DS News

DS News November 2022

DSNews delivers stories, ideas, links, companies, people, events, and videos impacting the mortgage default servicing industry.

Issue link: http://digital.dsnews.com/i/1484257

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 86 of 99

85 85 85 INVESTMENT GOVERNMENT PROPERTY PRESERVATION and special bond categories to attract social impact investor capital." e authors recognize the efforts of the GSEs that change should be implemented as positives in the report. "Both GSEs' strategies explicitly call out challenges disproportionately facing households and communities of color in renting and owning homes. is is important and long overdue," said the authors. "e GSEs have maintained plans under their respective Duty to Serve and affordable housing goal regimes, but these plans have never squarely focused on narrowing the racial homeownership gap. In addition to the overall focus on the racial homeownership gap, the EHFPs include several noteworthy provisions." And as affordability remains a major hurdle for many in today's market, the Urban Institute team of authors shift their focus on the critical need for high-quality, affordable rental housing, and the important role the GSEs play in multifamily finance. "Although taken together, these plans will have only marginal effects on the overall supply, Freddie Mac's planned initiatives to expand the supply of affordable rental housing are especially welcome because financial engineering alone will not resolve persistent rental affordability issues," said the authors. "Freddie Mac is also extending its Develop the Developer initiative in underserved communities of color from single- family (one to four units) to multifamily homes (five or more units); it is extending its 'linked loan' offering that supports emerging developers to allow for the financing of noncontiguous two-to-four-unit properties (Freddie Mac 2022, 59). And both EHFPs plan to explore standardizing best practices to make them fairer, such as tenant protections and housing choice voucher acceptance (Freddie Mac) and security deposits (Fannie Mae), all positive steps leading to broader market adoption of more equitable rental markets." One major concern of the authors is that neither Fannie Mae nor Freddie Mac's plan recognizes the GSEs' role in the current racial homeownership gaps as evidenced by the purchase loan channel shares by race and ethnicity exhibited below. "Both plans discuss how historical systemic racial discrimination has led to the homeownership and wealth gaps for people of color, but neither plan has a section on how GSE policies perpetuated these gaps and inequities," found the authors. "Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data confirm the GSEs do less mortgage lending to Black and Hispanic borrowers than the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) programs; 2021 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data show that Black borrowers are 5.3% of GSE purchase lending, 18.8% of FHA purchase lending, and 13.7% of VA purchase lending. GSE lending to Hispanic borrowers shows a similar pattern: 12.4% of GSE purchase lending, 27.5% of FHA purchase lending, and 13.9% of VA purchase lending. ese numbers were noticeably absent from both reports." Authors Ratcliffe, Goodman, and Stegman conclude their analysis by pointing out the GSE's missed opportunities and unresolved issues, including: » Leveraging the power of Credit Risk Transfers (CRTs), pilot programs, and the retained portfolio to expand equity in a safe and sound manner » Increasing public data disclosure » Increasing impact through collaboration among the GSEs » Increasing impact through collaboration between the GSEs and the FHA » Building a lasting commitment to equity "e EHFPs are an important step in attempting to close the racial homeownership gap, and there is a lot to like in these plans. But the plans have weaknesses, including trying to tackle too many issues, with a lack of focus and no emphasis on measurable outcomes. And several items are missing from these plans, including collaboration between the GSEs, the interaction between the GSEs and the FHA, and steps to insulate these plans from political whims."

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of DS News - DS News November 2022