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Posts Tagged ‘association’

FHA: Good News or Bad for Associations?

February 15th, 2010

The idea for the Federal Housing Administration’s new rules and enforcement was to allow for more buyers to qualify for FHA loans, thus increasing business for condo and apartment associations. But how good is it?

In fact, realtor associations and builders groups are opposed to the new rules, stating that the FHA has just made it that much harder for new building projects to be delivered and for existing apartment and condo complexes to qualify for the federal lending program. Apartment and condo associations agree. One section of the new FHA rules limits how many buyers of condo and apartment units can get an FHA loan. And the rules limit the number of FHA-backed loans to half of the existing units in a building.

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Flexibility and the Recession is Smart Business for Associations

December 8th, 2009

Faced with record numbers of owner foreclosures, is it time for your association to relax its rules and allow units to be rented by non-owners?  It’s the economy, stupid – that decade-old statement could have been written about what apartment and condo associations are facing today. With too many associations trying to deal with record numbers of owner foreclosures, association boards are desperate for a solution. That may mean relaxing standards that in the past were meant to protect property values.

 Most apartment associations have rules that prohibit or limit greatly the ability of owners to rent their units. The strong argument has always been that the unknown variable – the tenant – could be a detriment to the value of the property as many unit owners in the past have been reluctant to live in a mixed-use community. However, with so many empty units and so much financial strain on both apartment associations and homeowners, flexibility is the new buzz word of the industry.

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