Fannie and Freddie Mess With Investment Property Financing
Just when you though it was already tough to get investment property financing, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac instituted some new rules last August that really affected real estate investors all across the nation. Specifically, they had to do with cash out refinances, stated income loans and titling investment property in your LLC.
I’ve been a self-employed real estate investor for many years so the rule that affected me the most was the elimination of stated income loans. I typically don’t show enough income on my taxes to be able to qualify for financing. That’s the way our tax law is set up for self-employed people. But it sure hurts real estate investors!
The next investment property financing rule that hit me hard (and doesn’t make much sense to me) is that they say you can’t have more than four financed properties. Well, that’s not just investment properties, it includes the house you live in, too. So really it’s capped at three.
I guess Fannie Mae decided this didn’t make sense either because they raised the limit back up to 10. So now you can own your house plus 9 investment properties.
For me the lesson was to try to show more income on my taxes and think about another line of work! But then my neighbor told me about portfolio loans. I guess there are loans out there that don’t have these rules.
Portfolio lenders offer investment property financing under their own set of rules. So you can have more than 4 financed properties and in some cases they’ll still do stated income loans. That’s because the financing is based on the cash flow that the property produces, not the income that YOU produce! That’s the way it should be, anyway I think.
As long as your property makes enough rental income each month to pay the mortgage and expenses, then you’re in good shape. There’s a formula they use called debt service coverage ratio which is just the net income divided by the mortgage payment. It’s the same investment property financing formula that commercial lenders use so if you have commercial property you’ll be familiar with it.
In my next post I’ll tell you a little more about what I found out about refinances and properties that are titled in your LLC.
I'm Steve Barrett and I've been a real estate investor for 17 years. This is me with my daughter, Sara.
