George Allen / EducateMHC Blog Mobile Home & Land Lease Community Advocate & Expert

March 19, 2021

Walker & Dunlop’s ‘A Tale of Two Cities’

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 6:32 am

Blog Posting # 630 @ 19 March 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource 7 communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U! Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: This should be an interesting and informative ‘read’ for you. In it we share some late-breaking housing stats with you, followed by a critique of a 17 page report of questionable origin, and ending with some addtional helpful housing insights. Enjoy!

I.

Walker & Dunlop’s ‘A Tale of Two Cities’

The winter 2020 Quarterly Report in MULTIFAMILY OUTLOOK, contained a few thought-provoking gems worth repeating here.

“While unemployment rates dropped quickly from 14.7 percent in April (2020) to 8.4 percent in August, a more detailed look shows widening inequality …yet to be resolved. For those with a bachelor’s degree or higher, unemployment peaked at only 8.4 percent in April and has since fallen to 5.3 percent – a rate …once thought to be near the point of equilibrium for the economy. Unemployment rates for those with less than a high school education peaked at 71.2 percent and for those with a high school education, at 17.7 percent. More than one in ten people of the 42 million people in these segments of the labor force still remain unemployed as of August.”

“…the economy is far from being back to ‘normal’. The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet increased to nearly $3 trillion this year, as subsidies such as those provided by the CARES act backstopped businesses, individuals, and farmers. That’s almost triple the subsidies provide in 2008 which have yet to be paid back, igniting a debate about whether the economy can grow out of its increasing debt burden, print money, or continue in a low interest rate environment to pay back the debt.”

II.

Monopolization of the American Manufactured Home Industry

Here’s how the publisher of MHPro News introduced this controversial topic. “Samuel Strommen of the Knudson School of Law (a.k.a. USD Law) provided…(a) copy of his research paper that focused on Warren Buffett-led Berkshire Hathaway, Clayton Homes, their related lending, other Manufactured Housing Institute (‘MHI’) members, MHI itself, and the industry’s Real Estate Investment Trust (‘REITs’) sector.” Who is Samuel Strommen?

Precise title of this typescript? ‘The Monopolization of the American Manufactured Home Industry and the Formation of REITs: a Rube Goldberg Machine of Human Suffering.’

Now, don’t go and get all excited about this 17 page report with its’ ballyhooed 131 footnotes – if you can even find it online. An interesting ‘read’ sure, but not, in my opinion, of academic quality or much use to our industry and realty asset class.

First off, no record of Samuel Strommen being at the Knudson School of Law (a.k.a. USD Law), past or present. So, no idea as to what, if any, academic or manufactured housing credentials this individual possesses. I was thinking professor; now thinking law student, if that.

There’s passing mention of REITs in the report title, plus what you read in the introductory remark above – but no mention, beyond “increasingly consolidating landlords”, (that I read) in the report proper. A near total disconnect! Hint. This awkward wording suggests the identity of the real writer. Otherwise, the phrase would have been better penned as “landlords increasingly consolidating…”

Then there’s this salacious opinion appearing in the four sentences Introduction. “… (manufactured housing) the only form of residence in the United States that carries its’ own pejorative connotation, ‘trailer trash’.” Really? And I (you) should want to read further into this insulting screed?

“The aim of this paper is thus: to expose a number of antitrust violations – both blatant and subtle – in the form of the increasing monopolization of the manufacturing, financing, and the increasingly consolidating landlords, and to call for reforms within this industry.” And that’s pretty much what the writer does, except for NO further mention of, as pointed out earlier, ‘increasingly consolidating landlords’. Wonder why? Though there is mention of “25-30% of all manufactured homes are situated in manufactured home communities (commonly referred to…as ‘trailer parks’).”Called such by whom? Three paragraphs later, the writer refers to this unique, income-producing property type, properly, as a ‘land-lease community’. So, obviously, he has no expertise in the nature and use of manufactured housing trade terminology.

An error? “…production of manufactured homes hit its’ apex (i.e. highest point. GFA) over twenty years ago, with a maximum production of some 375,000 units in 1998.” NOT! That was simply a renascence year for the industry. Its true acme year was 1973 (25 years earlier) when 579,940 new ‘mobile homes’ were shipped nationwide! Perhaps that’s the ‘diff’; ‘mobile homes’ vs. manufactured homes shipped.

Earlier, I made reference to 131 footnotes in this report. Interestingly, the following observation is presented sans documentation: “While claims that Berkshire Hathaway vis-à-vis Clayton Homes have (sic) violated American antitrust law have (sic) not been litigated in court, ample evidence that violations are taking place are myriad.” (‘myriad = 10,000 times’. GFA) What evidence? Where’s ‘the footnote’ when one needs it?

Now here’re some interesting word choices: “What was previously a top ten (manufacturers) has amalgamated (‘consolidated) into a top three. What the industry has presented as apotheosis is closer to apoptosis.” (i.e. from ‘glorified’ to ‘self-destruction’). And this, “In public, Buffett boasted through a rictus (‘gaping grin’) that Clayton and its financing arm were performing a good deed….” These elitist word choices are what lead me to think (maybe) a law student is penning this rough document.

One of the most telling – and to me, helpful, sentences in the entire report, is this: “Clayton Homes (and their affiliated lenders) would suffer a detriment if (the) GSEs were to re-enter the chattel mortgage industry.” Really? And here I believed it was the two GSEs (and FHFA) who were digging in and dragging their heels when it came to implementing aggressive Duty to Serve (‘DTS’) plans and programs in favor of manufactured housing finance. So, which is it?

True or False? “…currently , half of the MHI executive (committee board members) are former employees of Clayton Homes.”

The report ends with the same question I’ve been posing for months. “Why has manufacturing yet to cross the 100,000 unit threshold, much less come anywhere close to its’ most recent 1998 peak?” While I criticize much of the content of the report, I do support this question!

‘A Rube Goldberg of human suffering’ is the subtitle of this research report. Personally, I don’t think the writer, professor, student, or whoever he/she is, addressed this salient point.

III.

Everyone Wants a Piece of Our Action!

When was the last time you read anything in Apartment Management Magazine about manufactured housing and land lease communities? Well, YARDI breeze, a property management software designed for multifamily rental properties recently (February 2021) contributed an article, based on a recent NorthMarq report, to this publication, titled: ‘Five Reasons Manufactured Housing Could Outperform the Market in 2021’. The first reason being high demand for land lease communities as being desirable places to live (especially during the pandemic. GFA). And the next four reasons?

