B3-6-05, Monthly Debt Obligations (05/04/2022)

Alimony, child support, and separate maintenance payments, bridge / swing loans, business debt in borrower’s name, court-ordered assignment of debt, debts paid by others, non-applicant accounts, deferred installment debt, federal income tax installment agreements, garnishments, home equity lines of credit, installment debt, lease payments, rental housing payment, loans secured by financial assets, open 30–day charge accounts, other real estate owned—qualifying impact, revolving charge/lines of credit, student loans.

When the borrower is required to pay alimony, child support, or separate maintenance payments under a divorce decree, separation agreement, or any other written legal agreement—and those payments must continue to be made for more than ten months—the payments must be considered as part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations. However, voluntary payments do not need to be taken into consideration and an exception is allowed for alimony. A copy of the divorce decree, separation agreement, court order, or equivalent documentation confirming the amount of the obligation must be obtained and retained in the loan file.

For alimony and separate maintenance obligations, the lender has the option to reduce the qualifying income by the amount of the obligation in lieu of including it as a monthly payment in the calculation of the DTI ratio.

Note : For loan casefiles underwritten through DU, when using the option of reducing the borrower’s monthly qualifying income by the alimony or separate maintenance payment, the lender must enter the amount of the monthly obligation as a negative alimony or separate maintenance income amount. (If the borrower also receives alimony or separate maintenance income, the amounts should be combined and entered as a net amount.)

When a borrower obtains a bridge (or swing) loan, the funds from that loan can be used for closing on a new principal residence before the current residence is sold. This creates a contingent liability that must be considered part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations and included in the DTI ratio calculation.

Fannie Mae will waive this requirement and not require the debt to be included in the DTI ratio if the following documentation is provided:

a fully executed sales contract for the current residence, and

confirmation that any financing contingencies have been cleared.

When a self-employed borrower claims that a monthly obligation that appears on their personal credit report (such as a Small Business Administration loan) is being paid by the borrower’s business, the lender must confirm that it verified that the obligation was actually paid out of company funds and that this was considered in its cash flow analysis of the borrower’s business.

The account payment does not need to be considered as part of the borrower’s DTI ratio if:

the account in question does not have a history of delinquency,

the business provides acceptable evidence that the obligation was paid out of company funds (such as 12 months of canceled company checks), and

the lender’s cash flow analysis of the business took payment of the obligation into consideration.

The account payment must be considered as part of the borrower’s DTI ratio in any of the following situations:

If the business does not provide sufficient evidence that the obligation was paid out of company funds.

If the business provides acceptable evidence of its payment of the obligation, but the lender’s cash flow analysis of the business does not reflect any business expense related to the obligation (such as an interest expense—and taxes and insurance, if applicable—equal to or greater than the amount of interest that one would reasonably expect to see given the amount of financing shown on the credit report and the age of the loan). It is reasonable to assume that the obligation has not been accounted for in the cash flow analysis.

If the account in question has a history of delinquency. To ensure that the obligation is counted only once, the lender should adjust the net income of the business by the amount of interest, taxes, or insurance expense, if any, that relates to the account in question.

When a borrower has outstanding debt that was assigned to another party by court order (such as under a divorce decree or separation agreement) and the creditor does not release the borrower from liability, the borrower has a contingent liability. The lender is not required to count this contingent liability as part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations.

The lender is not required to evaluate the payment history for the assigned debt after the effective date of the assignment. The lender cannot disregard the borrower’s payment history for the debt before its assignment.

Certain debts can be excluded from the borrower’s recurring monthly obligations and the DTI ratio:

When a borrower is obligated on a non-mortgage debt - but is not the party who is actually repaying the debt - the lender may exclude the monthly payment from the borrower's recurring monthly obligations. This policy applies whether or not the other party is obligated on the debt, but is not applicable if the other party is an interested party to the subject transaction (such as the seller or real estate agent). Non-mortgage debts include installment loans, student loans, revolving accounts, lease payments, alimony, child support, and separate maintenance. See below for treatment of payments due under a federal income tax installment agreement.

When a borrower is obligated on a mortgage debt - but is not the party who is actually repaying the debt - the lender may exclude the full monthly housing expense (PITIA) from the borrower’s recurring monthly obligations if

the party making the payments is obligated on the mortgage debt,

there are no delinquencies in the most recent 12 months, and

the borrower is not using rental income from the applicable property to qualify.

In order to exclude non-mortgage or mortgage debts from the borrower’s DTI ratio, the lender must obtain the most recent 12 months' canceled checks (or bank statements) from the other party making the payments that document a 12-month payment history with no delinquent payments.

When a borrower is obligated on a mortgage debt, regardless of whether or not the other party is making the monthly mortgage payments, the referenced property must be included in the count of financed properties (if applicable per B2-2-03, Multiple Financed Properties for the Same Borrower B2-2-03, Multiple Financed Properties for the Same Borrower .

