November 6, 2000, Revised December 12, 2007
Because borrowers pay for mortgage insurance that protects the lender,
much of the responsibility for terminating the insurance when it is no
longer needed falls on the borrower. Unfortunately, the termination
rules are unavoidably complicated.
Borrower-Pay Mortgage Insurance Requires Termination Rules
The insured party in a mortgage insurance transaction is the lender.
Therefore, they should pay the premium and pass on the cost in the
interest rate. If lenders paid the premiums, they would decide when to
terminate individual loans, based on whether they believed the risk
remaining in the mortgage justified continued payment of the premium. If
the premium was a one-time payment, no such decision would have to be
made. In either case, borrowers would be out of it.
Some mortgage insurance is indeed lender-pay, and borrowers are not
bothered with complicated termination rules because they are not
involved. See
Single File Mortgage Insurance: An Advance? But most
policies remain borrower-pay.
When mortgage insurance premiums are paid by borrowers, lenders have no
financial incentive to terminate. Since lenders are protected by the
insurance but don’t pay for it, they have no reason to terminate
voluntarily. Borrowers are required to purchase insurance when they
don't have 20% equity in their home, but they may find themselves still
paying premiums when their equity is much higher than that. Lenders must
be forced to terminate by government. And that’s where the trouble
starts.
Why Mortgage Insurance Termination Rules Are Complicated
Governments begin with the principle that since borrowers are not
required to buy mortgage insurance if they put 20% down or more, the
insurance ought to terminate when their equity rises to 20%.
For example, a home buyer who borrows $95,000 to purchase a $100,000
home is putting only 5% down and must purchase mortgage insurance. But
when that borrower has paid down the loan balance to $80,000, the
insurance ought to terminate. That seems simple and fair.
It also seems fair to terminate if part of the increase in the owner’s
equity is a result of appreciation in market value. For example, the
borrower would have 20% equity if the property value rose to $110,000
while the loan balance was reduced to $88,000.
But suppose virtually all the increase in equity resulted from
appreciation within just a few months after purchase? In areas where
prices jump sharply, they can also drop sharply, which suggests that
there be some minimum period for retaining the insurance.
Termination rules also must take account of other developments that may
affect the lender’s risk. For example, it wouldn’t be fair to the lender
to require termination if the borrower has been chronically late on his
payments, has taken out a second mortgage, or has moved out and is
renting the house.
A major issue in government-mandated termination rules is where
responsibility lies for initiating termination? Lenders can be made
responsible if termination is based on the current loan balance and the
original property value, because the lender has that information. But
lenders can’t be made responsible for termination based on the current
property value, because they don’t have that information and it would be
inordinately costly to maintain it for every borrower.
There is no alternative to making
borrowers responsible for initiating termination based on current market
value. They know better than the lender what their property may be
worth.
But how do borrowers become
aware of the rules and procedures to follow in initiating the
termination process? For example, what must the borrower do to establish
the current value?
Government requires lenders to
disclose the rules and procedures at the time the loan is made. So
borrowers already suffering from information overload at the closing
table, get one more set of disclosures that they cannot absorb.
Multiple Government Entities Make it Worse
Congress in the Homeowners Protection Act of 1998 set out ground rules
for termination of private mortgage insurance on all mortgages
originated after July 29, 1999. Loans originated prior to that date
might be covered by state law. Ten states, including California and New
York earlier had passed similar legislation.
Following the Federal legislation, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both US
Government-sponsored enterprise, established their own termination rules
for the mortgages it purchases from lenders. These are more liberal, but
available only to borrowers whose loans were purchased by the agencies.
For my attempt to guide borrowers through this labyrinth, see
Cancelling Private Mortgage
Insurance (2).
Termination rules for mortgage insurance provided by the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) are completely different than those applicable to
private mortgage insurance, and are based on earlier Federal legislation
and regulations of the FHA. See
Cancelling FHA Insurance.