1. Affordable manufactured housing (i.e. article simply put it: ‘MHCS’) can help solve the affordable housing crisis. Nothing new there, except the article is ‘silent’ on the lack of reasonable access to chattel capital for home-only loans on units going directly into land lease communities onto rental homesites.

2. There’s plenty of investment opportunity. (Said out of one side of the writer’s mouth – or pen) Versus mentioning the majority of ‘investment grade’ land lease communities (i.e. 100+ rental homesites in size) are already consolidated into one or another of 500+/- property portfolios throughout North America!); meaning, ‘plenty of investment opportunity’ among the 80+/- percent of the national rental community inventory, those properties containing fewer than 100 rental homesites. For more on this subject, read the 32nd annual ALLEN REPORT (January 2021), available for purchase via www.educatemhc.com

3. Manufactured homes are (un) surprisingly high quality. Best sentence in the article? “If renters are looking for a high-value deal, they need to take a closer look at well-built, competitively priced manufactured housing.” Note that ‘renters’ is used here, as opposed to ‘buyers’, since this is a multifamily rental property association trade publication.

4. Retired baby boomers are a growing demographic. To entice them, according to the article, use “many of the same rental perks used to bring in millennials:” Those being online rent payments, communal spaces, eco-friendly amenities, hosted events and activities, and fitness areas.

And Thanks to Dick Bessire, founder and partner at Bessire & Casenhiser in San Dimas, CA., for sending along this material.

George Allen, CPM, MHM
EducateMHC

March 12, 2021

Washington’s MH Watchdog Barks!

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 9:00 am

Blog Posting # 629 @ 12 March 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U! Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION:

I.

Washington’s MH Watchdog Barks!

Right to the point! The following lightly edited paragraph is quoted from 1 March1, 2021 communique from the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform:

“By tying manufactured home chattel loan participation in (Federal Housing Finance Agency’s) Enterprise Housing Goals (‘EHG’), to thus far non-existent support for such loans under Duty to Serve (‘DTS’ plans), FHFA has created a ‘perfect storm’ of malign neglect for the vast majority of lower and moderate-income American families seeking to realize the American Dream of homeownership via inherently affordable manufactured homes – directly contrary to Congress’ objectives for both EHG and DTS.”

So, what to do about this sad, ongoing ‘perfect storm’ of malign neglect on the part of FHFA & GSEs? Another brief paragraph from the same MHARR communique on March 1st, 2021:

“MHARR calls on FHFA to end this baseless charade, and (1) require market-significant purchases of mainstream, affordable manufactured home personal property loans under DTS; and (2) simultaneously restore EHG credit for such purchases, based on the known and well-documented affordability of both mainstream manufactured homes and chattel financing.”

Will this happen? No. Not unless you, as a manufactured housing businessperson or land lease community owner/operator, insist on more political pressure on whichever national advocacy entity that commands your loyalty and receives your dues monies.

Kudos to Mark Weiss at MHARR for speaking out so clearly and forcefully in our behalf in this timely, ongoing, and important matter!

II.

Off to a Too Slow Start in 2021!

Affordable housing is in very short supply and site-built housing prices jumped 11 percent during 2020, but new HUD-Code manufactured housing shipments, in January 2021, lagged behind the 8,733 we achieved during January 2020 – before the coronavirus pandemic hit!

That’s right, only 8,476 new HUD-Code housing shipments is the official January 2021 total posted by IBTS and embraced by HUD, MHARR, & EducateMHC; that’s 257 fewer new HUD-Code homes than the aforementioned 8,733 shipped during January 2020. Will we recover this ground during the next 11 months? In my opinion Yes; but ONLY IF manufacturers shorten delivery backlogs and lower unit prices as soon as possible! AND, as one land lease community portfolio owner/operator succinctly put it, after reading this month’s ‘MHShipment & Stock Market Report’,

“These (lower shipment) numbers don’t support the contention by manufacturers (plants) last year, that they were experiencing ‘significant increases in demand for manufactured homes’.”

Does the point of that observation remind you of another quote? Does me. In 1858, in Clinton, IL., Abraham Lincoln said: “You can fool some of the people all of the time and all the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.” HUD-Code manufacturers, are you paying attention?

Is the ‘MHShipment & Stock Market Report’ a new media resource to you? Probably. Though researched and penned, but purposely restricted to limited distribution since 2016, it’s become, in just the past several months, a major statistical reference for the industry and realty asset class nationwide!

Once each month, soon after the Institute for Building Technology & Safety (‘IBTS’) posts manufactured housing shipment data, here at EducateMHC we compare said tallies to the previous year, estimate the production value of homes shipped, and identify emerging trends. Also visit the New York Stock Exchange and Toronto Exchange to ascertain that day’s stock prices on all nine public manufactured housing and land lease community real estate investment trusts (four of the former and five of the latter). After posting said prices in the report, we calculate a Composite Stock Index comprised of eight of the entities (not including Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.). The Composite Stock Index on 3 March 2021 was $621.91, compared to $577.00 on (pre-covid) 3 March 2020. The newest feature of this seminal report is the U.S. House Price Index for the most recent month it is available.

Want to view the ‘MHShipment & Stock Market Report’ every month? Visit www.educatemhc.com and download The Allen CONFIDENTIAL: PRIME EDITION – Current Month’s Issue.

March 5, 2021

‘Murdered By Gods’

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 7:58 am

Blog Posting # 628 @ 5 March 2021: EducateMHC

 

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

 

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & commu8nication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

 

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHindustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfra7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

 

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U! Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

 

INTRODUCTION: Four opportunities coming your way. An exciting mystery novel authored by a land lease community owner. Help finance the new manufactured housing wing at the RV/MH Hall of Fame. Watch to see if CDC overstepped constitutional boundary with its’ eviction moratorium.  And, if a freelance consultant, here’s your opportunity to be included in the 22nd annual ‘Who Ya Gonna Call in 2021?’ directory. No one sends more MHNews your way!

 

I.

 

‘Murdered By Gods’

 

“I looked down at my phone, which seemed to be the source of the sudden heat. I’ve had phones get a little too warm before, especially when exchanging a lot of data…but never at such a temperature as what I was feeling now. It actually felt like it was burning my fingers, which prompted me to drop it with a yelped curse, “Shit. That’s Hot.”

