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Rent-To-Own Bailout on the Horizon?

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  • Rent-To-Own Bailout on the Horizon?

    Government Weighs Turning Foreclosures Into Rentals

    By Nick Timiraos


    There’s an 800-pound gorilla in the nation’s hardest-hit housing markets: hundreds of thousands of foreclosed properties are selling, and there’s four times as many potential foreclosures behind them.

    The Journal writes today that one idea gaining support in Washington is an effort to pull some of those properties off the market and rent them out, either on homes owned by federal agencies or loan giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

    These firms and U.S. banks currently own more than 500,000 foreclosed homes, and there’s another 2 million loans in some stage of foreclosure. The high share of distressed sales in many struggling markets is contributing to continued declines in home prices.

    “Can we find a way to try and reduce that overhang or to try to provide incentives for investors to covert them?” said Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in testimony to Congress last week.

    Critics worry about the risk of the government as landlord. One solution: sell federally backed foreclosures to investors who would have to agree to rent them out for a to-be-determined period of time. Investors would rehab the properties, fill them with tenants, and hire a national property management firm to oversee the day-to-day landlord needs.

    Supporters say while the government isn’t set up to be a landlord, neither is it any better prepared to sell thousands of foreclosed properties — something it’s already doing anyway. “Putting these homes in the hands of people who can take care of them and rent them out” would save taxpayer money, says John Burns, who runs a home-building consulting firm in Irvine, Calif.

    So far, the Fannie and Freddie have disappointed institutional investors by resisting selling homes in bulk at deep discounts. Instead, foreclosures are either sold through regular retail listings or in public auctions, known as trustee or sheriff sales. Those auctions have attracted primarily mom-and-pop investors but also include hedge fund-backed debt buyers.

    Two years ago, investors increasingly scooped up cheap properties at auctions in the hopes of rehabbing and quickly reselling them for a profit. But declining home values — and increased competition from investors — has made that much harder.

    Meanwhile, the discounts for foreclosed properties in some markets are so attractive “that it looks like the cash flow investors are getting [on rentals] is awfully good,” says Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist in Leesburg, Va.

    One sign that investor demand has picked up for cheap properties that can be rented: in Phoenix, the number of homes selling below $100,000 was up 41% from one year ago in May, while all other sales were down 11.3%, according to DataQuick, a real-estate data firm.

    “It doesn’t take too long as an investor to recognize the opportunity: home prices are less, but rents are more,” says Eric Peterson, a former homebuilder and co-founder of Praxis Capital, which has launched a $10 million fund focused on renting out foreclosures. Once prices stabilize and begin rising in a few years, “we’ll be holding a fair amount of inventory, and we’ll be ready to sell.”

    The idea has won backing from a number of influential private sector minds. Rental programs could “solve a couple of policy problems with one solution” by also extending qualified tenants an option to one day purchase the homes, said mortgage-bond pioneer Lewis Ranieri in a recent paper with Kenneth Rosen, a housing economist at the University of California at Berkeley.

    http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/20...-into-rentals/

  • #2
    Re: Rent-To-Own Bailout on the Horizon?

    Originally posted by don View Post
    Government Weighs Turning Foreclosures Into Rentals

    .. one idea gaining support in Washington is an effort to pull some of those properties off the market and rent them out, either on homes owned by federal agencies or loan giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

    ....
    The idea has won backing from a number of influential private sector minds. (??, who's) Rental programs could “solve a couple of policy problems with one solution” by also extending qualified tenants an option to one day purchase the homes, said mortgage-bond pioneer Lewis Ranieri in a recent paper with Kenneth Rosen, a housing economist at the University of California at Berkeley.

    http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/20...-into-rentals/
    dunno about this one = sounds an awful lot like a re-dux of the 60's 'great society' where the .gov spent billions (well, hundreds of millions, back in them daze) to build thousands of rental units in the inner cities and then, since things that are 'free' have no value - the residents promptly trashed them thus enlarging the ghettos

    so what eye hear here is a bankster looking for another bailout while they address another 'social need'

    IMHO, would be better to bulldoze the lowest end junk and allow a rational 'redevlopment' or 'urban renewal' in areas where private sector capital wants to put THEIR OWN money to work, where they see a profit to be made - this will create jobs for the productive sector vs more welfare for the bankster class

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    • #3
      Re: Rent-To-Own Bailout on the Horizon?

      Making the banksters' mortgage portfolio whole is the goal here. Social needs? Don't waste any gray cells figuring out a program. Of course they'll need cover. Hard to see how this could reflate housing. Of course once the TBTF mortgage holdings are discharged at full bubble value at public expense, who in FIRE would care if housing didn't reflate. Rentier Nation is an excellent fit for FIRE-Landia but there's work to be done first

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      • #4
        Re: Rent-To-Own Bailout on the Horizon?

        It's easy to forget that the role of the housing lending frenzy was not only to generate a windfall of fees but to provide the fuel for the MBS and the derivatives. Can shadow housing stock be dealt away with without addressing these much larger (gargantuan) FIRE entities.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Rent-To-Own Bailout on the Horizon?

          Originally posted by don View Post
          It's easy to forget that the role of the housing lending frenzy was not only to generate a windfall of fees but to provide the fuel for the MBS and the derivatives. Can shadow housing stock be dealt away with without addressing these much larger (gargantuan) FIRE entities.
          methinks other than waiting for the inevitable increase in population (and inflation), the only way out might be how they 'saved detroit'
          kash-4-klunker suburbs, anybody?
          tho it might be easier to simply have the banks line up at the barber, so the bernank can chop off some more of our hair and then they can have dreadlocks

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