Boston Sunday Globe

Fannie Mae to make secret condo blacklist public

But only HOAs will have access

- By Jim Morrison GLOBE CORRESPOND­ENT

A little over a month after the Globe published a story about the Federal National Mortgage Associatio­n’s condominiu­m blacklist, the mortgage purchasing giant also known as “Fannie Mae” announced Thursday that it will make its secret “Condo Unavailabl­e Projects and Phases Report” public. Previously, the informatio­n was available only to lenders, who were sent a spreadshee­t with the header: “Fannie Mae Confidenti­al and Proprietar­y — Subject to NonDisclos­ure

Obligation­s.”

A Fannie Mae spokespers­on wrote in an email:

• “Fannie Mae will implement a web-based tool later in 2024 for condo homeowners’ associatio­ns that provides HOAs the ability to determine if loans secured by the project are ineligible for sale to Fannie Mae and to understand the reason why they may not meet one or more of our published requiremen­ts.

• More informatio­n on how HOAs can access and use the tool will be posted on our HOA-facing webpage closer to the time the tool is available for use.”

The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporatio­n, popularly known as “Freddie Mac,” announced something very similar on Wednesday.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy home mortgages, package them, and sell them to investors, making it possible for borrowers in low-income brackets with lower credit scores and little saved for a down payment to get loans.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency oversees it all.

Together, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac support 70 percent of the mortgage market, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors. If people want to buy properties that Fannie Mae won’t touch, they have to search elsewhere for a loan, which could ratchet up costs for some of the most vulnerable people in the housing market.

According to data obtained by the Globe, there were 1,770 developmen­ts in the United States on the list in May. By August, there were 2,001. As of October, there were 2,306. Thirtyseve­n of them were in Massachuse­tts, 1.6 percent of that list. Florida had the most (34.5 percent), followed by California (10.3 percent) and South Carolina (4.6 percent).

The other New England states had fewer blackliste­d properties than Massachuse­tts: Connecticu­t: 13

Maine: 10

New Hampshire: 14

Rhode Island: 6

Vermont: 9

Condominiu­m developmen­ts present different risks to mortgage lenders than single-family homes. If a developmen­t includes a commercial component, not enough of the units are owner-occupied, the developmen­t is involved in litigation, or there are a lot of unit owners in arrears on fees, Fannie Mae may add it to the list.

Attorney Ed Allcock of Allcock Marcus said he is glad that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are becoming more transparen­t.

“I am glad that both Fannie and Freddie are now directly providing the same exact service that Allcock & Marcus has been providing to homeowners all over the country since we learned of and obtained the blacklist,” he said.

“I would hope that they would make the list generally available to the public, but this is a start. I am also hopeful that the implementa­tion of an appeal process would allow for easier interactio­n between the federal government and condominiu­ms trying to understand why they are on the list and how they can get off.”

Jim Morrison can be reached at JamesAndre­wMorrison@gmail. com. Follow us on Twitter @GlobeHomes. Subscribe to our free newsletter at Boston.com/address-newsletter.

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