If you want to be notified when I write something new on The Mortgage Reports, sign up for free daily email alerts or subscribe to the free RSS feed.

Why New Construction Condo Mortgage Guidelines Should Be Granted “Special Exceptions”

Posted on June 2, 2008
Filed under Conforming Mortgage Guidelines
Read the complete post

Thanks for visiting The Mortgage Reports. To stay absolutely current on mortgage markets and important guideline changes, be sure to take my free daily email alerts.

Comparing 2005 lending guidelines on condos to 2008 lending guidelines on condos.

Fannie Mae's new mortgage guidelines rightfully scrutinize buyers and owners of condominiums.

Since late-2007, mortgage markets have a new emphasis on collateral, or the value of the underlying property, and in a condo building, collateral can be wiped out for reasons beyond the borrower's control:

  1. Foreclosure-like sales prices in a similar unit
  2. "Special" assessment fees levied by the association
  3. Too much supply for similar units, not enough demand

However, just because condos are more "at-risk" than other property types doesn't mean that Fannie Mae should lump all condominium buildings together. 

New construction condos in 2008 pose much less tisk to lenders than those of 2005 and what Fannie Mae is doing is equivalent to swearing off California Zinfandel forever just because 2005 was a crap year.

The 2008 Condo Vintage should produce much different results from the 2005 Condo Vintage, but, unfortunately, mortgage lenders plan to treat them both the same.

The biggest reason why 2008 condo mortgages will be different is because today's average condo buyer hurdles over lending guidelines that 2005 buyers never had to consider, including:

  • Proving income with tax returns, W-2s and paystubs
  • Proving assets with bank statements and retirement statements
  • Showing healthy debt-to-income ratios
  • Making minimum downpayments of 5% for primary owners, 25% for investors

And then, lenders are applying harsher title regulations, new seller concession rules and strict appraisal review requirements to every mortgage approval -- safeguards which did not exist in 2005.

And lastly, the cherry on top: mortgage products.  Over the last few years:

  1. Lenders discontinued the 2-year ARM
  2. Negatively-amortizing loans fell out of favor
  3. 5-year ARM consistently out-priced 3-year ARMs

Therefore, almost nobody in today's new construction condo buildings has a mortgage adjusting prior to 2013. 

Fannie's new, stricter condo guidelines is bad news for new construction buyers because it unfairly lumps their home loans with poorly-performing assets. There's a well-known saying about babies and bathwater.

Over the next 2 years, loan performance attached to Housing Heyday Condos is expected to deteriorate and then should start to show improvement because the "new" home loans in the building will be subscribed to the "stricter" mortgage guidelines.

As an action item, if you live in one of these building and know you'll need a new mortgage prior to 2010, consider getting that mortgage today.  Joining the 2008 Vintage, after all, should be less restrictive than waiting to see what the 2009 or 2010 Vintage will look like.

Borrowing for condos should get harder before it gets easier and as stories like this one (no relation!) repeat themselves around the country, lenders will tighten up to protect themselves -- even as the Vintage that led to these situations is from last year's soil.


Dan Green is an active loan officer. Email or call 513-443-2020. Dan is on Twitter at @mortgagereports.

SEO Copywriting Made Simple
I use Scribe to improve my blog SEO

Live Rate Quotes

Required fields are marked with *