Credit reports may include accounts identified as possible non-applicant accounts (or with other similar notation). Non-applicant accounts may belong to the borrower, or they may truly belong to another individual.

Typical causes of non-applicant accounts include:

applicants who are Juniors or Seniors,

individuals who move frequently,

unrelated individuals who have identical names, and

debts the borrower applied for under a different Social Security number or under a different address. These may be indicative of potential fraud.

If the debts do not belong to the borrower, the lender may provide supporting documentation to validate this, and may exclude the non-applicant debts for the borrower’s DTI ratio. If the debts do belong to the borrower, they must be included as part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations.

Deferred installment debts must be included as part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations. For deferred installment debts other than student loans, if the borrower’s credit report does not indicate the monthly amount that will be payable at the end of the deferment period, the lender must obtain copies of the borrower’s payment letters or forbearance agreements so that a monthly payment amount can be determined and used in calculating the borrower’s total monthly obligations.

For information about deferred student loans, see Student Loans below.

When a borrower has entered into an installment agreement with the IRS to repay delinquent federal income taxes, the lender may include the monthly payment amount as part of the borrower’s monthly debt obligations (in lieu of requiring payment in full) if:

There is no indication that a Notice of Federal Tax Lien has been filed against the borrower in the county in which the subject property is located.

The lender obtains the following documentation:

an approved IRS installment agreement with the terms of repayment, including the monthly payment amount and total amount due; and

evidence the borrower is current on the payments associated with the tax installment plan. Acceptable evidence includes the most recent payment reminder from the IRS, reflecting the last payment amount and date and the next payment amount owed and due date. At least one payment must have been made prior to closing.

As a reminder, lenders remain responsible under the life-of-loan representations and warranties for clear title and first-lien enforceability in accordance with A2-2-07, Life-of-Loan Representations and Warranties A2-2-07, Life-of-Loan Representations and Warranties .

The payments on a federal income tax installment agreement can be excluded from the borrower’s DTI ratio if the agreement meets the terms in Debts Paid by Others or Installment Debt described above. If any of the above conditions are not met, the borrower must pay off the outstanding balance due under the installment agreement with the IRS in accordance with B3-6-07, Debts Paid Off At or Prior to Closing B3-6-07, Debts Paid Off At or Prior to Closing

All garnishments with more than ten months remaining must be included in the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations for qualifying purposes.

When the mortgage that will be delivered to Fannie Mae also has a home equity line of credit (HELOC) that provides for a monthly payment of principal and interest or interest only, the payment on the HELOC must be considered as part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations. If the HELOC does not require a payment, there is no recurring monthly debt obligation so the lender does not need to develop an equivalent payment amount.

All installment debt that is not secured by a financial asset—including student loans, automobile loans, personal loans, and timeshares—must be considered part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations if there are more than ten monthly payments remaining. However, an installment debt with fewer monthly payments remaining also should be considered as a recurring monthly debt obligation if it significantly affects the borrower’s ability to meet their credit obligations. See below for treatment of payments due under a federal income tax installment agreement.

Note: A timeshare account should be treated as an installment debt regardless of how it is reported on the credit report or other documentation (that is, even if reported as a mortgage loan).

Lease payments must be considered as recurring monthly debt obligations regardless of the number of months remaining on the lease. This is because the expiration of a lease agreement for rental housing or an automobile typically leads to either a new lease agreement, the buyout of the existing lease, or the purchase of a new vehicle or house.

The housing payment for each borrower’s principal residence must be considered when underwriting the loan. For the following scenarios, the borrower’s monthly rental housing payment must be evaluated (if the borrower does not otherwise have a mortgage payment or no housing expense):

for non-occupant borrowers, and

for second homes or investment properties.

The following list provides examples of acceptable documentation to verify the rental payment:

six months canceled checks or equivalent payment source;

six months bank statements reflecting a clear and consistent payment to an organization or individual;

direct verification of rent from a management company or individual landlord; or

a copy of a current, fully executed lease agreement and two months canceled checks (or equivalent payment source) supporting the rental payment amount.

Note: Refer to B3-5.4-03, Documentation and Assessment of a Nontraditional Credit History B3-5.4-03, Documentation and Assessment of a Nontraditional Credit History for rental payment history requirements when using non-traditional credit.

When a borrower uses their financial assets—life insurance policies, 401(k) accounts, individual retirement accounts, certificates of deposit, stocks, bonds, etc.—as security for a loan, the borrower has a contingent liability.

The lender is not required to include this contingent liability as part of the borrower’s recurring monthly debt obligations provided the lender obtains a copy of the applicable loan instrument that shows the borrower’s financial asset as collateral for the loan. If the borrower intends to use the same asset to satisfy financial reserve requirements, the lender must reduce the value of the asset (the account balance, in most cases) by the proceeds from the secured loan and any related fees to determine whether the borrower has sufficient reserves.

Note: Payment on any debt secured by virtual currency is an exception to the above policy and must be included when calculating the debt-to-income ratio.

