in comparable affordable housing programs, none of the alternatives include AMI in the formula for calculating payment assistance.
The alternatives are as follows:
Alternative 1: Calculate Monthly Payment Assistance based only on the borrower's AAI.
Alternative 2: Calculate Monthly Payment Assistance based on the borrower's AAI (building on Alterative 1) but the borrower's contribution equals the greater of (a) 25 percent of AAI for PITI; and (b) principal and interest payment based on a one percent interest rate, plus taxes and insurance.
Alternative 3: Calculate Monthly Payment Assistance as the difference between principal and interest at the note rate and principal and interest calculated at a below-market interest rate that is tied to the borrower's AAI.
Alternative 4: Calculate Monthly Payment Assistance as the difference between PITI at the note rate and the greater of (a) 24 percent of the borrower's AAI plus utilities and maintenance costs; and (b) principal and interest payment based on a one percent interest rate, plus taxes and insurance.
Alternative 5: Offer an up-front principal reduction that results in a borrower's payment being 24 percent of AAI, with the up-front principal reduction amount being provided as a zero-interest loan to be repaid in full upon graduation from the section 502 program.
Analyses of the five options eliminated Alternatives 1, 4, and 5. Alternative 4 was found to be very similar to Alternative 2, but difficult to explain because of the utility and maintenance cost component. In addition, an accurate utility and maintenance allowance would be difficult to establish on a nationwide basis. Alternative 1 was eliminated because it would not serve the same target market. This is because alternative 1 is based only on the borrower's income, without regard to loan amount or taxes and insurance. Alternative 5 was not subsidy neutral in any year but the first.
The contractor performed a sensitivity analysis to compare treatment of borrowers by the current formula, Alternative 2, and Alternative 3 along the same dimensions as the sensitivity analysis performed on the current formula. Based on borrower and loan characteristics for FY 2003, the sensitivity analyses were performed under the following assumptions:
Borrower's AAI: $21,000
AMI: $44,000
Initial Principal Amount: $90,000
Loan Term in Years: 33
Market Rate: 7 percent
Monthly Taxes and Insurance: $120 (1.6 percent of Initial Principal Amount/12 months)
The results are as follows: Changing AMI, Holding Other Factors Constant
Since Alternatives 2 and 3 both eliminate AMI by design, there is no variability in the amount of payment assistance borrowers receive based on AMI under either of these alternatives. Under the current payment assistance formula, the amount of payment assistance varies with AMI. Changing AAI, Holding Other Factors Constant
Under the current formula and the two alternatives, there is a maximum payment assistance amount. The current formula and Alternative 2 provide fairly similar amounts of payment assistance while Alternative 3 provides a greater amount of payment assistance to almost all borrowers whose incomes are above the cap.
Exhibit 10 shows this effect.
Exhibit 10.--Impact of Changes in Income on Payment Assistance, Current Formula and Alternatives
BILLING CODE 3410-XV-P
[[Page 8531]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP17FE06.000
Assumptions for Exhibit 10:
(1) Loan amount = $90,000
(2) T&I = 1.6 percent of loan amount
(3) Note rate = 7 percent
(4) AMI = $44,000
[[Page 8532]]
Under the current formula, the cap is determined by the ratio of AAI to AMI. When the ratio increases, the amount of payment assistance drops by more than the increase in income. This effect does not occur under either Alternative 2 or Alternative 3. The table below shows a borrower's monthly payments when income equals $21,000, $22,000, and $23,000, with tax and insurance payments ranging from 0.5 percent to 3.5 percent of the loan. Borrower payments that are not bolded are based on 25 percent of income. In this example, the borrower pays 25 percent when T&I is relatively low. The borrower payments that are bolded are based on a one percent interest rate.
Exhibit 11.--Impact of Change in Income on Borrower Payment and Payment Assistance, Alternative 2
Income = $21,000
Income = $22,000
Income = $23,000 T&I as
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Number
percent of T&I PITI Borrower
Borrower
Borrower loan
payment for Payment payment for Payment payment for Payment PITI assistance PITI assistance PITI assistance
1..........................................
