The Miracle Rehabilitation Loan known as the FHA 203k Loan

A fundamental look at the miracle program known as FHA 203k.

So many Buyers today are eager to purchase homes at below market prices. Often these homes are in need of serious repairs or improvements to update the property. The 203k Program handily meets the needs of Buyers today. I personally have originated and closed dozens of these loans back
in the early 1990’s in Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant under President Clinton’s Inner City Rehabilitation Initiative. Often we were financing a complete gut renovation of an abandoned Single Room Occupancy (SRO) residence. The Buyers usually paid a price around $50,000 and I would find FHA 203k Financing in the range of $250,000 to cover the purchase and the renovations. Under the provisions of the rehabilitation, the Buyer of such an SRO would convert the Certificate of Occupancy from rooming house to legal 2, 3 or even 4 Family home. The 203k allowed for just such a change and the costs involved, including Architectural fees, Plans and Permits, not to mention the construction costs.

Toay this miracle program allows a Buyer to purchase a home and obtain the monies for repairs or home improvements all rolled into a single loan with a SINGLE monthly FIXED RATE payment. The repairs can cost as little as $5,000 or can run as high as necessary to gut-rehab a home. The limit on
the repair monies that can be included in the loan is the Loan-To-Value (LTV) Limit based on statutory FHA Loan Limits in your area (see below). And this LTV percentage is calculated based on the value of the house AFTER improvements.

The 203k program even has a provision allowing the Buyer to request that up to 6 months worth of mortgage payments be included in the loan so they don’t have to pay two monthly housing
expenses—rent and mortgage—while the house is under construction.

With more and more bank-owned “REO” properties offered for sale, Buyers will need the 203k
Program more than ever before.

203k Interest rates run higher than market, usually about 1% higher, but this is still an ideal program to help Buyers achieve their goals of homeownership while simultaneously updating or renovating a home for the lowest possible cost.

Highlights of the 203k Program:

>Buyer can obtain the cash needed to conduct improvements on a home
purchase folded into the same mortgage loan needed to purchase the house.

>Borrower must qualify according to regular FHA Underwriting criteria with regards to Income, Assets and Credit.

>The Program is only open to Owner-Occupants; no investors permitted. BUT you do NOT have to be First-Time Homebuyer.

>No Income Limits; no minimum income requirements. No geographic limitations, with the exception that the property is here in the good ol’ USA!

Purchase + Improvements = ONE Mortgage and ONE Monthly Payment

Current FHA LOAN LIMITS under the 2009 Stimulus Bill for the New York Metropolitan Region:

1Fam: $729,750

2Fam: $934,200

3Fam: $1,129,250

4Fam: $1,403,400

FHA Basics:

* No Reserves on 1 and 2 Family homes (but it helps!)
* 3 Months Reserves required on 3 and 4 Family homes
* 3.5% Downpayment
* 6% Seller’s Concession
* Credit Scores down to 620 (down to 580 with some Lenders)

There you have a good fundamental look at the miracle program known as FHA 203k.

Do you have questions?  Click on ASK TREVOR and I’ll respond to any and all inquiries, even if you’re not buying a home in
New York State.

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Happy House Hunting!

FHA Is Good For New York

Given the high hurdles for potential purchasers to overcome with regards to credit and cash in the New York Metro Region, the FHA program eases the path to homeownership.

The FHA is the Federal Housing Administration, a division of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The FHA has been one of the single best ways for homebuyers to purchase a home since its inception in 1934 under FDR’s New Deal.

FHA guidelines make the experience of homeownership more accessible to more people. The guidelines are designed in such a way as to provide Lenders with more flexibility. The FHA is an insurance program whereby the mortgage loan is insured by the United States government. Further, FHA is the only Federal agency that is totally self-funded; FHA does not take any taxpayer money!

Some of the many wonderful features of FHA Insured mortgage loans:

-Low downpayment requirements: 3.5% of the purchase price

-Purchaser’s can use more of their monthly income to qualify for a loan

-Downpayment can be 100% gifted by a family member or employer

-Credit score requirements are lower than for Conventional loans

-FHA Loans are fully assumable (subject to the new purchaser’s ability to qualify for the loan)

-A Seller can contribute up to 6% of a Purchaser’s closing costs. This is especially useful in the NY Metro region where closing costs average 6%. This allows a potential Purchaser to own a home with a substantially lower cash requirement than Conventional loans. (See Closing Costs In NY for more information about closing costs in NY)

