California Plans to Allocate $200 M to Home Buyers

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Last Wednesday Gov. Schwarzenegger proposed a plan to allocate $10,000 to more than 20,000 California home buyers as state tax credits. The tax credits would provide up to $3,333 off state taxes for each of the next three years and could be combined with an $8,000 federal tax credit. Last Year, California legislators approved $100 million in tax credits for buyers of new, unoccupied homes.

Realtors, brokers and developers are behind this full force, because it would stimulate their industries and offer some job growth. The opposition to Gov. Schwarzenegger’s proposal are renters, who do not believe that their taxes should be spent as an incentive to purchase homes.

Existing-Home Sales Rise 7.2%

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The past two years have been tumultuous for the housing market, however there is a small ray of light now shining through. That ray of light comes in the form existing-home sales rising in July to their highest level in nearly two years. This rise was more than expected, and was the highest increase in percentage in over a decade.

Foreclosures and short sales reflect 31% of sales in July. Distressed property sales have pushed prices lower, year over year, attracting buyers not sidelined by unemployment or tight credit conditions.

WSJ – Full Article

Renting vs. Buying a Manufactured Home

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Renting vs. Buying a manufactured Home

Renting vs. Buying a manufactured Home

How do you know what makes more sense, renting an apartment or buying a mobile home? There are many factors that come into play, and the process of analyzing can be overbearing. So, here is a short and sweet post about where to start.

Not everyone is a CPA, and knows how to calculate the feasibility of buying a mobile home over renting an apartment. So, it is important to keep things simple. It comes down to two questions you must ask yourself if you want to own a manufactured home. If so, you must qualify for a manufactured home loan? Click to apply now.

If you decide that you don’t want to own and live in a manufactured home, stop reading now. If you are interested in becoming a homeowner and investing in your future, then read on.

Does it make Financial Sense?

First, take your current rent and multiply it by 12 (months) and then multiply it by 20 (years), then multiply it by 1.25 (to loosely account for rent increases). Now you know how much you will spend on rent over the next 20 years, and have nothing to show for it. If your rent is currently $500 per month, then you will spend about $150,000 over the next 20 years.

Do you trust the Real Estate Market?

In this market, it may be difficult to see real estate as a sound investment. But if you look at the big picture, it has traditionally been very strong. However, even with the recent housing market slump there has been about a 100% increase in housing prices. This means that if your $500 rent payment was made towards a mortgage, you could have a home worth $300,000 after 20 years, rather than nothing.

Can you get Approved for a Manufactured Home Loan?

The financial market meltdown has certainly made it more difficult to get financing for a manufactured or mobile home. However, there are still lenders and brokerage firms that know how to get you approved. You do have to be a very low risk to the bank, though. You must have good credit, no bankruptcy in the past 4-5 years, a down payment of atleast 10%, and a verifiable income. Taking all of this into account a mobile home mortgage broker can configure your ratios, and you are on your way to owning your very own manufactured home.

Are Mobile Home Loans more Difficult than Real Property Loans?

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Mobile Home Loans

Many people are curious, or stumped, when it comes to the differences between loans for mobile homes and loans real property site built homes. A lot of lenders that finance condominiums and single family real property homes do not lend on mobile homes, and a lot of people do not understand why. Well, there are some big differences in the properties themselves, and these differences affect the types of loans that can be done on the homes.

Basically, when you are looking at getting a loan, you need to put down collateral for that loan. The collateral for your loan is going to be the main factor where there are differences between a Mobile Home and Manufactured Home Loan and traditional “stick built” home mortgages. Just like how getting a loan for your vehicle and getting a loan for your business are two different types of loans, so are loans for mobile homes and real property site built homes.