 

As I said it, the buzz of conversation spiked in volume and intensity. Shouts, even shrieks of alarm erupted all around us. Focused as I was, on my defective phone, I did not immediately grasp the significance of this, but over the din, I could just make out a hissing sound – like a pressure valve releasing steam – emanating from the device.

 

…Everywhere I looked, I saw people staring at the floor, staring at mobile phones they had dropped or thrown down in dismay. I grabbed (Diane’s) clutch purse from her hands and flung it away. The purse was still in the air when it, and every other mobile phone in the great hall, erupted in a flash of white-hot flame.” Pp. 307 & 308

 

So goes, Murdered By Gods, a thrilling mystery authored by land lease community owner and real estate broker Charles G. Irion of Phoenix, Arizona.  Interested in reading more? Here goes…

 

“The business end of the submachine pistol was close enough that, had I been so inclined, I could have reached out and touched it.

 

There’s an axiom in self-defense instruction: run away from a knife, charge a gun. The reason is simple. Since you can’t outrun a bullet, you might as well go on the offensive. Additionally, guns are most effective at a distance, where the shooter has time to adjust his aim or lead a moving target.

 

Holding the nearest gunman’s gaze, I slowly raised my hands in what I hoped looked like a signal of surrender.

 

Something else I learned from close-combat instruction is it is physically impossible to pull a trigger while speaking.

 

As the first syllable left his throat, I made my move.”  Pp. 181 & 182

 

If you’d like to learn more about Charles Irion and this 12th exciting book in a series, read the full review I’ve penned, in the April issue of The Allen Confidential newsletter. However, if you want your copy now, order it directly from Chuck via www.charlesirion.com, or amazon.com

 

 

II.

 

Have YOU Donated Yet?

 

‘Fundraising for the New Manufactured Housing Museum Addition is Gaining Momentum’ is how a recent Press Release reads, from the RV/MH Hall of Fame in Elkhart, IN.

 

This is exciting! For many of us in the manufactured housing industry, and among land lease community owners/operators nationwide, we’ve been awaiting this important development for decades; frankly, ever since the RV/MH Federation was birthed in 1972 – that’s one year shy of 50 years ago! Now do you see why this long-promised addition to the Hall of Fame facility is generating so much interest – and donations?

 

Carolyn and I have donated annually, for decades, to support the RV/MH Hall of Fame. Now we all have an opportunity to help it grow, and recognize the manufactured housing industry as it has the recreational vehicle industry all these years. We’ll be making a donation this weekend.

 

“…kick-off donations from Clayton Homes ($300,000), Cavco Industries ($100,000), MHI ($50,000), MMH & RVCA Michigan Association ($50,000), and dealer/developer/dedicated board member Jimi Scoular ($50,000).”  Plus a whole raft of nearly two dozen individuals donating from between $1,000 and $25,000. If Jim Scoular’s name ‘rings a bell’ with you, it’s likely because he, his son, and late father, recently co-authored their family’s history in manufactured housing, titled Leap of Faith. This book available for purchase directly from the RV/MH Hall of Fame (574) 293-2344.

 

How to donate to the RV/MH Hall of Fame? Mail check to RV/MH Heritage Foundation @ 21565 Executive Parkway, Elkhart, IN. 46514. (tongue in cheek) ‘Tell’em, George sent you!’

 

Let’s celebrate the 50th Anniversary, in 2022, of the RV/MH Heritage Foundation, in the new manufactured housing addition!

 

III

 

The CDC

 

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas recently declared Center for Disease Control (‘CDC’) eviction moratorium a constitutional overstep; specifically, a federal health agency attempting to play the role of an economic regulatory agency. This ruling is being contested. Every land lease community owner/operator should follow this matter through the legal system, in hope for relief from this one-sided coronavirus pandemic measure.

 

IV.

 

Calling All Freelance Consultants!

 

Do you provide freelance (i.e. not on someone else’s payroll) consulting services to manufactured housing firms and or land lease community owners/operators nationwide? If so, maybe you should be listed in the annual ‘Who Ya Gonna Call in 2021?’ Directory of Freelance Consultants. The 23rd annual directory will be distributed along with the April issue of The Allen Confidential newsletter.

 

The directory generally contains the names, business profiles, and contact information on 40 or so individuals from throughout the U.S. If you’re been on the list now, or have been before, you know it. If not, and interested, email me (gfa7156@aol.com) your name, a paragraph describing your consultancy specialty (e.g. marketing, advertising, sales training, fee-management, ROC conversions, insurance, infrastructure, home-only finance, land planning & zoning, water leak detection, property valuation, resident screening, home installation, sub metering, and landscape architecture, just to name a few) and contact information (e.g. phone number, email address, and web site.

 

To obtain a copy of the 22nd annual directory, contact Erin Smith, MHM, via EducateMHC@gmail.com or visit www.educatemhc.com

 

 

 

February 26, 2021

MHShipments During Year 2021

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 9:43 am

Blog Posting # 627 @26 February 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: So, will ‘manufactured housing shipments’ eclipse 90,000 or 100,000 units during year 2021? Part I hints at an answer to that pithy and timely question. Part II? If you’re a land lease community mortgage originator or broker, and/or make home-only chattel capital loans, you’ll want to read the 23rd National Registry of ALL Lenders! Some stunning info contained therein, and most comprehensive directory of independent third party (personal property loan) lenders ever published! Part III? The question that’s on everyone’s mind: ‘What was the degree of ‘MHAdvantage/Cross-Mod™ implementation’ partnership during year 2020?

I.

MHShipments During Year 2021

Year 2020 MHShipment summary statement tying together years 2006, 2020, and now 2021.

“If we had those 3,000 (lost to coronavirus in April, May & June 2020) homes back (actually 2,775 net), we’d have likely shipped 97,165 new HUD-Code homes during all of 2020, achieving the highest performance level since 117,510+/-, way back in year 2006, or 14 years ago!” Edited quote from blog # 625.

