Planet Money - Mobile Home Parked
Episode Date: August 6, 2021We find out what happens when big investors spend billions of dollars buying mobile home parks and make them less affordable for the people who live there. Then we learn how the government helps them ...do it, with super low-cost loans that were meant to support affordable housing. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Planet Money from NPR.
Mary Hunt lives in a mobile home park in Swartz Creek, Michigan.
It's called South Valley Estates.
There are something like 120 mobile or manufactured homes here.
Some look like suburban houses.
Others are more like trailers up on foundations.
The lawns are mowed. There are little gardens.
I don't think you stepped on it, but that's my pumpkin.
Mary loves animals.
Sassy?
There's Sassy, the little aging hound dog,
and she's got like five cats.
She tends to take cats in when they need a haul.
Hold on, Claire Bear. I'm coming, baby.
She's lived here a long time.
She took care of her parents in this house. It's a double wide, so there is a lot of room. I's lived here a long time. She took care of her parents in this house.
It's a double wide, so there is a lot of room.
I've lived here almost 35 years.
Mary's 51.
She's a job driving elderly people to doctor's appointments.
She makes $10 an hour.
She also does Instacart deliveries.
Up until about five years ago, she was making ends meet.
And living here was a big part of that.
Mobile or manufactured homes provide a lot of affordable housing.
There are nearly three million of them in mobile home parks across the country.
And they can cost less than half of what other homes go for.
But the thing about mobile home parks is that even if you own your house outright, which Mary does,
you still have to pay rent on the little plot of land that your house sits on.
It's called lot rent.
For Mary, four years ago, it was less than $350 a month.
And whenever she had trouble paying that on time, she could work it out.
The couple that managed the park lived right here.
Stan and Nancy were the ones before.
I would call up and say, hey, look, I've got half the rent.
I'll bring the rest, you know, next week or whatever.
OK, that's fine. But you realize you're going to have a late fee.
Yeah, I understand that. I get that. OK. I take it down. No problem.
But then a few years ago, Stan and Nancy retired.
The local landowner sold the park to a much bigger company called Haven Park Communities.
It's a real estate
investment company that has been buying up mobile home parks across a bunch of different states.
Pretty soon, Haven Park started raising her lot rent. It's gone up from less than $350 to over
$400. She used to pay $10 a month to have her dog. Haven Park raised that to $15. And she says
they started tacking on other fees too,
fees she never had to pay before. Water's about $35, sewer's about $50, something like that.
Soon after Haven Park took over, Mary didn't have her full rent payment. So,
she says, she did what she'd always done. She went to the park manager.
I went in and said, okay, well, you know, I've got this amount right now and I'll have,
oh, we can't do that. You have to have the full thing. We can't take a partial payment.
And there really wasn't that much Mary could do about it.
It cost between $5,000 and $10,000 to move a mobile home.
Older ones often can't be moved at all.
So any fees they wanted to charge, she kind of had to go along with them.
Did it ever really occur to you as a potential problem that, OK, you own the house right here?
occur to you as a potential problem that, OK, you own the house right here. I mean, you know,
this wall is yours, but, you know, the ground under our feet is not like. It never really was a big deal to me, you know.
It would turn out to be a big deal. Earlier this year, Mary got sick with COVID and fell
behind on the rent, and the company filed an eviction case against her. Now, Mary had applied for federal money that's supposed to help pay back
rent so people don't get evicted. But all over the country right now, that's just taking a long
time to reach the people who need it. And when we talked to Mary at the end of July, she was
running out of options. A federal moratorium on evictions was about to expire, and the company would get the
legal right to evict her in just a matter of days. How do I choose if I have to go somewhere?
How do I choose which cats to keep? What's going to happen is I'm going to go with what I have on
my back pretty much, and everything will go to the road. And there won't be anything I can do about it.
I could be out next week without a place to live.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
I'm Mary Childs.
And I'm Chris Arnold.
Today on the show, what happens when big investors and private equity firms spend billions of dollars
buying up mobile home parks and make them less affordable for the people who live there.
