Using a
Lease-Purchase to Buy
The lease-purchase
offers homeownership opportunities to consumers with little cash and/or poor
credit, who are prepared to bet on themselves. The bet is that before the option
period expires, they will qualify for the mortgage they need to exercise the
purchase option. During the option period, they have the opportunity to rebuild
their credit and accumulate equity while living in the house.
The development of the
sub-prime market, in which consumers with poor credit or no cash can obtain
loans, does not seem to have lessened interest in lease-purchase. It is very
likely that those who succeed in exercising their option under a lease-purchase
do better than if they had financed a conventional purchase in the sub-prime
market. The savings in finance costs will more than offset a higher price on the
house. But those who can't exercise their option will lose their
bets.
Consumers who need to
rebuild their credit rating during the option period should understand that
paying their rent on time won't do it. Rent payment information is not used in
compiling credit scores. While Fair Isaac, the company that developed credit
scoring, has recently unveiled an "expansion" score based on "non-traditional
credit data," it does not yet include rent payment information from individual
home owners. Lease-purchase buyers who need a higher credit score must focus on
their credit cards and loans.
Even though it is
costly, the right not to
exercise the option is of value to buyers. If there is something seriously wrong
with the house, neighborhood, or neighbors, the money left behind on a
lease-purchase is much smaller than the cost of an outright purchase followed by
a sale.
Using a Lease-Purchase to Sell
Most home sellers want a
cash sale, but for those prepared to hang on to the property awhile longer, the
benefits can be compelling. Bob Bruss, an expert's expert on lease-purchases,
says that in this market, there are always more buyers than sellers - he has
been both. As a result, buyers generally pay top dollar, perhaps including some
assumed future appreciation. To be sure, the deal may fall through, but in that
case the seller gets to pocket the option fee and rent premium. The seller also
enjoys the tax deduction on his mortgage interest payments during the option
period.
3 October 2005 Postscript: Read the
Contract!
On October 2, 2005, Bob
Mahlburg, an investigative reporter for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, published
an article on a substantial lease-to-own program in Florida that had
generated numerous complaints. Over a 5-year period hundreds of deals were
executed under this program but only a handful of purchases. In fact, there were
more evictions than purchases.
The contract used in
this program made it all too easy for the seller to avoid having to sell when it
was more profitable to evict the tenant and do another deal with another hopeful
buyer. The moral: read the contract very carefully to make sure you are
confident you can live up to all the terms, such as paying your rent on time,
every time.