Distressed loans attracting private equity investors
Guess who holds your mortgage now? It's your friendly neighborhood hedge fund.
Dozens of hedge funds, private equity groups and other investors have
plunged into the beaten-down mortgage market in recent months, buying
tens of thousands of distressed loans and foreclosed properties around
the country. They hope to profit from the woes of banks and other
investors holding mortgages that have plummeted in value as home values
sink and defaults soar.
They are buying them from Wall Street investment banks eager to rid themselves of bad assets. Merrill Lynch & Co.,
for example, said this week that it would sell mortgage-linked
investments once valued at $30.6 billion for just $6.7 billion to Lone
Star Funds, a distressed-debt investor in Dallas.
Many of the
hedge funds, run by former Wall Street and lending industry executives,
claim they can do a better job than banks or other investors of
modifying mortgages at terms that consumers can afford.
"We're much easier to deal with than a bank," said Jacob Benaroya,
managing partner of New Jersey-based Biltmore Capital Group, a hedge
fund that's buying up to $100 million in mortgage debt per year. "We've
bought [the loan] at enough of a discount that we can make special
arrangements with the borrower."
However, the hedge funds
acknowledge that the loans they purchase are often in such trouble that
as many as half to two-thirds can't be salvaged. In that case, the fund
obtains the property through foreclosure and tries to sell it off, or
allows the borrower to turn over the house keys in return for forgiving
the outstanding mortgage balance.
Edelmira Sayo, a real estate
agent in Northern California, wound up turning over a rental property
to investment firm G8 Capital this month after her business slowed and
her income dropped.
The investor had offered to cut the value
of the $410,000 loan by $50,000, but Sayo still couldn't qualify for a
new loan because the value of her property had plummeted by nearly
$100,000.
"If I could have just had it modified, I could have
kept it," she said. "I didn't want to tarnish my credit report. ...
It's just so sad."
Evan Gentry, chief executive of G8 Capital,
said the company worked with Sayo for months to help her find a way to
refinance the mortgage, but he said it couldn't be done because of
falling property values, tighter credit and Sayo's lower income.
For many such borrowers, he said, "the best move for them is to simply
do a deed in lieu of foreclosure and simply start over."
So
far, housing advocates say they haven't yet seen the impact of such
hedge funds among the borrowers they counsel. But they hope these new
investors will be more amenable to borrowers' interests than the
current mortgage holders, which have been widely criticized for being
slow to modify loans amid an unprecedented volume of defaulting loans.
"I have been waiting for this to happen," said Gabe del Rio, vice
president of lending at Community HousingWorks, a nonprofit housing
agency in San Diego. "It will equate to a deeper ability to modify
mortgages."
Still, there are some worries that desperate
borrowers unwittingly may be giving up protections - such as the right
to sue the original lender - when they agree to a modification.
"Borrowers are not represented by an attorney or anybody who can advise
them about the legal effects of what they're signing," said Kurt
Eggert, a professor at Chapman University's law school.
Distressed-debt investors, however, emphasize that they are less
bureaucratic and more willing to make changes than most loan servicers,
which collect and distribute mortgage payments.
"They've got
too many loans and not enough people," said Matt Stadler, a principal
with investment group National Asset Direct, which currently owns about
750 loans and is looking to double that amount.
Restructuring the loan, when possible, is often faster and less expensive than going through the foreclosure process.
"We're fully aligned with the interest of the borrower to find a way to
make the loan more valuable by keeping them in their home," said
Stanford Kurland, a former Countrywide Financial Corp.
executive who founded Private National Mortgage Acceptance Co.
Kurland's company, nicknamed PennyMac, aims to raise $2 billion for
mortgage acquisitions.
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