In the United States, a mobile home loan is also referred to as a “chattel mortgage”. Chattel mortgages are securitized transactions, governed by Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The lender on a chattel loan secures the loan with a mortgage over the chattel, or the Mobile Home. Because chattel is defined as personal property, movable or immovable, for example, a book, a coat, a pencil, growing corn, a lease, a mobile home is considered a piece of personal property that could, for all intents and purposes, be moved; often times mobile homes are considered as riskier collateral than a real property, site built home.

Traditional homes that are built on site and include real property are a bit different from chattel, or mobile home loans. A mortgage loan for this type of home is a loan secured by real property through the use of a Note, which is a document that evidences the existence of the loan. Real property mortgages can and should be additionally evidenced by a Deed of Trust document, which is recorded with the County Recorder. The Recorder is a county official that insures that instruments are recorded, giving public notice of such transactions. The Deed of Trust will be recorded with the County Recorder of the County where the real property is located. Because there is no real property ownership involved with a mobile home loan, a lender cannot record any documents against the title to a mobile home, to further secure the loan.

Mobile Home Mortgages are not recorded or secured in the same fashion as real estate, or real property loans. The title information for mobile and manufactured homes is maintained by agencies directed by The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. In the State of California, The Department of Housing has “Registration and Titling” offices that are specifically assigned to maintaining the title information on Mobile and Manufactured Homes. The homeowner, or purchaser, of a mobile home shall be shown on the title as the registered owner, and the lender shall be shown as the Legal Owner to the mobile or manufactured Home. When a mobile or manufactured home is encumbered by a Legal Owner, the actual Certificate of Title to the mobile home is issued to the lender, or legal owner. The homeowner, or borrower, is issued a Registration Card, which evidences the homeowner´s Registered Ownership interest to the mobile home. With site-built, real property homes, the homeowner retains a Grant Deed to evidence their ownership in the home, and the lender maintains the Note and Deed of Trust to evidence their ownership interest in the real property home.

It´s helpful to understand these title and security differences, as they play a major role in determining the actual loan type, qualifying agents and the loan process itself. Manufactured Homes  and real property site built homes are not only built differently, but titled differently and mortgaged uniquely as well.

The True Origin of The Mobile Home

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Mobile Home Origins

So you think you know how Mobile homes came to be called such? Easy, Right? Because they can be moved from place to place, hence a home that is Mobile. Mobile Homes.

Well, this is actually a common misconception.

According to snopes dot com, “The origins of the mobile home are tied to the end of World War II. The rapid downsizing of the U.S. armed forces after the surrenders of Germany and Japan in 1945 brought back millions of servicemen (and servicewomen) to the United States from overseas in the mid-1940s, many of whom were coming of age and anxious to establish their independence, attend college, get married, and raise children. This demographic bulge, coupled with America’s burgeoning post-war recovery from the Great Depression and a wartime economy, created an unprecedented demand for housing — both for standard residential units and for quarters to accommodate the many servicepeople who were taking advantage of G.I. Bill benefits to complete their educations at colleges, universities, and other types of schools.

The widespread use of military-style prefabricated housing eased the severe housing shortgage temporarily, and the eventual creation of suburbs such as Levittown took care of much of the long term need, but neither of these solutions addressed a potentially lucrative marketing niche — people who were dissatisfied with living in barracks-like housing but didn’t want to (or couldn’t) wait years for the construction of affordable suburban housing. It was James and Laura Sweet, a couple from Prichard, Alabama, (a town just outside of Mobile) who came up with the concept that fulfilled that market niche.

James Sweet, a machine shop supervisor by trade, was reportedly finishing off his workday lunch one afternoon in January 1946 when a newspaper article about the post-war housing shortage caught his eye. What if, he thought, someone could manufacture a type of housing that could be put together cheaply and quickly at a central location, but was small and light enough to be transported to wherever the purchaser wished to locate it? Something like the prefabricated structures of the era, but much nicer and more home-like — a prefab housing unit divided into discrete rooms (rather than one large open space) with all the electrical and plumbing fixtures already in place. They could be built as one- or two-piece units, then loaded onto flatbed trucks and delivered wherever the purchaser desired.

