Skip to main content
Contact Us Today 818-425-3877 | Email
our facebook page
Our Blog
Tuesday, March 12 2013

Is Fannie Mae overpricing homes?

 
Jacalyn Blank, a real estate short sale negotiator, at foreclosed condominium that started out as a short sale in Rancho Penasquitos.
Jacalyn Blank, a real estate short sale negotiator, at foreclosed condominium that started out as a short sale in Rancho Penasquitos. — Howard Lipin

Is mortgage titan Fannie Mae overpricing homes throughout California?

Real estate agents and sellers have raised that question in a growing number of deals that have fallen apart with the taxpayer-supported company because of price disputes.

In those deals, sellers who had hoped for a more graceful exit from homeownership are pushed toward foreclosure.

Fannie Mae — which owns or backs about half of the home loans in California along with fellow mortgage-finance giant Freddie Mac — is trying to juggle two goals that appear to be at odds with each other.

The first is to help homeowners avert foreclosure through short sales.

For sellers, short sales — which allow borrowers to sell their homes for less than they owe as long as the owners of the mortgages say OK — are considered better than foreclosures because they shave off fewer points from credit scores and are sometimes more cost effective for banks.

READERS

If you’re struggling through the Fannie Mae short sale process, email reporter Lily Leung with your name, city, phone number, a short description of your circumstance and the best time to call. Email:lily.leung@utsandiego.com

Sellers also benefit because they can re-join the housing market faster, often cutting the wait time to as little as two years instead of seven for a foreclosure.

However, Fannie Mae also must price properties appropriately so that taxpayers, who have floated the company for four years, are getting a good deal.

The result of those competing goals?

Fannie Mae would agree to start the short sale process but would price those homes 20 percent to 40 percent above neighboring comparable sales, said Don Faught, president of the California Association of Realtors. The association is one of the largest trade groups in the state.

The disagreement in pricing has left homebuyers feeling ripped off, and at times, has caused short sales to fail. When short sales fail, home sellers could get stuck with foreclosure auction dates.

“Obviously this is a problem because the agent has to (re-)market the property with the Fannie Mae property price,” Faught said. “And often, there’s no time to re-market the property before a foreclosure (auction date.)”

The disputed values, which Fannie Mae says are justified, are based on several factors, said Fannie Mae spokesman Andrew Wilson. They include past sales, the opinions of contract real estate brokers, and sometimes appraisals.

Those factors yield a minimum amount for each property being considered for a short sale.

“We’re comfortable in the values we set,” Wilson said.

At times, the requested price is more than the highest comparable home sale and requested at the eleventh hour, say people involved in these deals.

A DEAL GONE SOUR

Mark DePlachett, a 62-year-old plumber, was trying to short sell his home in Rancho Peñasquitos during the holidays.

DePlachett wanted to get out of his mortgage because he could no longer afford it, he said. He was hurt on the job and lost a huge source of income.

The buyer interested in the property offered $191,000 for the condo, which appeared to be a fair price because a sampling of condos in the same building were being listed at or had sold below $200,000, said Jacalyn Blank, the short sale negotiator in that deal. Analyzing comparable units is a common practice in the housing world.

Fannie Mae’s asking price: $260,000, or roughly 30 percent above the highest comparable sale in that area.

That offer was actually made by Bank of America on behalf of Fannie Mae. As with many loans, one company can own the loan and another company can service it. Servicing a loan means accepting and managing mortgage payments from borrowers.

Fannie Mae gives loan servicers a minimum price that it’s willing to take in a short sale. The mortgage-finance company says it will even consider “close” offers, Wilson said.

If the buyer’s offer doesn’t meet the minimum, then servicers like Bank of America negotiate on Fannie’s behalf. This delegated responsibility, in fact, was expanded in the fall as a way to speed up short sales.

If a buyer wants to dispute the Fannie Mae value, then the servicer can send it to Fannie Mae for review.

That happened in DePlachett’s case. Analysis of comparable condos, either listed at or sold for sub-$200,000, were turned in along with other market details.

Fannie Mae ultimately rejected the offer and the buyer walked. The property was later re-listed at $260,000, the Fannie Mae request. Months passed. No bites.

A new buyer in December offered $251,000. But by then, it was too late.

“That was declined because the foreclosure sale was weeks away,” said Bank of America spokewoman Jumana Bauwens.

Eventually, the property sold at foreclosure auction for $240,000. That’s about 4 percent less than what the second buyer offered.

However, in some cases, owners of home loans can make more money through a foreclosure because they don’t have to pay real estate fees, such as commissions, escrow and title, said Blank, the short sale negotiator.

