FINANCE
GOVERNMENT-SPONSORED ENTERPRISES
Fannie, Freddie Post Record Years, On Pace for Another
AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE • May 2008
BY JERRY ASCIERTO
Fueled by a torrential second
half, Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac both announced that
their multifamily volume in
2007 hit record highs, at $60
billion and $44.7 billion respectively.
The government-sponsored enterprises
(GSEs), which had lost much market
share to conduit lenders through the
first half of the year, found themselves the
beneficiaries of the mid-year meltdown of
the commercial mortgage-backed securities
(CMBS) market.
“It was almost a tale of two years,”
said Heidi McKibben, Fannie Mae’s vice
president and head of multifamily production.
“We saw a shift in August, with
much more volume directed toward the
agencies.”
But it was a mixed bag for the affordable
housing industry. Each company
experienced a sharp decline in its volume
of low-income housing tax credit
(LIHTC) investments. Fannie Mae’s
LIHTC investments were nearly halved in
2007, to $1.1 billion from $2 billion the
year before. Freddie Mac’s LIHTC investments
dropped a less severe $50 million
in 2007, to $450 million.
GSEs’ 2007 Multifamily Production |
| |
2006 |
2007 |
Freddie Mac: |
|
|
New multifamily business
LIHTC investments
Acq-rehab/upgrade
Affordable housing
Seniors housing |
$28.8 billion
500 million
N/A
1.2 billion
1.5 billion |
$44.7 billion
450 million
800 million
3.7 billion
1 billion |
Fannie Mae: |
|
|
New multifamily business
LIHTC investments
DUS program
Affordable housing
Seniors housing |
34.3 billion
2 billion
20.4 billion
2 billion
2.2 billion |
60 billion
1.1 billion
30.3 billion
2.2 billion
5.9 billion |
The GSEs’ absence from the LIHTC
market during the last nine months has
been conspicuous, and the corresponding
drop in LIHTC prices over that
timespan has caused much anxiety in the
affordable housing industry. LIHTC
prices have fallen to about 85 cents per
tax credit dollar in some markets in the
first quarter, compared to about 95 cents
a year earlier. Many expect this trend to
continue through the first half, if not all
of, 2008.
On the plus side, the GSEs upped
their affordable housing debt activities
last year. Freddie Mac more than tripled
its affordable housing debt volume, to
$3.7 billion, from $1.2 billion the year
before. Fannie Mae saw a modest increase
in its affordable housing debt volume, to
$2.2 billion, from $2 billion the year
before.
2007 highlights
Fannie Mae overhauled its
Delegated Underwriting and Servicing
(DUS) guide to make its program more
competitive in 2007. The standard 1.25x
debt-service coverage ratio (DSCR)
became a 1.20x DSCR—even down to
1.15x in strong markets—and the guide
was boiled down from more than 200
pages to just 50, speeding up deal cycle
times by giving more authority to the
GSE’s network of lenders.
Fannie Mae also released its
Community-Investment Mezzanine
Moderate Rehab product, which combines
a mezzanine loan with a permanent
DUS loan. Introduced in June, that product
financed $180 million in mezzanine
loans, and led to $1.7 billion in permanent
DUS loans. Fannie Mae also saw a
significant increase in its seniors housing
business, to $5.9 billion from $2.2 billion
the year before.
One highlight from Freddie Mac’s
2007 was its volume of more than $800
million in Acquisition Rehabilitation/
Acquisition Upgrade products—a huge
figure when you consider that those products
weren’t introduced until October.
The acquisition-rehabilitation product
is aimed at substantial rehabs of up to
$30,000 per unit and features a loan-tovalue
(LTV) ratio of 86 percent and a
DSCR of 1.15x (down to 1.10x for the
interest-only portion of the loan). The
acquisition upgrade product, aimed at
more cosmetic rehabs of up to $10,000
per unit, features an LTV of up to 86 percent,
and a DSCR of 1.20x (down to 1.15x
for the interest-only period).
Freddie Mac also continues to focus
on expanding its roster of Targeted
Affordable Housing Seller/Servicers. Last
September, Centerline Capital Group
became the first lender in that network to
achieve fully delegated status, meaning it
can underwrite affordable housing loans
without prior approval from Freddie
Mac. And in March, Wachovia was granted
fully delegated status as well. Six other
companies round out the roster, and four
of them are close to achieving fully delegated
status, according to Mike May,
Freddie Mac’s senior vice president of
multifamily sourcing.
2008 outlook
Fannie Mae kicked off 2008 by
announcing a new small loan program,
called Micro Loans, for loans of up to
$750,000 on developments of five units or
more. The company is also working on
some refinancing products slated for a
2008 delivery.
Freddie Mac is busy working on a
CMBS execution that it may roll out later
this year. The plan is to create and sell
bonds backed by a pool of multifamily
mortgages, which would be provided by its
network of Program Plus lenders. The program
is so advanced that the company
could have executed a CMBS deal in the
first quarter but will first test it out
through a pilot program, according to
May.
Unlike much of the market, the GSEs
are still doing multifamily deals of up to 80
percent LTV. And their pricing is the lowest
in the market. The GSEs are quoting a
spread over the five-year Treasury rate of
around 270 basis points, leading to an allin
rate of 5.2 percent. Seven-year loans are
going for 250 basis points over the
Treasury, and 10-year loans for around
230 basis points over, totaling an all-in
rate of about 5.50 percent and 5.87 percent,
respectively, in early March.
Many GSE-affiliated lenders expect to
ride the surge of agency business throughout
2008. KeyBank Real Estate Capital
closed only about $100 million in Fannie
Mae business in 2007, but in January
2008 alone, it closed about $125 million.
KeyBank’s target is to process about $750
million in Fannie Mae business in 2008.
The company also plans to close another
$750 million in Freddie Mac deals in
2008, up from $250 million last year,
according to Dave Shillington, KeyBank’s
new director of agency lending.
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