“What happened with the DSCR appraisal issue in Baltimore earlier this year?” Good question. Baltimore is not alone: This week we have investors either pricing themselves out of, or ceasing loans from, the Philly market for certain non-owner loans.) The whole Baltimore thing seems to have quieted down, and up until recently the last news coming in October although this week along came, “Baltimore is striking fear into private lenders across the country.” “Over the past three years, businesses connected to Benjamin Eidlisz purchased more than 700 houses in Baltimore. Through a subsidiary called Loan Funder LLC, Roc Capital financed at least $35 million of these deals, according to a Banner review of property records. That money was used to purchase and refinance at least 224 homes in Baltimore. Today, 70 percent of those homes are in foreclosure, records show.” (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s are sponsored by Lenders One. Lenders One is dedicated to helping independent mortgage bankers, banks and credit unions reduce costs, improve profitability, and operate competitively in the mortgage industry and within their communities. Hear an interview with iEmergent’s Bernard Nossouli on why mortgage demand is better predicted by bottom-up, borrower-level and local-market signals than by national macro assumptions, while still requiring vigilance for structural inventory gaps, demographic shifts, and policy shocks that lenders and policymakers must factor in to understand true housing opportunity.)