And how the government's helping them do it with super low-cost loans that were meant to support
affordable housing.
Mary's story is happening all across the country. A lot of the mom and pops who have been running mobile home parks for decades, they're retiring.
They're looking to sell.
And big investors are swooping in with billions of dollars to buy these up because they think the parks could be more profitable.
We reached out to Haven Park. They wouldn't do an interview, but we still wanted to understand more
about why so many investors have gone into mobile home parks. In the past few years,
hundreds of parks have been bought up by big corporations.
So we asked some of the big private equity players doing this, Blackstone, Apollo, Carlisle,
and they also would not come on the show. But this guy
would talk to us. My name is Brandon Turner and I'm the CEO of Open Door Capital and we primarily
invest in mobile home parks. The big difference between companies like his and Haven Park and
the Blackstones of the world is kind of a bunch of zeros and a lot of office space. But they all
see the same opportunity here. I saw, well, where's the world headed? We're not building a lot of office space. But they all see the same opportunity here. I saw, well, where's the world
headed? We're not building a lot of affordable housing, yet we're not solving as an American
society. We're not solving the housing problem. And he sees owning mobile home parks as a really
steady source of income. Lots of demand, not enough supply, great business opportunity.
It's kind of the classic story. There's a lot of mom and pop
businesses not being run as efficiently as they could be, in this case, not raising rents, or he
says collecting rents as much as they could, being too loose with expenses. So he says there's this
inefficient industry and big investors can come in and figure out ways to make it better and get
more money out of it. And he recognizes that some residents can get caught in a really vulnerable situation.
The people who say that mobile home parks are predatory,
the 100% they're right in a lot of cases.
In fact, what the industry often does and has taught
is that if you go into a park
and these people own a home that is on the land,
but they can't be moved.
So then what the companies will do is they'll come in
and they'll take the rent and they'll go from $250 all the way up to $500. And they can't do
anything. And this company then just makes a lot of money. For those investors, that's kind of a
dream. Inelastic demand. A lot of people in mobile homes, they can't move. They have to keep paying.
In Haven Park's case, they told us in a statement that starting last
year, they do not raise lot rent more than $50 a year and they charge the fair market rent for the
area. Haven Park also said that sometimes if they didn't buy a park, all the residents would get
evicted because it would otherwise have gotten turned into a shopping mall or an office park.
And Brandon says, of course, he is not doing it
the bad way. He's not gouging people on rent. He says he's making money by doing that thing we
talked about, by buying up parks that maybe weren't run so well and making them run better.
I mean, I'm not saying we don't raise rent, but where we make our money and where we choose to
is by better management, by better collections. Actually efficiently collecting the
money from tenants, renegotiating contracts for a better deal on trash collection, fixing leaks to
save on the water bill. And for him, he says this is the big one. He tries to find parks to buy that
have a lot of vacant houses so he can bring in new tenants who will just happily pay rent month
after month. And there's another thing that the big investment firms do to get even more money out of these
parks.
I talked to several people in the industry, and here's how they say this works.
A company buys a mobile home park and starts jacking up the rents, which means the mobile
home park is making more money.
And that means it's worth more money on paper.
So the investor then refinances the mobile home park and takes out a big loan.
Like when you refinance your house and get cash out of the deal, they do the same thing
and they pull, say, $3 million out and then they go and buy another mobile home park and
do it again and again and again.
And this is one of the things that also makes mobile home parks a really good investment.
You don't need that much cash up front to create this cascade of borrowed money to keep acquiring more and more parks. And those loans, at least some of them, have super cheap interest rates,
thanks in large part to the federal government. Some of the loans are backed by Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, the government-backed entities at the heart of the U.S. mortgage market.
A big part of the reason Fannie and Freddie exist is to help more people be able to afford a house.
And they do that by backing the loan, by guaranteeing it, which lowers the interest rate.
