The Department of Housing and Urban Development is seeking White House approval to increase the upfront mortgage insurance premium charged by the Federal Housing Administration to borrowers. At a press conference scheduled for Wednesday morning, HUD and FHA officials are expected to announce other changes, including tighter underwriting standards. If approved by the White House, FHA will increase the 1.75% upfront mortgage premium (paid by those who take out a common type of home loan) simply by issuing a "notice" that goes into effect within 30 to 60 days. HUD also may ask Congress for permission to raise the annual premium that is paid monthly. This is 55 basis points paid over the course of the year for relatively low-downpayment loans.
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The total delinquency rate rose 0.2 percentage points annually in March, with the share of loans 90 days late rising out of the range they were in since 2024.
17m ago -
The test of automated risk assessments for government-sponsored enterprise-eligible mortgages are designed to help determine when waivers might be possible.
33m ago - AB - Policy & Regulation
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said Friday that she believes price growth is still heading toward the central bank's 2% target when factoring out one-time shocks such as tariffs and elevated oil prices.
3h ago -
Consumers sued 11 more industry players in the past two months over alleged unwanted contact, as the pace of spam call class action cases increases.
7h ago -
Deephaven expanded its HELOC product for wholesale lenders, Attom launched an AVM model and First American added an AI assistant to its title platform.
May 28 -
The Canadian-American bank's first AI agent does the work of gathering any missing documents and verifying data for mortgage applications.
May 28