“It’s not fair to homeowners who don’t want the foreclosure in their records,” Blank said. “... It’s not fair to the buyer. It means they are overpaying ... Sometimes, you have to pay $10,000 more.”

DePlachett now has a black mark on his borrowing history for about seven years.

“Bottom line ... just move on,” he said. “What else can you do?”

If a Fannie Mae short sale goes to foreclosure, then it is listed for sale at public auction. Proceeds of that sale would go to Fannie Mae.

If the property fails to sell at auction, then it goes into Fannie Mae’s foreclosure portfolio for resale. Mortgages for those homes generally do not require appraisals.

WIDESPREAD DISPUTES

Accusations of value inflation in Fannie Mae deals appear widespread. It became such an issue that the officials with the California Association of Realtors, which has a 115,000-person membership, recently flew to Washington D.C. to meet with Fannie Mae officials.

Faught, the California group’s president, said the meeting was cordial and reps from the company appeared eager to listen. But the bottom line is, price inflation is still very much an issue.

Fannie Mae officials are aware of the pricing disagreements with their short sales. Their answer in February was to create a process that allows agents to send those issues directly to Fannie Mae.

Addressing San Diego resident DePlachett’s short sale, Wilson said, it “would

be a prime example of the kind of issue we’d hope to avoid by allowing agents

and others to escalate short sale cases directly to Fannie Mae.”

Despite the new process in place, real estate agents are still concerned.

Agents fear that prices in certain areas are already artificially inflated.

When Fannie Mae sets minimum prices above the highest comparable home

sale in a neighborhood, it’s creating a new value standard that may not be

justified, said Phil Johnson, a real estate agent is dealing with Fannie Mae

value disputes.

Also, agents say Fannie Mae’s minimum asking prices are driving away

qualified buyers and increasing competition for traditional buyers.

When Fannie Mae asks for higher prices, buyers who have secured financing

would then have to get more financing to cover the difference.

This could be a problem for borrowers because they’d have to justify the

request for more money from the mortgage company, which may not be possible.

Cash buyers, on the other hand, may not have that issue.

They’re typically backed by companies with capital or hard-money loans, so

“they can pay whatever they want,” Johnson said. This could create bidding

wars and other issues for traditional buyers, who are already facing a tight inventory.

San Diego real estate broker Kurt Wannebo says the values that Fannie Mae

officials set make sense because they’re fully aware that the housing market

in areas like San Diego are hot.

Low inventory levels, spurred by high levels of underwater homeowners, have

caused prices to go up. The median price for a local home sold in January was

$350,000, up 15 percent from a year ago.

Competition for limited inventory, especially in the entry-level price range, has

been worsened by declining foreclosures.

Buyers who had typically purchased distressed homes now are forced to enter

the regular home market. This means more competition for traditional buyers.

“Fannie realized that certain market prices are appreciating quickly and offers

are coming in high,” Wannebo said. “ ... It’s wrong in that you know the values

aren’t always there.

“The problem is, let’s say you list a property for $300,000 because that’s what

the comps show,” he added. “I actually get an offer of up to $350,000. Buyers will

overpay for properties if they just want to get into it. (Fannie Mae) is exploiting that aspect.”

Email melily.leung@utsandiego.com | Tweet me: @LilyShumLeung |Subscribe to this blog. | Or try Google+

Posted by: Patty schultz AT 04:13 pm   |  Permalink   |  0 Comments  |  Email
Tuesday, March 12 2013

Struggling borrowers who relinquish their homes can live in them temporarily without having to make mortgage payments under new guidelines by mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The guidelines, introduced late last year, are set to take full effect by March 1. They're meant to help those facing hardships such as a job loss, illness or the death of a spouse.

Article Tab: On March 1, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will roll out a new program allowing underwater homeowners to give up their homes and cancel their mortgages. The new rules for these so-called deed-in-lieu transactions apply to people who are current or less than 90 days late on their payments.
On March 1, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will roll out a new program allowing underwater homeowners to give up their homes and cancel their mortgages. The new rules for these so-called deed-in-lieu transactions apply to people who are current or less than 90 days late on their payments.
SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

About mortgage release

In a nutshell: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage enterprises that back most of the home loans in the U.S., are streamlining the process for borrowers who can demonstrate hardships and want to give up their homes and be released from their debt. As part of the new guidelines, some homeowners can stay in their residences for up to three months without making mortgage payments or paying rent.

How to get started: Homeowners interested in the latest mortgage release guidelines should talk to their loan servicers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac representatives say.

