FHA will not extend anti-flipping waiver
The
 Federal Housing Administration (FHA) announced that it will not extend 
what is commonly referred to as the “FHA anti-flipping waiver.” This 
temporary waiver, put into place January 2010, provides a waiver for the
 FHA rule that prohibits the use of FHA financing to purchase single 
family properties that are being resold within 90 days of purchase. 
Prior to the waiver, a mortgage was not eligible for FHA financing if 
the purchase contract was executed within 90 days of the seller 
purchasing the property.
At the urging of the National Association
 of REALTORS®, the FHA previously extended the temporary waiver of this 
provision through Dec. 31, 2014. With the waiver, investors were able to
 acquire and renovate foreclosed and abandoned properties to increase 
the availability of safe and affordable homes across the nation. NAR sent a letter to the FHA commissioner in October, urging him to re-extend the waiver for these same reasons.
Why is the FHA doing this?
An
 audit released by the Housing and Urban Development Department (HUD) 
regarding property flipping says that HUD was lacking when it came to 
ensuring lenders' compliance with underwriting conditions for the 
waiver. This means that HUD did not ensure that the lenders were meeting
 standards for the loans, nor was HUD able to accurately track loan data
 on the properties resulting in a risk to the FHA Mutual Mortgage 
Insurance Fund of nearly $274 million. HUD recommended discontinuing the
 anti-flipping waiver as a result, and the FHA complied.
What does this mean for you and your clients?
If
 you are an investor or a property-rehabilitation specialist or 
represent one, beginning Jan. 1, 2015, you will have to return to 
pre-2010 operations in which properties may not be sold to a buyer using
 FHA financing until after 90 days have elapsed after the seller 
purchased the property.