0.50 $38 $621
$438
$183
$458
$162
$479
$142 2..........................................
0.70 53 636
438
198
458
177
479
157 3..........................................
0.90 68 651
438
213
458
192
479
172 4..........................................
1.10 83 666
438
228
458
207
479
187 5..........................................
1.30 98 681
438
243
458
222
479
202 6..........................................
1.50 113 696
438
258
458
237
479
217 7..........................................
1.70 128 711
438
273
458
252
479
232 8..........................................
1.90 143 726
438
288
458
267
479
247 9..........................................
2.10 158 741
438
303
458
282
479
262 10.........................................
2.30 173 756
439
316
458
297
479
277 11.........................................
2.50 188 771
454
316
458
312
479
292 12.........................................
2.70 203 786
469
316
469
316
479
307 13.........................................
2.90 218 801
484
316
484
316
484
316 14.........................................
3.10 233 816
499
316
499
316
499
316 15.........................................
3.30 248 831
514
316
514
316
514
316 16.........................................
3.50 263 846
529
316
529
316
529
316
Thus, when the borrower's payment is based on 25 percent of income, and the borrower's annual income goes from $21,000 to $22,000, the monthly payments increase by $20, for an annual increase of $240 and a net gain in income of $760. When the borrower's payment is based on the one percent interest rate, the amount of the payment does not change. Similarly, when the borrower's payment is based on 25 percent of income and income goes from $21,000 to $23,000, the monthly payment increases by $40, for an annual increase of $480 and a net gain in income of $1,520. When the borrower's payment is based on the one percent rate, his or her payment does not change.
Under Alternative 3, the EIR scale increases so gradually relative to increases in income that the borrower will not face a situation in which a loss in payment assistance exceeds an increase in earnings. Exhibit 12 shows how borrower payments increase with income, assuming the loan and borrower characteristics described at the beginning of this section. The payments do not change with taxes and interest, unlike under Alternative 2.
Exhibit 12.--Impact of Change in Income on Borrower Payment and Payment Assistance, Alternative 3
Borrower Income
payment for Payment
PITI PITI
assistance
$21,000.........................................................
$408
$295
$703 $22,000.........................................................
419
284
703 $23,000.........................................................
431
273
703
As Exhibit 12 shows, a borrower who earns $21,000 and receives a $1,000 raise must pay an additional $11 per month for housing, or $132 per year. If the borrower who earns $21,000 receives a $2,000 pay raise, the payment increases by $23 per month, or $276 per year. Changing the Initial Principal Amount, Holding Other Factors Constant
Under the current formula the borrower has an incentive to purchase a house at the upper end of a certain price range. The same phenomenon occurs under Alternative 2, as shown in Exhibit 14 below.
Exhibit 14.--Impact of Changes in Principal on Borrower Payment and Payment Assistance
Borrower Number
Principal T&I
payment Payment PITI assistance
1........................................................... $40,000
$53
$313
$0 2........................................................... 50,000
67
391
0 3........................................................... 60,000
80
438
31 4........................................................... 70,000
93
438
110
[[Page 8533]]
5........................................................... 80,000
107
438
188 6........................................................... 90,000
120
438
266 7........................................................... 100,000
133
438
344 8........................................................... 110,000
147
473
387 9........................................................... 120,000
160
516
422 10.......................................................... 130,000
173
559
457
As Exhibit 14 shows, the borrower's payment is the same when the principal ranges between $40,000 and $90,000, so the borrower has an incentive to purchase the $90,000 house.
Under Alternative 3, however, this effect does not occur because both the borrower's payment and the payment assistance increase with the principal amount. The following exhibit illustrates this dynamic.
Exhibit 15.--Impact of Change in Principal on Borrower Payment and Payment Assistance, Alternative 3
Borrower Principal
T&I at 1.6% payment for Payment PITI assistance
$40,000..........................
$53
$181
$131 $50,000..........................
