Finance Mortgage Banking
Fannie Mae Announces M-F Financing Modifications, Record $2B in First Half Volume
July 29, 2008
By: Keat Foong, Executive Editor, Multi-Housing News

Fannie Mae is working on a number of enhancements to its multi-family financing offerings, including a combined construction-permanent financing product.

The agency says it is cooperating with several DUS lenders who have construction lending expertise to combine construction financing with permanent debt. “The construction-to-permanent product will offer a seamless, lower cost execution and more certainty for the construction of new multi-family properties,” Fannie Mae states.

Currently, only HUD offers a multi-family construction-permanent loan, under its FHA mortgage insurance program. HUD's combined financing requires one underwriting and approval for both loans, with the construction loan rolling over to permanent loan. Despite major improvements over the years, customers still complain HUD's processing of the insured loan product can be cumbersome depending on the market.

Fannie Mae also announced it is enabling lenders to lock the interest rate on Fannie Mae loans at any point during the underwriting process. The Streamlined Rate Lock will provide more delegation to lenders and offer borrowers certainty of execution, it says.

Fannie Mae recently introduced the Refi PlusTM product, which is meant to make it easier for borrowers to refinance their existing DUS loan. Borrowers can lock the interest rate for their refinance loan up to 24 months in advance of the expiration of their prepayment period, and can use a Fannie Mae Supplemental Loan to immediately fund additional proceeds without having to wait for the existing DUS loan to mature.

Fannie Mae announced that it has experienced its strongest first-half year ever for DUS, with an increase of 30 percent over production in the same period in 2007. Fannie Mae’s investment in multi-family housing totaled $20 billion in the first half of 2008.

Fannie Mae reported large increases in its Small Loans and Student Housing financing. Its investments in Small Loans “surged” to nearly $5 billion in the first half of 2008. (Small Loans are loans of up to $3 million, or $5 million in certain markets.) The company also invested over $1.5 billion in seniors housing and $264 million in student housing, doubling its mid-year 2007 production of $132 million. Fannie Mae’s investment in manufactured housing increased four fold, from $89 million through mid-year 2007 to $458 million through mid-year 2008.

This article first appeared on www.multihousingnews.com, affiliated with Multi-Housing News magazine.

 
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