Apartment Finance
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Freddie Goes Green
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • January/February 2010
BY Jerry Ascierto
FREDDIE MAC
has taken a big
step toward offering
a green rehab
mortgage through
a partnership with
nonprofit lender
Community Preservation Corp. (CPC).
The organizations recently announced
a $1 billion green financing
initiative to offer construction and
mortgage loans to multifamily owners
pursuing energy-efficient upgrades and
retrofits. Half of the funds come from
Freddie Mac.
The question of how lenders account
for energy-efficient upgrades in their
underwriting has never been answered,
but this pilot program may point the
way. “We talk a lot about it, but we’ve
never done anything about it until now,”
says Mike May, senior vice president of
McLean, Va.-based Freddie Mac’s multifamily
division.
The biggest problem holding lenders
back is a lack of reliable data. While
upgrading an HVAC system or replacing
windows leads to cost savings, lenders
pause when underwriting any additional
NOI in the absence of clear metrics.
But this pilot program will monitor
the long-term effects of green retrofits
to measure their efficiency in conserving
heating fuel and electrical and water usage.
A resulting green mortgage product is
still far off since it will take awhile for the
numbers to be compiled, but the data collected
by CPC will be the basis of Freddie
Mac’s efforts to offer a green mortgage
product in the future.
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