They do this for individual homeowners, and they also do it for big corporations that build or buy apartment buildings and condos and mobile
home parks. And Haven Park took advantage of this. They've gotten a lot of loans backed by Fannie Mae,
backed by the federal government. But if Fannie Mae's mission is to help people to be able to
afford a home, all of this is not working out so well for Mary Hunt, right? And for a lot of people in her park.
There have been 15 eviction cases against eight different residents there in just the past year and a half.
And we called Haven Park to be like, wait, are you for real?
You're going to kick Mary out while she's waiting on this federal money?
And the next day, the day after we made that call, we got a voicemail from Mary.
Hey, Chris, it's Mary Hunt. I just wanted to give you a quick update. I just got a call from my
attorney. Mary said that Haven Park had talked to somebody at the rental assistance program where
she was waiting for that federal money to pay her back rent. And they said it looked like Mary would
be approved. But I think I'm going to be OK. I just wanted to let you know.
Bye.
So it's looking like Mary's going to get to stay in her home for now.
We then asked Haven Park, OK, but what about all the other people in their parks in Mary's
position?
We're waiting to get this federal rental assistance money.
And Haven Park now says they will not evict renters who can prove that they are waiting
to get that federal money.
But obviously, Mary's bigger problem is not fixed. She still does not own the land.
The rent has gone up. It might go up more. If she can't scrape together all the rent one month,
she might be right back facing eviction again. After the break, can there be another way?
Can residents fight back against these big investment firms and beat them at their own game?
Now we're going to go to another mobile home park.
This one's in Massachusetts.
Charlie Smith retired and moved to the Brookside Village Mobile Home Park in Plainville, Mass. He's 80 years old.
And he's got this really cute little mobile home that somehow to me looked like a surf shack that
you'd see on Maui. It's like, I just wanted to hang out there with him. I got a nice little yard
with lots of trees and flowers and bushes. You can see how nice and private it is. See my hammock back there? Yeah.
Oh, this is gorgeous.
There she is.
And one of the crown jewels,
his Yamaha Royal Star motorcycle.
It's a 1300.
It's a V4.
And I have saddlebags to go on it.
A few years ago,
Charlie almost wound up in the same situation as Mary.
He and the other residents heard that
their park was about to be sold to a big company. The owner had essentially already made a deal
with that company. So how did you even find out that this was happening to your park too?
Oh, he sent us a letter. We got a letter saying that the park was being sold, and he stated the amount of money.
Charles says the park was getting sold for about $4 million to this big company.
And a lot of the other people in his park, they're retirees on small fixed incomes,
and they were concerned because they were seeing rents going up in other parks that were getting bought up around them.
They weren't just concerned. They were actually terrified, saying they would turn to me and say, Charlie, if they force us out,
where would I go? We couldn't afford an apartment. We couldn't afford, you know, like, what the hell
would we do? And then Charlie got a call from a housing nonprofit. They told him, listen, this
isn't a done deal. There's this law in Massachusetts. It says when a mobile home park goes up for sale, the people who live there get a chance to buy it first. It's called the right of first refusal. Only a tiny handful of states have these laws. of a couple dozen retirees can take on a billion-dollar corporation or any other investor
and buy the park out. They can turn it into a resident-owned co-op. This felt revolutionary
to Charlie. And he says a bunch of park residents got together in like a church basement and he
floated the idea. Should they try to buy this park for themselves? And somebody saying, hey,
kind of like I guess they did back in the revolution when they met in a ta themselves. And somebody saying, hey, kind of like I guess they did back in the revolution
when they met in a tavern and somebody says, you know, we should all get together. So it was all
really exciting. But as Charlie talked to this nonprofit and learned more, he realized this was
going to be a long, difficult process. For one thing, they couldn't get a break on the price.
There was no discount for living there. They had to match whatever amount the investor was willing to pay. So that meant they needed to get a loan, a really big one.
Right. To match that $4 million offer that the investor was going to pay. And, you know,
even if Charlie sold his nice Yamaha, he's not going to have that kind of money, right? So
the only way to afford it was if everybody in the park agreed to pay more rent,
$180 a month. And that was unheard of in this park. Every year it had gone up $25 or something.
