83i-2502-0579 rev 10.29.09

83i-2502-0579 rev 10.29.09.docx

Application for HUD/FHA Insured Mortgage “Hope for Homeowners”

OMB: 2502-0579

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Paperwork Reduction Act Submission

Please read the instruction before completing this form. For additional forms or assistance in completing this forms, contact your agency’s Paperwork Reduction Officer. Send two copies of this form, the collection instrument to be reviewed, the Supporting Statement, and any additional documentation to: Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Docket Library, Room 10102, 725 Seventeenth St. NW, Washington, DC 20503.

1. Agency/Subagency Originating Request:

U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

Office of Housing, Office of Single Family Program Development


2. OMB Control Number:

a. 2502-0579


b. None

     

3. Type of information collection: (check one)

  1. New Collection

  2. Revision of a currently approved collection

  3. Extension of a currently approved collection

  4. Reinstatement, without change, of previously approved

collection for which approval has expired

  1. Reinstatement, with change, of previously approved collection

for which approval has expired

  1. Existing collection in use without an OMB control number

For b-f, note item A2 of Supporting Statement instructions.

4. Type of review requested: (check one)

  1. Regular

  2. Emergency - Approval requested by      

  3. Delegated

5. Small entities: Will this information collection have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities?

Yes No

6. Requested expiration date:

a. Three years from approval date b. Other (specify)

     

7. Title:

Application for HUD/FHA Insured Mortgage “Hope for Homeowners”

8. Agency form number(s): (if applicable)


HUD92900-H4H, HUD92915-H4H, and HUD92917-H4H

9. Keywords:


Housing, Mortgage Credit, HOPE for Homeowners, Appreciation Sharing, Equity Sharing

10. Abstract:

This information is collected on new mortgages offered by FHA approved mortgagees to mortgagors who are at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure. The new FHA insured mortgages refinance the borrowers existing mortgage at a significatnt writedown. Under the program the mortgagors share the newly created equity (Exit Premium) with FHA.


11. Affected public: (mark primary with “P” and all others that apply with “X”)

a.  Individuals or households e.  Farms

b. P Business or other for-profit f.  Federal Government

c.  Not-for-profit institutions g.  State, Local or Tribal Government

12. Obligation to respond: (mark primary with “P” and all others that apply with “X”)

a.  Voluntary

b. P Required to obtain or retain benefits

c.  Mandatory

13. Annual reporting and recordkeeping hour burden:

a. Number of respondents 8,000

b. Total annual responses 486,313

Percentage of these responses collected electronically 7

c. Total annual hours requested 339,549

d. Current OMB inventory 915,040

e. Difference (+,-) -575,491

f. Explanation of difference:

1. Program change: -575,491

2. Adjustment:

14. Annual reporting and recordkeeping cost burden: (in thousands of dollars)

Do not include costs based on the hours in item 13.

a. Total annualized capital/startup costs

b. Total annual costs (O&M)

c. Total annualized cost requested

d. Current OMB inventory

e. Difference

f. Explanation of difference:

1. Program change:

2. Adjustment:

15. Purpose of Information collection: (mark primary with “P” and all others that apply with “X”)

a. P Application for benefits e.  Program planning or management

b.  Program evaluation f.  Research

c.  General purpose statistics g. X Regulatory or compliance

d. X Audit

16. Frequency of recordkeeping or reporting: (check all that apply)

a. Recordkeeping b. Third party disclosure

c. Reporting:

1. On occasion 2. Weekly 3. Monthly

4. Quarterly 5. Semi-annually 6. Annually

7. Biennually 8. Other (describe)      


17. Statistical methods:

Does this information collection employ statistical methods?

Yes No


18. Agency contact: (person who can best answer questions regarding the content of this submission)

Name: Stephanie Schader

Phone(202) 708-2121



19. Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions

On behalf of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, I certify that the collection of information encompassed by this request complies with 5 CFR 1320.9.

Note: The text of 5 CFR 1320.9, and the related provisions of 5 CFR 1320/8(b)(3). appear at the end of the instructions. The certification is to be made with reference to those regulatory provisions as set forth in the instructions.


