Video - Beginners Guide to Modular Homes
This is a great video from the Modular Council showing the basics of the building a modular home.
Faster, Better,Cheaper - Awesome!
A blog about today's modular homes and all types of factory-built housing. The primary focus is on modular and manufactured housing from a lender who specializes in factory-built housing. By Chris Tawney
This is a great video from the Modular Council showing the basics of the building a modular home.
Phyllis Knight, the CFO for Champion Enterprises, gave a speech today about the company at the Morgan Stanley Small Cap Executives Conference in New York. Here is the link to her presentation and slides. If you have any interest in the direction that Champion and the industry are taking, it is worth listening to her presentation.
Here are some of the highlights:
Champion really has its model figured out. The future to factory-built housing is not in the HUD business - It's in the modular business. "The man with the gold makes the rules" is so true today. The financing is biggest hinderance to the HUD business and with modular you know longer have a financing problem.
10 Reasons to Consider
By Chris Tawney
As construction lenders that specialize in factory-built housing, we often are contacted by dealers who are struggling to complete a difficult manufactured home transaction. They have spent countless hours contacting lenders trying to find a loan program that just does not exist. They could be saving themselves time and possibly saving a transaction if they just discussed with their client building a modular home instead.
When we pose the idea of a modular home to a dealer, we often hear, “a modular home cost so much more than manufactured home.” True, a modular home could cost $10,000 to $20,000 more than the same size manufactured home because of the costs for the specific state and code upgrades, the added cost of the permanent foundation and additional set up costs. But, what the dealer fails to realize is that the upfront costs are usually outweighed by the other advantages of a modular home.
First, the mortgage interest rate that the borrower can get on manufactured home is always higher than a modular. Lenders perceive an added risk to a manufactured home and adjust their rates higher for that risk. This higher rate equates to a higher monthly mortgage payment for the client. Conversely, the buyer of a modular home will get a rate that is consistent with current market rates. The client has to look at all of the costs of homeownership and not necessarily just the additional upfront cost of the modular home.
Secondly, the modular home will appraise for more than a similar manufactured home home. It has been our experience that the costs of the project are typically 10% to 30% less than the appraised value of the home. It goes without saying, this equity created is something that is extremely beneficial to the client. We recently had a client come to us wanting to purchase a piece of land and build a manufactured home on it. When we did our appraisal the value was equal only to the total costs of the project (land, home & improvements). We suggested doing the appraisal as if the same was a modular. When we did that the home didn’t appraise only for the costs – it appraised for $180,000 more than the costs!
Here are 10 reasons when it makes sense to sell a client a modular home –
- The land value is too great and the highest and best use of the property is to build a modular home on the property.
- The borrower needs a stated income loan program.
- Once the manufactured home is installed on the property it will not have sufficient value
– There are no comparable sales in the area.
- The borrower does not fit into any of the available loan programs available for manufactured housing (Conventional, VA, FHA or specialty loan programs).
- The borrower would like in the future to have a home equity line of credit (HELOC). National lenders do not offer a HELOC for manufactured homes.
- The borrower would like to do a Zero Down loan program and he can’t qualify for an FHA program. If the client built a modular home, any immediate equity would be considered in his loan approval.
- The borrower has a FICO below 620 and does not qualify for an FHA loan. There are modular home construction loan programs for credit scores as low as 550.
- An investor client wants to develop a piece of land. There are few alternatives for construction financing for manufactured home investment properties. There is ample investor financing options when using modular.
- The borrower needs a sub prime loan.
- The client will create a non-conforming property – This happens when a manufactured home is placed in a neighborhood of site-built homes. This home will be nearly impossible to finance, and ultimately sell in the future. This is a big disservice to the client.
The reasons to sell a client a modular home are many. There are countless other reasons for when it makes sense to sell a client a modular home. Sometimes it is the dealer’s responsibility to talk the client out of one these solutions especially if the client is paying cash for the home. So, the next time a client is about to walk out of your office because they can’t get financing ask the question – What about a modular?
About the Author
Since 2005, Chris Tawney of Eagle Nationwide Mortgage (formerly Sunset Mortgage Co., LP, now a division of Eagle National Bank, NA.), has completed more than 80 modular home construction financing transactions for clients throughout the western
LXTV.com did a video story last week on Marmol Radziner and their prefab homes. The video is here. They interview Leo Marmol and he explains their ideas for prefabs and walks the interviewer through the process of building one of their homes in their factory.
Champion Entereprises (CHB) reported a first quarter loss of $7.2 million. Here is the link to Yahoo Finance on Champion and an article from Fool.com that came out prior to their conference call.
Fool.com thinks that we will see an even lower net as the year progress. They say that the net income is taken into an account a $108 M tax benefit.
Creative use of modular housing can cut as much as 15 percent off construction costs. On the money side, many communities are using tax increment financing ...(Read On)
The city of St. Petersburg, FL has just completed a 1,540 SF modular home in area called Bartlett Park. For many years this area has been crime-ridden and an area not considered for new development or rehab. By using modular housing the city is able to reduce the overall cost of the home and make it more affordable to potential buyers.
Here are the links to the story and the video from WTSP News.
Here is a company building modular homes using concrete. Very cool.Royal Concrete Conceptss is focusing on the Florida market and building a better safer home against hurricanes.
This could also be beneficial for California and the threat of earthquakes. Here is the press release from the company today.