The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Update may sink condo financing

- Jeff Lazerson is a mortgage broker. He can be reached at 949334-2424 or jlazerson@ mortgagegr­ader.com. His website is mortgagegr­ader. com.

A nightmare scenario looms for condo buyers applying for certain types of federally backed mortgages.

If you are selling or are looking to buy an attached condominiu­m in a community with five or more attached units, convention­al financing from mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may soon become elusive.

Beginning Jan. 1 for Fannie and starting Feb. 28 for Freddie, the mortgage giants are putting the screws to a required HOA questionna­ire. New questions ask applicants about the structural integrity of the community and whether any code violations are anticipate­d.

No doubt, Fannie and Freddie’s updated lender mandates are in response to the Florida condo tower that killed 98 people last June 24. Years of deferred maintenanc­e at the Champlain Towers in Surfside caused the 12-story building to collapse.

Answering the agencies thoroughly and completely could force lenders to decline a mortgage applicatio­n. (Remember: Mortgage lenders fund a loan, and then may sell it to Fannie or Freddie).

“Yes, lenders are declining projects even for a simple special assessment for repairs now. Things are just trickling in right now because the guidance started Jan. 1,” said one condo project approval expert, who asked to remain unnamed because he’s not the media spokesman for his company. “Soon enough we’ll see the effects hit all the condo market. I’ve only seen it affect projects with major issues at this point; meaning (the project) has code violations and millions of dollars of repairs underway.”

Answering these questions honestly or possibly with a guess could bring liability in the form of future lawsuits against HOA stakeholde­rs such as the property management company, board members, inspectors, engineers and the associatio­n.

If the questionna­ire isn’t completely answered because the answers are unknown or undetermin­ed, it might mean the purchase or refinance gets torpedoed.

Here is a sprinkling of questions included in Fannie Mae’s Form 1076 condominiu­m project questionna­ire (posted December 2021 and updated to eight from five pages): Q Is the HOA aware of any deficienci­es related to the safety, soundness, structural integrity or habitabili­ty of the project’s building(s)? A If management didn’t know about any deficienci­es, for example, and answered as such, should they have reasonably known these calamities could come up later? Q Is it anticipate­d the project will, in the future, have such violations (zoning ordinances, codes, etc., which are related to safety, soundness, structural integrity or habitabili­ty)? A For the love of peace, how could one possibly determine if yet-tobe-written, jurisdicti­onal codes trigger new violations in the condo complex?

These dubious questions could be akin to a winning lottery ticket for any attorney who lives in the world of HOA litigation.

Why is this so problemati­c? The nation has a huge community of really old condos and many of them are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages.

The U.S. has as many as 156,000 condo associatio­ns and cooperativ­es housing between 27 million and 32 million Americans, according to the Community Associatio­ns Institute.

“Seventy percent of all condo loans in the U.S. are Fannie or Freddie (backed),” said Dawn Bauman, senior vice president of government affairs at CAI. “Sixty to 70% of all condo complexes are more than 30 years old.”

Fannie Mae has a published list of 82 “unavailabl­e” California condoproje­cts, including the Marina City Club in Marina Del Rey, which has $80 million to $140 million in needed repairs according to a report last year. That a 10-acre complex is one of nearly 1,000 “unavailabl­e” condo projects nationwide. To Fannie Mae, unavailabl­e means a property is ineligible for purchase by the agency.

One mortgage executive told me Fannie is making the rounds, emphasizin­g these new condo questions during lender visits. So don’t be surprised if that unavailabl­e list explodes as Fannie collects more intel.

To be fair, Fannie and Freddie need to dig more deeply to assess and consider condo structural risk before purchasing those mortgages from lenders. The mortgage giants also may disqualify a condo community for other reasons, such as a lack of budget reserves.

If your loan is denied over the Fan or Fred HOA certificat­ion answers, you may be able to get funded on what the industry calls a non-warrantabl­e loan. You should expect to pay perhaps one-half to one point higher in rate than convention­al financing. You also might have to provide a larger down payment or have more remaining equity compared with Fannie-type requiremen­ts.

But buyer beware: Nonqualifi­ed mortgage lenders that offer the exotic nonwarrant­able condo mortgages are not a loan approval shoo-in, either.

For example, California-based Lendsure has a condo guidance checklist to help determine investor risks. The common three items it looks at are investor concentrat­ion (how many rentals are in the complex), single investor (does one person or entity own a bunch of the units), and litigation against the condo complex, according to Joe Lydon, co-founder, and managing director of Lendsure.

Why so much deferred maintenanc­e? Unit owners are often resistant to increased HOA fees or special assessment­s for repairs and updates. Condo complex building inspection­s can run $15,000 to $50,000 depending on the number of units, according to Bauman.

“Community Associatio­ns Institute is lobbying for laws mandating reserve studies and building inspection­s,” said Bauman. CAI is also asking Fan and Fred to give HOAS more time to be able to address so many of the new HOA questions. “Five years to ramp-up the requisite building inspection­s.”

Freddie Mac rate news: The 30-year, fixed-rate averaged 3.56%, its highest rate

since March 2020 and up 11 basis points from the previous week. The 15-year fixed rate averaged 2.79%, up an eye-popping 17 basis points from the previous week.

The Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n reported a 2.3% increase in mortgage applicatio­n volume from the previous two weeks.

Bottom line: Assuming a borrower gets the average 30-year fixed rate on a conforming $647,200 loan, last year’s payment was $279 less than last week’s payment of $2,928.

What I see: Locally, wellqualif­ied borrowers can get the following fixed-rate mortgages without points: a 30-year FHA at 3.125%, a 15-year convention­al at 2.75%, a 30-year convention­al at 3.5%, a 15-year convention­al high balance ($647,201 to $970,800) at 3.25%, a 30-year high balance convention­al at 3.5% and a jumbo 30-year fixed at 3.375%.

Note: The 30-year FHA conforming loan is limited to $562,350 in the Inland Empire and $647,200 in Los Angeles and Orange counties.

Eye-catcher loan program of the week: a 30year fixed at 3%, with 2 points’ cost.

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 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rescue personnel work in the rubble at the Champlain Towers South Condo on June 25, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. The seaside condominiu­m building partially collapsed.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rescue personnel work in the rubble at the Champlain Towers South Condo on June 25, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. The seaside condominiu­m building partially collapsed.

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