67
227
164 $60,000..........................
80
272
197 $70,000..........................
93
318
229 $80,000..........................
107
363
262 $90,000..........................
120
408
295 $100,000.........................
133
454
328 $110,000.........................
147
499
361 $120,000.........................
160
544
393 $130,000.........................
173
590
426
In addition, under the current formula and Alternative 2, borrowers with higher loan amounts receive more payment assistance than under Alternative 3, while borrowers with lower initial principal amounts receive more payment assistance under Alternative 3 than under either the current formula or Alternative 2. Exhibit 16 shows this effect.
Exhibit 16.--Impact of Changes in Principal on Payment Assistance, Current Formula and Alternatives
[[Page 8534]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP17FE06.001
Assumptions for Exhibit 16:
(1) AAI = $21,000
(2) T&I = 1.6% of loan amount
(3) Note rate = 7%
(4)AMI = $44,000
[[Page 8535]]
Changing Tax and Insurance Cost, Holding Other Factors Constant
Under the current formula and Alternative 2, payment assistance sometimes covers increases in taxes and insurance. Under the current formula, when the borrower pays at the EIR, payment assistance does not change with changes in taxes and insurance, but when the borrower pays the floor payment, payment assistance increases to cover increases in taxes and insurance. Thus, borrowers whose incomes are very low relative to their AMI receive a capped amount of payment assistance.
Under Alternative 2, payment assistance increases relative to increases in taxes and insurance as long as the borrower is paying 25 percent of income. Borrowers pay 25 percent of income when their income is high relative to their PITI. When the borrower's payment equals one percent plus T&I, the payment assistance amount is capped, which means that as taxes rise, payment assistance does not. This means borrowers in high tax areas receive proportionately less payment assistance relative to their payment than borrowers in low tax areas, all other factors being equal.
Under Alternative 3, payment assistance is the same regardless of T&I amount. Thus, borrowers with the same principal but different tax and insurance rates receive the same amount of payment assistance.
Exhibit 17 below illustrates this dynamic:
Exhibit 17.--Impact of Changes in Taxes and Insurance on Payment Assistance, Current Formula and Alternatives
[[Page 8536]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP17FE06.002
Assumptions for Exhibit 17:
(1) AAI = $21,000
(2) Loan amount = $90,000
(3) Note rate = 7%
(4) AMI = $44,000
[[Page 8537]]
Impact of the Alternatives on the Current Market
In addition to these analyses, the contractor also studied the question of how both alternatives would impact the market that the current formula serves. To assess whether each alternative formula will serve the same target market, three states were selected to represent high, medium, and low cost states. Average borrowers' AAI, Initial Principal Amount, and T&I were calculated for the counties that had at least 10 new borrowers in 2002 and 2003. The counties with the highest average borrower's AAI were selected to represent the high-income borrower's profile in each state. The same methodology applies to both median and low-income borrower profiles in each state. The contractor assessed how much payment assistance borrowers with low, median, and high incomes would receive, as well as the proportion of their income that would go toward housing under each alternative.
Under the current formula and Alternative 2, borrowers receive similar payment assistance and pay a similar percentage of their income to housing. Under Alternative 3, borrowers with high incomes in California and Illinois receive significantly less payment assistance than under the current formula, and many of them would also pay more than 29 percent of their income toward housing, thus disqualifying them from receiving a section 502 loan.
Exhibits 18 and 19 below illustrate these results:
Exhibit 18.--Payment Assistance Amounts in High-, Medium-, and Low-Cost States, Current Formula and Alternatives
[[Page 8538]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP17FE06.003
[[Page 8539]]
Exhibit 19.--Adjusted PITI-to-Income Ratios in High-, Medium-, and Low- Cost States, Current Formula and Alternatives
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP17FE06.004
BILLING CODE 3410-XV-C
[[Page 8540]]
In addition, applying the three formulas to the new borrowers in FY 2003 \3\, the analysis showed that the average ratio of borrower PITI with assistance to income was nearly identical for each formula, with Alternative 3 the lowest (26.7 percent) and the current formula the highest (27.4 percent).\4\ The ratio of payment assistance to total payment for principal, interest, taxes, and insurance was also fairly uniform across the three alternatives, with Alternative 3 the lowest at (38.3 percent) and the current formula the highest at 39.8 percent.\5\ More noteworthy was the number of current borrowers each formula would exclude from the program. Applying the requirements of each formula to the new borrowers in FY 2003, it was found that under Alternative 3 a sizeable number would have payments that exceed the maximum payment to income ratio of 29 percent for very low-income borrowers and 33 percent for low-income borrowers.
