The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (2024)

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As the creator of Mobile Home Living, it’s obvious that I’m an advocate of factory-built homes. Over the last 3.5 years I hope I’ve made it clear that while I love the homes, I’m not a fan of the manufactured home industry at all.I feel there’s a lot of room for improvement! Especially concerning the dealer-financed manufactured home trap.

If I had my way, everyone would buy used homes from private sellers or only use financing from a private bank but I know that’s not possible. Over the years I’ve tried to provide a lot of helpful advice and tips for those buying a new home. Education is power and that’s especially true when it comes to buying a new manufactured home.

The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (1)

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The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap

The Seattle Times published an article:

The Mobile-Home Trap: How a Warren Buffett Empire Preys on the Poor

It was based on the article released by the Center for Public Integrity:

Warren Buffett’s Mobile Home Empire Preys on the Poor

Both are well-written articles with a lot of great points and I hope you’ll take the time to read them, especially if you’re in the market for a new manufactured home.There are a lot of good key points involving dealer financing issues. Here are a few of them:

Obtain Your Own Private Financing

The best piece of advice anyone can give a potential manufactured home-buyer is toobtain your own financingbefore setting foot on a dealer’s lot.

Obtaining financing through the dealers is not advisable and should be avoided at all costs. Dealer financing has higher interest rates, lower down-payment requirements, and longer terms.

The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (2)

Take a look at the following loans of actual Clayton home buyers. Each scenario is a prime example of the issues of financing a home through a dealer:

AcklerFamily

The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (3)

Mansfield Family

The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (4)

Galler Family

The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (5)

You can read more financing stories onthe Center for Public Integrity’s website here.

Shop Around with TRUE Competitors

The second piece of advice is to shop around.Unfortunately, there’s a majorissuethat you’ll likely incur when trying to shop around and that’s the fact that onemanufacturer can go by several different names.

Clayton Homes, the Warren Buffet company, operates under 18 different names! Ever heard of Oakwood Homes or Luv Homes or TruValue? They are all Clayton companies!

The homes come from the same factories and dealer financing is through the same finance companies, they are simplyoperating under different names.

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Be Wary of Commissioned Salespeople

Amanufactured home dealeris similar to aused car dealer because they have salespeople working on commission.

Salespeople that work on commission sets the stage for most of the issues manufactured home buyers experience such as deception and misrepresentation. I believe if the industry is ever going to change for the better, it will need to get rid of the commission based salaries.

Salespeople have to feed their families and that can make for desperation. Desperate people will do anything.

Chances Are, You Will NOT Be Able to Refinance

Banks refinance and modify loans. Dealer-financed manufactured home companiestypically do not.

In the article, The Mobile Home Trap, the author spoke toseveral Clayton finance customers:

Nine Clayton consumers interviewed for this story said they were promised a chance to refinance. In reality, Clayton almost never refinances loans and accounts for well under 1 percent of mobile-home refinancings reported in government data from 2010 to 2013. It made more than one-third of the purchase loans during that period.

In general, owners have difficulty refinancing or selling their mobile homes because few lenders offer such loans. One big reason: Homes are overpriced or depreciate so quickly that they generally are worth less than what the borrower owes, even after years of monthly payments.

Appreciation is Not Likely (though it is possible)

Manufactured homes typically only appreciate (or gain value) if they are permanently installed on the land. In reality, it’s the land that is gaining the value, not the home in the most common cases.

Still, there’s been a few studies showing that mobile and manufactured homes CAN appreciate (click here to read about it).It’s an interesting study that proved more manufactured homes appreciated than depreciated.

Ellie Carosa, of Napavine, Wash., found this out the hard way in 2010 after she put down about$40,000 from an inheritance to buy a used home from Clayton priced at about $65,000.

Clayton sales reps steered Carosa, who is 67 years old and disabled, to finance the unpaid amount through Vanderbilt at 9 percent interest over 20 years.

One year later, Carosa was already having problems — peeling paint and failing carpets — that she decided to have a market expert assess the value of her home. She hoped to eventually sell the house so the money could help her biological granddaughter, whom she adopted as her daughter at age 8, attend a local college to study music.

Carosa was stunned to learn that the home was worth only $35,000, far less than her original down payment.

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New Manufactured Homes Can be Overpriced

The typical profit on a manufactured home is over $11,000!

Clayton’s own data suggest that its mobile homes may be overpriced from the start, according to court documents and comments filed with federal regulators by its general counsel.