The following is a summary of the topics, regarding the proposed collections of information, that the certification covers:

  1. It is necessary for the proper performance of agency functions;

  2. It avoids unnecessary duplication;

  3. It reduces burden on small entities;

  4. It uses plain, coherent, and unambiguous terminology that is understandable to respondents;

  5. Its implementation will be consistent and compatible with current reporting and recordkeeping practices;

  6. It indicates the retention periods for recordkeeping requirements;

  7. It informs respondents of the information called for under 5 CFR 1320.8(b)(3):

  1. Why the information is being collected;

  2. Use of the information;

  3. Burden estimate;

  4. Nature of response (voluntary, required for a benefit, or mandatory);

  5. Nature and extent of confidentiality; and

  6. Need to display currently valid OMB control number;

  1. It was developed by an office that has planned and allocated resources for the efficient and effective management and use of the information to collected (see note in item 19 of the instructions);

  2. It uses effective and efficient statistical survey methodology; and

  3. It makes appropriate use of information technology.


If you are unable to certify compliance with any of these provisions, identify the item below and explain the reason in item 18 of the Supporting Statement.

     


Signature of Program Official:




X

Michael E. Winiaraski, Deputy Director, Organizational Policy, Planning and Analysis Division, HROA

Date:

Signature of Senior Officer or Designee:





Lillian Deitzer, Departmental Reports Management Officer

Date:

Supporting Statement for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions


Application for HUD/FHA Insured Mortgage “HOPE for Homeowners”


Model HOPE for Homeowners Consumer Disclosure and Certification Form, Model Understanding Key Provisions of Appreciation Sharing, Model Appreciation Sharing Worksheet and Certification, Shared Equity Note and Mortgage, Shared Appreciation Note and Mortgage


A. JUSTIFICATION


1. Why this information is necessary:


The HOPE for Homeowners Act of 2008, located in Title IV of Division A of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA) (Public Law 110-289, 122 Stat. 2654, approved July 30, 2008), amended Title II of the National Housing Act to add a new section 257. New section 257 (12 U.S.C. 1701z-22) established within the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), HOPE for Homeowners, a temporary FHA program that offers homeowners and existing mortgage loan holders (or servicers acting on their behalf) insurance on the refinancing of loans for distressed mortgagors. Regulations published in 24 CFR 4001.01 through 24 CFR 4001.408 detail the requirements pertinent to HUD’s single family mortgage insurance programs, i.e., the eligibility requirements and underwriting procedures, which are determined by the documents included in this clearance package.


“Under the Program, new mortgages are offered by FHA-approved mortgagees to mortgagors who are at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure. The new FHA-insured mortgages refinance the borrower’s existing mortgage at a significant write-down. Eligible borrowers must be unable to afford their existing mortgage payments, must occupy the residence that is the security for the refinanced mortgage as their primary residence, and may not have any present ownership interest in another residence. Investors and investor properties are not eligible for the FHA-insured refinanced mortgages. Under the Program, participating mortgagors share their new equity and future appreciation with FHA. Additionally, participation in this Program is voluntary. No mortgagees, servicers, or investors are compelled to participate.


Section 257 of the NHA prohibits the new mortgage loan insured by FHA from exceeding 132 percent of the dollar amount limitation in effect for 2007 under section 305(a)(2) of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation Act (12 U.S.C.. 1454(a)(2)) for a property of applicable size. In addition, section 257 also provides that the term of the FHA-insured refinanced mortgage shall have a maturity of not less than 30 years, and must bear a single rate of interest that is fixed for the entire term of the mortgage. Section 257 directs that a mortgagor participating in the Program may not grant a new junior lien on the mortgaged property during the first 5 years of the term of the mortgage insured under the Program, except as the Board may determine is necessary to ensure the maintenance of property standards, and subject to the requirements that any new outstanding liens (1) do not reduce the value of FHA’s equity in the mortgagor’s home; and (2) when combined with the mortgagor’s existing mortgage indebtedness, do not exceed 95 percent of the home’s appraised value at the time of the new junior lien.”


The passage of the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act of 2009 (Division A of Public Law 111-22, 123 Stat.1632, approved May 20, 2009) included changes to HOPE for Homeowners resulting in a restructured program. Therefore FHA is amending its Paperwork Reduction Act Submission to reflect the information collection requirements of the revised program.