\3\ New Non-Leveraged Loan borrowers who have loan origination dates within fiscal year 2003 (10/1/02 to 9/30/03) and have the first payment assistance agreement records in the provided dataset.
\4\ Average borrowers' adjusted PITI-to-Income ratio was calculated using a simple average.
\5\ Average ratio of payment assistance to PITI was calculated using a weighted average of original loan amounts.
Exhibit 19
Average Average PITI to adjusted income Number of Percent of Number of Percent of Scenario
PITI to (exclude 17 borrowers total borrowers total income outliers)* >29%
>33% (percent) (percent)
Current Formula...................
28.19
27.43
1,744
29
706
11.86 Alternative 2.....................
28.29
27.53
1,319
22
571
9.59 Alternative 3.....................
27.47
26.70
1,764
30
854 14.34
* Notes: 1. Exclude the 17 outliers with the percentage exceeding 100%. 2. Based on 5,954 new non-leveraged loan borrowers' information in fiscal year 2003.
Revision of the Payment Assistance Calculation
RHS proposes to revise the payment assistance formula by implementing Alternative 2. Payment assistance will be calculated by taking the difference between the total cost of PITI minus the borrower's contribution, which will be the higher of 25 percent of AAI or P&I calculated at a 1 percent interest rate plus the cost of taxes and insurance.
Formula
Payment Assistance = PITI-Borrower's PITI Contribution
Borrower's contribution is the higher of the following calculations:
25% of AAI
P&I calculated at 1% Interest Rate + T&I
Alternative 2 improves upon the current formula in that it is a more simplified approach and is easier to explain to borrowers and others interested in the program. Alternative 2 does not rely on AMI, which was the main factor in unintended consequences of the current formula. In addition, Alternative 2 provides for consideration of property taxes and insurance cost which is very important in some segments of the RHS market. Under alternative 2, borrowers may be encouraged to buy the most expensive home possible in order to get the maximum amount of payment assistance. This is similar to the current formula. The Agency believes that this issue is mitigated by loan underwriting criteria, such as repayment ratios and Area Loan Limits. Borrowers in high tax areas will receive proportionately less payment assistance than borrowers in low tax areas. This is also similar to the current formula.
Alternative 3, on the other hand, provides more generous payment assistance to higher income borrowers in many cases, is a more complex formula requiring periodic adjustments, and would exclude more borrowers with PITI costs in excess of 33% of income than would Alternative 2 or the current formula.
The impact of implementation of Alternative 2 is the removal of AMI as part of the calculation. This will result in a more consistent and fair distribution of subsidy, especially in neighboring counties.
Leveraged Loans
Leveraged loans, under the current regulation, are not subject to the floor rate portion of the payment assistance formula. Payment assistance for a leveraged loan is determined using only the EIR. This provision has influenced the payment assistance calculation as well as the amount of funds available for borrowers in rural areas. To assess the impact of leveraged loans, RHS included a review of the leveraging policy in its overall assessment of the payment assistance formula.
In the mid-1990s, RHS adopted a policy of encouraging borrowers to obtain a portion of their financing from commercial lenders. The rationale behind this policy was, in part, to increase the amount of funds available for rural borrowers by utilizing private lenders to supply a portion of the financing. For example, if RHS has authority to lend $1 billion for section 502 direct loans and borrowers collectively secure 20 percent of their financing from private lenders, then RHS has effectively increased its available funding to $1.2 billion and is able to assist 2,500 more families than otherwise would have been possible (assuming an average principal amount of $80,000). However, the results of the payment assistance assessment demonstrate that the actual effect of leveraging decreases the amount of funds available.
