House
flipping is back, and a growing number of banks are jumping on the trend.
The
number of flipped homes in the U.S. reached the highest level since 2007 in the
first nine months of the year, thanks to rising home prices and growing
investor confidence. The average profit on flips is now $61,000, up from
$19,000 in 2009, the Wall Street Journal reported.
With profits
on the rise, lenders see an opening. Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and
JPMorgan Chase have all begun extending credit lines to lenders that back home
flippers. Two of those lenders are LendingHome and Asset Avenue, California
startups that allow house flippers to borrow over the internet. LendingHome
claims to have issued $1 billion in loans since its launch in 2014.
Anchor
Loans, one of the largest lenders to home flippers, said it expects to
originate $1.1 billion in loans this year, up from $713 million last year.
A third
of house flips are now funded by debt, but the overall market remains small.
Sources told the Journal that several hundred millions of dollars worth of
home-flipping have closed in recent months.
“Anybody
and everybody is getting into the business of house-flipping—that’s when you
know it’s the end of the rope,” California-based real estate agent and home
flipper George Geronsin told the Journal. [WSJ] — Konrad Putzier
Original
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