Open 30–day charge accounts require the balance to be paid in full every month. Fannie Mae does not require open 30–day charge accounts to be included in the debt-to-income ratio.

See B3-6-07, Debts Paid Off At or Prior to Closing B3-6-07, Debts Paid Off At or Prior to Closing , for additional information on open 30–day charge accounts.

For details regarding the qualifying impact of other real estate owned, see B3-6-06, Qualifying Impact of Other Real Estate Owned B3-6-06, Qualifying Impact of Other Real Estate Owned .

Revolving charge accounts and unsecured lines of credit are open-ended and should be treated as long-term debts and must be considered part of the borrower's recurring monthly debt obligations. These tradelines include credit cards, department store charge cards, and personal lines of credit. Equity lines of credit secured by real estate should be included in the housing expense.

If the credit report does not show a required minimum payment amount and there is no supplemental documentation to support a payment of less than 5%, the lender must use 5% of the outstanding balance as the borrower's recurring monthly debt obligation.

For DU loan casefiles, if a revolving debt is provided on the loan application without a monthly payment amount, DU will use the greater of $10 or 5% of the outstanding balance as the monthly payment when calculating the total debt-to-income ratio.

If a monthly student loan payment is provided on the credit report, the lender may use that amount for qualifying purposes. If the credit report does not reflect the correct monthly payment, the lender may use the monthly payment that is on the student loan documentation (the most recent student loan statement) to qualify the borrower.

If the credit report does not provide a monthly payment for the student loan, or if the credit report shows $0 as the monthly payment, the lender must determine the qualifying monthly payment using one of the options below.

If the borrower is on an income-driven payment plan, the lender may obtain student loan documentation to verify the actual monthly payment is $0. The lender may then qualify the borrower with a $0 payment.

For deferred loans or loans in forbearance, the lender may calculate

a payment equal to 1% of the outstanding student loan balance (even if this amount is lower than the actual fully amortizing payment), or

a fully amortizing payment using the documented loan repayment terms.

The table below provides references to recently issued Announcements that are related to this topic.

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Originating & Underwriting

Selling Guide

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(Published: Nov 06 2024)