The HOPE for Homeowners Consumer Disclosure and Certification Form (HUD-92915-H4H (10/2009)) and HOPE for Homeowners Subordinate Lien Upfront Payment Worksheet (HUD-92917-H4H (10/2009)), make it possible to determine eligibility and, consequently, the insurance fund for the single-family mortgage insurance programs is not placed in jeopardy. The HOPE for Homeowners Consumer Disclosure and Certification Form is used by prospective mortgagees to disclose special restrictions of the Program and to obtain the mortgagor’s certification that he/she has not: intentionally defaulted on their existing mortgage or any other substantial debt in the last 5 years, been convicted of fraud in the past 10 years and did not knowingly or willfully furnish material false information for the purpose of obtaining their existing mortgage. HOPE for Homeowners Subordinate Liens Upfront Payment Worksheet is used by the mortgagees to calculate the dollar amount that each subordinate lien holder could receive in the form of an upfront payment, if any, and obtain the lien holder’s signature acknowledging it has read and accepts the terms of the worksheet and is prepared to execute a full release of its lien in exchange for an upfront payment. The Exit Premium Note and Mortgage protect HUD’s interests in the equity and appreciation in the property and the attached model documents are provided as a reference for mortgagees. The FHA HOPE for Homeowners Attachment to FHA Loan Underwriting and Transmittal Summary (HUD-92900-H4H) is not a required form nor does it collect any additional data not already addressed in this submission. This form summarizes the H4H specific data on one page so it can be easily referenced.


2. How this information is used:


Lenders obtain information from borrowers in the normal course of business. HUD does not ascribe burden hours to information provided by the borrowers. Lenders report information to FHA for the purpose of obtaining mortgage insurance. Since the last submission there has been a decrease in respondents due to removal of trial modification requirement. The specific items of this information collection are as follows:


  1. The underwriter must determine that the borrower’s total monthly mortgage payment on the new H4H loan is less than the borrower’s aggregate total monthly mortgage payment on his or her existing (non-H4H) mortgage(s), including any subordinate mortgage liens, based on a fully-indexed, fully-amortizing PITI payment. Additionally, the lender must determine the borrower’s payment to income ratio on their existing mortgage loan(s) is greater than 31% as of the date of the H4H loan application. These calculations are specific to the H4H program and HUD ascribes burden hours.


  1. The underwriter must determine that the payment-to-income and debt-to-income ratios are at, or below, 31 percent and 43 percent, respectively on loans with a loan to value above 90.01 percent ; and at or below 38 percent and 50 percent, respectively for loans with a maximum loan to value of 90 percent.


  1. The file must contain evidence the mortgage being refinanced was originated on/before January 1, 2008. It is industry practice in refinance transactions to obtain information on the existing loan, thus HUD ascribes no burden hours.


  1. The lender must provide the ‘HOPE for Homeowners Consumer Disclosure and Certification’, (HUD 92915-H4H (10/2009)) signed and dated by the borrower at the time of initial application and when final documents are executed.


  1. The lender will calculate the dollar amount that each subordinate mortgage lien holder could receive from HUD’s share of future appreciation on the Subordinate Lien Upfront Payment Worksheet. Also, the originating lender will provide the subordinate lien holders with the Subordinate Lien Upfront Payment Worksheet, and obtain acknowledgement that they have read and accept the terms of the Subordinate Lien Upfront Payment Worksheet and is prepared to execute a full release of its lien in exchange for the upfront payment.


  1. Lenders already input several pieces of information into FHA Connection both at the time of case number assignment and endorsement. There are additional data fields for H4H loans. As an optional tool for the lender, we have summarized the additional data on the HUD -92900-H4H, an attachment to the underwriting transmittal.


  1. The lender will prepare and cause the borrower to execute the Exit Premium Note and Mortgage (EPM) for the H4H transaction.


  1. The lender will record the EPM with other loan documents, register the H4H security instrument in the Mortgage Electronic Registration System (MERS) as a MERS Original Mortgage, and deliver the original EPM note and recorded mortgage to HUD’s servicing contractor.


  1. Evidence the first payment on the new H4H mortgage was made by the borrower and not by any interested party to the transaction, from the loan proceeds or escrowed at closing.


  1. In the event the lender receives a warning that the borrower has been convicted of fraud at the time of case number assignment, and believes it in error, the lender must document to the Homeownership Center that the borrower has not been convicted of fraud.



  1. The H4H program and documentation burden sunsets on September 30, 2011. Each application request has its own unique characteristics of property, mortgage amount, and borrower; therefore, the use of computers can only be applied to the storage and retrieval of reference information and not to the burden-reduction aspect. However, data entry on these forms is increasingly generated by proprietary loan origination systems (LOS), if purchased or licensed by the lender, with much of that information provided electronically to HUD. Mortgage lenders may avail themselves of electronic options for data transmissions. In 2005, HUD began accepting case binders electronically. Approximately 7% of all case binders are now submitted in this manner.


  1. No duplication exists due to the fact that each application is unique to the eligibility requirements explained in item 2. No similar information exists.


  1. The information collected does not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.


  1. The reporting burden is loan-specific and, thus, cannot be conducted less frequently than on every single loan submitted to FHA for insurance endorsement.


