NEWS HEADLINES Fannie
Mae Rolls Out Refi PlusBy Jerry Ascierto Fannie
Mae has finished developing Refi Plus, a portfolio retention tool that it plans
to introduce by the end of July. The program allows borrowers to lock in
rates for refinancing existing Fannie Mae loans up to two years in advance of
the prepayment period end date, in conjunction with supplemental financing. The
company feels the time is perfect for such a product, since acquisition activity
has sharply declined over the last six months and more owners are opting to refinance
rather than sell. "If you have two years of yield maintenance remaining,
but you like where rates are today and you're ready to put a supplemental on,
we now have a product for that," said Heidi McKibben, Fannie Mae's vice president
of multifamily production. "This will give borrowers the flexibility to lock
in today's rates if they feel like we're in a rising interest-rate environment,
take out a supplemental, and basically lock up their new loan up to two years
out." Borrowers using Refi Plus are able to get cash out immediately
in the form of a supplemental loan; they don't have to wait for the existing loan
to mature. Additionally, there's no prepayment premium on the existing loan, so
there's no need to fund a good-faith deposit. Borrowers also eliminate uncertainty
about future rates since they're locking in the rate of the refinance loan on
a forward basis, up to 24 months out. The interest rate of the supplemental mortgage
loan and the refinance mortgage loan are rate-locked simultaneously. Fannie
Mae's Delegated Underwriting and Servicing (DUS) lenders are able to underwrite,
commit, rate-lock, and deliver most Refi Plus loans without prior review by Fannie
Mae, speeding up the deal cycle time. All multifamily loans of more than $750,000
are eligible, though loans of more than $25 million that want to use Refi Plus
would need to be pre-reviewed by Fannie Mae before the deal closes. Because
Fannie Mae is already familiar with the property, borrower documentation is reduced.
Borrowers can certify that there haven't been any changes to its organizational
structure, or to its financial strength and credit standing, in lieu of providing
new documentation. However, new third-party reports, such as an appraisal report
and physical needs assessment, are required. -Jerry Ascierto
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