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Dawn Rickabaugh, Broker dawn@notequeen.com 626.641.3931



Owner Financed Properties Gaining Popularity as Freddie and Fannie Face the Fire

“Will the seller take 5% down?” the agent asked me. “FHA is the only possible thing out there right now for my first time home buyer, but if your seller can match it, then we should be able to write an offer.” This kind of conversation will become increasingly common as the credit crisis plays out and buyers and sellers look for other ways of putting and keeping real estate transactions together.

Go read this article by CNN Money regarding Fannie and Freddie:

“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are government sponsored entities that help the mortgage market function by purchasing pools of loans and packaging them into securities.

Fannie Mae has reported a loss for the past two quarters while Freddie Mac has posted three consecutive quarterly losses. Both companies are expected to report a loss in the second quarter as well.

According to a report from Lehman Brothers analyst Bruce Harting, it would be “extremely challenging” for either company to come up with so much cash to meet new minimum capital requirements, causing already timid investors to be concerned. He added that a “severely undercapitalized” Fannie and Freddie “could possibly topple the already fragile markets.”

A study by Bridgewater Associates, one of the world’s biggest hedge funds, estimates that total credit crisis losses will amount to $1.6 trillion worldwide, and we’ve only lost $400 billion so far . . . so the global financial crisis might only be 25% complete? Wowee . . .

mortgage writedowns

“Yes, we’re ready to consider a 5% down,” I answered, “but we’ll have to structure the transaction in a way that adds some extra protection for the seller.”

In the standard seller carry back world, a 10% down payment is considered minimum, with 20% or more being preferable. If a buyer puts down that much hard equity, then it’s considered a pretty good note, and a note buyer will offer a higher price for it. Anything less than 10% and you seriously compromise the value of the note, or your ability to sell it at all.

So why would any seller consider taking a 5% down payment? Because:

If we can’t count on the institutional lending community while they work out their issues, secure government bailouts, etc., then buyers, sellers and the real estate professionals who serve them need to become proficient at other ways of closing real estate transactions.

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