When Vanderbilt was required to obtain appraisals before finalizing a loan, he wrote, the home was determined to be worth less than the sales price about 30 percent of the time. Another Clayton executive said in a 2012 affidavit that the average profit margin on Clayton homes sold in Arkansas between 2006 and 2009 was $11,170 — roughly one-fifth of the average sales price of the homes.

Don’t Be Late on Payments!

Once you’re late on a payment, you could be less than 60 days away from having your home repossessed.

Berkshire’s borrowers who fall behind on their payments face harassing, potentially illegal phone calls from a company rarely willing to offer relief.

Carol Carroll, a nurse living near Bug Tussle, Ala., began looking for a new home in 2003 after her husband died, leaving her with a six-year-old daughter. Instead of a down payment, she said, the salesman assured her she could simply put up two acres of her family land as collateral.

In December 2005, Carroll was permanently disabled in a catastrophic car accident in which two people were killed. Knowing it would take a few months for her disability benefits to be approved, Carroll said she called Vanderbilt and asked for a temporary reprieve. The company’s answer, she said: “We don’t do that.”

However, Clayton ratcheted up her property insurance premiums, eventually costing her $803 more per year than when she started, she said. Carroll was one of several Clayton borrowers who felt trapped in the company’s insurance, often because they were told they had no other options. Some had as many as five years’ worth of expensive premiums included in their loans, inflating the total balance to be repaid with interest. Others said they were misled into signing up even though they already had other insurance.

Carroll has since sold belongings, borrowed from relatives and cut back on groceries to make payments. When she was late, she spoke frequently to Clayton’s phone agents, whom she described as “the rudest, most condescending people I have ever dealt with.” It’s a characterization echoed by almost every borrower interviewed for this story.

Consumers say the company’s response to pleas for help is an invasive interrogation about their family budgets, including how much they spend on food, toiletries and utilities. Denise Pitts, of Knoxville, said Vanderbilt collectors have called her multiple times a day, with one suggesting that she cancel her internet service, even though she home schools her son. They have called her relatives and neighbors, a tactic other borrowers reported.

After Pitts’ husband, Kirk, was diagnosed with aggressive cancer, she said, a Vanderbilt agent told her she should make the house payment her “first priority” and let medical bills go unpaid. She said the company has threatened to seize her property immediately, even though the legal process to do so would take at least several months.

There May Be Less Consumer Protection Afforded to You When Financing Through a Dealer

Dealer financing falls through the cracks of consumer protection.

Many mobile home buyers finance their purchases with personal property loans, which typically have fewer federal and state protections than regular home mortgages. Their homes, for example, can be seized with little or no warning. With regular mortgages, by contrast, companies must wait 120 days before starting foreclosure.

“They entrap you,” Carroll said. “They give you a loan that you can’t pay back and then they take from you.”

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The Manufactured Home Industry is POWERFUL

For the last couple ofyears, I kept seeing advocacy for changes to the Dodd-Frank Act but no one could tell me why it was a good thing for the buyers.

In my opinion, classifying manufactured home financing withhigh-interest rates SHOULD be considered predatory lending practice, right?

After researching a bit, I understood exactly why I kept seeing article after article on manufactured home sites. These companies are making a fortune and can pay for the ‘advocacy’.

The government has known for years about concerns that mobile home buyers are treated unfairly. Little has been done.

Fifteen years ago, Congress directed the Department of Housing and Urban Development to examine issues such as loan terms and regulations in order to find ways to make mobile homes affordable. That’s still on HUD’s to-do list.

The industry, however, has protected its interests vigorously. Clayton Homes is represented in Washington by the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI), a trade group that has a Clayton executive as its vice chairman and another as its secretary. CEO Kevin Clayton has represented MHI before Congress.

MHI spent $4.5 million since 2003 lobbying the federal government. Those efforts have helped the company escape much scrutiny, as has Buffett’s persona as a man of the people, analysts say.

“There is a Teflon aspect to Warren Buffett,” said James McRitchie, who runs a widely-read blog, Corporate Governance.

Still, after the housing crisis, lawmakers tightened protections for mortgage borrowers with a sweeping overhaul known as the Dodd-Frank Act, creating regulatory headaches for the mobile home industry. Kevin Clayton complained to lawmakers in 2011 that the new rules would lump in some of his company’s loans with “subprime, predatory” mortgages, making it harder for mobile home buyers “to obtain affordable financing.”

Although the rules had yet to take effect that year, 99 percent of Clayton’s mobile home loans were so expensive that they met the federal government’s “higher-priced” threshold.

Dodd-Frank also tasked federal financial regulators with creating appraisal requirements for risky loans. Appraisals are common for conventional home sales, protecting both the lender and the consumer from a bad deal.

