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Laguna Woods co-op ends decade-long lender monopoly

Laguna Woods co-op resident Linda Nearing has little time left.

Nearing was recently diagnosed with glioblastoma, an aggressive cancer that starts in the brain. So, she can forget about ever getting a cash-out refinance before she passes.

I wrote about Nearing and her refinance denial last year in one of three columns about a policy at the Laguna Woods co-op limiting mortgages for its 6,323 senior members to just one lender, National Cooperative Bank, or NCB, for about a decade.

Unlike typical homeowners, those living in housing cooperatives, or co-ops, don’t own their units.

Instead, they purchase a share of a corporation, which in turn owns the buildings. Hence, a cooperative association, like the United Laguna Woods Mutual in this case, can add additional restrictions that aren’t typically made for fee-simple parcels.

Additionally, Laguna Woods has more than 6,500 condos that don’t restrict the number of lenders owners can choose from.

In April, the United Laguna Woods Mutual board did indeed loosen the rules for lenders, dropping the requirement lenders have to be FDIC insured.

“This was a result of the information you shared,” wrote Eileen Paulin, director of media at Laguna Woods Village, referring to me.

Let’s hear it for consumer choice, broader loan approval opportunity and competition among mortgage lenders.

Or maybe not.

The Laguna Woods Mutual also has a supplemental instrument commonly used by co-ops, called a Recognition Agreement, that may block more lenders from serving its co-op members.

The Laguna Woods Mutual uses its own 23-page agreement rather than relying on the commonly used, nine-page Fannie Mae Recognition Agreement, which a lender must have to be able to sell its loans to the government-backed mortgage firm.

Fannie’s agreement, for example, requires the mortgage giant’s approval to switch from professional management to self-management. Fannie’s agreement also gives lenders 15 additional days to cover a borrower’s missed assessment payments to keep the mutual from foreclosing on a member’s share. And Fannie’s agreement doesn’t include a provision giving the mutual the right of first refusal to buy a member’s share that’s facing foreclosure by the lender.

Four lenders declined to accept the Laguna Woods Mutual Recognition Agreement, said Pamela Bashline, the Laguna Woods community services manager. So, opening up the co-op to all duly licensed financial institutions may be a hollow victory for co-op members.

Co-ops across the country have done just fine with Fannie’s Recognition Agreement for what seems to be as an eternity to me. Asked to review the Fannie Mae Recognition Agreement, Laguna Woods Mutual leaders raised numerous objections, including a preference for such terms as less time to cover missed assessments and more leeway to switch to self-management.

In addition, the mutual objects to provisions allowing the lender to sell a loan without either the mutual’s or the borrower’s consent. The mutual agreement also requires that fire and casualty insurance cover the full replacement value of the insured property, while the Fannie agreement doesn’t.

“There is no good rationale to replace the existing agreement,” Paulin wrote. “A lender on a co-op in United must be willing to accept the terms of the agreement, which are designed to protect the mutual from unnecessary losses.”

While the Laguna Woods Mutual agreement may give the co-op more protection, it also may make loans ineligible for sale to Fannie Mae, the nation’s largest home loan backer.

Nearing was the only co-op owner brave enough to be named in my columns, telling her story about getting her mortgage refinance application denied by National Cooperative Bank, the exclusive lender.

“It’s most important to me that NCB is no longer able to dictate interest rates,” she said recently.

If most other co-ops across the country can live and thrive with Fannie Mae’s Recognition Agreement, why can’t the Laguna Woods Mutual?

After all, mortgage lender choice means better protection for the mutual from unnecessary losses due to better affordability (through competitive rates and fees), increased loan approvals and higher co-op unit prices when the mortgage ecosystem is working properly.

 

Freddie Mac rate news: The 30-year hit a record low, averaging 2.81%, down six basis points from last week. The 15-year fixed-rate averaged 2.35%, down two basis points from last week and tying the all-time low.

The Mortgage Bankers Association reported a 1% decrease in loan application volume from one week earlier.

Bottom line: Assuming a borrower gets the average 30-year fixed rate on a conforming $510,400 loan, last year’s payment was $246 more than this week’s payment of $2,100.

What I see: Locally, well-qualified borrowers can get the following fixed-rate mortgages with 1 point cost: A 30-year FHA at 2.25%, a 15-year conventional at 2.125%, a 30-year conventional at 2.5%, a 30-year FHA high-balance at 2.625%, a conventional high-balance ($510,401 to $765,600) at 2.75%, and a 30-year jumbo fixed rate at 3.25%.

Eye catcher loan of the week: A 30-year fixed-rate conventional mortgage at 2.875% without points or fees.

Jeff Lazerson is a mortgage broker. He can be reached at 949-334-2424 or jlazerson@mortgagegrader.com. His website is www.mortgagegrader.com.


Source: Orange County Register

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