But know what? We, as an industry and realty asset class, have no logical reason to believe 98,000, let alone 100,000 new HUD-Code homes will be shipped during year 2021 as long as we have to deal with:

• Dilatory effect of personal subsistence payments from the federal government, resulting in the under-manning of saw mills producing lumber, and factory-built housing plants producing and shipping new homes

• Unpredictable and substantial invoice price increases occurring after new homes have been ordered

• Continuing backlogging of homes, in large part, due to first bullet point.
• Lack of chattel capital home-only financing for new manufactured homes being sited and sold on-site in land lease communities

• Inaction of the FHFA and GSEs Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac relative to Duty to Serve plans

• Lack of chattel lending statistical transparency and sharing, on the part of one or more independent third party chattel finance firms enjoying market dominance

• Lack of chattel capital home-only financing for new manufactured homes being sited and sold on-site within land lease communities nationwide.

• Inaction of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (‘FHFA’) and GSE’s Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, relative to their Duty to Serve (‘DTS’) plans for manufactured housing.

And there are additional stumbling blocks we could add to this troublesome list, but you certainly get the idea.

II.

23rd National Registry of ALL Lenders

Well the ‘numbers are in’ (i.e. ‘dollars’, that is), and we now know year 2020, despite the coronavirus pandemic and all that went with it, was a Banner Year for real estate-secured mortgages brokered and originated pursuant to land lease community acquisitions and refinance! The grand total $ amount brokered and lent? Prime subscribers to The Allen Confidential newsletter will learn that stunning amount in the March 2021 issue due out next week – or so. But here’re a couple hints: the 2020 $ lending total exceeds mortgage $ volumes, for land lease communities, in years 2013 through 2019 (That’s as far back as records go), by more than $2 billion dollars! Whew! What a year!

If not already a Prime Subscriber to TAC, visit www.educatemhc.com to do so today.

Furthermore; do YOU realize TAC is our industry and realty asset class’ sole source land lease community news, and these key Resource Documents?

• ALLEN REPORT (a.k.a. ‘Who’s Who Among Land Lease Community Portfolio Owners/operators Located Throughout North America!’)

• Official ‘State of Manufactured Housing Industry & Land Lease Community Asset Class’

• National Registry of ALL Lenders & Brokers Serving MH & LLCommunities

• ‘Who Ya Gonna Call in 2021?’ directory of freelance consultants

• Directory of MH & LLCommunity Print & Online Media, plus state associations

• Official Lexicon & Glossary of MH & LLCommunity Trade Terminology

• Official Directory of GSE & NGO Organizations, plus professional property management training and certification programs

• Only accounting of MH & LLCommunity ‘trending topics’ (a.k.a. Evergreen Issues), plus official definition of affordable housing, low income housing, & very low income housing

• Directory of MH & LLCommunity National Advocacy & related trade organizations

• Directory of HUD-Code Manufactured Housing Manufacturers, plus descriptions of Community Series Homes (circa 2009) & CrossMod™ homes (circa 2016)

• Industry Briefing Sheet (e.g. statistics re MH & LLCommunities), and an abbreviated ‘State of the MHIndustry & LLCommunities’ document

• Statistics Sourcing & Formulae for MH & LLCommuniteis (i.e. ‘Where to get the information needed to better understand our industry & realty asset class’)

And, believe it or not, that list of a dozen plus Resource Documents available from EducateMHC is not comprehensive! For example, every monthly TAC now contains a ‘MHShipment Volume & Stock Market Report’ featuring the official MHShipment volume agreed upon among IBTS, HUD, MHARR & EducateMHC; as well as an accounting (i.e. stock market prices) of the nine public MH firms (includes three REITs) that’s available nowhere else!

III.

WE WANT TO KNOW!

Everyone in manufactured housing, and among land lease community owners/operators, knows year 2019 was DISMAL, where ‘MHAdvantage/CrossMod™ implementation’ was concerned (Like, maybe six transactions in all)!

OK, we’re now three months into year 2021 and still no word from the FHFA and two GSEs (i.e. Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac), as to degree of ‘MHAdvantage/CrossMod™ implementation’ during year 2020. Federal Housing Finance Agency, please supply that information, or instruct the GSE’s to do so, in the near future!

Why? Because, once and for all, we – as an industry and realty asset class, should know whether this much ballyhooed partnership is indeed viable; OR, if we should be looking elsewhere (Is there anywhere else?) for financial support for the HUD-Code manufactured housing industry and home-only loans for in-community home sales transactions.

We’re waiting…..

***

George Allen, CPM, MHM
EducateMHC

February 19, 2021

There’s An Important Matter Afoot

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 12:25 pm

Blog Posting # 626 @ 19 February 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. “Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!”

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877)MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: Some things that need to be said and resolved….

There’s An Important Matter Afoot
&
I’m Unsure How to Address It, but will try!

Faithful readers of this weekly blog posting are well aware of an important matter hinted at in this headline. We’ve described it in blogs # 622, 623, & 624, during the past several weeks. It’s the ‘community owner’s lament’ (i.e. ‘expression of grief & frustration’), relative to some if not all, HUD-Code housing manufacturers’ backlogging homes to be produced and shipped, and adding significant price increases on units after orders have been placed.

Now the matter has taken on a new dimension; one of scale – one that might, however, have been present all along.

The Question today is: ‘Are large property portfolio (e.g. those with more than 50 land lease communities apiece) owners, compared to smaller (i.e. one or two properties apiece) operators, experiencing similar backlogging of homes ordered, and significant unilateral increases in unit prices after orders have been placed or not?’

Frankly, I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that ‘large portfolios, routinely ordering many new HUD-Code homes to fill vacant rental homesites’ are indeed being given a huss (i.e. in USMC parlance, ‘Help me!’), since manufacturers can expect volume home sales from them. But if true, is this right and fair?

The challenge, in historical perspective, seems similar to what the manufactured housing industry faced in the mid-1980s, when smaller, regional HUD-Code housing manufacturers felt beleaguered by 1) relatively new HUD-Code (i.e. circa 1976) regulations, as well as 2) much larger firms being able to absorb costs of increased regulation better than them.

Result? Formation of the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform or MHARR.

Not for a moment am I suggesting smaller land lease community owners/operators run off and charter a new national advocacy entity to represent their business interests. Rather, via the National Communities Council (‘NCC’) division of the Manufactured Housing Institute (‘MHI’), a forum for such discussion of this timely and troubling matter, should be possible! For that matter, next week, MHI/NCC, from 22 thru 24 February, hosts a virtual meeting of members. Why not make ‘community owners’ lament’ a matter of discussion and exploration?

