Cash for Condos Grows Scarcer; Equity Lines Vanish
Syndicated real estate columnist Kenneth Harney reports that would-be condo buyers across the country are about to find financing harder to come by. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both recently issued guidelines that require loan officers to perform due-diligence research on characteristics like a condo’s legal documentation and the percentage of units owned by…

Syndicated real estate columnist Kenneth Harney reports that would-be condo buyers across the country are about to find financing harder to come by. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both recently issued guidelines that require loan officers to perform due-diligence research on characteristics like a condo’s legal documentation and the percentage of units owned by investors, and for lenders to assume legal and financial responsibility for the accuracy of their assessments. “Even if you had an 800 FICO score and 50 percent equity,” says one mortgage broker, “you still might not be able to get a condo loan.” As Harney writes, “It depends on whether the underlying project can pass the underwriting tests, is in a declining market, and has a lender ‘concentration’ limit on it. Some lenders refuse to finance more than a set percentage of units in a single condo project to limit their risk.” At the same time, many home owners are starting to see big reductions, or freezes, on their home equity lines of credit. A poster on the Forum recently wrote the following: “Logged into my bank account today to find that my line of credit had been cut down by more than half. When I called the bank they told me it was due to a “reduction in property value”. I know things ain’t peachy, but I haven’t noticed prices going down that much! Has anyone else had experience with challenging this type of decision? I put 40% down on my home, fer chrissakes, got a great lease on my rental unit and my credit is well above 750. What gives?!” As the Times has reported, banks are freezing equity lines “even in areas where property prices are rising.” Ouch.
Condo-Loan Restrictions Tightening [Baltimore Sun]
Incredible Shrinking HELOC?? [Forum]
Photo by Evaonne Hendricks.
good, this should keep prices more reasonable
Lets see.. You paying rent on a 2 bedroom apartment of 2000.00 a month. But your retarded ass wants to be in the “Metoo” crowd and buys a 2 bedroom condo! With carrying costs over 4500.00 a month.
Plus where did you buy this condo? You went fringe and bought in the Ghetto! You did the “edgey” thing and now your “Investment” is blowing up in your face!
Look here assholes, we are going to have a fucking depression! If there are no more “Ponzi” financing , the whole thing falls apart!
Here look at this video, this is what happen when a neighborhood goes down the tubes!
Ruins of an Empire
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fn1jw7l2ZRw
The What
Someday this war is gonna end…
This isnt news – the only thing that would be newsworthy here is that they weren’t doing these reviews before.
However – there is no question in my mind that this is posted on Brownstoner as part of his (thinly veiled and completly incomprehensible) campaign to trash the condo market
Lower home equity lines means that buyers actually have to sell before they can buy. Should make the slowdown slow down faster.
Lower home equity lines means that buyers actually have to sell before they can buy. Should make the slowdown slow down faster.
“eggheads” implies that they are smart people with a theory that tells them what to do. Don’t blame the smart people or the theorists for this.
This is just straight out opportunism: the Republican deregulationists created a system that even not-so-smart bankers can play.
Step right up and take the bet. If you win, you get a big bonus, your employer makes lots of profits for its shareholders, homebuyers can pay prices they never would have dreamed of, builders and homesellers get rich. If you lose — the taxpayers cover your losses.
You don’t need to be an egghead to borrow and lend at Greenspan’s cheap rates on those terms.
Lower home equity lines means that buyers actually have to sell before they can buy. Should make the slowdown slow down faster.
we just had our banker at Chase suggest that we apply for an increase on our Home Equity line.
“Its called risk management and the banks are just waking up.”
Pathetic though that these guys just go from one extreme to another. Instead of being really really loose with lending, now lets try being really really tight with lending. These eggheads have no idea what they are doing at the end of the day…
Just like wall street – First tech Bubble, then Housing Bubble, now Comodities Bubble…When that bursts, maybe they will come full circle and start a brand new tech bubble again. Idiots every one, sad commentary on the human condition…