1. Cash requirements lower: If a Purchaser obtains conventional financing with a 5% downpayment, the total cash required on a $475,000 Single Family purchase would be approximately $60,000 (downpayment, closing costs and 2 months PITI reserves). The same Purchaser using an FHA loan would need approximately $20,000 (3.5% downpayment; Seller can pay the Purchaser’s closing costs and no reserves are required).
2. FHA allows for a higher “Debt-To-Income” ratio. Also, FHA allows on a single family or condo that the Purchaser can have Non-Occupying cosignors from the Purchaser’s family assist in qualifying for the mortgage loan.
3. Credit scores lower: FHA does not have a credit score requirement. However, Lenders are permitted to overlay their own Underwriting criteria on FHA guidelines. Currently the credit score standard among most Lenders for an FHA loan is a minimum credit score of 620 (some Lenders go down to 580). For a Conventional loan with PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance) a Purchaser need have at least a 720 credit score.
4. Expanded Opportunity to Purchase: On any given day there are many people wishing to purchase a home who don’t have the money for a large downpayment PLUS closing costs. Living in New York is expensive. For the average New York family earning approximately $100,000 annually to save $60,000 is an extremely difficult undertaking considering the high housing expense and other high cost of living expenses. Saving a $20,000 downpayment is an easier exercise thus making the dream of homeownership more accessible.
5. After Purchase Marketability: The FHA Purchaser in today’s market is effectively locking in today’s interest rate for a future homebuyer in the resale of the home. For example, if a Purchaser of a Single Family home closed today at a 30year fixed rate of 5.375%, that purchaser/owner could conceivably resell the home seven years from now to a person who would assume the FHA loan at today’s rate. If rates are higher in the future, this makes for a more opportune marketing potential.

In conclusion, the FHA program surprises potential homebuyers with its accessibility. These are people who never thought they could own a home. Specifically to the New York market, given the high hurdles for potential purchasers to overcome with regards to credit and cash, the FHA program eases the path to homeownership.

More about FHA and where to find an approved FHA Lending Institution at The FHA Website.

Beware Using Non-FHA Approved Mortgage Brokers

Work only with an FHA approved mortgage broker with a Mini-Eagle or an FHA approved Lender with a Full Eagle.

Since the FHA Insurance program is pretty much the only way to get a mortgage these days, I’d like to caution you against working with any mortgage professional that is not approved by HUD to originate FHA Insured Loans.

The process of obtaining such an approval is difficult and expensive. When a mortgage broker is approved, the office receives what is known as a “Mini-Eagle.” The Mini-Eagle is the permission from HUD to originate FHA loans. A Direct Lender, approved by HUD, has a Full-Eagle.

As we become more and more aware of the excessive lengths some unscrupulous mortgage people will go to in order to make money without paying any attention to legalities, ethics, or professional conduct, we need also understand these same lowlifes will try to jump on any bandwagon in order to make a buck.

Fact is the regulation is in place to prevent anyone from jumping on the FHA bandwagon. That regulation is the Mini-Eagle and Full-Eagle.

FHA does allow in certain instances a Non-FHA Approved mortgage broker to recommend a client to a Full-Eagle Lender and to act as a consultant for the client. This permission is limited to consulting and the fee is limited as to how much the consultant can earn. The consultant is paid by you, the client. Consultant means exactly that: advice, counseling and consulting. The Non-FHA approved mortgage professional cannot originate the loan, cannot write the loan application or become involved in any aspect of the process for loan approval. For that you will work directly with the Lender.

Think of the Non-FHA approved mortgage person as a facilitator who connects you with a Lender, is available to answer your questions and offer advice on the program, but cannot do anything more than that.

Beware of the mortgage people walking around saying, “I can do FHA loans.” More often than not these lowlifes are not FHA approved and they plan on convincing you to doing a loan application with them for an FHA loan. “I’ll find an FHA Lender for you. Sign here.” This is ILLEGAL.

Further, this consultant doesn’t have any real standing in terms of accessing information about FHA products or interacting with the Lender to get your loan processed timely for an approval.

Why should you pay one of these people when you can easily find and work with an approved and experienced FHA mortgage professional?

These folks are just trying to take your money by joining in the current mortgage market opportunity without making the proper professional investment (in time and money) to obtain the proper licensing.

Work only with an FHA approved mortgage broker with a Mini-Eagle or an FHA approved Lender with a Full Eagle. You can find listings of both types of Mortgage Company in your area by visiting www.fha.gov and entering your zip code.

