FHA Keeps Funding Flips, Investors And
Buyers Rejoice
December 29, 2011 · Broadwater
Properties
From our friends over at ForeclosureRadar.
In a move that will
undoubtedly make investors stand up and cheer, the Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) announced today that the Federal Housing Administration
is extending a temporary waiver of its “anti-flipping” rule. The
waiver is a boon for investors who rely on rehabbing and selling properties in
a short timeframe, and homeowners who rely on FHA-insured financing to buy.
The pool of buyers who
rely on FHA dramatically increases the investors’ ability to quickly sell. FHA
research finds that in today’s market, it takes a real estate investor less
than 90 days to acquire, rehab, and sell a property. Before the initial waiver in February 2010, FHA did not allow potential
buyers to purchase properties that had previously been purchased within the
last 90 days to protect its mutual mortgage program from losses on homes that
were not rehabbed, but flipped at inflated prices.
The waiver is subject
to certain restrictions, including that transactions must be at arms-length,
meaning that the deal must be made between separate parties who would not gain
from the buying or selling of the property.
The waiver was set to
expire on January 31, but now will be in effect through December 31, 2012.
This is great news for
the thousands of potential homeowners who are first-time buyers or those who
lack the down payment required on a conventional loan, as well as real estate
investors that have built a business around rehabbing properties and selling to
FHA borrowers.
From
our friends over at ForeclosureRadar.
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