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Private
Mortgage Insurance 101
Before
the advent of mortgage insurance, the average home buyer was
required to put a minimum of 20% down to purchase a home.
This sizeable down payment reduced a lender's risk in the event of
foreclosure or default of the loan by creating a large enough
equity position in the home to cover the cost of selling the home,
recovering any expenses incurred during the foreclosure process,
and adding a little profit into the margin.
In the 1950's several entrepreneurs began testing the market for
mortgage insurance. In May of 1956, Congress passed
legislation expanding the role of FHA and in 1957, the first
modern day mortgage insurance company opened in Milwaukee and
opened the door to the beginning of low down payment conventional
loans. Progress was slow until 1971, when a regulatory authorities expanded lending limits for conventional loans, up to 95% of appraised value.
Private
mortgage insurance (also known as PMI) protects lenders against
loss due to foreclosure. This protection allows lenders to
offer more mortgage loans with low down payments (and in some
cases, no down payments). Private mortgage insurance is not
life insurance, as some insurance agents would like you to
believe. Private mortgage insurance only protects the
lender. Mortgage life insurance protects your home and
family by paying all or a portion of the mortgage in the event of
your death.
For
many home buyers, private mortgage insurance is a necessary
evil. There is no benefit to the home buyer.
Though the amount paid each month is determined by the type of
loan and the percentage the home buyer puts down, most home buyers
will have one form of mortgage insurance or another.
However,
the Federal Government passed the "Homeowner's Protection Act
of 1997" that reformed the then current private mortgage
insurance regulations. The key provision of this law forces
most lenders to automatically cancel private mortgage insurance
when the home owner's mortgage reaches 78% of the home's original
purchase price. Unfortunately this only applied to loans
originated after July 29, 1999.
To
begin, select from the column on the right.
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