We're sorry, but this discussion has just been closed to further replies.
Tags:
I won't tell you it won't work, you'll get plenty of that I'm sure. What I would like to see is how it is structured. On your blog you mention this being a non-profit group, which is OK, but what about the donations? Are people giving to charity or are they making an investment and expecting a return. Charity is nice but an investment situation will get you more people signed up to give. I'm no expert but I would think that with this being a non-profit it would get even more people to sign up as investors since more of the return (i.e. profits) will go back to them and not to the organization. The organization becomes the facilitator and the people giving become the profitors. A win-win in my book.
What I think would take the most work, and generate the most arguments, is what will the criteria for granting a loan be? Personally I'm not too keen on duplicating what has happened in the markets today, but giving to those that can't afford the loan in the first place. However I am for giving to those that show they can repay the loan but just don't have that traditional 20% down payment. Most first time home buyers would fit into this category. I happened to be one of those that had to %100 finance. I can afford it, but I just didn't have that huge lump down payment sitting in the bank.
You may not use quite as strict credit standards as a traditional mortgage broker or bank, but some standards should be in place to protect those that are giving their money as loans. Show the ability and recent history of making payments on their current stuff, etc.
As for dispersing the money, I personally wouldn't sign up if it meant my money went directly to a user that I chose. Instead I would rather give a few hundred or whatever and have that spread out and get a return on that lump sum. Sure I could do this manually but that would be tedious, although I suppose the option would be nice to go either way. Think of it like a mutual fund. You put your money in each month and the fund diversifies that amongst it many stocks and bonds. This could operate in much the same way, with homes being the collateral and mortgages being the investment instrument.
As an investor I would also want to make sure that the requesting family actually proved they were trying to buy a home and not just end up getting a personal loan on my good faith. Call my cynical, but people would try to game the system somehow; it is just inevitable. Downside: if you make it an investment I suppose one could argue that you become a REIT or something like that and would have to follow regulations and what not. Who knows.
The "charity" approach might be easier to administer, but I feel you would get far less involvement. Given the amount of money people would need it would also burden the recipient with trying to pay back 10's or 100's of people.
Or am I totally off base here??
You're thinking much bigger than I had thought. For some reason I was only thinking about funding the down payment portion of a loan, but you're aiming for the whole mortgage. Very interesting. So in the simplest terms the company becomes a broker for mortgages and the funding for the brokerage comes from private individuals. That might open up a whole can of legal worms, but hey that is where those volunteer lawyers come in!
The annuity approach is interesting. I haven't done too much reading on annuities, but what I have read suggested other options would be better. However those could have just been in the context of what I wanted, not in general. For example some insurance programs offer annuities and such and there are better options in some cases. This may be completely different though.
There are certainly details to consider, but large and small. Such as what happens during a default, who owns the property? What if an investor wants to sell their mortgage and cash out? I suppose eventually you could set up a system within the organization to handle lender to lender transactions. Just don't package them up and resell them to big mortgage houses, like say, oh, Fannie Mae :)
In any case, the devil may be in the details, but the idea sure seems sound. I look forward to reading more of your thoughts on this.
© 2009 Created by Bill Hennessy on Ning. Create a Ning Network!