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RAD Workshop WCAH July 25, 2013 Presented by: C. Ray Baker & Associates.

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Presentation on theme: "RAD Workshop WCAH July 25, 2013 Presented by: C. Ray Baker & Associates."— Presentation transcript:

1 RAD Workshop WCAH July 25, 2013 Presented by: C. Ray Baker & Associates

2 Most of America’s 1.2 million Public Housing units were built as temporary housing beginning in 1937. These units are old, outdated and in desperate need of major capital repairs. RAD will allow PHAs and their developer partners to convert Public Housing units to Section 8 PBV units. During this transformation a combination of LIHTCs and debt will provide the funding necessary to modernize these units. Only a small fraction of the nations 3,200 Housing Authorities have the expertise necessary to implement RAD. WHY RAD? 2

3 Public Housing Capital repair needs in excess of $25.6B across portfolio, or $23,365/unit Section 9 funding platform unreliable (pro-rations, cuts), inhibits access to private debt and equity capital (declaration of trust) Losing 10,000-15,000 hard units/year Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation (Mod Rehab) Cannot renew on terms needed to secure financing Rent Supplement (Rent Supp) & Rental Assistance Payment (RAP) No option to renew when contracts expire 3 C URRENT C HALLENGES

4 Public Housing & Mod Rehab Can compete to convert assistance to: – Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) or – Project-Based Vouchers (PBV) Cap of 60,000 units (applications must be received by 9/30/2015) Convert at current funding only Choice-Mobility, with limited exemptions Extensive waiver authority to facilitate conversion 4 1 ST C OMPONENT

5 Mod Rehab, Rent Supp & RAP Upon contract termination/expiration, convert Tenant Protection Vouchers (TPVs) to PBVs No cap, but subject to availability of TPVs Choice-Mobility requirement per PBV program rules Limited waiver authority to facilitate conversion Prospective conversion authority through 9/30/2013 Retroactive conversion authority back to 10/1/2006 (convert by 9/30/2013) 5 2 ND C OMPONENT

6 In nine months there are more Public Housing Authorities engaged in RAD than there were in the first two years of the HOPE VI program. There are more Public Housing units in the RAD program than there were in the first two years of the HOPE VI program. The RAD program has not required any additional funding from Congress. RAD VS. HOPE VI 2/2/20126

7 What? Allows 60,000 public housing units to convert to long-term Section 8 rental assistance contracts Why? Access private debt and equity to finance capital needs Program simplification/streamlining Better platform for long-term preservation Conversion Options Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) Project-Based Vouchers (PBV) RAD B ASICS 7

8 What is RAD? HUD demonstration program that combines public housing operating and capital subsidy into a Section 8 HAP contract What kinds of developments are being done with RAD? Minor rehab; major rehab; new construction; mixed income; off-site replacement housing How do I determine if I have a project/portfolio that would be a good candidate for RAD conversion? Use the RAD Inventory Assessment Tool in the Resources section of www.hud.gov/rad How would RAD affect: Residents: No change; 30% of income for rent PHA Functions: Dependent on cash flow, fees, strong management; puts them on the more secure Section 8 funding platform; Gives them the affordable housing tools of other nonprofit developers Resources: www.hud.gov/rad; www.radcapitalmarketplace.com; www.radresource.netwww.hud.gov/radwww.radcapitalmarketplace.com www.radresource.net RAD W ORKSHOP 8

9 Ownership – Public or non-profit, except to facilitate tax credits Contract Rents Operating Fund (with Operating Fund Allocation Adjustment) +Capital Fund +Tenant Rents = RAD Contract Rent Notes: HUD will honor the FY 2012 RAD contract rents for all applications received before end of CY 2013 (applies to individual applications, portfolio awards, and multi-phase awards) PHA may adjust Contract Rents across multiple projects as long as aggregate subsidy does not exceed current funding (“rent bundling”) RAD B ASICS ( CONT.) 9

10 P UBLIC H OUSING C ONVERSION R ENT L EVELS ACCSection 8 10

11 Partner with PHAs to: Modernize aging family & elderly properties Substantial rehab of deteriorated properties Demolish/replace severely distressed/obsolete properties Thin densities/mix incomes via RAD HAPs and transfer authority Place RAD HAP contracts in off-site units in high amenity locations Increase QAP scoring by serving more VLI families New 20 year HAP contract funding NONPROFIT D EVELOPER OBJECTIVES 11

12 Debt Conventional Soft secondary Credit enhancement FHA Insurance FHA Mortgagee Letter for RAD transactions LIHTC Pilot LIHTCs 4% availability & considerations 9% availability & considerations RAD F INANCING 12

13 Section 223(f) Refinance or acquisition Minor/moderate repairs ($6,500/unit*high cost factor) Permanent debt with repair escrow - up to 35 years Section 221(d)(4) Substantial rehab: 2 major building systems Construction/permanent debt all in one - initial/final closing 40-year financing Mortgagee Letter for RAD Transactions issued 10/12 Eligibility, underwriting criteria, processing & materials FHA M ULTIFAMILY M ORTGAGE I NSURANCE 13

14 Streamlined-Enhanced FHA 223(f) & LIHTCs Rehab expenditures of up to $40,000/unit Tax credit or Bond Cap allocation in hand Processed in Multifamily Hubs Using MAP lenders approved for the Pilot Goal of 3-4 month turnaround on applications 14 FHA LIHTC P ILOT P ROGRAM

15 Affordable Housing Program (AHP) This program is funded with 10% of the Federal Home Loan Banks' net income each year. Most effective when paired with other programs and funding sources, like Low-Income Housing Tax Credits. More than 776,000 housing units have been built using AHP funds, including 475,000 units for very low-income residents. $4.6 billion in total AHP dollars since 1990. That’s 200 million per year. AHP loan funding often comes with an equal amount of grant funding. F EDERAL H OME L OAN B ANK AHP 15

16 RAD Sweet Spot—Debt Only Abt study—$24k/unit average capital need Opex at $4,500 pupy + $300 replacement reserves FHA debt at 3.45%; 1.2 DCR Feasible with RAD rents above ~$610/month RAD & LIHTC S 16

17 RAD Sweet Spot—4% LIHTCs Rehab needs above $24k/unit to ~$40k/unit Ease of meeting 50% test with RAD rents Available P-A Volume Cap Non-competitive QAPs favoring preservation, green Evolving, accessible short-bond structure Historically low borrowing rates RAD & LIHTC S 17

18 Short Bond Structure for 4% LIHTCs At Closing –TE bonds with 24 month term issued (1.25%) –FHA 221(d)(4) or 223(f) closes During Construction –Construction draws: Standard GNMA certificates –Bonds paid down & paid off at construction completion –Reduces negative arbitrage costs Long Term – Project benefits from 40-year loan at FHA rate of 3.45% RAD & LIHTC S 18

19 RAD Sweet Spot—9% LIHTCs Targeted prospects for substantial rehab & replacement housing No Section 18 review Income mixing Split project (AMP) –9% LIHTC used to help cover relo/demo/first phase –4% LIHTC for balance of site RAD HAP contract(s) for off-site replacement –Acquisition/rehab –New construction RAD & LIHTC S 19

20 RAD A CROSS THE C OUNTRY – 1 ST C OMPONENT 9,997 Units 949 Units 2,556 Units 1,279 Units NortheastMidwestSouthWestTotal PHAs and Mod Rehab Units Awarded9491,2799,9972,55614,781 20

21 RAD A CROSS T HE C OUNTRY 21 1 st Component 2 nd Component Approved 5,000 units in 48 projects Expecting additional 2,000 unit approvals by end FY 2013 Over 120 projects awaiting approval with additional authority 132 CHAP awards, representing 14,781 units 51% conversion to PBRA, 49% conversion to PBV Over 60% of proposals planning to use LIHTCs (the vast majority being 4% credits) Over 60 partnering lenders and investors Expected to raise $816M in debt and equity instruments

22 Eliminates caps on units that can convert for:  Public housing  Mode Rehab Creates new awards for:  Portfolio conversions  PHA defines “portfolio” of projects, either the entire PHA inventory or some subset  PHA must submit applications for at least half of the projects in portfolio  HUD will reserve award for remaining units in portfolio  PHA must submit application for remaining projects in portfolio within 365 days  Multi-phase conversion  Allows PHAs to reserve conversion authority for projects with multiple development phases with applicable contract rent for all phases  PHA has until July 1, 2015 to submit application for final phase  PHA required to fulfill all CHAP milestones for each CHAP awarded  Upon application acceptance, HUD will issue CHAP for initial phase and multi-phase award letter covering all phases of project  Joint RAD/CNI applicants Opens the Ongoing Mod Rehab Application Period K EY C HANGES IN THE RAD N OTICE 22

23 RAD A WARDS T REND C HART

24 L ENDERS AND T AX C REDIT I NVESTORS Alliant Capital Boston Capital California Community Reinvestment Corporation Centerline Capital Group Community Affordable Housing Equity Corporation Community House Partners Development Corporation Direct Tax Credits, Inc. Enterprise Community Investment Georgia Department of Community Affairs Great Lakes Capital Fund Hudson Housing Capital Hunt Capital Parnters National Equity Fund Newport Partners LLC Ohio Capital Corporation Ohio Capital Housing Corporation PNC Real Estate Prestige Affordable Housing Equity Partners Raymond James Tax Credit Funds Inc. RBC Capital Markets Arbor Commercial Mortgage Beekman Securities Centerline Mortgage Capital Chase Bank Columbus Bank and Trust Continental Mortgage Corporation Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago Hunt Capital Partners McCan Communities New Mexico Bank & Trust NW Financial Group LLC Rabobank N.A. Red Stone Equity Partners SunTrust Bank TD Bank US Bank Red Stone Equity Partners Richmon Group Union Bank Bellwether Enterprise Real Estate Capital LLC Capital Fund Services Inc. Crain Mortgage Group LLC Fifth Third Bank First Citizens Bank NA Forest City Capital Corporation Great Lakes Capital Fund Highland Commercial Mortgage Lake Forest Bank & Trust Company Lancaster Pollard Love Funding M&T PNC Real Estate Prudential Huntoon Paige Associates LLC RBC Capital Markets Housing Finance Group Red Mortgage Capital Rockport Mortgage St. James Capital LLC US Bank Community Development Corporation Walker Dunlop 24

25 RAD Notice, application materials, and additional resources can be found at www.hud.gov/rad Email questions to radresource.net RAD W EB P AGE 25


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