Is Fannie Mae in the Hot Seat?
Over the last few months, there has been quite a bit of Internet squawking about the GSEs approach to short sales and foreclosures, particularly Fannie Mae (who seems to rule the roost). Allegations are being made that Fannie Mae is forcing underwater borrowers into foreclosure by not approving short sale transactions. Specifically, there is a national trend where short sale values on Fannie Mae properties are coming in significantly above market value. And, since nobody can qualify for a loan above market value, the properties then end up in foreclosure.
In looking back over the last few years, this may not be anything new. In a Fannie Mae Announcement made in August of 2010, Fannie Mae stated that they would penalize servicers that “languished” too long in the processing of short sales. Additionally, Fannie Mae has long had a policy of frowning upon short sales for borrowers that have missed more than 12 months of mortgage payments.
The Irony of Streamlined Short Sales
On November 1, 2012, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stated that they would have streamlined guidelines for the processing of short sales. Those guidelines stated short sales would be processed in no more than 60 days, as many of the tasks that were previously delegated to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could now be handled directly by the servicers.
Yet the irony is that the valuations are still coming back too high, forcing distressed borrowers into foreclosure. Mortgage servicers could now quickly decline short sales within the 60-day “streamlined” period.
Fannie Mae Foreclosures
When Fannie Mae lists an REO, the property is generally listed above the current market value. They advertise the property and review all offers but prefer for borrowers to obtain a HomePath® loan. With the Fannie Mae HomePath® loan, no appraisal is required. With no appraisal, the buyer could pay 10% or even 20% over market value. The new owner of the Fannie Mae REO now owns a property with a loan more than market value; the owner is now upside down like the short sale seller that couldn’t get his short sale approved just a few months before.
One additional policy that people are chattering about is the Fannie Mae flipping rule. If an investor buys a Fannie Mae owned property, there is a deed restriction which states that the property cannot be sold for more than 120% in the first 90 days—thus discouraging rehabilitation experts from purchasing Fannie Mae properties.
Where Does this End?
The overall consensus seems to be that these Fannie Mae policies punish the distressed borrower and work to the financial benefit of Fannie Mae. You could argue that any entity can do what they want. It’s debt settlement. If Fannie Mae does not want to settle with the borrower, that’s their choice. However, since the United States Government (that’s us folks) owns the largest stake in Fannie Mae, these policies are definitely giving people something to squawk about.
