Inman

More ARM borrowers switching to fixed-rate loans

The mortgage lending market is self correcting, with lenders tightening underwriting guidelines and shifting to more secure mortgages, according to the latest quarterly index compiled by a University of Pennsylvania expert on lending.

Susan M. Wachter, professor of Real Estate and Finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, said that despite problems in the subprime mortgage market, “the sky isn’t falling.” In a press release announcing the release of the latest U.S. Mortgage Payment Index, Wachter said “consumers have more options than ever to get into a good mortgage and out of a bad one.”

Wachter said lenders have tightened underwriting guidelines and financed more loans for people with credit scores of 650 or higher. More than 60 percent of broker-sold mortgages in January were prime, she said, up from 50 percent in 2006.

Still, 89 percent of borrowers with one-year adjustable-rate mortgages were able to refinance into long-term, fixed-rate loans in the first quarter of 2007, a 4 percent increase from the same time last year. Of those choosing to refinance hybrid ARM loans, 84 percent chose fixed-rate mortgages, an 8 percent increase from last year, Wachter said, citing Freddie Mac data.

There was a 55 percent spike in mortgage insurance applications in March over February, and volume remained high in April, Wachter said. Private mortgage insurance is typically required when borrowers put down small or no down payments. But Wachter said a fixed-rate loan with private mortgage insurance is often a more affordable alternative to piggyback or “exotic” loans.

Wachter recommended consumers with “bad” mortgages raise their credit scores above 620, call lenders to discuss refinancing into a fixed-rate prime mortgage, and check with their lenders or mortgage insurer about workout programs if they are having trouble making payments.