Why You Need To Look At Your 401k Statement

One of the prime methods to getting a mortgage loan approval during the current mortgage-underwriting climate is proving you have reserves: those dwindling 401k accounts might be useful after all.

Mortgage Loans are difficult to obtain these days.  Underwriters at Banks are about the craziest I have ever seen in 20 years as a mortgage professional.  Arguments over the interpretation of an underwriting guideline—the kind I used to win back in the 90’s—are frequently Cold-War-style standoffs: there is no clear winner, you see it your way, and I see it mine.

Folks think Underwriting a mortgage loan application is some kind of objective exercise.  It’s not.  Underwriters are human and they are subject to the same day in and day out challenges all the rest of us humans face, with one difference.  If the Underwriter is having a bad day, or, in our current market, a BAD YEAR, that Underwriter is making obtaining a loan approval an impossible endeavor.

As a mortgage originator, I have to “pre-underwrite” each and every client’s situation.  I have learned to “roll with the punches” as it were to find strengths in any given loan application and help my client get the loan approval for the home they wish to buy or refinance.  I’m watching how Underwriters are reacting to market conditions or the directives they are receiving from their bank employers (too often confused and muddled) to gauge the best path to loan approval for my clients.

Thus I look for every little bit of ammunition I can find in order to fight the good fight when I’m prequalifying a client.

One nice bit of artillery is the ubiquitous 401k or retirement account.  Underwriters like “reserves” on a loan application.  Reserves is the money you have left over after closing on a mortgage loan; it’s the money you didn’t spend on downpayment and closing costs.  In the event you experience some life catastrophe in the future, like a job loss, you can use the reserves to pay your mortgage every month while recovering from said catastrophe (finding another job).

Reserves are required for two months’ worth of mortgage payments for Conventional (Non-Government) financing. The FHA does not require reserves for 1 or 2 family home financing; 3 and 4 family homes require 3 months’ reserves. Those are the guidelines, but let’s talk about getting your loan approved during the toughest mortgage underwriting era I’ve ever seen. Reserves count a lot; the more you have, the higher the probability of a loan approval, especially if your application is weak in any of the other areas of loan underwriting (IAC, or Income, Assets, Credit).

Often, my clients come to me for prequalification with their standard documentation in hand: paystubs, Tax returns, bank statements.  I always request but never seem to encounter proof of any retirement accounts, like 401k statements.  And when I ask my clients, “Okay, you don’t have the statement with you, but how much is in your account right now?”  I am often met with blank stares.

Folks just don’t know. Considering how much money they may have lost in those retirement accounts in recent months, they don’t want to know.

I understand a lot of us don’t want to face the bad news of dwindling retirement funds due to markets falling and investments failing.  But you need to open up that 401k statement if you’re planning on applying for a mortgage.  Those monies, eviscerated by market forces though they may be, can be very useful on a loan application.

In fact, I’d be so bold as to say that right now, one of the prime methods to getting a mortgage loan approval is proving you have reserves.  So get out those statements this chilly Sunday afternoon and face the music. Put your 401k statment together with your other documents you’ll need for the loan application.  Doing so might be the difference between getting a mortgage approval, or not.

FHA: Mortgage Solution for 2009

The FHA program was created to make it easy for families to acquire their own homes. I say this often these days, “The FHA is the ONLY game in town.”

When I started in the mortgage business in 1989 I was introduced to the FHA Insured mortgage loan. As a Mortgage Banker, the loans I made were typically FHA as this had long been the province of mortgage bankers in general.

During the Sub-Prime “Boom” I found myself often confronted with clients who, in my professional opinion, were prime candidates for FHA financing. The problem with the boom times and FHA was simple: there is a limit to FHA loan amounts, and during the boom, those limits were far below what was needed in the marketplace. FHA loan limits had not kept up with market price advances.

Now, the FHA limit here in the NY Metro region is $625,500 for a single family home. This is something we can work with.

The FHA loan program was created in 1934 during The Great Depression as part of the New Deal. The concept was simple: turn a nation of renters into a nation of homeowners. At the time, 70% of the United States population rented. The FHA program was created to make it easy for families to acquire their own homes. To this end, the FHA was spectacularly successful.

I like that there is so much rich American history associated with the FHA. I have always loved helping my clients obtain their dreams of homeownership with the FHA program. And I am thrilled that during these terrible economic times the FHA has once again come to the forefront to create possibilities of homeownership. I say this often these days, “The FHA is the ONLY game in town.”

And I like that.

I’ll write more about FHA, in the meantime, visit FHA’s website for more information about this wonderful loan program.