Sweet’s wife, Laura, was a commercial artist who did illustrations for magazines, and she drew up a few simple floor plans according to her husband’s directions. James Sweet built a couple of prototype units in his off-work hours to prove his concept viable, and then, satisfied with the results, used the couple’s savings, mortgaged their home, and borrowed against his life insurance to establish Sweet Homes, a company dedicated to the manufacture and sale of prefabricated  homes.

National advertising was still something of a rarity in the 1950s, but as the new national highway system enabled the sale of prefabricated homes to spread outwards (mostly to the north and west) from the Alabama/Mississippi area, more and more consumers were exposed to the houses, liked them, and began clamoring for their own “Mobile homes.” Business boomed, more manufacturers entered the fray, and factories were established all over the U.S. to better serve local customers. Eventually whole communities of these types of homes were created all across the country, populated by homeowners who preferred them to more expensive and more closely-quartered suburbs full of site-built housing.

Over the years, however, as the generation who fought World War II aged and prefabricated homes became commonplace throughout the U.S., newer consumers were unaware that the appellation “Mobile home” was a geographic reference, a term coined in acknowledgement of the area in which the industry got its start. The name was more and more frequently rendered as a common compound noun (“mobile home”), leading many to mistakenly conclude that it referred to houses that were “mobile” — that is, movable from place to place. While “mobile homes” can indeed be transported, they are of course far from mobile — in the vast majority of cases they are never moved off the sites to which they are originally trucked. (Most “mobile homes,” once situated, are moved again only if their owners replace them with newer models, or if they have to be removed because the land on which they sit has been converted to other uses.)”

And now you know the true origin of the Mobile Home.

go to snopes dot com for further information and literary citations.

Mobile Home Loans in the Economic Recovery

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Mobile Home Loans in the Economic Recovery

In the current economic recession, it seems like the average American is able to afford less and less.

These unfortunate circumstances have placed affordable housing in quite high demand. It’s no surprise now that manufactured homes and mobile homes are paving the way when it comes to reasonably priced housing. With this increased demand, there will be more and more Americans living in factory built homes. As ownership of manufactured and mobile homes has increased, so has the demand for Mobile Home Loans.

At the introduction of manufactured and mobiles to the housing market, most of the average mortgage banks were uninteresed in offering Mobile Home Mortgages. Most mortgage banks lumped Mobile home loans in the same category with car or vehicle loans. Much like vehicles, manufactured and mobile homes were thought to quickly depreciate in value, unlike a traditional stick-built home or condo that typically sees equity gaining over time.

Due to the lack of equity appreciation, for many years it was improbable that a manufactured or mobile home refinance or equity loan would be made available to owners of factory built homes at all.
As time went on, home values skyrocketed faster than general income could keep up with. The depreciation of manufactured and mobile home owner’s equity started to slow down.  Eventually the equity losses  stopped altogether. Manufactured and mobile homes soon were actually increasing in equity, in part due to the increasingly superior quality and safety of manufactured and mobile housing, coupled with federal and state laws governing the factory-built process.  While mobile home owners invested in their homes and continued to maintain and improve them, they gained precious equity.

Today, rate-and-term mobile home refinance loans and cash-out equity loans have become readily available to eligible owners of manufactured or mobile homes. It has become reasonably easy to locate what was considered “non-traditional” and even undesirable financing for manufactured or mobile homes.

As the current real estate market begins to recover, the manufactured and mobile home market endures the same loss of value as the “stick-built” and condominium homes. In the midst of the recovery, manufactured and mobile homes still remain viable for financing at terrifically competitive interest rates. These loans should be eligible for rate-and-term refinancing in the not-too-distant future and perhaps even “cash-out” equity loans in the somewhat-near-future.
There was a time when a manufactured or mobile home loan was frowned upon as a mere “car loan”.
Those days have long passed as manufactured and Mobile Homes have emerged as the last affordable housing in America with competitive financing available to qualified buyers.

