Thursday, March 12, 2009

The Changing Nature of Hard Money Lending

Just this week a broker whom I work with regularly asked me why do we need some type of income documentation from her client? If we go back to what was Hard Money lending even a year ago this is a legitimate question. Remember when the only documentation that was needed to approve a loan was a breathing borrower, a 1003 and a property, today it’s a different world. Investors and lenders have learned that caution is the norm and that property can loose value. To illustrate theses changes here is an article from the AP, "When economy bottoms out, how will we know?" by Alan Zibel, Christopher Leonard and Tim Paradis, Business Writers

A different lending approach is being developed in the hard money world. Today you could define Hard /Private Money lending as flexible lending. Until mid August 2007, Hard Money lending was pretty much borrower’s bail out lending. When you could not get money from banks you were going to a hard money lender. Two primary reasons at that time either you were so desesparate as a borrower or the property was in such a bad shape that no conventional or subprime lenders could approve the financing. Here I am referring to residential lending as the commercial market was a little more reasonable.

The assumptions made by “most” private lenders at that time were that property values will continue to increase and that other sources of funds would be available to take out their loans. Since then the lending and financing world as radically changed. Values have collapsed and there is no capital available to do financing. Assumptions made are no more valid, thus private lending had to take a different approach.

Today private lending is more of flexible lending than bail out lending. Bailout loans are still being considered but at very low loan to values. Most of private lending today is done for investment properties and commercial properties that can not get bank loans. Banks do not approve loan for more than 4 residential properties. No more stated income loans, so self employed people are suffering, especially self employed investors. Hard money loans for borrower with low Fico (below 600) will be more complicated to get. In addition, more and more lender want to make sure that the borrower can make the mortgage payments.

In our next few posts we will continue to address these issues.

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