Mexico’s SHF to Eliminate UDI Loans in 2011

Date Published 6/28/2011
Author Marja Hoek-Smit
Theme
Country Mexico






June 2, 2011: The Mexican housing agency Sociedad Hipotecaria Federal (SHF) will eliminate its inflation-indexed Unidades de Inversion, or UDI mortgage refinancing in 2011. 

UDI mortgages are fixed-rate mortgages denominated in the Mexican UDI inflation-linked currency. With UDI loans both the nominal mortgage balance and monthly payments move in line with inflation, resulting in payment uncertainty for the borrower and possible negative amortization. While initial mortgage payments are lower on UDI loans compared to peso-denominated mortgages, improving affordability, the credit risk is higher.  More>>

SHF introduced a new peso mortgage product – the Defined Payments mortgage—which has a lower initial interest rate than regular peso mortgages, enabling low-income borrowers to more easily qualify for a loan.  The rate will increase every third year, for a pre-determined number of years, and the mortgage payment will adjust upwards by a maximum of 4% annually. The Defined Payments product limits the frequency of payment adjustments and is anticipated to carry a lower credit risk than the UDI loan. 



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