And people kind of, they grumbled about it even then. But when you raise it $150 or $180,
it's like, whoa, I don't want my rent raised. And Charlie needed his neighbors to get behind
the idea. The Massachusetts law says that 51% of the residents had to vote to form the co-op. Rent increases and all.
So they started going around like literally door to door and sitting down at kitchen tables with
people and making the pitch. Charlie says at this point, investors who want to buy a park,
they go around and make their own sales pitch to the residents telling them, look, you don't want to buy this park.
You're retired.
You don't know how to run a mobile home park.
You don't want the headaches and take all this on.
So it was super unclear to Charlie whether they would actually have enough votes.
When we had to vote to find out how many people were in favor of us making the purchase, we got 100%.
Everyone voted themselves a big rent increase. That's how much
they wanted to own this park themselves. And it worked. They did it. They bought the park.
At Brookside Village, it's now been one year since the park converted to a co-op. Charlie
and the other residents are celebrating what they call their own Independence Day. Andy Danforth was there eating a cheeseburger off the grill.
He was the nonprofit's person on the ground at Brookside Village. And he also helped them get
that really big loan that they needed. And he says it's frustrating that they had to do that
without any help from the federal government, from Fannie and Freddie.
I've done over 50 conversions, over a quarter billion dollars,
and not a cent of it came from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
So what Annie's saying is that when the residents of a mobile home park want to buy their own park, they almost never get a super cheap loan backed by Fannie and Freddie,
generally because the co-ops don't have the cash for a big enough down payment.
But the investors, those big companies that are buying up parks like this,
they absolutely do have the cash. So that's why they're getting their loans backed by Fannie and
Freddie. In fact, they got more than $5 billion worth of those government-backed loans just last
year. And it doesn't have to be this way. People like Andy say it's within the
government's power to change this, to change the structures that are cutting out the co-ops.
There are plenty of different approaches Fannie and Freddie could try to see if they work.
Andy says if residents of mobile home parks could get those loans backed, it would change the game.
Residents could get easier access to loans at much lower interest
rates, so they'd be more able to afford to buy up their own parks. A lot more parks could turn
into co-ops. These folks, they're probably paying another $100 a month for every home,
just in interest that they wouldn't be paying Fannie Mae. So $100 a month over years is,
you know, would turn out to be
hundreds of thousands of dollars to these folks. So that huge $180 a month rent increase the people
at Brookside Village here had to swallow, that could have been a lot smaller if the loan was
backed by Fannie and Freddie. And again, one of the central missions of Fannie and Freddie is to
help people afford homes. But they've ended up backing the corporate investors that are jacking up rent and not the actual people trying to afford their homes.
And because the co-ops don't have access to this magic rate lowering tool, they have to charge more rent.
So somehow all of the options for mobile home residents are paying more rent or paying more rent.
We reached out to Fannie and Freddie and Freddie Mac told us in a statement, basically, that they have recently been requiring some more protections for tenants in mobile home parks.
Now the plan is.
But Charlie doesn't think that his work is done here.
He and I slipped away from the barbecue and he took me on a tour of the park.
Charlie's kind of become like the unofficial mayor,
and he was pointing out all the big plans for the future for this place,
including space for more mobile homes.
Because we're going to have a home there and then a home and a home.
Four more brand new ones are going to be in this area here.
Four more homes where people will live on land that they own together
and that no big investor can buy out from under them.
Have you beaten private equity at its own game?
Let us know.
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This week, the Planet Money newsletter is there's a way you can beat the best investors.
You've just got to know when to sell.
Today's episode was produced by Dave Blanchard and mastered by Isaac Rodriguez, edited by
Sarah Saracen. Special thanks to James
Sneed, as well as Savannah Siccarella, and to Robert Benincasa with NPR's investigations team.
Our supervising producer is Alex Goldmark. I'm Chris Arnold.
And I'm Mary Childs. This is NPR. Thanks for listening.