Tax Time: A Journey to getting your MONEY.

Use tax time to get in touch with your money; you can get more of it in your pocket by working with a competent tax professional and by knowing the fundamentals of IRS regulations.

I sat with a family last night preparing to buy a home. I sifted through the documents needed for the loan approval process, paystubs, bank statements, 401k account statements, credit report. Finally I came to the clients’ tax returns.

Mom and Dad have their annual returns prepared by the same tax professional they have used for more than twenty years. I reviewed the documents and thought the returns were adequately prepared.

Then I reached for the Son’s tax returns. HoooBoy. There as I reached across their dining room table was that infamous “green and white” folder. I won’t mention the name of the national service (well-advertised on television and elsewhere), only will I state that when I see that infamous folder, a shiver runs down my spine (the kind you get when you read a really scary Stephen King story late at night).

What followed was some stern talking to by me to the Son. “First thing you’re going to do when you buy your home is meet with your Mom and Dad’s accountant. You will no longer visit the folks who gave you that green and white folder.”

I went on to advise him to bring his previous three years’ returns to Mom and Dad’s accountant when he goes there in a few weeks to have his 2008 returns prepared. The IRS allows us taxpayers to revise our returns up to three years back if we feel we missed some deductions and may be entitled to a larger refund than was originally issued.

Having seen many returns stapled into those green and white folders over the years, I knew there was a REALLY good chance my client could amend one or several of his previous three years’ returns and get some more money back from Uncle Sam.

I also told him, since they are soon to buy a home, that he needs to consult with the accountant in the area of getting a lower refund after he buys a home. Instead of waiting for a refund, he should lower the tax deductions from his weekly paycheck thus enabling him to bring home more money. Uncle Sam still gets his fair share (the IRS allows us to change our withholding as many times throughout the year as we feel is necessary as long as we are meeting our tax liability), and my clients—soon to be Homeowners—get more liquid cash every month to help make the experience of buying their first home a happier one.

More money in your pocket every month when you own a home seems to be a pretty good path to happiness to me, no?

The advice I gave these clients is important as you learn to watch out for your money. Use tax time to get in touch with your money; you can get more of it in your pocket by working with a competent tax professional and by knowing the fundamentals of IRS regulations.

Prepare for Tax Time

Homeowners and Renters alike need to prepare for a different kind of conversation with their tax professional during these troubled economic times.

In the next few weeks, employers all across the country will begin sending out 2007 W-2 forms so that we taxpayers can get our papers together and submit our annual tax returns.

As you await the arrival of your W-2, might I suggest spending a Saturday afternoon preparing for your meeting with your tax professional?

If you are a homeowner, you’ll need also to receive from your mortgage Lender your annual 1098 form indicating how much interest and taxes you paid throughout the year. For most of us, the mortgage interest and property taxes on our primary residences are seriously important tax deductible items. Often, these deductions can bring about a large refund for a homeowning family.

Homeowners should also bring to their tax pro any and all documentation to support any other potential tax deductions they may have the right to claim: charitable contributions, Union dues, unreimbursed employee expenses, proof of medical bills in excess of 2% of your adjusted gross income, and more. Bring as many items as you may feel are deductible; let your tax pro be the judge of what is feasible as a deduction, and what’s not. As a homeowner, you’re most likely filing a Schedule A for itemized deductions and that’s where the mortgage interest, property taxes and all those other deductions will be collected to provide a substantial reduction in your adjusted gross income—usually much larger than the standard deductions provided for by Uncle Sam.

I’d like to suggest this year that you Homeowners also consult with your tax professional about important tax-saving strategies for 2009. In the current state of the economy, we could all use a boost in our take-home pay or at least solid advice on how to save on your 2009 income taxes.

For instance, you can change your withholding at work and reduce the tax dollars deducted from your weekly paycheck, thus taking home more of your hard-earned dollars. Next year, you’ll get a lower refund, but, so what? That’s your money the government is returning to you—a loan you made, interest-free to Uncle Sam—not a windfall from the Treasury.

Your tax pro might also suggest refinancing your mortgage at what are right now the lowest interest rates since a man named Eisenhower was in the White House. Your tax professional will likely tell you to pay points not only to obtain the lowest possible rate, but also to obtain a further tax deduction over the next two years on your annual returns.

Homeowners, when you meet with your tax professional this year, go for the maximum deductions and discuss money-saving, tax-reducing strategies. It’s your money, it’s your home and you worked danged hard for both of them!

