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1) Study: Arkansas down to just 33 payday lenders (Texarkana Gazette)LITTLE ROCK?The number of payday lenders operating in Arkansas has dropped by about 86 percent since the state?s top attorney threatened legal action over their high-interest loans, a new study says.2) Crackdown on pushy lenders (Herald Sun)LENDERS that push debt on to borrowers who cannot afford it will be heavily penalised under a Rudd Government crackdown.
3) State down to just 33 payday lenders, study says (The Russellville Courier)By Andrew DeMillo Associated Press writer LITTLE ROCK (AP) ? The number of payday lenders operating in Arkansas has dropped by about 86 percent since the state?s top attorney threatened legal action over their high-interest loans, a new study said.
4) State housing groups says it will get tough on risky lenders (Alaska Journal of Commerce)Officials with the Alaska Housing Finance Corp. are cracking down on lenders who disregard the agency's credit and property guidelines, and from now on will require them to repurchase loans that become delinquent at any time within the first three years.
5) Lenders: Most buyers can still qualify for mortgage (Montgomery Advertiser)To paraphrase Mark Twain, the death of loans and credit have been greatly exaggerated, according to some central Alabama mortgage lenders.
6) SBA honors R.I.?s top lenders to minority businesses (Providence Business News)PROVIDENCE ? Three Rhode Island lenders will be recognized this month for making the highest rate of U.S Small Business Administration-backed loans to minority-owned companies.
7) Japan May Help Regional Lenders With Fund, Nikkei Reports (Bloomberg)Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Japanese government and the ruling parties decided to create an emergency fund to help small and midsize regional lenders meet their financial needs, Nikkei English News said, without saying where it got the information.
8) Lenders tightening business loan conditions, bank survey suggests (CBC)Data collected by the Bank of Canada suggests that Canadian lenders are tightening the terms and raising the prices of loans to businesses.
Orchestra Funds
Strike the Proper Chord
National
Real Estate Investor, April 1, 2005 by Jason Moskowitz,
Michael E. Napoliello, Jr.
It happens every day: A real estate developer with a vision for
a new project drives to his city's financial center and looks wistfully at the
shiny bank towers that house lavish investment firms, knowing full well that
these firms will be completely uninterested in his project. Then he'll visit
three or four private investment organizations that specialize in seed money
for start-up real estate projects.
If he is lucky, the developer's project will be looked at
favorably by these hard-cap lenders and the seed money will be made available,
but that's rare. There in a nutshell is the bottleneck of real estate
innovation. The good news is that an emerging group of so-called orchestra
firms are bringing a new spark to real estate visionaries.
Orchestra seed loans were historically known as hard capital
or hard-money loans, but the word "hard" has been discarded because
it unduly implies reluctance and risk on the part of lenders and borrowers.
Mezzanine and bank loans provided by traditional lending institutions often
follow seed capital, so the word orchestra has become a nice fit for the modern
lending organization specializing in seed capital. Such a capital structure is
comparable to theater seating, where the orchestra comes before the mezzanine.
Orchestra firms represent a new breed of sophisticated
seed-level lenders who are on a par with the major public institutions. More
than simply making short-term acquisition loans, first mortgages and
development loans, these firms are bringing technical, geographic and marketing
expertise that is providing invaluable support to developers.
When a Seattle developer was having trouble getting
financing from traditional lenders for a proposed upscale 100,000 sq. ft. mall
because the city government showed only a tepid interest, the developer
approached an orchestra lender. The lender determined that the city
might be more excited about the project if one of the potential tenants was a
high-end food emporium. The lender and developer targeted the ideal tenant so
that when a relationship with a top food chain was forged, the loan, and the
city approval, went through with flying colors.
Demystifying orchestra funds
Similar to mutual funds, orchestra funds seek outside
investors who pool their capital to lend to developers. The funds are typically
designed to generate profits by making acquisition loans, first mortgages, and
development loans. Most funds will also specialize in a particular geographic
region.
Personal investors will find these funds attractive not only
because they are about the only way for them to participate as lending sources,
but also because they will achieve a relatively secure return of about 13% on
an annualized basis.
The beauty of orchestra funds is diversification, or the
spreading of risk across a wide variety of investors and projects. More investors
will be able to participate because these funds require far less initial
investment than if they were to finance a project individually. For the
borrower, this vehicle will ultimately provide a new and less expensive funding
option. As more real estate players get involved in orchestra lending, more
capital will be available for worthy projects, and expenses such as
interest-rate costs will decrease for the borrower and lender.
Until recently the typical entry-level orchestra investment
was a minimum of $500,000. Today, thanks to orchestra funds the minimum has
dropped to $100,000. As orchestra funds become more popular, it is our hope
that the individual real estate investor will be able to participate in this
type of lending for as little as $10,000.
Fulfilling a dream
When a Phoenix
developer learned that an exciting urban redevelopment opportunity was about to
hit the market, he knew that if he did not secure a loan within a few days the
feverous bidding by developers across the country would make the project's
costs unreasonable. The developer approached an orchestra fund manager with
similar investment objectives. The fund manager recognized the value of the
deal and moved on it quickly. Ultimately, the loan was secured and the
development was a success.
Orchestra lenders and funds are the new frontier in real
estate. As interest rates rise and capital diminishes, the quality companies
will rise to the top and be even more important to investors and developers.
Orchestra companies and funds seek to add growth, value and innovation in the
once staid, and much misunderstood, world of hard money - a term that may have
seen its last days.
Jason Moskowitz and Michael E. Napoliello Jr., who developed one of the first orchestra
funds, are executive officers of InSymphony Private
Capital (www.insymphony.us.).
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