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Kathleen,
We purchased a rental home last fall and thought increasing our HELOC home equity line of credit, secured with our residence, would be the quickest way to make the purchase. Our HELOC at that time was with a large Texas bank that we also carry our home owners and auto insurance with so an O&G lease was not an issue. Even though the bank gave us the HELOC in 2009 and appraised our home for twice the amount of the HELOC and they make us insure our home with a replacement cost policy of 8 times the amount of the loan amount, they sent an appraiser that said he could not appraise our home due to it's unfineshed state of construction. The exterior is 100% complete and 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, den, kitchen, kitchenette, office, laundry, pantry, workshop, garage and livingroom are all 100% complete. Out of anger we went to our locally owned bank where we have accounts and told them we wanted a equity line to purchase a rental home and bundle our current loan together. We told them upfront we had recently signed our property with an O&G lease. Our local bank looked at the O&G lease as a strong positive and as soon as the appraisel came back gave us the loan. Small locally owned banks make their own decisions and often hold the loans they generate in house and see the bonus money and potential royalties as not only a positive for paying the loan back but as good potential deposits. As soon as we received our bonus money we deposited it with them. As soon as we started receiving rents from the rental home we opened a checking account with them and deosit the rents. The money stays local and they have the money to loan local. Chase, Bank of America and other large banks could care less about us. If we all added banking local to trying to shop local our communities would be the stronger and leasing problems due to loans would be much less.
The large Texas bank wrote us a loan on the same house two years earlier when it was only half finished. The appraiser they sent when we applied for the credit line increase was just to lazy to do his job because our house is large and unusual it is hard for them to find nearby comparables.
Except they don't always. Huntington bank was refusing to allow mortgages to be subordinated up until a few months ago. Now they charge landowners $500 just to look at amending the mortgage. That doesn't mean they will ultimately grant someone the right to lease, it just means they get $500 no matter what. Local banks are just as inept as larger ones.
The BIG take home message here is this -selling mortgages on the secondary market. The secondary market has shown they are not interested in taking the mortgages with properties with oil and gas leases. Why is beyond me.... the property value argument is bogus in my experience. Banks that usually sell on the secondary market do not finance properties over 5 acres - because they can't sell anything other than a cookie cutter type mortgage. Properties under 5 acres will never have deep well surface activity. Meanwhile the 5 acre parcel could be next to a much larger parcel where the drilling actually does take place and while this may decrease the 5 acre parcel's property value, the lending bank has no control over what the neighbor's do with their parcel so what difference does it make if their client has an oil and gas lease AFTER they have already given them a mortgage?
Meanwhile if you are financing a larger parcel or a farm, the banks which sell mortgages usually will not finance you to begin with so it's a non-issue.
I agree with Dan - go with locally owned etc. And when the royalties roll in keep in mind who really is interested in understanding what is happening in our community and who is not.
The really silly part of this is when the borrower doesn't even own the O&G rights under them and a third party does the bank doesn't know or care.
Hi you all, I'm just providing you a update on my oil and gas lease offer. My mortgage is owned by Freddy Mac. 90% of mortgages in the US are. So, I would have to submit an application to have my gas and oil partially released, pay a $100.00 non refundable processing fee. I would need a geological map or survey from the oil and gas company to show where the drilling will occur in relation to my structure and a certified copy of the recorded oil and gas lease must be returned to the mortgage servicer. The approval process takes 30 to 90 days. If they find out that you have a gas or oil lease without permission you are in technical default of your loan. I am not signing any lease for my small .46 acre of land. I'm posting this for those of you with mortgages. Most people don't know there loans are owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
"Most people don't know there loans are owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac."
1. All of the sudden this seems to be a recent problem.
2. Remember, you picked your bank, they did not pick you for a customer. If they refuse to work for you, fire them and get a new bank. You can often move a loan to someone who is more agreeable and easier to work with.
3. This does not really seem to be a problem in other states.
Am I missing something? how about ohio state law... froced pulling. if your not leased and they want your gas and oil, they can take it anyway. how does the banks fit into this? you get your royality but maby not as much as if you had negocated with the oil co. state law trumps the banks policys. or am I wrong?
This really isn't a problem with my bank. A lot of banks sell loans to Freddy Mac and Fannie Mae. People don't always know that their loan has been sold. I wondered also about the forced pooling when you have a mortgage. Anyway, I have .46 acre of land and in my case there is not much money at stake so I will pass. It's not financially smart to refinance my loan in my case or even fill out the paperwork and pay the money to see if I meet the requirements through Freddy Mac to get my oil and gas rights released. So I wish you all the best in your oil and gas endeavors.
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