Apartment Finance
TodayMORTGAGE LENDINGFANNIE MAE Credit
Standards TightenAPARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • June 2008 Weak
economy, lack of competition drive Fannie Mae to adjust underwriting in first
half. BY JERRY ASCIERTO Fannie Mae is
processing deals hand over fist this year even as it makes significant adjustments
to its credit standards. In early April, Fannie Mae moved to a standard
1.25x debt-service coverage ratio (DSCR) and down to 1.20x in strong markets such
as New York, Los Angeles, and Seattle. Last year, Fannie Mae had lowered
that threshold to a standard 1.20x and down to 1.15x in strong markets. The move
was a reaction to the aggressive underwriting by conduit lenders who were stealing
much of the market share from Fannie Mae. Fannie Mae frankly was
never really comfortable with the 1.20x debtservice cover, said Byron Steenerson,
president of Alliant Capital, LLC, a Delegated Underwriting and Servicing (DUS)
lender. But there was a fairly strong competitive pressure to be down there
because of the conduits. The change back to the historical norm of
1.25x DSCR is a reflection of the reduced competitive environment, as conduit
lenders continue to wait on the sidelines. Its also partly a reflection
of concern for the overall economy, said Don King, senior vice president
and national agency director for DUS lender CWCapital. Theres a lot
more concern today on the short- and medium-term economic outlook.
In addition, Fannie Mae has tightened its underwriting standards on short-term
loans. Last year, five-year deals could be sized up to an 80 percent loan-to-value
(LTV) ratio, but Fannie Mae changed the LTV ratio on five-year deals to 75 percent
in the first half of 2008. Fannie Mae has also made some borrower- friendly
changes to its criteria for underwriting acquisition deals. In the past,
lenders used a rigid, formulaic approach to sizing loans on acquisition deals.
Lenders would look only at a propertys historical datathe trailing
three months of net rental income and the trailing year of expenses and
develop a baseline net operating income from which to size the loan.
But with that formula lenders couldnt take into account the potential buyers
projections of income and expenses, which limited the amount Fannie Mae was willing
to lend. Lenders would need to seek waivers from Fannie Mae to increase the loan
size, a process that increased deal cycle time significantly. Most
acquisitions are driven by a buyers perception that they can do a better
job than the current owner, said Steenerson. The formula they had
to look back on income was very limiting, and we werent able get the dollars
the buyer was seeking without spending a great deal of time justifying to Fannie
Mae why they should allow flexibility. The new formula, which went
into effect this spring, allows lenders to take the buyers projections into
account when sizing the loan, which reduces deal cycle time and ultimately increases
the loan amount. Winning deals Both Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac are providing liquidity in a down market, and unlike other capital sources,
were making deals of up to 80 percent LTV in the first half of 2008. But with
so much business coming their way, the government-sponsored enterprises now have
the luxury of cherry-picking which transactions they will finance. In late
April, 10-year conventional Fannie Mae deals were being priced at 225 basis points
over the 10-year Treasury note, which carried a 3.81 percent yield, making the
all-in rate 6.06 percent. Thanks to relatively low prices and high leverage levels,
Fannie Maeaffiliated lenders are still seeing much interest in the programs, though
the composition of the business has changed. DUS lender Green Park Financial
had processed about $650 million in Fannie Mae deals by late April and hopes to
close more than $2 billion for the year, up from $1.2 billion in 2007. The company
added eight employees in the last six months to help process all of the business
that has come its way. Green Park is getting far fewer requests for acquisition
financing: Only about 25 percent of Green Parks Fannie Mae deals are for
acquisitions, down from about 75 percent in the spring of 2007. Theres
still a disconnect between sellers expectations for the value of their assets
and the borrowers, said Ted Patch, senior vice president and chief
production officer for DUS lender Green Park Financial. Now that the loan-sizing
parameters are more prudent, the borrower can only borrow so much money, and that
translates into what theyd be willing to pay for the property.
But with interest rates at favorable levels, the company has seen a lot of interest
in refinancing opportunities, and has also processed more manufactured housing
and seniors housing deals. Similarly, Alliant Capital said about 25 percent
of its deals this year are for acquisitions, down from 50 percent normally. But
the company had processed about $200 million in Fannie Mae loans by late April,
with a target to produce more than $600 million in 2008, almost doubling its 2007
volume of $315 million. Fannie Mae is working on some portfolio retention
products to make the refinancing of existing Fannie Mae loans more attractive.
While the company was mum on details, lenders said the time was perfect for Fannie
Mae to further prove its case. Fannie Mae has a unique opportunity
to cement their relationship with a large group of borrowers right now both
those that have come back to them [from the commercial mortgagebacked securities
(CMBS) market] and those that have not used them until now, said Steenerson.
If they can demonstrate that the system is userfriendly and competitive
and that theyll stay in the market in good times and bad, then they can
really expand their market. CWCapitals King believes that Fannie
Maes outlook for the rest of 2008 is bright, as the companys products
continue to attract interest and other sources of liquidity wait on the sidelines.
But even if the CMBS market comes back in 2008, it wont come back all at
once. There will be some period of time while the conduits ramp up and prove
themselves out again before theyre really going to be in a position to compete
with Freddie and Fannie, King said. |