$750K mortgage fraud too sweet to pass up
Sellers without any purchase offers are most
likely to participate
Monday, January 22, 2007
By Jack Guttentag
Inman
News
Weak housing markets appear to encourage mortgage fraud. Typically, fraud
associated with home purchases requires multiple
perpetrators, one of whom is the ringleader. While a
lender is always the victim, another lender may be
involved as a perpetrator. An appraiser, home seller and
home buyer are always involved, perhaps innocently,
perhaps not.
Here is a great example provided by one of my
readers. He had his house listed for sale for six months
with no takers at the list price of $700K, reduced from
over $800K, and finally took it off the market. Shortly
thereafter, he received a letter offering him $675K,
contingent on his getting an appraisal for $750K. (The
letter-writer was the ringleader in this case.) The
homeowner did get an appraisal for $750K, perhaps
because of his high asking price earlier, and the
tendency for appraisals to lag the market.
The ringleader explained to the homeowner how the
deal would go down. The critical factor was 100 percent
financing for the full amount of the appraisal. Of the
$750K obtained from the lender, $675K would go to the
seller, $20K to settlement costs, $20K to the
ringleader, and $35K to help the buyer with the
payments.
One major element in the fraud is concealment of the
true price, which is $675K. The standard lending rule is
that the loan amount is based on appraised value or sale
price, whichever is lower. Hence, the sales contract and
loan documents have to show a $750K sale price, which
makes it a fraud.
The ringleader trolls for buyers with ads that do not
mention price or loan amount, only monthly payment. The
advertised payment, furthermore, is below the monthly
mortgage payment on the $750K loan by the amount of the
ringleader's monthly contributions from the $35K, which
has been extracted from the sale price for that purpose.
Who in his right mind would borrow $750K to purchase
a house worth $675K? Only those who are payment myopic,
meaning that they make purchase decisions based on
monthly payment rather than price. There are many,
especially among first-time home buyers, most of whom
have been paying rent for their housing. In making
decisions about renting, it is appropriate to compare
the quality of the accommodation with the monthly rent,
and many carry that mindset over to home purchase, not
realizing that home ownership is a different game
altogether.
On the face of it, these borrowers should not
qualify. They are putting no cash in the transaction --
even the settlement costs are paid for them -- and they
can afford the payment only with the help of the
supplement paid by the ringleader. How does the
ringleader find a lender who will qualify them?
I don't know the answer, but my speculation is that
the lenders who originate these loans are
co-perpetrators who knowingly accept falsified
documents. They don't hold the loans, and therefore
don't take the risk of default and foreclosure. The risk
is passed first to wholesale lenders who buy the loans
from the originator, and then to the ultimate holders,
which are likely to be investors in mortgage-backed
securities and the entities that guarantee the
securities.
Loan originators who sell loans in the secondary
market can be required to repurchase loans that quickly
go into default. Usually these buyback arrangements
don't extend more than six months; however, beyond that
the originator is off the hook.
In the case at hand, the ringleader protects the
lender against buybacks by selecting borrowers who can
carry the payment with the help of the supplement. So
long as the supplement lasts, which will be one to two
years, the likelihood of default is low. When the
supplement stops, the default probability will jump, but
that is no longer viewed as the responsibility of the
loan originator.
This is a tempting deal for home sellers who are
having trouble getting their price. When a sale is
consummated, they get their money and are out of it.
Because they sign off on falsified documents, however,
they are participants in fraud.
It is also tempting for buyers who see an opportunity
to acquire more house, perhaps far more, than they could
otherwise afford. The down side is that they must also
sign off on falsified documents, and they risk
defaulting on the mortgage.
Buyers will default after the supplement ends unless
either a) their income rises to the point where they can
carry the payments on their own, or b) the house
appreciates enough that they can sell at a price that
covers the mortgage. A default would seriously damage
their credit and delay any plans to become homeowners
legitimately.
The writer is professor of finance emeritus at the
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
Comments and questions can be left at
www.mtgprofessor.com.