Now, in my opinion, there is a proverbial Achilles Heel to this ‘community owners’ lament’. Specifically, while MHI/NCC boasts a couple hundred members to date, very few attend such meetings, virtually or in person. At the same time, there are hundreds more community owners/operators nationwide, who do not belong to the institute/council – and hence have no voice in addressing this timely and troubling matter. What to do about them?

To that end, the MHARR has been pretty straight-forward and vocal, during the past several years, recommending post-production segments of the manufactured housing industry (including the land lease communities realty asset class) organize a new and completely separate national trade body to this end! How many more years will ‘tail of the dog’ MH business types labor on in search of parity and effective national advocacy?

As one of 19 founders of the Industry Steering Committee (‘ISC’) who met on 31 August 1993, and a founding board member of the NCC on 1 January 1996, I do not believe the council has achieved goals set for it at that time!*1 It is not even the ‘court of last resort’ for matters such as contentious landlord-tenant legislation, use of floor fees to promote brand awareness and image improvement, encouraging certified professional property management at all levels, and – as in this case – researching and arbitrating issues among post-production segments of the manufactured housing industry. If nothing else, after 25 years, it’s time for an NCC ‘reset’!

Someone let me know if ‘community owners’ lament’ is discussed, or not, at the MHI/NCC meeting.

End Note.
1. For a list of the goals agreed upon by the ISC during the fall of 1993, request it from me via email: gfa7156@aol.com

George Allen, CPM, MHM
EducateMHC

February 12, 2021

MHShipments Falter Once Again & Stock Prices, for the most part, Recover to pre-Covid Levels!

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 6:57 am

Blog Posting # 625 @ 12 February 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION:
• Manufactured Housing Shipments Falter in Year 2020
• Manufactured Housing Stock Prices Recover to Pre-Covid Levels
• Affordable Housing Under Assault Everywhere
• 2020 Election. Here’s What TIME magazine now tells us about it
• Lease Option Home-only Financing Today & Tomorrow

I.

MHShipments Falter Once Again & Stock Prices, for the most part, Recover to pre-Covid Levels!

If this time last year you hoped the annual shipment volume of new HUD-Code homes would eclipse 98,000 units – for the first time since 2006, prepare to be sorely disappointed! We started the year ‘strong’, with monthly shipment totals above what they were during 2019. Then the coronavirus hit! For the next three months (April, May, June), shipments were ‘off’ by 1,000+/- units per month; and, from that point on, seesawed through the remainder of 2020, ending with a dismal total of only 94,390 new HUD-Code homes shipped (Based on Institute of Building Technology & Safety reported unadulterated monthly totals alone!). That’s 225 fewer new homes than were shipped during all of year 2019!

Know what that means? If we had those 3,000 (lost) homes back (actually 2,775 net), we’d have likely shipped 97,165 new HUD-Code homes during 2020, achieving the highest level since 117,510+/-, way back in year 2006, or 14 years ago! Another unintended consequence of the coronavirus pandemic.

Given continued home-only finance uncertainty, in most local housing markets, the fact the manufactured housing industry ‘recovered so well’ by year end 2020, bodes well for hitting or even eclipsing aforementioned goal of 98,000 units by year end 2021. What do you think?

Then there’s the stock market performance of our nine public companies; four HUD-Code housing manufacturers (i.e. BRK-A, SKY, CVCO, & LEGH) and five land lease community portfolio owners/operators (i.e. ELS, SUI, UMH, MHPC, & MHC.U). Between March (coronavirus) and April, all these firms took major hits to their stock prices, with one halved in value! By February 2021 however, all companies returned to, or close to, their March 2019 stock price levels – with the one ‘hit the hardest’, rebounding to an even higher price than during March 2019.

Any of this ‘new news’ to you? If so, subscribe to The Allen Confidential business newsletter; available via www.educatemhc.com Every issue contains a ‘MHShipment Volume & Stock Market Report’ for your edification. There’s nothing like it anywhere else in the MHIndustry!

II.

Affordable Housing Under Assault

‘Homeless Seniors R Us’ is how homeowners/site lessees in some Upper Midwest land lease communities now describe themselves. Why? Because a few private equity giant firms, from outside the manufactured housing industry, have acquired land lease communities for their property portfolios, and then, too aggressively ‘jacked site rents’ and began charging additional for trash removal and water! For example, in one Montana community, site rent increased to $380 per month, and with addition of aforementioned charges, raised a typical resident’s total payout to $500/month.

And then there’s this gem, describing the repurposing of a land lease community in Puyallup, Oregon. Vacant rental homesites are being filled with 313 square feet Tiny Homes selling for $60,000., with 30 year leases. And the monthly HOA (Homeowners Association) fee is $800/month! Anyone see ‘affordable’ anywhere in that description? I sure don’t.

III.

TIME Magazine: Saving or Rigging of 2020 Election?
“-…a well-funded cabal of powerful people, ranging across industries and ideologies, working together behind the scenes to influence perceptions, change rules and laws, steer media coverage and control the flood of information. They were not rigging the election; they were fortifying it.” According to Molly Ball, a writer for TIME magazine.

Now, there’re two opposing perspectives, leaking one profound truth! The 2020 election was either RIGGED or FORTIFIED. What’s your opinion? Mine? The former.

IV.

Lease-Option Home-only Financing Today & Tomorrow…

Following two paragraphs are quoted and edited, from email correspondence between two land lease community portfolio owners/operators, discussing home-only chattel financing.

We’ve had very good experience with Country Place Mortgage in Dallas, TX. although they only finance Cavco/Fleetwood Homes. Also had very good experience with American Commerce Bank in Bremen, GA. And, very good experience with private investors who frequently finance our acquisition of homes through self-directed IRA accounts. We are not fans of one top market share chattel lending program, because of fees and interest rates a community owner is responsible for if the buyer/borrower defaults, and lender’s (alleged) refusal to substantiate the amount they claim a community owner is responsible for when a buyer defaults.

A discussion many community owners have had during the past five to 10 years, has been regarding interest in developing a lender who’d provide home-only acquisition financing to land lease community owners/operators selling on-site. Lease-Option programs implemented by community owners are very attractive to said owners, as well as homebuyer/site lessees who don’t qualify for conventional loans, manufacturer programs, and the industry in general; as they are well-secured for the entity advancing funds. The hurdle we invariably encounter is one of scale – lenders able to invest large amounts of capital at attractive interest rates, don’t want to do so at much less than tens of millions of dollars.