But when federal agencies jointly proposed appraisal rules in September 2012, industry objections led them to exempt loans secured solely by a mobile home.

Then Clayton pushed for more concessions, arguing that mobile home loans secured by the home and landshould also be exempt. Paul Nichols, then-president of Clayton’s Vanderbilt Mortgage, told regulators that the appraisal requirement would be costly and onerous, significantly reducing “the availability of affordable housing in the United States.”

In 2013, regulators conceded. They will not require a complete appraisal for new manufactured homes.

You HaveTo Do Your Homework

Of course, we cannot put all the blame on dealers and finance companies.In several situations, the buyers simply didn’t research like they should have.

If you’re struggling to pay for the home you already have, you probably shouldn’t be thinking of buying a new home. This rings true if you are not well-versed in the issues that dealer-financed manufactured homes have as well.

In addition,there’s a lot of people that simply do not understand how financing works in relation to depreciation and they get in over their heads without realizing what they’re doing.

Remember, education is power and being poor is not cheap.

Paycheck loan companies are making millions on the backs of hard-working people that simply needed a little help to make it until the next payday but end up in a vicious cycle. It’s the same with those buy here, pay here car lots and rent-to-own furniture stores. Making payments sounds like a great way to buy something but paying 4 times (or more) forthe product is not the smartest thing a consumer can do.

You Can Still Get Fair Financing

Financing is not one-size-fits-all. With a greatwork history and high credit score,you can be eligible for very competitive loan terms at your bank. There’s even enticing dealer-financing available. Typically, the high-interest rates are for consumers with poor credit and low income.

If your credit is not so greatyou should probably wait a couple years before buying a home – your wallet will thank you! Take the time to raise yourcredit score and learn as much as you can about your options. Then walk onto the lot and start negotiating. Never sign anything until you completely understand every word and then pay an attorney or financial adviser to read over it too. Redundancy works!

Clayton’s Response

I think it’s only fair to release the letter I received from Clayton in response to these articles. Here’s what they had to say:

Clayton Homes Statement Regarding Misleading Reporting

MARYVILLE, Tenn., April 6, 2015 — Beginning with a provocative, political campaign-style

the video promoted via social media last Thursday, The Seattle Times and the Center for Public Integrity today published a misleading report about Clayton Homes. Here are the facts:

Manufactured housing plays a critical role in affordable housing in America, making up 50 percent of all new homes sold below $150,000. Clayton Homes, founded in 1956, will have the privilege of helping over 30,000 families with a new home this year.

Clayton Homes’ policies, procedures, and training are designed to ensure that customers have a choice of lenders. A list of all available lenders is posted and provided in company-owned retail locations. Customers are encouraged to select more than one lender so they can compare options – and select the loan program that best serves their needs. The retailer selling the home receives no financial incentives from the lender the customer chooses.

Clayton Homes’ finance companies have operated in the highly-regulated mortgage lending industry for more than 40 years. Just 90 days ago, The New York Times wrote, “what distinguished Clayton Homes was that its financing division, unlike that of competitors did not engage in predatory lending or exploit its customers’ naiveté`.” Our lending policy and procedures help ensure that we evaluate each customer’s reasonable ability to repay the loan for which they have applied. Appraisals are ordered from an unaffiliated third party on all loans secured by land that we finance, and a copy is provided to the customer prior to the closing of the loan.

All new home loans being originated are fixed rate and fully amortizing with an average term of 22 years. In the last 12 months, the average total down payment was just under 19 percent and customary closing fees are all disclosed to the customer. The only 30-year loans being offered by our lenders are through the government FHA title II loan program.

Interest rates on manufactured homes can be higher than loans for site-built homes because government-sponsored programs are not readily available for manufactured homes, the land is often not included in the loan, and the loan size is much smaller. Unlike lenders that originate loans and sell them to investors, we hold the loans on our books, assuming the risk throughout the life of the loan rather than passing the risk on to others.

The unfortunate reality is that some customers have trouble making their monthly payments when they experience a significant life-event – divorce, job loss, or medical issue. Our company’s policies, training, and monitoring are in place to comply with all applicable federal and state laws. When a home is foreclosed no one wins – the company loses money and more significantly the customer loses their home. A variety of loss mitigation options are offered to customers including payment extensions and loan modifications all to help customers stay in their homes. The company’s servicing practices were recently cited as best practices in The New York Times.

Customers shopping a company-owned location can easily compare models and features with pricing posted in all homes. Retail locations operate under various trade names in order to represent the many manufacturers of homes available in the market providing a broader selection for customers. Clayton Homes’ retail locations make up approximately 12% of the industry’s retail locations.

