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As owning a vacation home with friends gains popularity, financing gets easier -- but the other stuff is still tricky. By Ann Brenoff
Times Staff Writer
February 18, 2007
WHEN it comes to being able to afford a vacation home, sometimes you just need a little help from your friends.
In
a real estate market of high prices, it was only a matter of time
before the idea took hold that multiple families could chip in and make
buying a second home more affordable, said Andy Sirkin, a San Francisco
lawyer credited with popularizing the tenancy-in-common agreement — the
backbone for group buying. And just recently, the mortgage industry has
jumped aboard the trend by offering fractional funding — loans
expressly for group ownership situations.
Although no one is
keeping track of how many group purchases are being made, Sirkin said
home sharing is growing among many segments of the population — led by
those who think it would simply be fun to own a vacation home with a
bunch of friends. There is also an increase in group ownership among
people who already own second homes but find they aren't using them
much and wouldn't mind getting their hands on some cash, he said.
But perhaps the biggest push is coming from the mortgage industry,
which has taken steps to simplify the process of buying together. Under
one model, everyone in the group shares one loan; in another program of
fractional loans, each share owner arranges his or her own financing.
Traditionally,
second-home buyers have tapped into the equity in their primary houses
to pay for their purchases. But First Fractional Funding of Kansas City
found that not everyone wanted to do that.
"There was a void
in the buying process," agreed Stephen Gordon, vice president of the
Colorado-based Carteret Mortgage Co.'s fractional funding division.
Carteret offers loans on one-quarter to one-twelfth shares at market
rates.
To qualify, Gordon said, applicants need a FICO, or
Fair Isaac Corp., score of 700 or better and may borrow up to 75% of
their share's value. The loans being written are three-, five-, seven-
and 10-year adjustables at 7% to 8%.
Why the limited terms? Because lenders have no history or statistics about foreclosures among group owners, Gordon said.
Although
attorney Sirkin acknowledged the perception that lending to a group
raises the risk factor, he said his experience has proved otherwise. In
the almost 10,000 deals he has helped put together, he said he has
never seen a loan default.
Which is not to say that other problems don't rear their ugly heads.
The
hot-button issues of owning a second home as part of a group, Sirkin
said, are usage, furnishings and exit strategy. All those points should
be covered in minute detail in a co-ownership agreement before the deal
is sealed.
"You don't want brief," Sirkin said of the agreement, "you want excruciating detail."
Usage
is defined as either unit-based (co-owners will cohabitate all or some
of the time) or time-based (co-owners are allotted different times).
Think
about the smallest detail, no matter how silly it seems, Sirkin said.
What hour does an owner's "occupancy day" begin — 9 a.m. or 5 p.m.? If
everyone is there together, who sleeps in the master bedroom with the
Jacuzzi tub?
About 2% of the groups in unit-based properties
have problems, Sirkin said, although he hasn't encountered a group with
difficulties in time-based units. Why?
"They aren't there at the same time," he said. "It's all about cohabitation."
When
working with clients, Sirkin insists they think about things like: Will
the home be smoker-free? Pet-free? Child-free? Who cleans it? Can it be
lent to friends and family members? Can an owner rent out his or her
time? Who fixes things that get broken?
Curiously enough, many groups quarrel over furnishings.
"Second
homes can't become the repository for everyone's old furniture after
they've remodeled their primary residence," Sirkin said. "You need to
determine — in advance — what can be brought in."
In one case,
an investor-owner who wasn't going to use the unit didn't want to spend
the extra money on a high-end TV, while his partner, who was planning
to vacation there, wanted a state-of-the-art plasma big screen. They
compromised: a small TV in the bedroom and a better-quality one in the
den.
Exit strategies also should be spelled out. Some groups want control over whom a partner sells to. Some groups don't care.
A
tenancy-in-common agreement — an arrangement under which two or more
people co-own a property without a right of survivorship — allows each
co-owner to choose who will inherit his or her ownership interest upon
death. By contrast, "joint tenancy" requires that each co-owner's
interest pass to the other co-owners upon death.
Most states
also weigh in. In California, regulatory approval is required if there
are more than 10 co-ownership shares. Florida intervenes at more than
seven shares, and in Hawaii, state approval is required if any owner is
allotted fewer than 60 days a year of usage.
Local government approvals of sharing arrangements are rarer but increasing, especially in resort areas.
Picking people who agree with your usage goals would seem to be Chapter
1 in the investing-with-your-friends guide. However, that's not always
the case. For instance, in April three Palos Verdes Estates families
bought a $975,000, 2,700-square-foot home together in the Lodges, the
newest phase of the Snowcreek Resort at Mammoth Lakes, even though they
knew they had differing goals going in. One bought it strictly as an
investment, another wanted to use it minimally and the third wanted to
use it as often as possible.
They came up with a plan — in writing — that satisfies all three.
Gary
Schmid, the investor, owns another unit in the complex and stays there
when he comes to Mammoth. When Ken Roberts and Ron Anfuso, the other
co-owners, come up, they pay the net rental revenue rate — 65% of what
the rental program charges. The rental program would keep the other 35%
if it had rented out the unit.
This way, no one feels cheated
out of the rental income, and everyone can use the unit as often as
they want. If one of the owners uses the unit during the premium
holiday rental periods, he pays the higher rates charged. In the same
vein, the co-owners can lease it to their friends and family for 65% of
the net rental revenue. "It made sense," said Roberts, who thought of
the compromise.
The three Palos Verdes Estates families know
each other primarily as professionals: Anfuso is a CPA, Schmid is a
dentist, and Roberts is a mortgage financial planner. They partnered in
2001 on another Snowcreek property — a 1,400-square-foot, two-bedroom
condo for which they paid $399,000 — which, when sold in 2006 for
$762,000, made the new purchase possible.
"For us," Roberts
said of himself and his wife, Keri, "this was a way to buy a far, far
nicer house than we could have on our own."
"My wife and I
were up here and saw it and immediately put a deposit down, went home
and called up the two other partners," he said. Had they not signed off
on the plan, the Roberts were prepared to look for new partners.
How have things worked out? Terrifically, report all three.
A similar tale is told by principals in a group purchase of a vacation home in the desert.
Todd
Hoover is an old hand at group investments, having bought and sold
several Palm Desert-area rentals with partners since 1998.
"Our motto was 'income first,' " he said.
But,
Hoover said, when they sold in 2005, he knew he wanted something
different in his next investment: He wanted to be able to use the
property.
So, Hoover and three couples joined forces to share
ownership of a single one-ninth share of a richly appointed
3,300-square-foot house in a complex of homes sold specifically as
fractionals in La Quinta, Calif. Each one bought a quarter share of the
one-ninth fractional, dividing the $300,000 cost among the four
parties.
Thrilled with his fractional ownership, Hoover says his desert getaway is "nicer than my principal home."
Plus, there is this bonus: Many of the home's other fractional owners
live out of state and make just one short trip a year there. That
leaves the house vacant — and available under a cross-ownership
agreement for his use for just a $179 cleaning charge and a small
service fee.
Most of the time he stays at the house, he is
joined by at least one couple in his fractional ownership group. The
house, with two master suites plus a separate casita, makes the living
arrangement comfortable.
And the tenancy-in-common agreement,
which spells out the details of pretty much every situation imaginable,
also provides comfort.
"Everyone knew going in just what to expect," Hoover said. "Friends or not, you have to do that."
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