Mon, May 28, 2012, 1:05 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Government Set to Sell Foreclosures in Bulk

The Obama administration, in conjunction with federal regulators and led by the overseer of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is very close to announcing a pilot program to sell government-owned foreclosures in bulk to investors as rentals, according to administration officials.

There currently are about a quarter of a million foreclosed properties on the books of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), and millions more are coming.

The foreclosure processing delays of last year created a mammoth backlog of properties yet to be processed, which are just now being re-started. One of the initiatives of this program is for the federal government to be in the position to mitigate and manage any new wave of foreclosures, sources say.

Late-stage delinquencies still in the pipeline number close to two million, according to a new report from Lender Processing Services. Foreclosure starts outnumber foreclosure sales by two to one and "the trend toward fewer loans becoming delinquent, which dominated 2010 and the first quarter of 2011, appears to have halted," according to LPS.

Knowing this all too well, the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve, HUD, FDIC, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, with their conservator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) at the helm, are engaged in a collaborative effort to face this new wave of foreclosures head on and figure out a way to keep these properties from sitting on the books of the government and sitting empty in the nation's neighborhoods.

As the Federal Reserve alluded to in its white paper on housing last week, "A government-facilitated REO-to-rental program has the potential to help the housing market and improve loss recoveries on reo portfolios." REO's (Real Estate Owned) are bank-owned properties, or, in this case, properties owned by the government-sponsored enterprises and the FHA. Three Fed governors pushed for similar plans in speeches last week, as well.

A pilot sales program will be starting in the very near future, according to administration officials. They are working on what the market potential is, what pricing would be, how government can partner with private investors, and who has the operational experience to manage so many properties.

"I think there is a fair amount of money in the wings waiting to buy, investors doing cash raises to buy properties on a large scale," says Laurie Goodman of Amherst Securities. "But that means they have to build out a rental organization; it means they build out a management company, because if you're accumulating a hundred homes in Dallas that's very different than running a multifamily building."

A number of institutional investors have shown appetite and interest in bulk REO deals, according to officials, but the plan has to incorporate ways to help facilitate financing. That has been one of the biggest roadblocks to deals already in the works between hedge funds and the major banks. Sources close to these private bank negotiations say there is plenty of cash to buy properties, but building out a management structure for the rentals is pricey, and some investors are finding the math doesn't add up to make it worth their while.

Larger investors want to be able to get real scale in any government program, in the range of 50, 100, 500 properties per deal, or $1 billion-plus in assets, say officials close to the plan. That's why the government is looking to test a combination of different approaches. Fannie Mae did a $50 million sale last June, but that was on the small side. Officials are evaluating at what larger asset sales beyond that would look like.

"We expect several pilots that will involve both local investors and institutional investors. The goal here is to reduce supply by converting foreclosed homes into rental units," says Jaret Seiberg of Guggenheim Securities. "Less supply - even less fear about a flood of foreclosed homes hitting the market - could stabilize [home] prices."

While much of this program will focus on local areas of distress, officials say they are looking at where the assets are today but are really more focused on where all the foreclosures will be in the future. It's not about the stock of foreclosures currently, it's about the flow of them over time and alternative ways to manage that flow.

Officials say they want to bring back private capital and help support rental opportunities for households, particularly when rent rates are up at the same time home prices are down.

Questions?  Comments?  RealtyCheck@cnbc.com And follow me on Twitter @Diana_Olick



