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Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI)
• What is PMI?
• How does PMI work?
• What does PMI cost?
• How is PMI paid?
• How does the buyer apply for PMI?
• What is 80-10-10 financing?
• Cancellation of PMI
• History of PMI
• PMI Companies (Names & Addresses)
What is PMI?
If you make a down payment of less than 20% of the purchase
price of the home, mortgage lenders generally require that
you take out Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI). This protects
the lender incase you default on your mortgage. You may need
to pay up to a year’s worth of premium for this coverage
at closing, which can amount to as much as several hundred
dollars. One way to avoid this extra cost is to make a 20%
down payment. There are also other ways to eliminate PMI such
as 80-10-10 financing which is further described in this section.
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How does PMI work?
PMI companies write insurance protecting approximately the
top 20% of the mortgage against default (non-payment). This
depends on the lender’s and investor’s requirements,
the loan-to-value ratio, and the particular loan program involved.
Should a default occur, then the lender sells the property
to liquidate the debt and is reimbursed by the PMI Company
for any remaining amount up to the policy value.
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What does PMI cost?
Costs vary from insurer to insurer, as well as from plan to
plan. For example, a highly leveraged adjustable rate mortgage
would require the borrower to pay a higher premium to obtain
coverage. Buyers with 5% down payment can expect to pay a
premium of approximately 0.78% times the annual loan amount
($92.67 monthly for a $150,000 purchase price). But the PMI
premium would drop to around 0.52% times the annual loan amount
($58.50 monthly) if a 10% down payment was made on the loan.
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How is PMI paid?
PMI fees can be paid in several ways, depending on the PMI
Company used. Borrowers can choose to pay the first-year premium
at closing; then an annual renewal premium is collected monthly
as part of the house payment. Or the borrower can choose to
pay no premium at closing, but add on a slightly higher premium
monthly to the principal, interest, tax, and insurance payment.
Buyers who want to sidestep paying PMI at closing but not
increase their monthly house payment can finance a lump-sum
PMI premium into their loan. With this type of payment plan,
should the PMI be canceled before the loan term expires (through
refinancing, paying off the loan, or removal by the loan servicer),
the buyers may obtain the rebate of the premium.
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How does the buyer
apply for PMI?
Although the buyer typically bears the cost of PMI, the lender
is the PMI Company’s client, and shops for the PMI on
behalf of the borrower. Many lenders deal with only a few
PMI companies because they know the guidelines for those insurers.
This can be a problem when one of the lender’s prime
companies turns down a loan because the borrower doesn’t
fit its risk parameters. A short-sighted lender might follow
suit and deny approval on the loan application without consulting
even a second PMI company. This obviously could leave all
the parties involved in an undesirable position.
The lender has an increasingly difficult
task to be fair to the borrower while shopping for the most
effective method to soften liability. Sometimes, it may appear
that a lender has no justification for doing what he or she
does – but if we look deeper, it is undoubtedly there.
TOO MUCH INFO HERE. DELETE THIS PARAGRAPH AS IT DOES NOT HELP
THE BORROWER.
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What is 80-10-10
financing?
These days it can be difficult to save enough money to make
a 20% cash down payment on your dream home, even if your income
is relatively high. Using conventional financing, such buyers
must purchase Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) which increases
the cost of home ownership and, ironically, makes it even
more difficult to qualify for the mortgage.DELETE THIS SENTENCE
However, if you’re a dues-paying member of the cash-challenged
class, don’t despair. Given that your income is sufficiently
high, it’s possible to avoid getting stuck with PMI.
That is why 80-10-10 financing was invented. It is called
80-10-10 because a savings and loan association, bank, or
other institutional lender provides a traditional 80% first
mortgage, you get a 10% second mortgage, and make a cash down
payment equal to 10% of the home’s purchase price. By
using this method, you are no longer obligated to take out
PMI on your property.
The same principle applies if you can only
afford to make a 5% down payment. In this case 80-15-5 financing
is also available. However, because a smaller cash down payment
increases the lender’s risk of default, you may be asked
to pay higher loan fees and a higher mortgage interest rate
for 80-15-5 than you pay for 80-10-10.
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Cancellation of
PMI
The Homeowners Protection Act of 1998 - which became effective
in 1999 - establishes rules for automatic termination and
borrower cancellation of PMI on home mortgages. These protections
apply to certain home mortgages signed on or after July 29,
1999 for the purchase, initial construction, or refinance
of a single-family home. These protections do not apply to
government-insured FHA or VA loans or to loans with lender-paid
PMI.
For home mortgages signed on or after July
29, 1999, your PMI must - with certain exceptions - be terminated
automatically when you reach 22 percent equity in your home
based on the original property value (provided your mortgage
payments are current). Your PMI also can be canceled, when
you request - with certain exceptions - when you reach 20
percent equity in your home based on the original property
value, if your mortgage payments are current.
One exception is if your loan is "high-risk."
Another is if you have not been current on your payments within
the year prior to the time for termination or cancellation.
A third is if you have other liens on your property. For these
loans, your PMI may continue. Ask your lender or mortgage
servicer (a company that collects your payments) for more
information about these requirements.
If you signed your mortgage before July
29, 1999, you can ask to have the PMI canceled once you exceed
20 percent equity in your home. But federal law does not require
your lender or mortgage servicer to cancel the insurance.
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History of PMI
Private Mortgage Insurance originated in the 1950s with the
first large carrier, Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation
(MGIC), referred to as “magic”. For this reason,
early PMI methods were deemed to “magically” assist
in getting lender approval on an otherwise unacceptable loan
package. Today, there are eight PMI insurance underwriting
companies in the United States.
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PMI Companies
Amerin Guaranty Corporation
303 East Wacker Drive, Suite 900
Chicago, IL 60601
Tel: 800-257-7643
Fax: 312-540-0564
PMI Mortgage Insurance Company
601 Mongomery Street
San Francisco, CA 94111
Tel: 800-288-1970
Fax: 415-291-6175
Commonwealth Mortgage Assurance Company
1601 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103-2197
Tel: 800-523-1988
Fax: 215-496-0346
Republic Mortgage Insurance Co.
P.O. Box 2514
Winston-Salem, NC 27102-9954
Tel: 800-999-7642
Fax: 919-661-0049
G.E. Capital Mortgage Insurance Corporation
P.O. Box 177800
Raleigh, NC 27615
Tel: 800-334-9270
Fax: 919-846-4260
Triad Guaranty Insurance Corp.
P.O. Box 25623
Winston-Salem, NC 27114
Tel: 800-451-4872
Fax: 919-723-0343
Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation
P.O. Box 488
Milwaukee, WI 53201
Tel: 800-558-9900
Fax: 414-347-6802
United Guaranty Corporation
P.O. Box 21567
Greensboro, NC 27420
Tel: 800-334-8966
Fax: 919-230-1946
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