The Federal Housing Finance Agency plan to allow more borrowers to refinance into lower-rate mortgages brought plenty of analysis from the industry about the plan’s merits. As part of the plan, the FHFA removed the 125% loan-to-value ceiling for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans to qualify for a refi. The federal regulator also cut back on risk-based fees and representation and warranty risks that make lenders reluctant to accept certain loans. An appraisal also is no longer required as long as an automated valuation model estimate is already provided. HousingWire CEO Paul Jackson shared his views on the plan during an interview with CNN American Morning Tuesday. “There are 11 million mortgages underwater,” Jackson said. “There’s 4 million borrowers who might benefit from this. It’s certainly a positive. I don’t know how you can say it’s not a positive to say, ‘We’re going to actually help people who are doing the right thing: They are underwater on their mortgage, yet they are still making payments’. Certainly giving them the ability access ultra low mortgage rates is a good thing. It’s good for the economy and it’s good for the mortgage market.”
Paul Jackson is the former publisher and CEO at HousingWire.see full bio
Most Popular Articles
Why housing demand is up and inventory is down in 2026
Pending sales rose to 75,856 vs 72,039 in 2025 as inventory turned negative year over year with mortgage rates near 6.58%.
Jun 13, 2026
-
HUD tests a new Operation Breakthrough for today’s housing crisis
Jun 23, 2026 -
SERHANT. expands into Texas with 13 founding agents
Jun 23, 2026 -
Keys to the housing market for the rest of 2026
Jun 20, 2026 -
Fannie Mae to expand title pilot program, Pulte says
Jun 24, 2026 -
Congress passes 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, sends bill to Trump
Jun 23, 2026
Latest Articles
KB Home Q2 2026 earnings point to scale vs execution debate
Homebuilding’s mid-year public company earnings season is now looking through the prism of the back half of 2026. Each of the sector’s players had better have put themselves in a good position for some heavy lifting and outperformance, rather than lugging around a forgettable first half. In that light, it’s welcome news that one of […]
Paul Jackson is the former publisher and CEO at HousingWire.see full bio