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Goin' country: Buying a house 'down home' has
rules of its own
By Michael
D. Larson Bankrate.com
Yankton, S.D., (1998 est.
population, 14,325) is about as far from New York City or Los Angeles
as a person can get. It's got a couple of manufacturing plants and
Avera
Sacred Heart Hospital, and yes, Tom Brokaw once called the town
home. But beyond that, it's just one small city surrounded by a
whole lot of country.
Sound like the perfect place to move? Many
Americans think so. They've decided the best house has a yard measured
in acres and is miles away from the nearest neighbor. But before
you trade that daily subway ride for a lot full of feeder calves,
you should spend time studying up on how home loans get done in
the country.
Surprises
for city slickers
While many mortgages in Minneola, Kan., are the same as those in
Manhattan, others vary significantly. Depending on the size of the
property and what you want to do with it, among other factors, all
sorts of odd restrictions can apply to the loan. People who don't
learn the ropes will likely find out how expensive 40 acres and
a farmhouse can be.
"Just to first clarify any perception that
because we're a bank from way out in South Dakota where there's
no trees and no cities, we don't utilize national mortgage programs
as if we were in the middle of a large metro area, that's not founded
at all," says Jim Kirk, vice president of residential real estate
at First
Dakota National Bank in Yankton. "We use the same traditional
markets.
"But if at some point the subject property
that is to be mortgaged is not considered residential enough or
at some point we cross the line where it's no longer just residential
property and it's mixed-use property, is that property then eligible
for traditional mortgage products? Often, it is not," he adds. "Properties
can be financed and there are ways to do it, but the thing is, you
may have to come up with a higher down payment or go into higher
interest rate or some kind of subprime loan."
Rural lending has gotten more progressive over
time, but it still involves unfamiliar twists and turns that consumers
accustomed to buying in cities and suburbs might not expect. In
a subdivision, for instance, appraisers value homes by comparing
their sales prices to the prices other units within several blocks
have fetched recently. But rural homes can be miles apart and come
with vastly different amounts of land. That makes it difficult for
appraisers to find "comps" -- or comparable properties -- they can
use to value the property being purchased. Many rural families live
in the same homes for generations, too. So, there may not be recent
sales figures to use.
"Lenders are looking at if there's a large
adjustment on the appraisal for land," says Virginia McGhee, program
coordinator with Colonial
Farm Credit in Mechanicsville, Va. "If your subject is a 40-acre
parcel and all the appraiser could find were five-acre parcels or
20 acres, is that comparable? We doubt it."
When
hobbies go fowl
Lenders can get nervous about land use, too. Many borrowers enjoy
country living because they have enough space to try their hands
at raising a few chickens or growing vegetables for sale at a neighborhood
market. But people who generate too much of their income from this
sort of "hobby farming," or those who devote too much of their properties'
acreage to farming, can run into trouble. Mortgage companies sometimes
have to treat such properties as mixed-use rather than purely residential.
In those cases, borrowers typically get stuck with higher interest
rates, higher down payment requirements and other mortgage hurdles.
"Here I've got John and Mary Doe. They work
in town, but they live on a 15-acre hobby farm. They have a couple,
two or three buildings on the farm that are special-purpose buildings
built specifically for the raising of livestock. They may feed a
few feeder calfs or raise horses, not for the family's entertainment
but for commercial purposes," Kirk says. "Those are the kind of
properties that fall in the gap.
"It's hard to find a product to finance those
because that's where the hole exists."
Even borrowers who don't plan to farm at all
can run into problems when they're looking to buy country homes
surrounded by a significant amount of land. Mortgage lenders and
the secondary marketing agencies that buy their loans, Fannie
Mae and Freddie
Mac, like when most of a purchased property's value comes from
the home, rather than the lot, experts say. That's because rural
land can lose its value much faster than a suburban house if there's
a regional drought or economic downturn. Lenders get left holding
foreclosed property they can't sell for enough to cover their loans
when that happens. As a result, they either charge more for the
loans or won't make them at all.
