In This Article
Source First (Teacher Rule!): Everything you’re about to learn comes from one textbook: Annual Report to Congress Regarding the Financial Status of the Federal Housing Administration Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (FY 2025), published by HUD and available here.
Today’s lesson turns that very serious report into something easier—and more interesting — to understand.
Lesson 1: FHA’s Big Piggy Bank Is Very Full
Imagine the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has a giant piggy bank called the Mutual Mortgage Insurance (MMI) Fund. This piggy bank:
- Collects mortgage insurance premiums.
- Pays claims when borrowers can’t keep their homes.
- Is backed by taxpayer dollars, so it must be managed carefully.
In FY 2025:
- FHA’s piggy bank had $140 billion inside.
- Over $100 billion of that was cash or cash-like.
- The piggy bank was filled to 11.47%, when the law only requires 2%.
Translation for investors
FHA is not broke or fragile. It has plenty of cushion to handle borrower problems without panicking or dumping homes onto the market.
Lesson 2: Too Many “Second Chances” Was a Problem
During COVID, FHA tried to be nice—maybe too nice. Borrowers who fell behind were allowed to:
- Modify loans
- Pause payments
- Get partial claims
- Try again…and again…and again
But the report shows something important: Almost 60% of borrowers who got help fell behind again within one year. That’s like letting a student retake the same test six times—and they still keep failing.
Lesson 3: New Rules to Help People Succeed (or Move On)
So in 2025, FHA changed the rules. In April 2025, FHA rewrote its “help plan” (called the loss mitigation waterfall). New rules:
- COVID programs ended
- FHA-HAMP ended
- Borrowers now get one home-retention option every 24 months.
- Borrowers must prove they can actually make payments before getting permanent help.
FHA estimates this saves $2 billion.
Translation for investors
This doesn’t mean “more foreclosures tomorrow.” It means faster decisions and less endless limbo, which historically leads to clearer timelines when homes eventually change hands.
Lesson 4: Borrowers Are Struggling—but Not All at Once
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Now let’s talk about late homework (aka delinquency).
- Serious delinquencies (90+ days late) rose to 4.54%.
- That sounds scary—but it’s still normal by historical standards.
Here’s the twist:
- Even when loans fail, losses are much smaller.
- Loss severity dropped from 50% years ago to 22% today.
Why?
- Home prices went up.
- FHA sells homes faster.
- Fewer homes sit empty and deteriorate.
Translation for investors
Stress is rising, but damage is limited. Timing matters more than panic.
Lesson 5: “Risk Layers”—When Too Many Weak Spots Stack Up
FHA doesn’t just look at one thing. It looks for stacked risks, called risk layers. Think of it like a Jenga tower. If all three are there, the tower wobbles:
- Low credit
- High debt
- Very small down payment
In 2025, FHA updated how it measures risk layers:
- Credit score below 640
- Debt-to-income ratio above 40%
- Loan-to-value ratio above 95%
Using this better ruler:
- About 8% of FHA loans have risk layers.
- Old rules only caught about 1%.
Translation for investors
This doesn’t predict a crash. It helps identify where stress might appear if conditions worsen.
Lesson 6: Students Are Smarter…but Carry Bigger Backpacks
Good news: FHA borrower credit scores are higher than they’ve been in years.
Not-so-good news:
- Borrowers are carrying more debt.
- Average DTI today is 45%.
- Twenty years ago, it was closer to 37%.
Why?
- Homes cost more.
- Rates are higher.
- Insurance costs more.
Translation for investors
Borrowers are more responsible—but have less wiggle room. Small disruptions matter more than they used to.
Lesson 7: FHA Ran the Worst Tests Imaginable (on Purpose)
FHA asked a scary question: “What if the worst economy ever happened again?” They replayed:
- The Great Recession
- Massive home price drops
- High unemployment
- No price recovery afterward
Even then:
- FHA’s piggy bank stayed more than twice the legal minimum.
- The system still worked.
Translation for investors
This strength is why FHA could lower up-front mortgage insurance costs—it wasn’t reckless, it was math-backed.
Final Thoughts: What Can Investors Do With This?
This report is not a crystal ball. It is a map. Investors can use it to:
- Understand where stress forms.
- Track policy-driven timing.
- Watch cohort-level risk.
- Avoid assuming “defaults = chaos.”
FHA isn’t ignoring problems. It’s managing them slowly, deliberately, and with money in the bank.
Important Disclosures
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