June 6, 2005 Revised October 5, 2005, December 3, 2007
Single File Mortgage Insurance is lender-pay rather than borrower-pay
mortgage insurance. It is a third option for borrowers who cannot put
20% down, the other one being a second ("piggyback") mortgage. Any one
of them might be best for any particular borrower, but a system based on
lender-pay mortgage insurance would work best for borrowers over the
long-run.
"I recently was told about single file mortgage insurance, which is
supposedly superior to piggyback arrangements. Is it?"
Single File Mortgage Insurance is Lender-Pay
Home purchasers who cannot make a down payment of 20% today have three
ways to go: traditional borrower-pay mortgage insurance; second or
"piggyback" mortgages; and lender-pay mortgage insurance. Single File is
MGIC’s name for its lender-pay program.
From a system perspective, lender-pay mortgage insurance is the best
option, and I look for it to prosper. That does not necessarily mean,
however, that a particular borrower might not find a better deal with
one of the other options, as I’ll explain below.
Drawbacks of Traditional Mortgage Insurance
Under traditional mortgage insurance, the borrower purchases the policy
and pays the premiums, but the lender selects the insurer. This is an
odious arrangement, since it gives the lender referral power and a
preference for higher rather than lower premiums. Higher premiums permit
larger kickbacks to the lenders for the referral of business to the
insurers.
While direct kickbacks are illegal under the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act (RESPA), there are numerous ways to legitimize them. One
that has become common among large lenders is to establish a reinsurance
affiliate that shares the premiums on insurance sold to the lender’s
customers. This is kosher under RESPA, since the affiliate also shares
the risk. The reality, however, is that reinsurance deals are disguised
(and costly) kickbacks.
Traditional mortgage insurance has another unholy feature -- the
insurance runs on well past the time that it is really needed. Since the
insurance protects the lender but the borrower pays for it, the lender
has no incentive to terminate the policy when the risk becomes minimal.
In 1999, Congress finally decided to do something about this,
establishing mandatory termination rules. The rules, however, are
extremely complex and difficult for borrowers to navigate. See
Cancelling Private Mortgage
Insurance 1 and
Cancelling
Private Mortgage Insurance 2.
Piggybacks as a Substitute For Mortgage Insurance
Fortunately, there are a lot of lenders in our system, and some of them
have little stake in the traditional mortgage insurance system. When
they discovered a few years ago that they could obtain a competitive
advantage by offering combination first and second mortgages instead,
they jumped at it. For example, to the borrower who could only put 5%
down, they offered an 80% first mortgage plus a 15% second, in lieu of a
95% first mortgage with mortgage insurance.
These came to be called "piggybacks". While the second mortgage has a
higher rate than the first, the higher rate is paid only on the second
mortgage and the interest is deductible. Premiums on traditional
mortgage insurance are paid on the entire first mortgage, and were not
deductible until 2007, when they were made deductible for that year
only.
Within just a few years, piggybacks became established as a major
alternative to traditional mortgage insurance. With their traditional
business shrinking at an alarming rate, the insurers have been under
enormous pressure to develop counter-measures. Lender-pay insurance is
the best of them.
Advantages of Lender-Pay Mortgage Insurance
Under lender-pay insurance, the lender pays the premium and charges the
borrower for it in the rate. This is better than traditional mortgage
insurance because lenders have an incentive to pay as little as possible
for the insurance, rather than to benefit as much as possible from their
referral power. Since lenders must compete in terms of interest rate,
the borrower ultimately will get the benefit of lower insurance
premiums.
The rate increment lasts as long as the mortgage, but that is also true
of the second mortgage part of piggyback arrangements. In addition,
lender-pay insurance is simpler: one loan, one rate. Piggybacks usually
involve an incremental upfront fee, and the second mortgage can be a
different type of instrument than the first mortgage. Frequently, it is
an adjustable rate mortgage of some type, which makes the package more
difficult for borrowers to assess.
In my view, a system based on lender-pay insurance will work better than
one using traditional insurance or piggybacks. This does not imply,
however, that in our existing system that offers all three choices,
borrowers will always do better with lender-pay insurance. Any
particular borrower might do better with borrower-pay insurance, as
noted in
Pros
and Cons: Mortgage Insurance Versus Higher Rate, or with a
piggyback, as noted in
Piggyback Loans: Two Mortgages Cost Less Than One?
Using Calculators
Most loan providers charge what the market will bear, which means that
you can easily overpay for any of the options. Contrary to what you may
hear from a loan provider, there is no general answer to the question of
which approach is less costly to the borrower. There are only specific
answers to individual deals, and the answer can vary from deal to deal.
To help with this problem, I developed three calculators. Calculator 13a
compares the costs of a piggyback deal and lender-pay insurance.
Calculator 14a compares the costs of traditional (borrower-pay)
insurance and lender-pay insurance. Calculator 14b compares the costs of
all three. Calculators are an excellent defense against high-powered
sales pitches.