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  • Copyright and Preface
  • A1-1-01, Application and Approval of Seller/Servicer
  • A2-1-01, Contractual Obligations for Sellers/Servicers
  • A2-1-02, Nature of Mortgage Transaction
  • A2-1-03, Indemnification for Losses
  • A2-2-01, Representations and Warranties Overview
  • A2-2-02, Delivery Information and Delivery-Option Specific Representations and Warranties
  • A2-2-03, Document Warranties
  • A2-2-04, Limited Waiver and Enforcement Relief of Representations and Warranties
  • A2-2-05, Invalidation of Limited Waiver of Representations and Warranties
  • A2-2-06, Representations and Warranties on Property Value
  • A2-2-07, Life-of-Loan Representations and Warranties
  • A2-3.1-01, Lender Breach of Contract
  • A2-3.1-02, Sanctions, Suspensions, and Terminations
  • A2-3.2-01, Loan Repurchases and Make Whole Payments Requested by Fannie Mae
  • A2-3.2-02, Enforcement Relief for Breaches of Certain Representations and Warranties Related to Underwriting and Eligibility
  • A2-3.2-03, Remedies Framework
  • A2-3.3-01, Compensatory Fees
  • A2-4.1-01, Establishing Loan Files
  • A2-4.1-02, Ownership and Retention of Loan Files and Records
  • A2-4.1-03, Electronic Records, Signatures, and Transactions
  • A2-4.1-04, Notarization Standards
  • A2-5-01, Fannie Mae Trade Name and Trademarks
  • A3-1-01, Fannie Mae’s Technology Products
  • A3-2-01, Compliance With Laws
  • A3-2-02, Responsible Lending Practices
  • A3-3-01, Outsourcing of Mortgage Processing and Third-Party Originations
  • A3-3-02, Concurrent Servicing Transfers
  • A3-3-03, Other Servicing Arrangements
  • A3-3-04, Document Custodians
  • A3-3-05, Custody of Mortgage Documents
  • A3-4-01, Confidentiality of Information
  • A3-4-02, Data Quality and Integrity
  • A3-4-03, Preventing, Detecting, and Reporting Mortgage Fraud
  • A3-5-01, Fidelity Bond and Errors and Omissions Coverage Provisions
  • A3-5-02, Fidelity Bond Policy Requirements
  • A3-5-03, Errors and Omissions Policy Requirements
  • A3-5-04, Reporting Fidelity Bond and Errors and Omissions Events
  • A4-1-01, Maintaining Seller/Servicer Eligibility
  • A4-1-02, Submission of Financial Statements and Reports
  • A4-1-03, Report of Changes in the Seller/Servicer’s Organization
  • A4-1-04, Submission of Irrevocable Limited Powers of Attorney
  • B1-1-01, Contents of the Application Package
  • B1-1-02, Blanket Authorization Form
  • B1-1-03, Allowable Age of Credit Documents and Federal Income Tax Returns
  • B2-1.1-01, Occupancy Types
  • B2-1.2-01, Loan-to-Value (LTV) Ratios
  • B2-1.2-02, Combined Loan-to-Value (CLTV) Ratios
  • B2-1.2-03, Home Equity Combined Loan-to-Value (HCLTV) Ratios
  • B2-1.2-04, Subordinate Financing
  • B2-1.3-01, Purchase Transactions
  • B2-1.3-02, Limited Cash-Out Refinance Transactions
  • B2-1.3-03, Cash-Out Refinance Transactions
  • B2-1.3-04, Prohibited Refinancing Practices
  • B2-1.3-05, Payoff of Installment Land Contract Requirements
  • B2-1.4-01, Fixed-Rate Loans
  • B2-1.4-02, Adjustable-Rate Mortgages (ARMs)
  • B2-1.4-03, Convertible ARMs
  • B2-1.4-04, Temporary Interest Rate Buydowns
  • B2-1.5-01, Loan Limits
  • B2-1.5-02, Loan Eligibility
  • B2-1.5-03, Legal Requirements
  • B2-1.5-04, Escrow Accounts
  • B2-1.5-05, Principal Curtailments
  • B2-2-01, General Borrower Eligibility Requirements
  • B2-2-02, Non–U.S. Citizen Borrower Eligibility Requirements
  • B2-2-03, Multiple Financed Properties for the Same Borrower
  • B2-2-04, Guarantors, Co-Signers, or Non-Occupant Borrowers on the Subject Transaction
  • B2-2-05, Inter Vivos Revocable Trusts
  • B2-2-06, Homeownership Education and Housing Counseling
  • B2-2-07, First-Generation Homebuyer Loans
  • B2-3-01, General Property Eligibility
  • B2-3-02, Special Property Eligibility and Underwriting Considerations: Factory-Built Housing
  • B2-3-03, Special Property Eligibility and Underwriting Considerations: Leasehold Estates
  • B2-3-04, Special Property Eligibility Considerations
  • B2-3-05, Properties Affected by a Disaster
  • B3-1-01, Comprehensive Risk Assessment
  • B3-2-01, General Information on DU
  • B3-2-02, DU Validation Service
  • B3-2-03, Risk Factors Evaluated by DU
  • B3-2-04, DU Documentation Requirements
  • B3-2-05, Approve/Eligible Recommendations
  • B3-2-06, Approve/Ineligible Recommendations
  • B3-2-07, Refer with Caution Recommendations
  • B3-2-08, Out of Scope Recommendations
  • B3-2-09, Erroneous Credit Report Data
  • B3-2-10, Accuracy of DU Data, DU Tolerances, and Errors in the Credit Report
  • B3-2-11, DU Underwriting Findings Report
  • B3-3.1-01, General Income Information
  • B3-3.1-02, Standards for Employment Documentation
  • B3-3.1-03, Base Pay (Salary or Hourly), Bonus, and Overtime Income
  • B3-3.1-04, Commission Income
  • B3-3.1-05, Secondary Employment Income (Second Job and Multiple Jobs) and Seasonal Income
