Down payment assistance has been a tool to compensate for one of the key barriers to homeownership, i.e. a lack of adequate down payment on the purchase of a home.
Down payment assistance (DPA) programs have been in focus lately as lenders, consumer advocates, policy shops, and regulators are looking for ways to help first-time home buyers become homeowners. DPAs went through a period when they were largely discontinued due to the increase in defaults on loans using a DPA. There is still much debate about this issue, but in this blog we want to focus on the DPA business landscape and market trends today - particularly in the government lending sector.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) provides grants to state and local organizations through the HOME Investment Partnerships Program and the Community Development Block Grant Program. State and local housing finance agencies (HFAs) administer many of these programs. The three main types of down payment assistance are grants, second mortgage loans, and tax credits.
121,624 purchase mortgage loans with DPA ($30.2 Billion) were originated in 2021 (source: Polygon Research analysis in GovLoansVision of Ginnie Mae loan-level disclosure data set updated through January 2022).
First-Time Home Buyers (FTHB) comprise 84% of DPA purchase money loans.
In 2020, DPA purchase money loan production ticked up. Once 2021 originations are more fully tabulated, we expect the total will be more than 150,000 (note: there is a lag between origination and issuance that is most acute in the most recent 2 months at any given point in time; we estimate that the 121,624 originations we can see so far represent roughly 80% of the actual 2021 production.) See figure 1 below.
Figure 1: Annual DPA purchase money originations (number of loans)
Source: Polygon Research, GovLoansVision updated through January 2022
We can see the top issuers of DPA purchase loans as well:
Top 3 Non-Depository issuers::
Top 3 Depository Issuers:
The state with the highest DPA purchase money loan volume was California with about $4 Billion, followed by Texas with $3.14 Billion, and Florida with $2.3 Billion
We are keeping a close eye on DPA loan originations performance, including the 30-60-90+ delinquency rates, forbearance, and liquidations. If you would like to see how this picture looks for your state, schedule a#nbsp;15-minute free data exploration call with us.