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  • Mary  •  Altoona, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    So how many out there got a deduction off of thier Mortgage payment each time it was sold in them package deals ?(((((Even after the IRS deductions paid for them ))))) they sold for 3% to 7% of the face value from servicer to servicer and How many was in the bad loan ratio that they were dumping due to illegal loan from the beginning ? then these banks get bail outs to boot paying for the losses again and again and again !
    People we want accounting records ! Your Homes are more than likely been paid for 2 3 4 maybe even 5 times or more !
  • paul  •  4 months ago
    The homeshould be sold only to individuals ,families. Here we go again! Transfere of wealth Your right!
    • Sunny 4 months ago
      And who gets to allot them?
    • DetroitOS 4 months ago
      The benefit of selling to an investor is he/she will have the funds to repair these homes so that people can live in them. If an investor purchased 20 homes and fixes them up they will be move in ready for renters who are struggling, due to credit issues or other, and looking for a way to get back on their feet.
    • Patrick 4 months ago
      There are individuals with good credit who will buy good second homes if the price is low. Just because you command the ability to drive the price with the millions the our government has enabled you to use doesn't mean you should profit from the crises 'you' --the wealthy--caused in the first place. There is a happy medium. Let the investors buy the junk and renovate the neighborhoods most in need or allow individual investors and buyers to pick up property on better terms. This is ridiculous. There are a lot of us out here who are responsible, work full time or own small businesses, handled our money correctly, true middle class, not wealthy and are just getting the crap whacked out of us at both ends of the spectrum with government assistance.
  • Larry T  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 months ago
    Certainly no chance for fraud here!!! The more they get involved the bigger th mess. When is the Majority going to get it???????????????????????????????
  • David  •  Tirana, Albania  •  4 months ago
    Only the big parties will benefit from this. Another approach would be to provide special financing including payment of broker/realtor costs, so ordinary individuals can participate in this program as well.
    • Willie W 4 months ago
      Save your money for a downpayment, make sure you can make the payments and then consider buying a house. This is how most "ordinary" individuals attained homeownership. If you have to have special financing and other expenses paid, you shouldn't buy a house.
    • Jake 4 months ago
      agreed...the average person should be able to benefit also
  • DTT  •  Santa Clara, California  •  4 months ago
    It might be a way to get rid of the surplus homes that are unoccupied and in disrepair, but it has a tremendous potential for corruption and mismanagement. My guess is that the balk investors would be given huge discounts to current value which would further hurt the real estate market. My first question however is why haven't these homes been offered for sales before this was considered and why was a backlog allowed to develop. My guess is that the banks will sell more and more of their "backlog" to Freddie and Fannie at inflated prices and then Freddie and Fannie will discount them to hedge funds. It sounds like a form of insider trading to me where the government gives preference to big investors and another way for banks to benefit at tax payers expense. I'll wait to see the details before I make final judgement however.
    • Whistleblower 4 months ago
      You are so right. The principal investors have already stated anything more then 30 cents on the dollar is unacceptable. What is worse is that there are millions of Americans who would love to buy and live in these homes at 50 cents on the dollar if the could get a mortgage. What is going to happen is that the bulk buyers are going to put renters in for a year and then dump the property buy getting the renters a FHA loan. That is what was done with the private bulk purchases and why FHA defaults are at record levels. Guess who is one of the biggest investors. James Lockhart the regulator in charge ofr the GSEs when they got in trouble.
    • Whistleblower 4 months ago
      The government is not going to see one red cent. Most of these homes have thousand of dollars in penalty fees outstanding. Those get paid out of any proceeds and guess who gets them. The servicers.
    • Its Still Stupids Economy 4 months ago
      there would be alot more but they cant get the deadbeat squatters out of the homes
  • Nate  •  4 months ago
    excuse me, mr. government. Why can't fannie and freddie price these house accordingly, and make them available for everyone to purchase and let the market work like it should. The gov might even get more for the homes than what they value it at. The problem right now is the banks are holding on to them and not letting the prices adjust because Fannie and Freddie are giving them free money to keep them on their books. Outright FRAUD! This stinks of a backhanded bailout to the banks, yet again. When are we going to stop this?
    • matt c 4 months ago
      Well put, sad to say but I think you are correct.
    • A Yahoo! User 4 months ago
      Unfortunately you are 100% correct. They are not selling these properties at the going rate you and I would pay for a normal forclosure. They are selling these units in "Bulk" at a couple of pennies on the dollar to cronies.
    • ET 4 months ago
      just another boondoggle to pay off their friends!
  • NoWayGray  •  Tulsa, Oklahoma  •  4 months ago
    Shouldn't this headline read "Obama sells taxpayer purchased homes to real estate giants for pennies on the dollar"?
    • Jesse 4 months ago
      So what is your plan on how to sell this stockpile of homes that is building up? Because giving loans to people with shaky credit and and no savings is how they got foreclosed on in the first place.
    • D. 4 months ago
      No, it shouldnt.
    • walter777777 4 months ago
      It may be the only way to resolve this problem, and it may not work since so many homes are in areas which are so economically depressed that there is very little work to be found for persons to support themselves.

      W.
  • SkepticalOne  •  Dallas, Texas  •  4 months ago
    Why do I get the idea that there will be more section 8 housing involved and more rentals to people who should not live in these neighborhoods?
  • Jason  •  4 months ago
    "...is very close to announcing a pilot program to sell government-owned foreclosures in bulk to investors as rentals..." - that's tax payer-owned foreclosures being dumped for pennies on the dollar to enrich a few. Thanks again!!!
  • Bob D  •  New Britain, Connecticut  •  4 months ago
    What about the small investor just starting out.
    Nothing for the working american, as usual.
  • 5th Horseman  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 months ago
    Section 8 crack housing coming to a neighborhood near you.
  • Taz  •  Roanoke, Virginia  •  4 months ago
    Oh great, more help from the Government.
  • bryan  •  Ocala, Florida  •  4 months ago
    Im a small investor who aquired properties from 2000 to 2005. The cost of the mortgages is being supported by the rental market only. As far as the value of these propoerties, 60% are worth less than whats owed. The rental value is the olny thing saving my investment. Now the Obama administration wants to flood the market with cheap rentals and squeeze me out. He is no more for the average American than any other useless politician up on the hill. Vote them all out in 2012.
  • Great divide  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 months ago
    These are owned by the taxpayers and we should have the right to purchase them..... By packaging them in bulk they eliminate the poor and the middle class. Obama lies to the people but, his policies speak loud and clear..
  • john  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 months ago
    The cash strapped government! They are out of other peoples money now so they have to sell assets they didn't pay for at rock bottom prices! Get ready! The big currency crisis is just around the corner!
  • Geoff  •  Odessa, Texas  •  4 months ago
    Homes should just be put up to auction, rather than the govt deciding who owns. Good government unloads these properties. Not so good it doesn't let market forces determine who ends up owning. Overall, bad for independent landlords, as rental prices will reflect the increased competition. More indication the government has made the poort choice to influence the direction of another market.
  • S  •  4 months ago
    I am writing letters to all my regional elected representatives.
  • opportunist_2  •  Los Angeles, California  •  4 months ago
    Democrats enslave the minorities to economic poverty.
  • Herky1942  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
    You elected these corrupt people, now you better get out and vote in November to get rid of the incumbent thieves
  • Hotschott  •  4 months ago
    I am sure the Obama administration is calculating how to turn this into a vote generating scheme. He will find an investor that supports his campaign. Then he will fill these houses with section 8 tenants on the government dime. Lots of votes. Lastly he will propose a Federal program for low-income purchases of these houses so we can cycle this whole thing back into the mortgage business (and create jobs). He will probably propose state level admin of the programs so nobody can blame him when the whole thing blows up in few years after the section 8 ghetto he creates turns into Liberty City and Watts.
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