Times change, however, and interest rates are still at all-time lows, so perhaps it’s time to revisit this timely topic.

OK blog reader, you interested in being part of such a discussion should it take place, probably virtually, during the next several months? If so, let me know via gfa7156@aol.com

***
George Allen, CPM, MHM EducateMHC

February 5, 2021

Community Owners Taking Action!

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 6:53 am

Blog Posting # 624 @ 5 February 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: Unforeseen consequences of the coronavirus pandemic? Delayed deliveries (out to fall 2021 with some factories) and arbitrary increasing of HUD-Code housing base price! Part II shares some Good News, for a change. Major gala event scheduled for 9 August 2021 at the RV/MH Hall of Fame in Elkhart, IN. And if, as a land lease community owner/operator you have homeowners/site lessees who’ve paid off MH loans originated with Greentree ‘many years ago’, and are in search of lien releases; well, read Part III.

I.

Community Owners Taking Action!

Appears the manufactured housing industry now has a ‘baker’s dozen’ Evergreen Issues!

“An Evergreen Issue is content that’s always relevant.” As defined in the 32nd annual ALLEN REPORT (a.k.a. ‘AR’ & ‘Who’s Who Among Land Lease Community Portfolio Owners/operators Located Throughout North America!’). Amidst its’ widely-referenced statistical compendium, the popular AR identified a dozen Evergreen Issues that have dogged the industry and realty asset class, to varying degrees, for the past decade and longer. Now, here’s the 13th Evergreen Issue, or so it seems….

#13. ‘Delayed deliveries and arbitrary jacking of HUD-Code housing base prices are profoundly counterproductive, fostering bad will toward the manufacturer, consumer remorse on the part of homebuyers/site lessees, and perennial problems for community owners/operators.’

But NOW, land lease community owners/operators, in some parts of the U.S., are uniting to make this plight known, and suggesting remedial action in a two-step process:

First, effect an informal agreement between the home supplier and community owner, whereby the latter accepts the arbitrary price increase, but insists manufacturer sign off on a statement, added by the community owner to the product sheet (a.k.a. Sales Order Confirmation), below or near the signature line on said form that reads akin to this:

“We understand manufactured housing prices are rising because of significant increases in the cost of raw materials and building products. However, when the costs of these materials decrease, we expect housing prices to be reduced as well. Agreed!” _________________manufacturer’s representative.

This is the second time land lease community owners/operators have come together to protect their business interests! To date, as before, this initiative is not being encouraged by state and national advocates for manufactured housing! This is somewhat understandable, given most operational funding for these trade entities comes from the manufacturing segment of the industry. But maybe, like last time (i.e. 31 August 1993 – 1 January 1996 = fructification and birth of MHI’s National Communities Council division), we’ll again underscore the truth of Benjamin Franklin’s famous quote: “We must, indeed, hang together, or most assuredly, we shall hang separately.”

So, start adding the above statement to your HUD-Code housing manufacturer’s product sheet or Sales Order Confirmation, and request your manufacturer’s rep sign it!

II.

What’s Going On @ RV/MH Hall of Fame?

Are you, like many others and me, suffering from year-long pent-up desires to travel and engage in interpersonal networking with manufactured housing and land lease community peers? Well, mark your calendar NOW, and plan to attend a truly historic RV/MH Hall of Fame Induction Banquet the evening of 9 August 2021! I’ve already made my hotel reservation for the event; suggest you do likewise, as rooms sometimes sell out for this stellar annual event.

Why will this one be truly ‘historic’? Because, for the first time in a half century, two ‘classes’ (2020 & 2021) will be inducted into the RV/MH Hall of Fame! Know what this also means? Attendance will likely swell to 700 or more businessmen and women! SO, a stellar opportunity to celebrate this honoring of 20 inductees, and opportunity to engage in the Best Networking available anytime, anywhere in the manufactured housing industry! Who’s being inducted? Here’s a near complete list of the MH (only) inductees:

• Steven P. Adler of MUREX Properties in Ft. Myers, FL.
• Ron Dunlap, retired Virginia MHAssociation executive, and military veteran
• George Porter of Manufactured Housing Resources, in DE., and RVN military veteran
• Jerry Ruggirello, land lease community owner/operator
• Ken Anderson, MHI of AZ executive
• Keith Casenhiser, partner at Bessire & Casenhiser in CA.
• Charles Lott of Fleetwood Homes in GA.
• Debra (Dee) Pizer of Zeman Properties in IL.
• Alan Spencer from Dakotaland Homes in SD.

I can’t speak for you, but I’ve known the majority of these individuals for more than 30 years, and count them not only as business associates, but good friends. I’m certain many of you feel the same; so, ‘let’s get together’ and celebrate Monday evening, 9 August 2021. To purchase banquet tickets, phone (574) 293-2344. If you’ve never visited the RV/MH Heritage Foundation’s Hall of Fame, Library, & Museum facility, you are in for a very pleasant surprise!

III.

Greentree Financed & Need a Lien Release?

Contact Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing via Customer Care Line (800) 365-7107

George Allen, CPM, MHM
EducateMHC

January 29, 2021

Community Owner’s Lament Grows….

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 9:32 am

Blog Posting # 623 @ 29 January 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com, & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lese communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: Part I revisits the ‘hot topic’ of last week’s blog: rampant house price increases and delivery backlogs. Part II gauges the multifamily infill market for apartments and land lease communities during 2021. And Part III, if you’re a lender or loan broker, announces a unique opportunity to market your services!

I.

Community Owner’s Lament Grows….

“Delaying delivery and jacking the sale price (of new HUD-Code manufactured homes) are counterproductive for all three parties.” HOW? “Bad will towards the manufacturer, consumer remorse on the part of the homebuyer/site lessee, and problems for the community owner/operator.” This is what we ‘splained’ in last week’s blog posting (#622). THIS WEEK? Here’s how at least one HUD-Code housing manufacturer justifies an increase in base price these days.

Lumber mill production continues to be below capacity, in part, as COVID-19 affects workforce

Lumber product demand continues to be high, particularly in the housing sector

New home sales, according to NAHB statistics, are 21 percent higher YTD; single family housing starts up 27 percent YTD.