Additional information: Here are some resources for homeowners:

•Fannie Mae has set up two help centers near Orange County: Call 866-442-8576 (Los Angeles area) or 866-442-9409 (Inland Empire)

•On the Web, see Fannie Mae'sknowyouroptions.com.

•For Freddie Mac, see the Avoiding Foreclosure Resource Center and Deed-in-Lieu pages onfreddiemac.com.

 
 
 

Bottom line: Homeowners can turn over the house keys and erase their debt – even if they are still current on their payments. In the past, borrowers typically had to be delinquent before they could qualify for such help as a loan modification.

"We don't view it as 'walking away,'" Fannie Mae spokesman Andrew Wilson said, referring to a term used in the housing industry to describe homeowners who bail on their mortgages. "We view it as taking ... responsible action."

Striking a deal to relinquish a home that's heading for repossession is nothing new; the homeowner gives the lender a "deed in lieu of foreclosure." Or some borrowers just stop making their mortgage payments, and the property is eventually foreclosed.

But now some homeowners can be released from their mortgages with the option of living in the homes payment-free for up to three months, Wilson said. The new guidelines also streamline the process: Banks can green light homeowners who qualify for mortgage release without having to seek case-by-case approval from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Fannie and Freddie, government-sponsored enterprises chartered by Congress, guarantee about 70 percent of mortgages in the United States. Both are in the process of winding down as policymakers look at revamping the mortgage market.

Wilson said the guidelines aim to avoid protracted foreclosures and get properties on the market more quickly. Homeowners must leave the residences in good condition. In return, a homeowner gets some time to make a transition and takes less of a credit hit. Another part of the program gives the borrower an option that has been available for a few years: Paying rent to stay in the home for up to a year.

If foreclosure can be prevented, Wilson said, "That's good for the borrower, it's good for Fannie Mae, it's good for the taxpayer and it's good for the neighborhood where that home is. We view it as saving money and reducing losses."

Under the guidelines, even someone with a vacation home could apply for a deed-in-lieu transaction on their primary residence. In some cases, homeowners may be asked to make a financial contribution.

California is a non-recourse state. That's means that after a foreclosure or short sale, the lender on a purchase-money mortgage has no right to the borrower's wages or assets. But a lawyer for Freddie Mac said the law does not prohibit contributions from borrowers who engage in deed-in-lieu transactions, according to Freddie Mac spokesman Brad German.

Reactions to the mortgage-release provisions are mixed.

Daren Blomquist of RealtyTrac, a nationwide foreclosure tracking service based in Irvine, said the guidelines may help individual homeowners but could camouflage the still shaky state of the housing industry.

"The bottom line is that these new requirements make it easier for homeowners with negative equity to walk away from their mortgages," Blomquist said. "This is an implicit acknowledgment that many of these homeowners will end up being foreclosed anyway and an attempt to short circuit the lengthy and messy foreclosure process – and possibly the negative press that comes with higher foreclosure numbers."

He said, "In many cases a mortgage release may be the best option for everyone involved, but the danger is that a shift away from completed foreclosures to mortgage releases could mask the fact that the housing market is still extremely fragile."

Blomquist said nearly 11 million homeowners nationwide are "seriously underwater."The number represents 26 percent of all homeowners with a mortgage, "and every mortgage release still represents a distressed homeowner who is losing his or her home."

In Orange County, 91,128 borrowers were underwater at the end of the fourth quarter in 2012, or 19.6 percent of homeowners with a mortgage, according to online home tracker Zillow.com. That fell from 21.3 percent in the third quarter.

Representatives for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac said the agencies did not have projections on how many homeowners would qualify for mortgage release or how much money would be spent on it.

"The program will undoubtedly be a benefit for some borrowers facing hardship, but it is too soon to tell what impact this will have on the housing market and economy," said Dustin Hobbs of the California Mortgage Bankers Association. "Too many questions (are) left to be answered, including what effect this will have on borrower attitudes and behavior. As with all such programs, the devil is in the details, and we just don't know enough yet."

Jeff Lazerson of Mortgage Grader in Laguna Niguel questioned the timing of the new guidelines in light of the winding down of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were put into a conservatorship several years ago to help shore up the nation's crashing housing market. He said the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank, is about to release a blueprint for big changes.

"Why now, why after the eye of the storm has passed, are they inviting on-time paying borrowers who happen to be underwater to mail in their keys?" he said. "This probably has a lot more to do with reducing Fannie and Freddie's balance sheets of perceived toxic loans that are going to be hard to offload."

Contact the writer: 714-796-4903 or mkalfus@ocregister.com

Posted by: Patty Schultz AT 04:02 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email