Mobile Home Loans – Quick Tips

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Are you thinking about refinancing your mobile home or getting a loan to purchase a mobile home or a manufactured home?
Make sure the lender you are working with is Qualified to lend in your state and that they have a good standing reputation.
Here are some Important questions to ask your lender:

What licenses do you have to lend in this state?
Are you a member of any Manufactured Housing Associations in the state?
How long have you been in business?
What state are you located in?
What state will my loan be processed in?
Are You Able to Lend your own Funds?
Are You Equipped to Service Loans In-House?

Another One Bites the Dust

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According to a recent LA Times article, Green prefab architecture firm Michelle Kaufmann Designs is closing it’s doors.

“Kaufmann, who worked for Frank Gehry and Michael Graves early in her career, was a pioneer in the so-called modern prefab movement of recent years. She was also one of the first architects to make a persuasive case that prefab design, which reduces construction waste and damage to building sites, among other benefits, was in a number of ways synonymous with sustainability.”

“Kaufmann’s own efforts, she said, were undermined by the economy’s rise and its fall. During the last few years of the housing boom, as she was starting out, many factories were so busy making money with conventional prefab construction that they saw no reason to experiment with more innovative designs. As the economy has soured, many of those same factories have gone out of business entirely. And lenders, who during the boom looked for excuses to approve even the most exotic mortgages, have taken on the kind of conservatism that formerly marked prefab builders.”

Although lending on mobile homes, manufactured homes and pre fab homes has tightened up, financing is still easily available to qualified home buyers and home owners. Now more than ever, it’s important to have a trustworthy, licensed lender, with a great reputation, like CAMHF, on hand.

Blue Sky Homes builds an All Steel Pre Fab Home

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Blue Sky Homes, LLC, has developed a stunning prototype project.

The Jetson Green blog reports “The goal of the prototype home was to test out the Blue Sky Homes’ Building System, which consists of light-guage steel framing, factory fabrication, on-site assembly, flexible design, and high sustainability.  The design exceeds Title 24 energy requirements by 15%, and green elements include bamboo and FSC-certified cabinetry, solar PV, solar hot water panels, grey water system, low-VOC paints, high-performance double-E windows and doors, Energy Star appliances, efficient STEPs (steel thermal efficiency panels), and abundant natural light.”

Digging deeper into this prototype, we discovered that Blue Sky has put together a slideshow, showing 5 days of the building process for their all steel prototype.

Check out the slide show Here or the Time Lapse Video Here

The finished product:

Not Too Shabby!

For more info, visit Blue Sky Homes website.

“Did you Know?” Mobilehome Edition

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beautiful mobile home

Did you know… ?

if a manufactured home was built after September 1, 1958., alterations to the electrical, plumbing, or mechanical systems of a manufactured home require a permit and inspection from the Department of Housing and Community Development regardless of where the home is located.

Did you know… ?

a community park manager or management association must obtain permission from HCD or the local enforcement agency to move lot lines for individuals residing in the park, after obtaining a homeowner’s approval and meeting other requirements. See Title 25 California Code of Regulations section 1104(d) here.

Did you know… ?

the rules and regulations of a mobile home park must be given to the resident at the time of application for tenancy and with new leases/extensions. There is no requirement to post the park rules, however.

Did you know… ?

Mobile Home park management can require homeowners to correct violations of local and/or state regulations for the unit and accessory structures. Management generally cannot require a homeowner to make physical improvements to park-owned property or structures, including the lot.

See MRL sections 798.73.5 an 798.83 in the Civil Code for more information Here.

Did you know… ?

Contrary to popular belief, fixed rate financing IS available for mobile homes and manufactured homes built prior to June of 1976. Visit California Manufactured Home Finance’s website at  www.camhf.com for more information on financing a mobile home.

This concludes today’s Mobile home edition of  ”Did you know?”