The overwhelming majority of Clayton Homes’ customers report high levels of satisfaction with their home purchase and mortgage, and we are honored to serve them in their communities. To read more about Clayton Homes, visit our About Us page.

About Clayton Homes

Clayton Homes has built quality homes since 1956, winning multiple awards for design and construction. Through its affiliates and family of brands, Clayton Homes builds, sells, finances, leases, and insures manufactured and modular homes, as well commercial and educational buildings. Clayton Homes is a vertically integrated Berkshire Hathaway company whose purpose is opening doors to a better life, one home at a time.

Additional Resources

If you’re in the market for a new manufactured home please take the time to read the following articles. They really can help you get a better deal and understand your options better:

30 Tips for Buying and Financing A Manufactured Home

Avoiding Issues During a Manufactured Home Purchase

Buying a Manufactured Home: Warranties and How to Handle Issues After the Sell

Insiders Guide to Manufactured Home Dealers

Manufactured Home Buying Tips

As always, thank you for reading Mobile Home Living!

Image Sources:TruckTrend, GalleryHip

The Dealer-Financed Manufactured Home Trap (2024)

FAQs

Why do manufactured homes have a bad reputation? ›

Lightly and cheaply built, conforming only to a very weak HUD code, not considered real estate by the lenders, assumed to lose value over time like a car. Modular homes, on the other hand, were known to be very different, built to the same codes as site-built homes. They are usually well-crafted permanent buildings.

What is the oldest manufactured home that can be financed? ›

The question of financing older manufactured homes often puzzles buyers, as lenders typically have strict criteria regarding the age and condition of the property. Generally, the oldest manufactured home that can be financed is one built after June 15, 1976.

Why are manufactured homes looked down upon? ›

It's estimated that over ten million Americans, often young blue-collar workers live in these trailers. However, these parks were looked down upon due to their mass-produced and industrial nature. Trailer homes are mass-produced, and sacrifice craftsmen qualities in favor of cost savings.

Why do banks not like manufactured homes? ›

That said, financing the purchase of a mobile or manufactured home may require more digging than purchasing a traditional home. That's because most mortgage lenders don't offer financing for these types of properties due to their lower cost and depreciating value.

Why is it harder to insure a manufactured home? ›

Due to their unique construction and vulnerability to certain weather, such as windstorms, manufactured and mobile homes typically don't qualify for traditional homeowners insurance.

Why is it so hard to refinance a manufactured home? ›

Manufactured Home Mortgage Refinancing Requirements

One major requirement for a mortgage is for the manufactured home to be on a permanent foundation. Manufactured homes that aren't on a permanent foundation are considered chattel property or personal property, and you'll have fewer loan options.

Why are mortgage rates higher for manufactured homes? ›

Manufactured home loans often have higher interest rates than traditional home loans because they are considered higher risk. Additionally, borrowers may need to make a larger down payment and have a shorter loan term.

What is the lowest down payment for a mobile home? ›

In certain cases, down payments can be as low as 3.5%. Loans can be used for the manufactured home, the lot the home will live on or both.

What is considered a permanent foundation for a manufactured home? ›

Permanent foundations must be con- structed of durable materials; i.e. concrete, mortared masonry, or treated wood - and be site-built.

What are chattel loans? ›

A chattel mortgage is a loan to purchase movable personal property, such as a manufactured home or construction equipment. The property, or chattel, secures the loan, and the lender holds an ownership interest.

Why is there a stigma against manufactured homes? ›

The stigma evolving around manufactured homes is related to the fact that many individuals believe that mobile homes and manufactured homes are the same. Therefore, the views and attitudes towards these pre-1976 homes and mobile parks are reflected in manufactured homes.

What percentage of Americans live in manufactured homes? ›

Mobile homes make up 6.4% of the US housing sector and there are 8.5m of them, down slightly on 2011, according to the US Census. The number of occupants is not recorded but it's estimated to total about 20 million.

Why do people not like modular homes? ›

Another of the dangers of modular homes is that they're not entirely customizable. This means that you will probably have to be okay with not having all the features that you want. Or, you might have to tolerate a floor plan that doesn't work with your ideal vision.

Why do trailer parks have a bad reputation? ›

Trailer parks, especially in American culture, are stereotypically viewed as lower income housing for occupants living at or below the poverty line who have low social status.

Are manufactured homes good to flip? ›

Mobile homes are known for their relatively shorter renovation and flipping timeline. Unlike single-family homes, which often involve extensive remodeling, mobile homes require fewer repairs and upgrades. This means you can complete your projects and potentially sell them quicker, maximizing your profits.

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