"They're not going to get into significant
acreages. There's a number of five acres or 10 acres -- some number
always pops up," says Tom Griffin, vice president of AgFirst
Farm Credit Bank. The Columbia, S.C.-based company is a member
of the nation's Farm
Credit System, a collection of small bank-like institutions
that make rural loans and larger banks from which they borrow money
for those loans.
"That's the major item, the major obstacle."
Though these issues can get in the way, consumers
needn't give up hope. They may have to get loans that don't fit
the standard secondary market bill. But that carries some benefits
with it.
Room
to run
Lenders typically have more leeway when it comes to charging closing
costs and setting terms on portfolio mortgages (mortgages a bank
holds on its books rather than sells off via Fannie Mae or Freddie
Mac). If interest rates drop, they can modify a loan's rate and
payment to reflect market conditions rather than require a full,
expensive refinance.
"When we do an in-house loan, we find ways
to eliminate a lot of the settlement costs that we have no way of
eliminating on a traditional, conforming residential mortgage,"
says First Dakota's Kirk. "We might waive appraisals, waive surveys,
waive underwriting fees or not make escrows mandatory."
Of course, the best things in life aren't always
free. Banks may restrict portfolio loans to terms of 15 years or
less, require larger down payments or charge higher rates. That's
why some rural-property buyers may want to consider helpful government
programs.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural
Housing Service offers a loan guarantee program that's similar
to the Department of Housing and Urban Development's Federal
Housing Administration program. Just like HUD, the USDA gets
lenders to offer lenient loans by promising to offset their losses
in the event borrowers default. The USDA
mortgages, which have been around since 1991, require no down
payment. Consumers who earn up to 115 percent of the area's median
income can use the loans to buy properties in communities with less
than 20,000 people.
"The program was started because there was
a lack of credit in rural America primarily and we still see that,"
says David Villano, deputy administrator for the USDA's Rural Housing
Service. "Rural America doesn't have the same access to credit that
people in more urban areas do."
Leveling
the fields
Times are changing, though, according to many experts. The federal
government, Farm Credit banks and secondary marketing agencies have
been working toward leveling the playing field between rural, urban
and suburban home buyers for a couple years. As a result, many rural
borrowers can now get the same conventional loan rates and programs
available elsewhere.
"The interface between rural homeowners and
the large urban secondary market hasn't been perfect and I'm talking
about Fannie and Freddie in particular," says John Blanchfield,
director of the American Bankers Association's Center for Agricultural
and Rural Banking in Washington. "But both of them have made real
efforts in the past few years to bridge that gap.
"We still run into problems in rural America
with homes not fitting the standard box that an urban or suburban
property might fit," he adds. "But I think people are making a greater
effort on this."
AgFirst, for one, offers two programs in cooperation
with rural lenders, Fannie Mae and another less-familiar sister
agency nicknamed Farmer
Mac. Borrowers can get mortgages through the programs, which
have more lenient guidelines on acreage and land use, at conventional
rates.
"If they are a creditworthy borrower," Griffin
says, "they shouldn't let some of the property characteristics that
they're looking for prevent them from getting a conventional, residential
mortgage product and conventional, residential mortgage interest
rates."
All of these unfamiliar conditions and caveats
can trip borrowers up, so experts recommend carefully planning before
any big move to the country. Buyers may want to save up more down
payment money or consider government loan options, for example.
If they need to go with private lenders, they should find ones that
offer conventional rates even on oddball properties. Or, they should
track down companies willing to shave closing costs on portfolio
loans. Those who do so will be well on their way to sipping sun
tea in no time.
"During most of the 70s and 80s, rural America
experienced huge population outflows. But during the 90s, most of
rural America has experienced population inflows," says the ABA's
Blanchfield.
"This is a real big thing for a lot of the
country and there's a lot of opportunity for folks."
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