Lumber prices have increased 34 percent during the three week period between mid-December and early January; doubling between November and now

Cost of oriented strand board (‘OSB’) now exceeds its’ earlier price peak this past fall

Cold-rolled steel has risen in price by 61 percent since June, with most of the increase occurring during the past 60 days

Shower doors, metal exterior accessories and other metal fixtures have increased in price between 23 and 34 percent.

Other components increasing in cost include copper wiring, resin-based materials, wood cabinets, etc…

Now, ‘here’s another rub’. At least one manufacturer, in an effort to provide some measure of wholesale price stability to land lease community owners/operators buying new HUD-Code homes to sell on-site, offers a form of price protection, i.e. ‘pay extra, above the base price, to ensure the new home won’t experience even further price increase’. Here’s how one veteran land lease community portfolio owner/operator responded to such a plan offered by one of his/her housing manufacturers:

“So, they’d charge $3,500 on a $50,000 new manufactured home, to guarantee the price won’t go up between the time we ‘agree’ on a sales price (i.e. base price) and the time the home is delivered in three to five months’ time? What a deal. NOT!!! What happens when raw material and building product costs go down?”

All the while, we continue to wonder why monthly new HUD-Code housing shipment volume lags behind 2019 levels, and well behind those of year 2018. Specifically, “Institute for Building Technology & Safety (‘IBTS’) reports 7,996 HUD-Code homes shipped (November 2020), compared to November 2019 @ 7,972homes, and 9,035 new homes shipped (the month before) during October 2020.” This quoted from the ‘MHShipment Volume & Stock Market Report’ published each month (i.e. January 2021) by EducateMHC in The Allen Confidential business newsletter. If you’re not already reading this key strategic information each month, visit www.educatemhc to subscribe!

II.

Just Saying…

Do you read MULTIFAMILY EXECUTIVE magazine? Well, if you did, you’d already know

“Multifamily real estate (investment) remains a solid investment for the long term.” P.11

“There is a significant amount of pent-up demand for quality multifamily product in quality locations.” P.25

“Until the pandemic is resolved, hotel is uninvestable, office is not for the faint of heart, and retail is dead.” P.23

To me, this says, mid to large-sized land lease communities nationwide, as a whole, will continue to be highly attractive to investors within and outside the manufactured housing industry. And among property portfolio ‘players’, consolidation will continue at its’ feverish pace, compressing capitalization rates along the way. The downside? As we already know, the ongoing, albeit increasing, threat of landlord-tenant legislation will have to be faced throughout year 2021.

III.
Calling All Lenders!

Whether you originate real estate-secured mortgages on land lease communities, or personal property loans (chattel capital) for home-only loans, I need to hear from you ASAP!

During January, EducateMHC will be compiling the 23rd annual ‘National Registry of ALL Lenders Serving the Manufactured Housing Industry and Land Lease Community Real Estate Asset Class’. Next to the annual ALLEN REPORT, which was distributed this month as an addendum to The Allen Confidential business newsletter, this is the second most popular, of 12 Resource Documents researched and updated each year. Are you receiving these RDs? You should be! Visit www.educatemhc.com for more information.

In the meantime, however, if you are either (or both) a lender or broker, please send an email to gfa7156@aol.com with this information:

Name of the lender and or broker and indicate whether ‘lender’ and or ‘broker’ focus for firm

Indicate whether this information is for land lease community mortgages or home loans

Total loan origination volume for all of year 2020

Names and phone numbers of three contact individuals at your firm

Here’s a major reason for you to want to be included in the 23rd annual ‘National Registry of ALL Lenders’. Being so-listed is the least expensive, most effective marketing media you will encounter this year! How so? This unique Resource Document is requested frequently by investors acquiring and refinancing land lease communities, as well as independent (street) MHRetailers and land lease community owners/operators seller-financing new HUD-Code homes being sold on-site at their properties!

Questions? Reach me via the Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764.

January 22, 2021

Bruce Allen Savage (1950-2021)

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 9:47 am

Blog Posting # 622 @ 22 January 2021; Copyright 2021: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EducateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aol.com, & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: I’ll let this blog posting speak for itself, other than to simply say:

This obituary of a ‘friend in the manufactured housing business’ prompts me to pen I hope we never see something similar for our industry! But the way things are going (i.e. ‘nowhere to date’), this could happen if we don’t hit on a solution to our MH shipment malaise. To that end, be sure to read the final short paragraph of Part II here following. GFA

I.

Bruce Allen Savage (1950-2021)

While he’s been gone from MHI for more than a decade (He was VP of Communications), many old timers in manufactured housing, will likely remember Bruce Savage with some degree of affection. He was non-threatening in his demeanor, always helpful in the time of need, and a bona fide supporter of our industry and realty asset class.

Bruce authored The First 20 Years, a retrospect book describing the birth and first two decades of growth of MHI’s National Communities Council (‘NCC’) division. The book continues to be available for purchase via www.educatemhc.com

A more detailed description of Bruce’s life and passing will be featured in the February issue of The Allen Confidential newsletter, also available via www.educatemhc.com

II.

A Community Owner’s Lament
The first and third following paragraphs are quoted from recent email messages penned by veteran land lease community property portfolio owners/operators. I know, from experience, they parrot many of our peers nationwide, during these trying pandemic times:

“This is really disappointing and very detrimental to the industry – particularly the community segment. Unlike independent (street) MHRetailers, who sell homes onto private property, community owners live, for decades, with those who buy their homes. Time and again, we’ve seen homebuyers/site lessees, who find one thing wrong with their home, go on to find many more items to complain about. Now, delaying delivery of the new homes for six weeks, and increasing the sales price by $4,000 – over the original amount quoted, starts that relationship off on a very bad note! More than likely, it’ll only get worse. I am very concerned this homeowner will find dozens of things to complain about once they move in- causing both our staff and manufacturer’s warranty department, to spend a great deal of time trying to satisfy this customer.” (lightly edited. GFA)

Delaying delivery and jacking the sale price are counterproductive for all three parties: ‘bad will’ towards the manufacturer, anger on the part of the homebuyer/site lessee, and problematic for the community owner/operator. And there’s a significant historical statistical reason why this should not be happening. During year 2009 (Our industry’s nadir year of shipments at 48,789 homes) only 25% of new HUD-Code homes were shipped directly into land lease communities (i.e. 10,000 units). However, with the introduction of Community Series Homes that year, the percentage, by year 2015 had increased to 40%…meaning 28,000 units went directly into communities. So manufacturers know this market is ‘open’ to them, while ‘independent (street) MHRetailers’ continue, for the most part, to be dormant since there is no easy, let alone reasonable, access to chattel capital for home-only loans. So, why purposely shoot oneself in the foot (i.e. manufacturers purposely discouraging community owner purchases) to set themselves us for negative results?