  • B3-3.1-06, Requirements and Uses of IRS IVES Request for Transcript of Tax Return Form 4506-C
  • B3-3.1-07, Verbal Verification of Employment
  • B3-3.1-08, Rental Income
  • B3-3.1-09, Other Sources of Income
  • B3-3.1-10, Income Calculator
  • B3-3.2-01, Underwriting Factors and Documentation for a Self-Employed Borrower
  • B3-3.2-02, Business Structures
  • B3-3.2-03, IRS Forms Quick Reference
  • B3-3.3-01, General Information on Analyzing Individual Tax Returns
  • B3-3.3-02, Income Reported on IRS Form 1040
  • B3-3.3-03, Income or Loss Reported on IRS Form 1040, Schedule C
  • B3-3.3-04, Income or Loss Reported on IRS Form 1040, Schedule D
  • B3-3.3-05, Income or Loss Reported on IRS Form 1040, Schedule E
  • B3-3.3-06, Income or Loss Reported on IRS Form 1040, Schedule F
  • B3-3.3-07, Income or Loss Reported on IRS Form 1065 or IRS Form 1120S, Schedule K-1
  • B3-3.4-01, Analyzing Partnership Returns for a Partnership or LLC
  • B3-3.4-02, Analyzing Returns for an S Corporation
  • B3-3.4-03, Analyzing Returns for a Corporation
  • B3-3.4-04, Analyzing Profit and Loss Statements
  • B3-3.5-01, Income and Employment Documentation for DU
  • B3-3.5-02, Income from Rental Property in DU
  • B3-4.1-01, Minimum Reserve Requirements
  • B3-4.1-02, Interested Party Contributions (IPCs)
  • B3-4.1-03, Types of Interested Party Contributions (IPCs)
  • B3-4.1-04, Virtual Currency
  • B3-4.2-01, Verification of Deposits and Assets
  • B3-4.2-02, Depository Accounts
  • B3-4.2-03, Individual Development Accounts
  • B3-4.2-04, Pooled Savings (Community Savings Funds)
  • B3-4.2-05, Foreign Assets
  • B3-4.3-01, Stocks, Stock Options, Bonds, and Mutual Funds
  • B3-4.3-02, Trust Accounts
  • B3-4.3-03, Retirement Accounts
  • B3-4.3-04, Personal Gifts
  • B3-4.3-05, Gifts of Equity
  • B3-4.3-06, Grants and Lender Contributions
  • B3-4.3-07, Disaster Relief Grants or Loans
  • B3-4.3-08, Employer Assistance
  • B3-4.3-09, Earnest Money Deposit
  • B3-4.3-10, Anticipated Sales Proceeds
  • B3-4.3-11, Trade Equity
  • B3-4.3-12, Rent-Related Credits
  • B3-4.3-13, Sweat Equity
  • B3-4.3-14, Bridge/Swing Loans
  • B3-4.3-15, Borrowed Funds Secured by an Asset
  • B3-4.3-16, Credit Card Financing and Reward Points
  • B3-4.3-17, Personal Unsecured Loans
  • B3-4.3-18, Sale of Personal Assets
  • B3-4.3-19, Cash Value of Life Insurance
  • B3-4.3-20, Anticipated Savings and Cash-on-Hand
  • B3-4.3-21, Borrower's Earned Real Estate Commission
  • B3-4.4-01, DU Asset Verification
  • B3-4.4-02, Requirements for Certain Assets in DU
  • B3-5.1-01, General Requirements for Credit Scores
  • B3-5.1-02, Determining the Credit Score for a Mortgage Loan
  • B3-5.2-01, Requirements for Credit Reports
  • B3-5.2-02, Types of Credit Reports
  • B3-5.2-03, Accuracy of Credit Information in a Credit Report
  • B3-5.3-01, Number and Age of Accounts
  • B3-5.3-02, Payment History
  • B3-5.3-03, Previous Mortgage Payment History
  • B3-5.3-04, Inquiries: Recent Attempts to Obtain New Credit
  • B3-5.3-05, Credit Utilization
  • B3-5.3-06, Authorized Users of Credit
  • B3-5.3-07, Significant Derogatory Credit Events — Waiting Periods and Re-establishing Credit
  • B3-5.3-08, Extenuating Circumstances for Derogatory Credit
  • B3-5.3-09, DU Credit Report Analysis
  • B3-5.4-01, Eligibility Requirements for Loans with Nontraditional Credit
  • B3-5.4-02, Number and Types of Nontraditional Credit References
  • B3-5.4-03, Documentation and Assessment of a Nontraditional Credit History
  • B3-6-01, General Information on Liabilities
  • B3-6-02, Debt-to-Income Ratios
  • B3-6-03, Monthly Housing Expense for the Subject Property
  • B3-6-04, Qualifying Payment Requirements
  • B3-6-05, Monthly Debt Obligations
  • B3-6-06, Qualifying Impact of Other Real Estate Owned
  • B3-6-07, Debts Paid Off At or Prior to Closing
  • B3-6-08, DU: Requirements for Liability Assessment
  • B4-1.1-01, Definition of Market Value
  • B4-1.1-02, Lender Responsibilities
  • B4-1.1-03, Appraiser Selection Criteria
  • B4-1.1-04, Unacceptable Appraisal Practices
  • B4-1.1-05, Disclosure of Information to Appraisers
  • B4-1.1-06, Uniform Appraisal Dataset (UAD) and the Uniform Collateral Data Portal (UCDP)
  • B4-1.2-01, Appraisal Report Forms and Exhibits
  • B4-1.2-02, Desktop Appraisals
  • B4-1.2-03, Hybrid Appraisals
  • B4-1.2-04, Appraisal Age and Use Requirements
  • B4-1.2-05, Requirements for Verifying Completion and Postponed Improvements
  • B4-1.3-01, Review of the Appraisal Report
  • B4-1.3-02, Subject and Contract Sections of the Appraisal Report
  • B4-1.3-03, Neighborhood Section of the Appraisal Report
  • B4-1.3-04, Site Section of the Appraisal Report
  • B4-1.3-05, Improvements Section of the Appraisal Report
  • B4-1.3-06, Property Condition and Quality of Construction of the Improvements
  • B4-1.3-07, Sales Comparison Approach Section of the Appraisal Report
  • B4-1.3-08, Comparable Sales
  • B4-1.3-09, Adjustments to Comparable Sales
  • B4-1.3-10, Cost and Income Approach to Value
  • B4-1.3-11, Valuation Analysis and Reconciliation
  • B4-1.3-12, Appraisal Quality Matters
  • B4-1.4-01, Factory-Built Housing: Manufactured Housing
  • B4-1.4-02, Factory-Built Housing: Modular, Prefabricated, Panelized, or Sectional Housing
  • B4-1.4-03, Condo Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-04, Co-op Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-05, Leasehold Interests Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-06, Community Land Trust Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-07, Mixed-Use Property Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-08, Environmental Hazards Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-09, Special Assessment or Community Facilities Districts Appraisal Requirements
  • B4-1.4-10, Value Acceptance (Appraisal Waiver)
  • B4-1.4-11, Value Acceptance + Property Data
  • B4-2.1-01, General Information on Project Standards
  • B4-2.1-02, Waiver of Project Review
  • B4-2.1-03, Ineligible Projects
  • B4-2.1-04, Environmental Hazard Assessments
  • B4-2.1-05, Unacceptable Environmental Hazards
  • B4-2.1-06, Remedial Actions for Environmental Hazard Assessments Below Standards
  • B4-2.2-01, Limited Review Process
  • B4-2.2-02, Full Review Process
  • B4-2.2-03, Full Review: Additional Eligibility Requirements for Units in New and Newly Converted Condo Projects
  • B4-2.2-04, Geographic-Specific Condo Project Considerations
  • B4-2.2-05, FHA-Approved Condo Review Eligibility
  • B4-2.2-06, Project Eligibility Review Service (PERS)
  • B4-2.2-07, Projects with Special Considerations and Project Eligibility Waivers
  • B4-2.3-01, Eligibility Requirements for Units in PUD Projects
  • B4-2.3-02, Co-op Project Eligibility
  • B4-2.3-03, Legal Requirements for Co-op Projects
  • B4-2.3-04, Loan Eligibility for Co-op Share Loans
  • B4-2.3-05, Geographic-Specific Co-op Project Considerations
  • B5-1-01, High-Balance Mortgage Loan Eligibility and Underwriting
  • B5-1-02, High-Balance Pricing, Mortgage Insurance, Special Feature Codes, and Delivery Limitations
  • B5-2-01, Manufactured Housing
  • B5-2-02, Manufactured Housing Loan Eligibility
  • B5-2-03, Manufactured Housing Underwriting Requirements
  • B5-2-04, Manufactured Housing Pricing, Mortgage Insurance, and Loan Delivery Requirements
  • B5-2-05, Manufactured Housing Legal Considerations
  • B5-3.1-01, Conversion of Construction-to-Permanent Financing: Overview
  • B5-3.1-02, Conversion of Construction-to-Permanent Financing: Single-Closing Transactions
  • B5-3.1-03, Conversion of Construction-to-Permanent Financing: Two-Closing Transactions
  • B5-3.2-01, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgages
  • B5-3.2-02, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgages: Loan and Borrower Eligibility
  • B5-3.2-03, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgages: Collateral Considerations
  • B5-3.2-04, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgages: Costs and Escrow Accounts
  • B5-3.2-05, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgages: Completion Certification
  • B5-3.2-06, HomeStyle Renovation: Renovation Contract, Renovation Loan Agreement, and Lien Waiver
  • B5-3.3-01, HomeStyle Energy for Improvements on Existing Properties
  • B5-3.4-01, Property Assessed Clean Energy Loans
  • B5-4.1-01, Texas Section 50(a)(6) Loans
  • B5-4.1-02, Texas Section 50(a)(6) Loan Eligibility
  • B5-4.1-03, Texas Section 50(a)(6) Loan Underwriting, Collateral, and Closing Considerations
  • B5-4.1-04, Texas Section 50(a)(6) Loan Delivery and Servicing Considerations
  • B5-4.2-01, Native American Conventional Lending Initiative (NACLI)
  • B5-4.2-02, Disaster-Related Limited Cash-Out Refinance Flexibilities
  • B5-4.2-03, Loans Secured by HomePath Properties
  • B5-5.1-01, Community Seconds Loans
  • B5-5.1-02, Community Seconds Loan Eligibility
  • B5-5.1-03, Community Seconds: Shared Appreciation Transactions
  • B5-5.2-01, Loans With Resale Restrictions: General Information
  • B5-5.2-02, Loans with Resale Restrictions: Eligibility, Collateral and Delivery Requirements
  • B5-5.3-01, Shared Equity Overview
  • B5-5.3-02, Shared Equity Transactions: General Requirements
  • B5-5.3-03, Shared Equity Transactions: Eligibility, Underwriting and Collateral Requirements
  • B5-5.3-04, Massachusetts Resale Restriction Loan Eligibility Requirements
  • B5-6-01, HomeReady Mortgage Loan and Borrower Eligibility
  • B5-6-02, HomeReady Mortgage Underwriting Methods and Requirements
  • B5-6-03, HomeReady Mortgage Loan Pricing, Mortgage Insurance, and Special Feature Codes
  • B5-7-01, High LTV Refinance Loan and Borrower Eligibility
  • B5-7-02, High LTV Refinance Underwriting, Documentation, and Collateral Requirements for the New Loan
  • B5-7-03, High LTV Refinance Alternative Qualification Path
  • B5-7-04, High LTV Refinance Representations and Warranties