Effects of Leveraging Policy on Program Level
The following exhibits demonstrate the effects of the current leveraging policy on the amount of funds available to finance housing in rural areas. The Payment Assistance to Principal and Interest payment at the note rate (PA/PI Ratio) represents the most significant factor that determines the subsidy rate for the program. For the purposes of this illustration, it is assumed that the other four inputs to calculate subsidy rate remain constant. Thus, the same percentage change in the PA/PI ratio will be carried over to the subsidy rate. Further, to demonstrate the effects, it is necessary to assume the level of budget authority remains the same.
Definitions:
[[Page 8541]]
Program level is the amount of financing available to finance single family homes.
Budget Authority is the actual cost of providing the financing.
Subsidy Rate is the factor used to determine budget authority. It includes interest subsidy, a factor of loan losses, maintenance, and other costs associated directly with the loan.
The program level is determined by dividing available budget authority by the subsidy rate. For example, under the current formula, $201 million in budget authority divided by .194 subsidy rate (the program subsidy rate for FY 2003) equals $1,038 million in program level. There is only one subsidy rate for the entire section 502 direct loan program, which includes both leveraged, and non-leveraged loans. The following rates are for illustrative purposes to show the difference in cost for the leveraging provision of the payment assistance formula (i.e. leveraged loans under the current formula are not subject to the payment assistance floor rate.)
Exhibit 20.
Current Formula Including Leveraging Provision
Program level
Budget authority
Subsidy rate PA/PI ratio
$1,038 million................................ $201 million....................
19.40%
39.75
Alternative 2 Without Leveraging Provision
Estimated Program level
Budget authority
subsidy rate PA/PI ratio
$1,100 million................................ $201 million....................
18.27%
37.43
Alternative 2 With 30% Leveraging Requirement
Estimated Program level
Budget authority
subsidy rate PA/PI ratio
$838 million.................................. $201 million....................
23.99%
49.16
Comparing the first two formulas, the 5.8 percent decrease in the PA/PI ratio occurs with the elimination of the leveraging provision. Applying the same percentage decrease to the subsidy rate and dividing the budget authority by that result produces a $62 million (or 6 percent) increase in the program level.
Conversely, with the inclusion of a requirement of obtaining 30 percent of each loan from commercial lenders, the PA/PI ratio increases by 24 percent. Applying the same percentage increase to the subsidy rate raises it to 23.99 percent, which causes the program level to decrease 19 percent to $838 million.
Of the 219,281 payment assistance agreements analyzed as part of this assessment, 66,451 (30 percent) were for leveraged loans, meaning that a portion of the original principal amount was obtained from a private lender.\6\
\6\ Included in the definition of leveraged loans are situations in which non-profit organizations provide a grant to buy down the original principal amount.
Even though 30 percent of the 219,281 payment assistance agreements made between 1996 and 2003 were associated with leveraged loans, the leveraged portion of the amount of principal financed by borrowers was relatively insignificant. Of the 10,502 new borrowers in fiscal year 2003, 4,548 (43 percent) were leveraged loans, but the leveraged portion of the principal accounted for only 8.16 percent of the total loan level.\7\ The effect of leveraging at different thresholds (e.g., 30 percent and 40 percent), on the total loan volume is demonstrated in the following exhibits:
\7\ The assessment was performed on the borrowers who have a loan origination date within fiscal year 2003 and have the first payment assistance agreement in the provided dataset.
Exhibit 21.--Details of Fiscal Year 2003 New Borrowers' Leverage Information
Number of
Leveraged Current formula
note rate leveraged leveraged Total loans loan amount loan amount amount year 1 loans
loans
(percent)
Actual Payment Assistance.................................... 39.75%
5,954
4,548 10,502 $77.4 M $948 M
8.16
Payment Assistance Ratio of Alternative 2 in Year 1
Provision & note rate Leveraged
$ Leveraged $ Total $ Leveraged/
Scenario
threshold in year 1 loans Total amount loan amount $ total (percent)
(percent)
1............... Without Leverage..
