OIL-RICH FUND EYEING FORECLOSED US HOMES
There's a new land grab starting in America.Foreign money, which up to now has focused its attention on investing in iconic commercial real estate - like Barneys New York and the Chrysler Building - is now moving to scoop up tens of thousands of discounted foreclosed homes across the country.
One sovereign fund, said to have earmarked $29 billion to purchase foreclosed residential real estate, recently hired a West Coast mortgage broker and is starting to search for bargains, The Post has learned.
The search, which is being carried out, in part, by Field Check Group mortgage consultant Mark Hanson, who was retained by the broker, Steve Iversen, is concentrating on single- and multi-family REO (real estate owned) homes, or homes that have already been taken over by the mortgagee.
Neither Iversen nor Hanson would disclose the name of the client, but sources told The Post it's a sovereign fund.
It is difficult enough to watch folks' homes being taken over and bought up in the normal way of things as lives are destroyed and changed forever to the negative, but to know that those whose single value to the globe is what lies beneath the dirt by chance and to know that their greed in pricing this commodity far above it's material value is the lever by which they buy our homes in the extremis they have perpetrated, is unconscionable.
This is a national issue which, if this economy is broken by energy prices will face a very large percentage of American families.
The unidentified fund joins individual US investors, hedge funds and Wall Street banks in kicking the tires of REO homes, which have fallen in value so much that they are now tempting investments.
A sovereign fund would have two distinct advantages over other investors - the depressed value of the US dollar makes the homes a bargain, and sovereign funds have deeper pockets.
The sovereign fund of Abu Dhabi, for example, has a reported $875 billion in assets, while Norway has $391 billion, Singapore has $303 billion and Kuwait has $264 billion in their sovereign funds, which are funded by proceeds from oil sales.
The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is expected to announce next month what type of US distressed assets they will be investing in and real estate is at the top of the list, according to a report in Financial Times last week.
ADIA did not respond to an e-mail question about REO investments.
So far, prices on bulk sales of REO properties vary based on location and are selling from 60 cents to 80 cents on the dollar. Hanson started out offering 40 cents on the dollar for about $2.5 billion worth of California properties owned by IndyMac and Washington Mutual but was turned down. The banks refused to comment.
Hanson is now willing to pay 50 cents to 60 cents on the dollar for a collection of California REOs worth at least $500 million.
In fact, this week Hanson's team negotiated a $2 billion package mixed with homes across the country for 31 cents on the dollar. While progress seems slow, Hanson reminds us this is only a nine-month old industry.
Some market experts think such deeply discounted REOs, like the deal Hanson just closed, are more fiction than fact.
"The size and discount of that type of deal isn't the norm yet," said Robert Pardes, with Recourse Recovery Management Services, a provider of mortgage advisory services.
"The critical mass of bulk REO is in well-capitalized institutions that don't need to sell yet in bulk at a deep discount because they are better off not taking substantial hits to the capital just to get the assets off their books,"
This may change, should the market become more crowded with bank failures and distressed institutions, he said.
Enoch Lawrence, senior vice president of CB Richard Ellis, says "This type of bulk buy would make an impact on the market. They are in a unique position because they have a long time horizon to invest and a cheap cost of capital. It's actually a perfect time for them to acquire these REO assets."
But hey, Nancy, Harry and Barry, let's fart around some more with drilling and anything else which might, in your geological and climatological opinion disturb the environment in Tonga. That's a much higher priority to some people.
2 comments:
The oil rich vultures are moving in. Economic jihad continuing apace while Congress does nothing about an energy plan.
Gives one pause as to whether we should support/fight the gov's attempts to bail out our mortgage lenders.
The Japanese alarmed us when they dabbled in this a couple of decades ago. That effort didn't last and eventually collapsed.
Keeping in mind, we should be ever careful what we wish for - will history repeat itself with these vultures?
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