Rent Real EstateThe % Indicators of Homeowner Association Health
Different industries like to rely on "indicators" of value. Indicators are
"snapshots" to gauge the viability of a certain product, investment or
service. For example, a car dealer may use the condition of the car
interior as an indicator of the mechanical condition. The same principle
can be applied to homeowner associations like condominiums and planned
communities.
Three key "percent" indicators that help understand what is going on at the
association are:
% of Owner Occupants
% of 90 Day Delinquencies
% of Reserves Funded
% of Owner Occupants. Lenders require 50% to 67% owner occupants to
consider making a loan to a prospective purchaser. This requirement comes
from proven experience that homeowners take better care of their homes than
investors. Since a lender has a share of the common area liability, they
want to be sure a majority of residents have a high motivation in caring for
the property and are willing to ante up the money to do it. Homeowners have
a higher likelihood of doing that than investors. Therefore, if the percent
of owner occupants drops below 67%, financing options disappear. Real
estate market value is directly related to the availability of financing. No
financing will mean declining property values.
% of 90 Day Delinquencies. This is an indicator of how the association is
handling its business. If a high percentage of owners are being allowed to
be delinquent without aggressive collection, it appears that the board is
not doing its job. Further, if people aren"t paying, there is inadequate
money to get reasonable maintenance done and the property will show it. If
maintenance is not getting done, property values will fall.
% of Reserves Funded. Reserve planning represents the association"s
attitude about long range preparedness. Reserves include all is the common
area components for which the association has maintenance responsibility
having a useful life of three and thirty years. For each of these
components, a remaining useful life and cost of repair or replacement is
established. From all this information, a reserve funding plan (usually
monthly) is formulated to pay for all those items without the need for
special assessments. Components that can be excluded are those that can be
reasonably paid for from the regular operating budget. Reserve planning is
fair to all owners because all pay a proportional share of the costs based
on the time they own the property. Special assessments penalize those
owners who happen to be there when those predictable expenses come due.
So, the percentage of reserves that are funded indicate the association"s
willingness to perform long range planning. Ideally, it should be around
100% but will vary somewhat due to income and expenditures. For many
associations, unfortunately, the percentage is much less and for way too
many, O%. The poor maintenance condition of these associations is painfully
obvious. Due to lack of adequate reserve funding and the unpopularity of
special assessments, maintenance is usually deferred and the assets
deteriorate along with the property values. The Percent Funded indicator is
a strong and reliable one.
These three % indicators tell who is living there, how well they are doing
managing their money, and how well they are planning for the future. It is
like knowing the mileage, model year, and "brand reputation" of a used car.
Thanks to Robert M. Nordlund of Association Reserves, Inc. for the article
concept.
For more information on this subject, see www.Regenesis.net.