Buying a Condo? Know How Many Owners Are Paying Their Assessments

By Ilyce Glink | May 7, 2009 |

I moderated a panel discussion yesterday morning in Chicago on behalf of Chicago Agent magazine. The panelists included local loan officers and managers from Bank of America, 5/3 Bank, GuaranteedRate.com, Capital Funding Mortgage Company, and National City Mortgage. The room was filled with real estate agents and mortage lenders who had come to hear the latest on-the-ground news about the real estate market in Chicago.

The lenders (L to R are Wesley Ley, 5/3 Bank; Leslie Struthers, GuaranteedRate.com; David Kasprisin, Bank of America; Dan Gjeldum; and, Oren Orkin, Capital Funding Mortgage Company) were honest: The real estate market is slow (dreadful in some parts of the city) and will take a long time (at least 5 years, several lenders estimated) to recover. For the next 12 months at least, lenders will have to do the kind of thorough verifications they did 20 years ago — and should have never stopped doing, said Dan Gjeldum, of National City Mortgage. The good news: everyone on the panel believes that the Chicago real estate market has only lost 5 to 10 percent of its value, although certainly some areas have taken a bigger hit.

And all of the lenders agreed that the new financing requirements for condominiums are extremely difficult. For example, they told the agents, if your buyer wants to purchase a condominium, make sure that virtually all of the condo unit owners are paying their assessments on time. If more than 15 percent of unit owners are late with their assessments, you won’t be able to finance a condo in the building — the implication being, don’t waste time showing units there.

The agents were grateful to have the information but were surprised that they’d needed to question the condo boards so closely about on-time assessment payments, condo reserves, and the new requirements for homeowners’ insurance for condominiums. Chicago, like so many metro areas, has thousands of condos for sale.

It’s clear that mortgage lenders are overwhelmed by the new information and requirements being issued almost daily (certainly weekly) out of Washington, D.C., and with trying to manage borrowers’ expectations of a changing loan process. Agents want an easy way to know how to deal with lenders for short sales and foreclosures — and are frustrated to discover that each lender different, as are the end investors the retail mortgage lenders work with.

Until all of this new real estate information is managed in a way that makes sense for mortgage lenders, real estate agents, and home buyers, it may be difficult to sustain the recovery.

 
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  •  
    1

    mgr403

    05/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Buying a Condo? Know How Many Owners Are Paying Their Assessments

    I've heard stories of some condo buildings where developers have disappeared and residents are struggling to keep the property maintained. It's a scary situation.

  •  
    2

    Ilyce Glink

    05/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Buying a Condo? Know How Many Owners Are Paying Their Assessments

    I've had some requests for a list of the new lending rules for condo buyers. I'm doing some research and will try to compile some of the new regulations into a jargon-free zone. Stay tuned.

  •  
    3

    jfree85

    05/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Buying a Condo? Know How Many Owners Are Paying Their Assessments

    are there regulations about lending for a condo in a building where there are a lot of rented units? i know a lot of condo buildings are trying to rent the units they can't sell.

  •  
    4

    Ilyce Glink

    05/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Buying a Condo? Know How Many Owners Are Paying Their Assessments

    @jfree85 - it's like shooting yourself in the foot: You can't get a mortgage if more than 70 percent of the units are rented. (For awhile, that number was 50 percent, and now the rules have changed back). But if you can't sell, you want to rent so you have some way of making the mortgage payment. If you can't make the mortgage payment, you'll have to hand the keys to the lender, which will make it tougher for everyone else to get a loan, because a foreclosed unit is one that isn't owner-occupied. This is a seriously down cycle that could shift condo sales into slow gear for some time to come.

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