37.43
0 10,502
$0.00 $948,343.39
0.00 2............... With Provision 30%
49.16
3,850 10,502 96,999.33 948,343.39
10.23 Threshold. 3............... With Provision 20%
19.15
4,646 10,502 79,169.39 948,343.39
8.35 Threshold.
[[Page 8542]]
Note: In evaluating the effects of requiring borrowers to obtain 30 percent of the principal from commercial lenders, it was apparent that leveraging would benefit only 3,850 of the 10,502 borrowers, and the remainder would obtain a non-leveraged loan. Some elect to pay 25 percent of AAI toward PITI, and some are paying at 1 percent interest rate under a non-leveraged scenario. The equivalent amount of leveraged principal for the 3,850 borrowers is $97 million, equaling 10.23 percent of the total lending. The same logic would hold true if the leveraging threshold was set at 20 percent.
Because leveraging did not appear to be achieving the policy objective of increasing the funding available for rural homeowners, the assessment also analyzed the results of raising the leveraging threshold to minimum levels of 20 percent and 30 percent. Not only did establishing a minimum level not materially affect the total amount of funding available, 8.35 percent and 10.23 percent respectively, the minimum levels significantly increased the amount of payment assistance required.
Hence, the policy of using the payment assistance formula to encourage leveraging actually decreases available funding. The effect, with two different market interest rates, is demonstrated in the following exhibits: Assumptions
(1) AAI = $24,000
(2) Note Rate = Market Rate
(3) Annual T&I = 1.8 percent of principal
Exhibit 22.--Market Interest Rate 6 Percent
Adjusted Weighted Total
PA ratio
PITI-to- average No.
Scenario
original USDA loan
PA
(PA/USDA Borrower's income interest amount amount
P&I) total P&I ratio
rate (percent)
(percent) (percent)
1................................... Non-Leveraged.......... $90,000 $90,000
$142
$27
$380
25.00 ........... 2................................... Leveraged (20%)........ 90,000 72,000
204
49
318
21.90
2.0 3................................... Leveraged (30%)........ 90,000 63,000
179
49
344
23.18
2.5
Exhibit 23.--Market Interest Rate 8 Percent
Adjusted Weighted Total
PA ratio
PITI-to- average No.
Scenario
original USDA loan
PA
(PA/USDA Borrower's income interest amount amount
P&I total P&I ratio
rate (percent)
(percent) (percent)
1................................... Non-Leveraged.......... $90,000 $90,000
$267
41
$380
25.00 ........... 2................................... Leveraged (20%)........ 90,000 72,000
304
59
343
23.14
2.40 3................................... Leveraged (30%)........ 90,000 63,000
266
59
381
25.04
3.10
Based on the results demonstrated by this analysis, RHS proposes not to provide additional payment assistance or use the payment assistance formula as a means of encouraging the use of leveraged funding. It is simpler to have a single calculation. So, in conclusion, RHS proposes to adopt Alternative 2, under which payment assistance will be based on a borrower contribution of 25% of AAI towards PITI, however in no case will the amount of payment assistance exceed the amount needed to repay the loan if it were amortized at a one percent rate.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 3550
Accounting, Housing, Loan programs--Housing and community development, Low and Moderate income housing, Manufactured homes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas, Subsidies.
Therefore, Chapter XXXV, title 7, Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended to read as follows:
PART 3550--DIRECT SINGLE FAMILY HOUSING LOANS AND GRANTS
1. The authority citation for part 3550 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 42 U.S.C. 1480.
Subpart B--Section 502 Origination
2. Section 3550.68 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 3550.68 Payment subsidies.
RHS administers three types of payment subsidies: interest credit, payment assistance method 1, and payment assistance method 2. Payment subsidies are subject to recapture when the borrower transfers title or ceases to occupy the property.