  • B5-7-05, High LTV Refinance Pricing, Mortgage Insurance, and Special Feature Codes
  • B6-1-01, General Government Mortgage Loan Requirements
  • B6-1-02, Eligible FHA-Insured Mortgage Loans
  • B6-1-03, Eligible VA-Guaranteed Mortgages
  • B6-1-04, Eligible HUD-Guaranteed Section 184 Mortgages
  • B6-1-05, Eligible RD-Guaranteed Mortgages
  • B7-1-01, Provision of Mortgage Insurance
  • B7-1-02, Mortgage Insurance Coverage Requirements
  • B7-1-03, Lender-Purchased Mortgage Insurance
  • B7-1-04, Financed Borrower-Purchased Mortgage Insurance
  • B7-1-05, Government Mortgage Loan Guaranty or Insurance
  • B7-2-01, Provision of Title Insurance
  • B7-2-02, Title Insurer Requirements
  • B7-2-03, General Title Insurance Coverage
  • B7-2-04, Special Title Insurance Coverage Considerations
  • B7-2-05, Title Exceptions and Impediments
  • B7-2-06, Attorney Title Opinion Letter Requirements
  • B7-3-01, General Property Insurance Requirements for All Property Types
  • B7-3-02, Property Insurance Requirements for One-to Four-Unit Properties
  • B7-3-03, Master Property Insurance Requirements for Project Developments
  • B7-3-04, Individual Property Insurance Requirements for a Unit in a Project Development
  • B7-3-05, Additional Insurance Requirements
  • B7-3-06, Flood Insurance Requirements for All Property Types
  • B7-3-07, Evidence of Property Insurance
  • B7-3-08, Mortgagee Clause, Named Insured, and Notice of Cancellation Requirements
  • B7-4-01, General Liability Insurance Requirements for Project Developments
  • B7-4-02, Fidelity/Crime Insurance Requirements for Project Developments
  • B8-1-01, Publication of Legal Documents
  • B8-2-01, Security Instruments for Conventional Mortgages
  • B8-2-02, Special-Purpose Security Instruments
  • B8-2-03, Signature Requirements for Security Instruments
  • B8-3-01, Notes for Conventional Mortgages
  • B8-3-02, Special Note Provisions and Language Requirements
  • B8-3-03, Signature Requirements for Notes
  • B8-3-04, Note Endorsement
  • B8-4-01, Riders and Addenda
  • B8-5-01, General Information on Special-Purpose Legal Documents
  • B8-5-02, Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Mortgage Documentation and Signature Requirements
  • B8-5-03, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgage Documentation Requirements
  • B8-5-04, Sample Legal Documents
  • B8-5-05, Requirements for Use of a Power of Attorney
  • B8-6-01, Authorized Use of Intervening and Blanket Assignments
  • B8-7-01, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (MERS), Inc.
  • B8-8-01, General Information on eMortgages
  • B8-8-02, Requirements for Creating, Closing, and Correcting eNotes
  • C1-1-01, Execution Options
  • C1-2-01, General Information on Delivering Loan Data and Documents
  • C1-2-02, Loan Data and Documentation Delivery Requirements
  • C1-2-03, Ownership of Mortgage Loans Prior to Purchase or Securitization and Third-Party Security Interests
  • C1-2-04, Delivering eMortgages to Fannie Mae
  • C1-2-05, Delivering Green MBS to Fannie Mae
  • C1-2-06, Bailee Letters
  • C1-3-01, General Information on Remittance Types
  • C2-1.1-01, Mandatory Commitment Process
  • C2-1.1-02, General Information about Mandatory Commitment Pricing and Fees
  • C2-1.1-03, Mandatory Commitment Terms, Amounts, Periods and Other Requirements
  • C2-1.1-04, Mandatory Commitment Extensions and Pair-Offs
  • C2-1.1-05, Servicing Fees
  • C2-1.1-06, Accrued Interest Payments for Regularly Amortizing Mortgages
  • C2-1.1-07, Standard ARM and Converted ARM Resale Commitments
  • C2-1.2-01, Best Efforts Commitment Process
  • C2-1.2-02, Best Efforts Commitment Pricing, Periods, and Fees
  • C2-1.2-03, Best Efforts Commitment Terms, Amounts, and Other Requirements
  • C2-1.3-01, Servicing Marketplace
  • C2-2-01, General Requirements for Good Delivery of Whole Loans
  • C2-2-02, Documentation Requirements for Whole Loan Deliveries
  • C2-2-03, General Information on Whole Loan Purchasing Policies
  • C2-2-04, Timing of Distribution of Whole Loan Purchase Proceeds
  • C2-2-05, Whole Loan Purchasing Process
  • C2-2-06, Authorization to Transfer Funds
  • C2-2-07, Purchase Payee Codes
  • C3-1-01, General Information About Fannie Mae’s MBS Program
  • C3-1-02, Preparing to Pool Loans into MBS
  • C3-2-01, Determining Eligibility for Loans Pooled into MBS
  • C3-2-02, Selecting a Servicing Option
  • C3-2-03, MBS Remittance Type and Selecting a Remittance Cycle
  • C3-2-04, Mandatory MBS Commitments
  • C3-3-01, Determining and Remitting Guaranty Fees
  • C3-3-02, Accessing Buyup and Buydown Ratios and Calculating Payments or Charges
  • C3-3-03, Buying Up and Buying Down the Guaranty Fee for MBS
  • C3-4-01, Term-Related Fixed-Rate Mortgage Pooling Parameters
  • C3-5-01, Creating Weighted-Average ARM MBS
  • C3-5-02, Calculating the Weighted-Average Pool Accrual Rates for ARM Flex Pools Using a Fixed MBS Margin
