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Posts Tagged ‘BIA’

Investor Report: Defaulted Mortgage Notes

Friday, August 21st, 2009

A recent deal near Sacramento, California, illustrates a key strategy many investors are following in the distressed real estate field: They’re opting to buy defaulted mortgage notes on projects from banks rather than the real estate itself.

Months later they take full control of the property by foreclosing on it as the noteholder, often yielding a much lower total acquisition price than they’d have gotten in a competitive public foreclosure proceeding.

Earlier this month, real estate investment firm PCCP LLC, formerly known as Pacific Coast Capital Partners, took over a 25-acre new housing community called Folsom Treehouse, in Folsom, California.

The development has 291 finished lots, 99 single family lots, 164 condo lots and 28 constructed or partially built houses.

Folsom Treehouse’s original developer defaulted on a $22.5 million loan in late 2008. Last March, PCCP bought a discounted note on the project from United Commercial Bank and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

The size of the discount to PCCP was not made public, but in purchases of severely distressed notes, the price can go to 50 cents on the dollar — even less, depending upon the circumstances.

If the discount was 50 percent in this case, for example, the investor might have gotten effective control of property that had originally been valuated at well over $22 million for less than half that price.

PCCP did not return phone calls from Realty Times seeking clarification on what it paid, but in a statement Jim Galovan, a vice president for the firm, said the deal typified the company’s opportunistic approach.

Three thousand miles to the east in New York City, where growing numbers of residential and commercial building owners are defaulting on loans and seeing property values plummet, savvy investors are pursuing a similar strategy.

Developer and investor Ed Mermelstein says multifamily properties, especially newly or partially built new condos, are in serious distress.

Lenders are faced with a terrible choice: Either hang on to a nonperforming note on a building declining in value, OR listen to investors like Mermelstein who’ll offer to take the note off their hands for a deeply- discounted price, all cash, in thirty days.

Banks slowly but surely are becoming more receptive, Mermelstein told Realty Times last week.

But how do you find deals with potentially big discounts and know the right moment to approach banks stuck with nonperforming paper?

“You’ve got to know people who’s business it is to know,” he said, especially brokers, lawyers and lenders who are hardwired into the local market, and know who’s in pain.

June production up for region’s home builders

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Sacramento-area home builders ramped up their summer production in June, receiving permits to start 374 new single-family homes, apartments and condominiums, the California Building Industry Association reported Friday.

Capital-area builders accounted for 10.8 percent of the 3,446 permits issued statewide.

Home builders in El Dorado, Placer, Sacramento, Sutter, Yolo and Yuba counties started 374 single-family detached homes and attached multifamily homes or apartments, the CBIA reported.

That was up from 252 in May.

Despite the uptick, the region’s homebuilders have cut production in half from last year.

Their 1,650 permits from January through June compare with 3,285 the same months in 2008.

The same pattern statewide means builders are on track for their fewest permits since the state started keeping records in 1954.

Applications for home-buying tax credit to be cut off today

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

They’re almost gone.

The California Franchise Tax Board announced this morning it will pull the plug on its fax machine at midnight tonight, accepting no more applications for a $10,000 tax credit for buyers of new unoccupied homes in California.

Early Wednesday, the FTB said it has received 11,925 applications for the popular tax credit – 75 short of its 12,000-application limit.

The state tax agency said last month it would take 2,000 extra applications for the credit because many received are duplicates, invalid or incomplete.

The tax credit program, launched March 1 to move statewide home builders’ excess, unsold inventory, proved more popular than expected. The FTB said it has already issued 4,808 certificates for nearly $45 million worth of credits. Officials expect to process and award all the credits by the end of August.

Home builders have shifted their focus to efforts to add $200 million more to the original $100 million allocation. But that’s proved more difficult than expected in a rancorous budget climate. Some economists have criticized further allocations as a stimulus for home building when the state’s larger problem, they argue, is an excess of unsold existing homes.

The California Building Industry Association, a trade group for residential builders and suppliers, maintains that each $10,000 tax credit adds $16,000 to state government revenues and $3,000 to a local government because of the economic activity generated.