March 29, 2016
Tuesday’s Regulatory & Legislative Roundup
- The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has implemented a new rule that effectively implements the Helping Expand Lending Practices in Rural Communities (HELP) Act.
- The House of Representatives passed the Foreclosure Relief and Extension for Servicemembers Act of 2015 (S. 2393), which provides financial protections, for instance in foreclosure, for those who incurred debt prior to active service.
March 29, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
March 28, 2016
Buck-A-Home
The Saint Louis Post-Dispatch quoted me (from an AP story) in Kansas City Presses To Sell Eyesore, Vacant Homes for A Buck. It reads, in part,
Drawn to the idea of buying a house for just a buck, Dorian Blydenburgh paced through the century-old digs in south Kansas City and didn’t mind tree limbs on the living room floor, holes in the ceiling and a funky mold smell.
“This is one everyone is gonna want, and there’s gonna be a fight for this,” said Blydenburgh, 56, a contractor looking at the three-bedroom, 1,500-square-foot house at 4124 Chestnut Avenue as a makeover prospect for a friend, who later applied to buy it. “Some of these places you need a bulldozer to fix, but this is doable. For a dollar, it looks like a go.”
That’s what Kansas City, Mo., officials were hoping to hear. The city and the Land Bank of Kansas City have offered 130 derelict, generally unlivable structures for sale for $1 each to those willing to make them livable again within a year. The buyer’s reward is an eventual $8,500 rebate — the amount it would have cost the city to flatten the houses.
* * *
But it’s buyer beware. Applicants must undergo a background check — applicants who are registered sex offenders or have drug-dealing or prostitution convictions are disqualified — and prove through bank statements or unused credit card limits they have at least $8,500 to devote to the rehab.
Ultimately, the program’s backers warn, rehabbing the properties might cost tens of thousands of dollars, perhaps involving installing or repairing roofs, electrical systems, plumbing, heating and air conditioning or foundations. And that’s beyond the cost of tackling troubling unknowns such as lead or asbestos.
“Most of those buildings on the dangerous list are going to have to come down. We know that,” Mayor Sly James said. “But there are other homes on that low level that could be salvaged, and we want people to know they are out there.”
Other cities have tried similar approaches. In Detroit, with the help of tens of millions of dollars from taxpayers, the city has torn down about 7,100 of an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 vacant houses since May 2014, with the mayor planning to have an additional 15,000 homes gone by 2018. More than 1,300 other homes have been auctioned, Detroit Land Bank Authority spokesman Craig Fahle said. Buyers of those properties, many fetching just the opening bid of $1,000, are required to bring the house up to code and have it occupied within six months — nine months if it’s in a historic district.
Chicago and Milwaukee have are unloading vacant lots. Chicago has sold more than 400 vacant parcels since 2014. In Milwaukee, homeowners next to a vacant lot can buy it for $1.
David Reiss, a Brooklyn Law School professor who focuses on real estate issues and community development, urges would-be buyers to understand the expenses beyond the price tag, including property taxes, upkeep and liability insurance.
“A house for a dollar may be an albatross around your neck,” he said. “I would look at it case by case. If it sounds too good, it probably is.”
March 28, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
Monday’s Adjudication Roundup
- The S. Supreme Court comes out 4-4 on discrimination claims in spousal guarantor suit following the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, affirming the lower court decision.
- The NJ Tax Court held that when valuing a piece of land, environmental contamination caused by a chemical manufacturing facility should be considered.
- American Capital Ltd., a private equity firm, attempts to nix suit by Mission Peak Capital affiliate alleging that it reneged on a $52 million sale of commercial mortgage-backed securities.
- The Securities & Exchange Commission filed suit against two brothers and their real estate investment firm for allegedly taking $2.7 million from investors in a Ponzi scheme.
March 28, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
March 25, 2016
Friday’s Government Reports Roundup
- The S. Commerce Department reported a 5.2 percent increase in housing starts in February 2016, a 7.2 percent increase from January in single-family homes.
March 25, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
March 24, 2016
Thursday’s Advocacy & Think Tank Roundup
- The Hispanic Wealth Project released “The State of Hispanic Homeownership Report,” which found that Hispanic homeownership is at its highest since 2009.
- The Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies released a case study examining the private for-profit sector’s importance in affordable housing development, focusing on the country’s leading for-profit affordable housing developers.
March 24, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
March 23, 2016
Wednesday’s Academic Roundup
- Speculative Fever: Investor Contagion in the Housing Bubble, Patrick J. Bayer, Kyle Mangum & James W. Roberts, Economic Research Institutes at Duke (ERID) Working Paper No. 211.
- Network Affiliation and Mortgage Modification in the Non-Agency MBS Market, James Neil Conklin, Moussa Diop & Walter D’Lima.
- Special Economic Zones in the United States: From Colonial Charters, to Foreign-Trade Zones, Toward USSEZs, Tom W. Bell, Chapman University, Fowler Law Research Paper No. 16-02.
- Addicted to Government? The Impact of Housing Assistance on Program Participation of Welfare Recipients, Barbara A. Haley & Aref Dajani, Poverty & Public Policy 2015.
- Sharing and the City, Michèle Finck & Sofia Ranchordas.
- Residential Mortgages and Public Policy: What to Do with Fannie and Freddie?, David Kohn & James S. Sagner, Business and Society Review, Vol. 121, Issue 1, pp. 161-183, 2016 (Paid Access).
March 23, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
March 22, 2016
Tuesday’s Regulatory & Legislative Roundup
- New ordinance in Minneapolis, MN requires landlords to handout voter registration forms to new tenants in hopes that such a requirement will ensure that the local election administrators have accurate voter information.
- The Federal Reserve announced that even though inflation picked up, it is not over the Fed’s two percent objective, and thus, the current interest rate for bank lending will remain at 0.25 percent and 0.5 percent.
March 22, 2016 | Permalink | No Comments