  • C3-5-03, Calculating the Weighted-Average Pool Accrual Rates for ARM Flex Pools Using a Weighted-Average MBS Margin
  • C3-5-04, Pooling ARMs with a Conversion Option
  • C3-5-05, Commingling ARMs in MBS
  • C3-6-01, Parameters for Pooling Loans Into Fannie Majors
  • C3-7-01, Establishing an MBS Trading Account
  • C3-7-02, Initiating an MBS Sale
  • C3-7-03, Making Good Delivery
  • C3-7-04, Delivering MBS Pool Data and Documents
  • C3-7-05, Confirming Presettlement Information
  • C3-7-06, Settling the Trade
  • C3-7-07, Sale of Fannie Mae Securities to Third Parties
  • D1-1-01, Lender Quality Control Programs, Plans, and Processes
  • D1-1-02, Lender Quality Control Staffing and Outsourcing of the Quality Control Process
  • D1-2-01, Lender Prefunding Quality Control Review Process
  • D1-3-01, Lender Post-Closing Quality Control Review Process
  • D1-3-02, Lender Post-Closing Quality Control Review of Approval Conditions, Underwriting Decisions, and Documentation
  • D1-3-03, Lender Post-Closing Quality Control Review of Data Integrity
  • D1-3-04, Lender Post-Closing Quality Control Review of Appraisers, Appraisals, Property Data Collectors, and Property Data Collection
  • D1-3-05, Lender Post-Closing Quality Control Review of Closing Documents
  • D1-3-06, Lender Post-Closing Quality Control Reporting, Record Retention, and Audit
  • D2-1-01, General Information on Fannie Mae QC Reviews
  • D2-1-02, Fannie Mae QC File Request and Submission Requirements
  • D2-1-03, Outcomes of Fannie Mae QC Reviews
  • D2-1-04, Identifying and Remedying Origination Defects Under the Remedies Framework
  • E-1-01, References to Fannie Mae's Website
  • E-1-02, List of Contacts
  • E-1-03, List of Lender Contracts
  • E-2-01, Required Custodial Documents
  • E-2-02, Suggested Format for Phase I Environmental Hazard Assessments
  • E-2-03, Revocable Trust Rider (Sample Language)
  • E-2-04, Signature Requirements for Mortgages to Inter Vivos Revocable Trusts
  • E-2-05, Servicing Marketplace — Mortgage Loan Servicing Purchase and Sale Agreement
  • E-2-06, Correcting Errors in eNotes
  • E-2-07, Description of eNote Header, Footer, and eNote Clause
  • E-3-01, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: A
  • E-3-02, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: B
  • E-3-03, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: C
  • E-3-04, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: D
  • E-3-05, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: E
  • E-3-06, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: F
  • E-3-07, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: G
  • E-3-08, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: H
  • E-3-09, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: I
  • E-3-10, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: J
  • E-3-11, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: K
  • E-3-12, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: L
  • E-3-13, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: M
  • E-3-14, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: N
  • E-3-15, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: O
  • E-3-16, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: P
  • E-3-17, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: Q
  • E-3-18, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: R
  • E-3-19, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: S
  • E-3-20, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: T
  • E-3-21, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: U
  • E-3-22, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: V
  • E-3-23, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: W
  • E-3-24, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: X
  • E-3-25, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: Y
  • E-3-26, Acronyms and Glossary of Defined Terms: Z

IMAGES

  1. (PDF) Federal Court remands Freddie Mac back to Washington State court

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  2. Changes to how Freddie Mac calculates student loan debt

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  3. Fillable Online 4,000,000,000 Freddie Mac GLOBAL DEBT FACILITY Fax

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  4. Federal Jury Delivers Shocking Verdict on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

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  5. Fillable Online 7.39% Fixed Rate Debentures Due 2006 $150,000,000

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  6. Freddie Mac’s Newly Enhanced Mortgage Rate Survey Explained

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VIDEO

  1. MOC LECTURE 4 MAC FIXED ASSIGNMENT SCHEME

  2. Queen live at Earls Court but only when Freddie’s on camera

  3. Loan Officer Training

  4. full Step by Step Zombie Debt Assignment. Report Mortgages and Autoloans to credit reports

  5. Assignment of Debt EXPLAINED!

  6. Freddie Mac, NAR, & Mortgage Debt Crisis