Origination/Lending
Sign of the Times: Even Homebuilders Prefer to Rent
By
DIANA GOLOBAY
January 5, 2009 12:10 PM CST
You know it’s bad when a home builder is forced to sell its own properties — the model homes it uses to attract buyers — and sign leases on them instead. In the midst of a boom in residential mortgage refinancing activity and recent efforts to stave off foreclosures through voluntary modification programs and foreclosure moratoriums, it sounds reasonable that struggling home owners are either refinancing out of their current mortgages or getting out of the home owning sector and back into the renter’s market in order to make ends meet. Apparently, such is now the case with at least one luxury home builder.
An Irvine, Calif.-based residential land development and home building company announced Friday it had sold 17 model homes for $25 million — that’s an average $1.47 million each — to an unnamed investor who turned around and leased the homes back to the company. California Coastal Communities, Inc. (CALC: 1.00 0.00%) said it received $22.5 million up front for the transaction with an additional $2 million deferred payment and a $500,000 reserve payable for conversion of the model homes for sale to home buyers after the eventual termination of the lease.
“The sale and leaseback of the model homes at our Brightwater project increases our liquidity and improves our company’s financial position during this extraordinarily difficult time in the housing market,” said company CEO Raymond Pacini in a press statement.
The company used $10.2 million of the sale proceeds to make repayments to its investor and reduce the payments that will be due in 2009. With another $10.7 million paid to reduce the balance outstanding under its revolving credit agreement — which allows the company to re-borrow the funds — the company boasts just $16 million in total liquidity. Though not a relatively large number to begin with, the company’s liquidity appears neutralized altogether when taken in beside the outstanding inventory at a single community.
The company reported the backlog of inventory at its Brightwater community, where the models were sold, stands at seven — that’s seven homes, not seven months — with a combined value of $16.6 million. Although the company sold seven Brightwater homes during the fourth quarter 2008 at an average of $2.1 million, it only “delivered” 40 in all of 2008 — and that total includes the sales of the models. So, the company’s backlog of inventory at Brightwater alone accounts for roughly a third of the its total business for fiscal year 2008, not accounting for the models sold and leased back.
“The continuing loss of consumer confidence during the financial crisis worsened in mid-September, and coupled with the moribund state of the residential mortgage market, has negatively impacted our new orders in the fourth quarter,” Pacini said. “We are hopeful that the federal government’s measures, designed to revive the mortgage market and restore consumer confidence, will enhance our efforts as we begin the 2009 selling season.”
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Monday morning that it had begun buying mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.04 -7.14%), Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.23 -1.60%) and Ginnie Mae as part of an earlier announced $500 billion program. In an announcement over the holidays, the Fed suggested that its purchase program will run through the second quarter 2009– a much tighter window than most analysts had projected — and the government has said it intends to pay for the program by printing more money, which may likely lead to inflation and other negative responses.
Write to Diana Golobay at diana.golobay@housingwire.com.
Disclosure: The author held no relevant investment positions when this story was published. Indirect holdings may exist via mutual fund investments. HW reporters and writers follow a strict disclosure policy, the first in the mortgage trade.
recent stories by department
Origination/Lending
Secondary Market/Investors
Servicing/Default
Get your HW Fix
Join nearly 10,000 bold subscribers who already get our daily email delivered to their inbox -- it's free, and a great way to ensure you don't miss something.
Events
2009 Dec 09 -- 2009 Dec 10
RMBS: Assessing Value and Risk
This two-day course in New York City will equip market participants with the knowledge and skills to evaluate prime, Alt-A and subprime RMBS portfolios in order to assess their value and understand inherent risks. For more information, visit www.fitchratings.com.
2010 Jan 13 -- 2010 Jan 14
2010 Collection Technology Summit
The Collection Technology Summit is the first industry event to focus solely on collections and its associated technologies and continues to draw top executives from the nation's most prominent institutions. The Collection Technology Summit, where innovation happens. For more information, visit www.collectiontechnology.net
Print This Article