“New homes MHRetailers used to receive in four to six weeks, are now taking four to six months to be delivered. Prices are being increased every two to three months – even while presold homes are on order. Manufacturers are ignoring MHRetailers commitments to home buyers. And homebuyers are blaming MHRetailers. Some are now canceling orders. Manufacturers say they are forced to pass along price increases that have been precipitated by increased cost of raw materials (i.e. lumber) and labor shortages caused by bonus unemployment and stimulus checks discouraging workers from going back to work. The moratorium on tenant evictions keeps getting extended, with no relief for community owner landlords.”

Here’s how one long-retired MH executive suggests we Save Our Industry! Read carefully: Either ‘Tie the underlying realty into the home loan’, OR, ‘Keep raising the price of homes until manufacturers can afford to give subsidized interest rates – just like auto manufacturers do.’

George Allen, CPM, MHM EducateMHC

January 15, 2021

“Amen & Awoman”

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 2:25 pm

Blog Posting # 621 @ 15 January 2021; Copyright 2020: EducateMHC

Perspective. ‘Land lease communities, previously manufactured home communities, and earlier, ‘mobile home parks’, comprise the real estate component of manufactured housing!’

EducateMHC is the online national advocate, asset class historian, data researcher, education resource, & communication media for all land lease communities throughout North America!

To input this blog and/or affiliate with EduateMHC, telephone Official MHIndustry HOTLINE: (877) MFD-HSNG or 633-4764. Also email: gfa7156@aool.com, & visit www.educatemhc.com

Motto: ‘U Support US & WE Serve U!’ Goal: to promote HUD-Code manufactured housing & land lease communities as U.S. # 1 source of affordable attainable housing! Attend MHM class!

INTRODUCTION: You a ‘woke’ citizen? Content in Part I is a leading indicator of one’s wokeness.

Part II? During a time when we should be enjoying record levels of monthly new manufactured housing shipments, we continue to lag at and behind last year’s performance – and I see no encouraging recovery signs on the economic horizon for our industry and realty asset class!

What concerns me the most is the imminent implementation of massive tax increases to pay for the $600 & $2000 stimulus packages ‘enjoyed’ during year 2020 and now, 2021. Parenthetically, I’ve wondered all along why such monies should even be going to folk who’re already receiving social security checks each month, as well as those who are gainfully employed.

I.

“Amen & Awoman”

Given the remote chance you haven’t heard or read, “Amen & Awoman” is how the opening prayer to the new session in Congress was ended last week. But I suppose we should not be surprised, given the rules package for the 117th Congress includes a proposal to use gender-inclusive language and pronouns, eliminating terms such as ‘father, mother, son, daughter’, and much more.

Terms to be excluded include ‘father, mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, first cousin, nephew, niece, husband, wife, father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother, half sister, grandson, granddaughter.’

These terms would be replaced with ‘parent, child, sibling, parent’s sibling, first cousin, sibling’s child, spouse, parent-in-law, child-in-law, sibling-in-law, stepparent, stepchild, stepsibling, half-sibling, and grandchild.’

Sure hope this woke nonsense isn’t a precursor of what to expect during year 2021 and beyond, as more liberal policies and practices almost surely will be implemented.

II.

Here We Go Again – & Again….

MHI, to date, says it best in NEWS & UPDATES correspondence to members, dated January 6, 2021. (I’m expecting far stronger language & pointed criticism from MHARR on this matter!)

In recent correspondence, from MHI to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (‘FHFA’), relative to their ‘2021 Underserved Market Plans for Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac (‘the GSEs’), under the Duty to Serve Program, they had this to say:

“…MHI acknowledge(s) the progress GSEs have made in increasing volume of land-home loans and creating new financing optio0ns for the industry’s new CrossMod™ homes, but call(s) for more progress in the development of a secondary market for chattel lending. MHI also discussed GSEs’ financing for land-lease communities for Duty to Serve (‘DTS’) credit.”

The actual DTS Plans make for interesting – and revealing reading. A few examples:

In the Fannie Mae Plan. “The key characteristics of chattel financing for manufactured housing compared with non-chattel financing include:

• Shorter loan terms (typically 20 years instead of 30)
• Higher interest rates (at least two to five percentage points)
• Fewer rights when in default; and
• A more limited pool of lenders, due to the lack of a secondary mortgage market”

Did you know? “Manufactured housing titled as personal property (chattel) makes up the majority of manufactured housing in the U.S. (but) financing options are limited” due to:

• Lack of overall market transparency (making) it difficult to understand risks which discourages Enterprise, lender and investor participation in the market.
• Market data and information on chattel is largely unavailable
• Lack of understanding on how chattel loans perform.

Read those three bullet points again, and ask yourself: ‘Are today’s independent third party chattel lenders’ of home-only loans, members of the Manufactured Housing Institute?’

Answer? YES. Then, why are those three bullet points still questions in search of answers?
Why the disconnect? Think about it. Might it be the chattel lending (home-only) niche is so profitable for a very few firms, that they’re reluctant to provide statistics and information to the GSEs, which would likely lead to greater competition for them?

Fannie Mae’s DTS Plan proposal for measurable Action ‘way back in 2018’? Form an advisory council “…to include at least five lenders (as the industry is dominated by a small number of lenders….), one industry trade association, two manufactured housing retailers, one industry data services company, two chattel loan servicers, one consumer advocacy group, and three (housing) manufacturers….” Two quick observations: First, why no inclusion of land lease community owners in this eclectic mix? After all, by year 2015, 40% of all new homes shipped from factories were going directly into this unique, income-producing property type. A grave oversight – in my opinion. And second; it appears ‘so little progress has been made’ in this Action area, relative to aforementioned bullet points; the year 2020 (i.e. 2021 report) lists only two perfunctory measures:

• “Communicate pilot progress and industry updates
• Identify opportunities for research and collaborative engagements to further the future of a sustainable chattel secondary market”

That’s not much in the way of progress after three years of, what now appears to be ‘lip service’ to Duty to Serve, where manufactured housing chattel lending for home-only loans is concerned.
***

George Allen, CPM, MHM
EducateMHC

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress