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FHFA Multifamily Caps Unchanged at $35B 

The Federal Housing Finance Agency set the 2019 multifamily lending caps at $35 billion for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, unchanged from the 2018 caps. The caps are based on FHFA’s projections of the overall size of the 2019 multifamily originations market, which FHFA expects to be relatively flat compared to the market in 2018.  In setting the caps, FHFA also considers multifamily market estimates developed by industry participants and analysts.

As in prior years, FHFA will review its estimates of the multifamily loan origination market size on a quarterly basis, including consultation with multifamily lenders and Fannie and Freddie, and will adjust the caps if necessary.  To prevent disruption in the market, if FHFA determines that the actual size of the 2019 market is smaller than was initially projected, it will not reduce the caps.

The multifamily lending caps are to ensure provide liquidity for the multifamily market without impeding the participation of private capital. Because market support for affordable multifamily housing has historically been limited, FHFA will continue to exclude from the 2019 caps certain loans in the affordable and underserved market segments.

For 2019, FHFA is making the following changes to these excluded categories:

  • Loans to finance energy or water efficiency improvements: FHFA is increasing the requirements for exclusion from the multifamily cap loans that finance energy or water efficiency improvements through Fannie Mae’s Green Rewards and Freddie Mac’s Green Up or Green Up Plus programs. To qualify for exclusion from the cap, multifamily loans that finance energy or water efficiency improvements must project at least a 30 percent reduction in whole property energy and water consumption and a minimum of 15 percent of the reduction must be in energy consumption. Also, FHFA is adding a data collection requirement for all excluded Green Rewards and Green Up or Green Up Plus loans, which requires engagement of a third-party data collection firm prior to closing.  The consumption reduction threshold ensures that the benefits from green renovations are passed through to the tenants, while the added data requirement allows FHFA to evaluate the green improvements programs. ​
  • ​Loans on affordable units in cost-burdened renter markets: To address the critical shortages of affordable rental housing in some markets, FHFA has developed a data-driven approach it will follow to designate markets in which units affordable to cost-burdened renters at certain area median income levels will be excluded from the multifamily cap on a pro-rata basis. This data-driven process will ensure that exclusions from the cap are focused on markets where renters are most cost-burdened and will result in less variation in market designations over time and offer greater stability to the multifamily market.

 

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