From REAL CLEAR POLICY
By David Goldstein
https://www.realclearpolicy.com/articles/2024/02/21/low-income_homeownership_should_include_title_insurance_coverage_1013274.html
President Biden
and a growing number of members of Congress, faced with inflation and
higher interest rates, have correctly made increasing access to
affordable homeownership a public policy priority. The pursuit of the
American Dream of owning a home is as important now as it ever was. But
achieving that goal is ever more difficult, especially for low- and
moderate-income families.
The Biden administration should be commended for working to make
homeownership more affordable, accessible, and equitable. It has focused
on solving the main challenges to affordability, including lack of
housing supply and regulatory barriers to housing development at the
local level. But it is off base on one initiative that would hurt
homeowners by allowing certain home purchases to occur without the
protection of title insurance.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency has opened the way for
mortgage-finance giant Fannie Mae to expand the use of attorney opinion
letters (AOLs) instead of title insurance on certain loans it purchases,
including mortgages on condominiums and in homeowners’ associations.
This is a short-sighted program that adds unnecessary risk to homeowners
and U.S. taxpayers.
AOLs are legal opinions prepared by attorneys who do public-records
searches that assert that properties are not subject to title
impediments, which can impact ownership of the property. Title insurance
includes that basic search and also provides extra protection by
providing coverage for title difficulties that would not be found in
public records alone.
For example, AOLs do not protect against fraud and forgery, which are
growing concerns and major causes of claims. They also do not cover
legal costs for title problems, which title insurance does. AOLs leave
homeowners vulnerable to significant attorneys’ fees if they are forced
to defend their ownership rights.
Expanding the use of attorney opinion letters instead of title
insurance for condominium loans exposes consumers and lenders to a range
of unnecessary risks. Issues such as unpaid condominium or homeowners’
association dues and assessments that could lead to liens are not found
in public records searches. With an AOL, lenders and homeowners would be
left holding the bag if these items are not rectified before a property
is sold. Title insurance protects homeowners in such circumstances.
In addition, title insurance is regulated by states. AOLs are
unregulated and lack basic consumer protections provided by that kind of
oversight including requirements for title insurers to protect
consumers and hold reserves to pay claims.
Title insurance is a small, one-time cost that provides protection to
property rights for as long as a family owns their home. Homeowners pay
this modest fee as protection against future claims on their ownership.
Without it, they are gambling that they won’t face steep costs if their
right to own their home is challenged. In too many cases, that is not a
safe bet.
Without a title insurance backstop, both lenders and property owners
are left to fight over the consequences if their attorney’s opinion
turns out to be inadequate to protect their interests. Title insurance
protects against losses or damages from both known and unknown title
defects.
Substituting AOLs for title insurance will not accomplish the goal of
putting affordable homeownership in reach of more Americans. Fannie
Mae’s action hurts rather than helps American families and first-time
homebuyers, especially the lower income families that Fannie Mae is
supposed to help.
According to a recent study, title and settlement fees are less than 1 percent of the borrower’s total life-of-loan costs.
President Biden and his appointees are wise to try to expand
affordable homeownership opportunities. But permitting Fannie Mae to
take a shortcut and abandon title insurance even in limited
circumstances increases risk on average American households. It is a
mistake that will endanger property rights and do little for long-term
housing affordability and sustainability.
Congress should pass the bipartisan Protecting America’s Property
Rights Act cosponsored by Reps. Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas), Wiley Nickel
(D-N.C.), and Brad Sherman (D-Calif.), which would protect homebuyers
by requiring the proven coverage of title insurance on mortgages
purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
David Goldstein heads the American Consumer Alliance and chairs the Alliance to Defend Affordable Homeownership.