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Federal agency may restrict financing in HOA-governed communities that impose transfer fees
Realtors, lenders and community associations are up in arms about
forthcoming Federal Housing Administration rules they believe could make
mortgage financing more expensive — maybe even impossible — for large
numbers of buyers and sellers around the country.
The concerns are not about condo certifications this time around — an
issue that has caused hundreds of condo developments to drop their
eligibility for FHA mortgages on individual units. The new problem is
even broader, affecting potentially tens of thousands of homeowner
associations that routinely impose transfer fees whenever units are
sold.
The fees, which range from $100 to $500 in most cases, frequently are
used by HOAs to replenish capital reserves, make improvements to
infrastructure or even fund environmental conservation activities.
Unlike the controversial investor-driven private transfer fees
marketed by Wall Street’s Freehold Capital Partners in 2010 and 2011,
most HOA transfer fees are used to benefit the community.
Here’s the problem: In response to the widely criticized private
transfer fee programs, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac adopted guidelines in
2012 that banned private-purpose, investor-benefit transfer fees from
eligibility for conventional financing. Their rule carefully
distinguished between the Freehold Capitol type of fees — which
generated income streams for bond investors for up to 99 years — and the
typical HOA transfer fees designed to benefit the community’s
residents.
More recently, lawyers in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development’s office of general counsel have warned FHA that under
existing “free assumability” regulations, the agency is not permitted to
insure mortgages on properties that come with “restrictions on
conveyance” — encumbrances on the title that could hamper transfers.
That includes fees required to be paid at the sale of units in
communities governed by homeowner associations.
The Community Associations Institute (CAI), the largest trade group
representing HOAs, estimated that as of 2012, there were 323,600
association-governed communities in the U.S. containing just under 26
million housing units and 63.4 million residents. Based on a recent CAI
survey of members, roughly 72 percent of HOAs impose transfer fees of
one sort or another when units are sold. Most collect flat fees but some
charge a small percentage of the sale price.
According to HUD sources and interested trade groups — CAI, the
National Association of Realtors, the Mortgage Bankers Association and
others — FHA is preparing regulations, possibly for publication as early
as June, that would, if adopted, restrict FHA financing in communities
with transfer fees.
FHA officials decline to discuss the regulation because it is still
being drafted, but trade groups who have met with the agency say it will
not track Fannie’s and Freddie’s clear guidelines, which allow
community-benefit fees. The groups fear that most existing HOA transfer
levies will become obstacles when buyers or sellers seek to use FHA
loans. Ditto when unit owners who are seniors apply for an FHA-insured
reverse mortgage, the dominant financing tool of its type in the field.
In an April 23 letter to FHA Commissioner Carol Galante, six trade
groups warned that any new regulation that discriminates against HOA
fees “will greatly disadvantage the millions of homeowners living in
community associations, making it much harder for them to sell their
homes.” The groups asked Galante to instead “mirror” Fannie’s and
Freddie’s guidelines “and prohibit only those fees that don’t benefit
the homeowner and association where they live.”
Dawn Bauman, senior vice president for government and public affairs
at CAI, told me last week that FHA’s forthcoming regulation would have
especially harsh impacts on HOAs in states that were hardest hit during
the housing bust and recession: California, Arizona and Florida, among
others.
Many of these have struggled with financial problems caused by
unit-owner defaults and have had to postpone needed capital
improvements. Some depend on transfer fees for essential services to the
community. If under FHA’s rule these HOAs will have to stop collecting
transfer fees or take other steps that reduce the flow of funds, “this
could compromise the stability of these communities,” Bauman said.
At the very least, she said, FHA’s creation of a two-standard system
with divergent requirements for mortgage approvals nationwide — Fannie’s
and Freddie’s plus its own — would introduce needless confusion to the
marketplace and be counterproductive for homeownership.
What’s the remedy if FHA pushes ahead with what appears to be its
plans and issues regulations that will harm HOAs? To fix the problem,
“we’ll have to go to Congress,” Bauman said.
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