(a) Eligibility for payment subsidy. (1) Applicants or borrowers who receive loans on program terms are eligible to receive payment subsidy if they personally occupy the property and have adjusted income at or below the applicable moderate-income limit.
(2) Borrowers with loans approved before August 1, 1968, are not eligible for payment assistance, even if they assumed the loan after that date.
(3) Payment subsidy may be granted for initial loans or subsequent loans made in conjunction with an assumption only if the term of the loan is at least 25 years or more.
(4) Payment subsidy may be granted for subsequent loans not made in conjunction with an assumption if the initial loan was for a term of 25 years or more.
(b) Determining type of payment subsidy. (1) A borrower currently receiving interest credit will continue to receive it for the initial loan and for any subsequent loan for as long as the borrower is eligible for and remains on interest credit.
(2) A borrower currently receiving payment assistance using payment assistance method 1 will continue to receive it for the initial loan and for any subsequent loan for as long as the borrower is eligible for and remains on payment assistance method 1.
(3) A borrower who has never received payment subsidy, or who has stopped receiving interest credit or payment assistance method 1, and at a later date again qualifies for a payment subsidy, will receive payment assistance method 2.
(c) Calculation of payment assistance. Regardless of the method used, payment assistance may not exceed the amount necessary if the loan were amortized at an interest rate of one percent.
(1) Payment assistance method 2. The amount of payment assistance granted is the lesser of the difference between:
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(i) The annualized promissory note installment plus the cost of taxes and insurance less twenty-five percent of the borrower's adjusted income; or
(ii) The annualized promissory note installment less amount the borrower would pay if the loan were amortized at an interest rate of one percent.
(2) Payment assistance method 1. The amount of payment assistance granted is the difference between the annualized note rate installment as prescribed on the promissory note and the lesser of:
(i) The floor payment, which is defined as a minimum percentage of adjusted income that the borrower must pay for PITI: 22 percent for very low-income borrowers, 24 percent for low-income borrowers with adjusted income below 65 percent of area adjusted median, and 26 percent for low-income borrowers with adjusted incomes between 65 and 80 percent of area adjusted median; or
(ii) The annualized note rate installment and the payment at the equivalent interest rate, which is determined by a comparison of the borrower's adjusted income to the adjusted median income for the area in which the security property is located. The following chart is used to determine the equivalent interest rate. Percentage of Median Income and the Equivalent Interest Rate
When the applicant's adjusted income is:
THEN the equivalent Equal to or more than: (percent) BUT less than: interest rate is \1\ (percent)
00................................ 50.01 of adjusted
1 median income. 50.01............................. 55 of adjusted
2 median income. 55................................ 60 of adjusted
3 median income. 60................................ 65 of adjusted
4 median income. 65................................ 70 of adjusted
5 median income. 70................................ 75 of adjusted
6 median income. 75................................ 80.01 of adjusted
6.5 median income. 80.01............................. 90 of adjusted
7.5 median income. 90................................ 100 of adjusted
8.5 median income. 100............................... 110 of adjusted
9 median income. 110............................... Or more than
9.5 adjusted median income.
\1\ Or note rate, whichever is less; in no case will the equivalent interest rate be less than one percent.
(d) Calculation of interest credit. The amount of interest credit granted is the difference between the note rate installment as prescribed on the promissory note and the greater of:
(1) Twenty percent of the borrower's adjusted income less the cost of real estate taxes and insurance, or
(2) The amount the borrower would pay if the loan were amortized at an interest rate of one percent.
(e) Annual review. The borrower's income will be reviewed annually to determine whether the borrower is eligible for continued payment subsidy. The borrower must notify RHS whenever an adult member of the household changes or obtains employment, there is a change in household composition, or if income increases by at least 10 percent so that RHS can determine whether a review of the borrower's circumstances is required.
Dated: February 3, 2006. Thomas C. Dorr, Under Secretary, Rural Development.
[FR Doc. 06-1349 Filed 2-16-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-XV-P