  1. Lenders are required to keep records for the duration of the mortgage loan, which could be as long as 30 years. However, the average length of an FHA-insured mortgage is approximately 7.5 years.


  1. In accordance with the requirements of 5 CFR 1320.8(d), the Notice soliciting comments on this collection of information was published in the Federal Register on April 6, 2009 (Volume 74, Number 64 page 15514). No comments were received.


  1. There are no gifts or other type payments made to respondents.


  1. The Privacy Act Statement provided in form HUD-92900-H4H Section III, “Notice to Borrowers” furnishes the authority for the collection of the information requested and the assurance of confidentiality as established by law. Information regarding the borrower's financial status and income data are only used to determine eligibility.



  1. This information collection does not contain any questions of a sensitive nature.


  1. Estimate of public burden.


Information Collection

Number of Respondents

Frequency of Response

Responses Per Annum

Burden Hour Per Response

Annual Burden Hours

Hourly Cost Per Response

Annual Cost

HOPE for Homeowners Consumer Disclosure and Certification

92915-H4H

8,000

1 per loan

96,875

.5

48,438

$36.26

$1,756,362.00

EPM

8,000

1 per loan

96,875

.25

24,219

$36.26

$878,181.00

Subordinate Lien Upfront Payment Worksheet

92917-H4H

8,000

1 per loan

96,875

2.0

193,750

$36.26

$7,025,375.00

Eligibility Debt to Income ration as of H4H application date

8,000

1 per loan

96,875

.50

48,438

$36.26

$1,756,362.00

Qualifying Debt to Income Ratio

8,000

1 per loan

96,875

.25

24,219

$36.26

$878,181.00

92900-H4H*








Evidence Fraud warning is a false positive

8,000

1 per qualifying loan

1938

.25

485

$36.26

$17,586.00

Totals

8,000


486,313

Varies

339,549


$12,312,047.00

*This form is provided as a reference only. The mortgagee may choose whether or not to complete it.


Respondents are the FHA approved Mortgagees, whose number totals approximately 8,000.


For the estimates of the cost burden to the public resulting from the collection of information, HUD interviewed lenders from small, medium, and large mortgage companies. HUD spoke with Judith Smith of Judith O. Smith Mortgage Group, Lauri Siebenthall of PrimeLending, Tonia Gustafson of Wells Fargo, Brenda Walker of the Kentucky Housing Corporation, and David Wescott of the Florida Housing Finance Corporation.


For the burden hour estimates, HUD uses the longest estimated time to account for manual process where needed. The one hour estimate for the HOPE for Homeowners certification was derived from information provided by Ms. Gustafson. She noted that the process will require multiple manual processes, including finding, tracking and identifying the original loan.


Ms. Gustafson, Ms. Siebenthall, and Ms. Smith each indicated that the appreciation sharing worksheet would require lenders to explain the H4H loan to subordinate lien holders, who tend to be smaller lenders. It also may necessitate extra discussion time to identify the person within the organization with the proper authority to extinguish the lien.


Ms. Siebenthall indicated that once the additional form requirements were incorporated into their current automated process, the processing of H4H loans would not create a substantial number of additional burden hours for staff.


Additionally, HUD used the Congressional Budget Office estimate that the H4H program will serve 400,000 homeowners over the 3 year period. We used one-third of that total for the annual frequency of response.



  1. There are no additional costs to respondents.


  1. The annualized cost estimates for the Federal Government are based on a $36.26 per hour costs that is based on a GS-12 staff review.


The cost to the Federal Government relates the review of direct endorsement and lender insurance cases.


Information Collection

Number of Respondents

Frequency of Response

Responses Per Annum

Burden Hour Per Response

Annual Burden Hours

Hourly Cost Per Response

Annual Cost

Case Binder Review

1

75% of loans submitted for insurance

72,657

1.0

72,657

36.26

$2,634,543.00



  1. This is an amendment of a currently approved collection. The program revisions resulting from the additional legislation have decreased the responses per annum and annual burden hours by 601,160 and 178,687 respectively. Additionally, the estimated number of responses has decreased. The reduction in the responses per annum and annual burden hours are further reduced by 345,800 and 229,691 respectively. The information collection is required to meet the statutory and regulatory requirements of the HOPE for Homeowners Program established in Title IV of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008.


16. This information collection does not include results that will be published.


17. We are not seeking approval to avoid displaying the expiration date of the OMB approval.


18. There are no exceptions to the certification statement identified in item 19 of the OMB 83-I.


B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods


The collection of information does not employ statistical methods.


OMB 83-I 10/95

File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
File TitleSupporting Statement for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions
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File Created2021-02-03

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