For those of you who are renting, I’d recommend similarly probing for the sage wisdom buried in your tax professional’s mind as to ways you can save money on your 2009 taxes. There are certainly things you can do now and throughout the year—contributions to an IRA and the like—that will invest your money for the future and lower your tax liability when you file your 2009 return next year.

I’d bet that for many renters your tax professional may look at your income, look at your lack of deductions and your inability to file a Schedule A for itemized deductions and make a radical suggestion: Buy a Home!

If ever there was a reason to ignore all the bad news about falling home prices, instability in the economy and the payroll of the New York Yankees, buying a home for the purpose of paying less income tax is as good a reason as you can find.

So, renters, get ready for a serious conversation with your tax professional this year. Then, ring me up to get prequalified for a mortgage. I’d be happy to oblige in your quest to pay less income tax next year. And, it would be my pleasure to help you make a dream come true: that of owning your own home!

A New Hope…just like the Old Days

As a new sense of optimism sweeps into the housing market, the old-fashioned way of getting your mortgage comes once again into vogue.

There’s a feeling of hope we’re seeing from new clients; they want to buy homes. Monthly payment leads the day when it comes to determining if they can buy a home, not the rate, not the state of the economy, not the state of the housing market. And that’s just like the old days.

The hope is driven by the idea there will be a new President, a new administration, and a new attitude in Washington.

These people are coming out in the cold, looking at homes, asking questions, making offers and ultimately buying a home. Many of them are being qualified using another traditional mortgage “standard” the FHA Insured mortgage loan.

FHA has been around since The Great Depression and is still, in my humble opinion, the best way for a family to purchase a home. FHA financing allows for a more “human” understanding of a borrower’s qualifications; lower credit scores (not “deadbeat” credit, just the stuff life throws at you), lower cash required for downpayment (important in the NY Metro region where the cost of living and closing costs are so high), and the ability to use more of your income to qualify for the loan.

I’ve performed miracles using FHA loans throughout my career; and a lot of plain old boring loans that didn’t require a miracle, just a human touch.

FHA is a government insurance program; it’s not a bailout. The bank makes the loan, Uncle Sam insures it against foreclosure. So an old program comes into it’s own just in time. As a new sense of optimism sweeps into the housing market, the old-fashioned way of getting your mortgage—with some help from the government through the FHA—comes once again into vogue.

Yay for that.

Intangible Benefits of Homeownership

I don’t think my radar is any more tweaked than usual, but I did pick up quite a few quotes in today’s NYTimes.com which point to the American Dream of homeownership and the “intangible benefits” of same.

I have long said that you simply cannot put a number to quantify the intangible benefits of homeownership. When you live in your own home there is something that changes within you, there is a feeling which you simply can’t express with a number such as “4% increase in property value.”

My entire career as a mortgage professional has been spent helping people who think as I do, who “feel” it makes complete sense to own their own homes. These folks focus on the monthly payment—can they afford to own a home—then decide to move forward if that payment fits. They move forward regardless of the person sitting in the White House, regardless of interest rates or property values or what the newspapers say about it (“Buy NOW! Real estate always goes up!” or, “Worst time to buy real estate!”).

These folks know deep down inside there is something they will receive that you can’t put into numbers, and only rarely into words, that just makes it feel like you did the right thing when you put it all on the line to buy a home.

’nuff said from me, here are some quotes (with the links) from today’s NYTimes.com:

From “The Backyard In New York City-An Urban Oasis” (The article describes the joys and rather unusual circumstance of a backyard within the urban confines of New York City)—NYTimes.com August 31, 2008

“”I wish they’d pass a law,’ said Rebecca Cole, a designer of high-end backyard, terrace and rooftop gardens, ‘that if you have outdoor space you have to put something on it because the rest of us want it.’”

“’One of the reasons we love it, it’s garden to garden,’” said Ms. Franklin

My Fave Quote from the article:
“At night, after putting their sons to bed, they set up a folding table to sip cocktails and grill by tiki candles and music on the radio while counting their blessings, as Mr. Pinn says: ‘A house, two kids, two cars and a lawn.’”

I don’t detect a single word about “ROI” (Return On Investment), the state of the economy and the effect on property values, or the mortgage meltdown of 2007. Nope, this is what the folks are talking about:

“They consulted neighbors who were also fixing up their yards. ‘We get together over drinks and talk about seeds,’ Mr. Pinn said. ‘It’s kind of an odd conversation for the city.’”

Instead of watching the value of his property ticking up or down:

“…weekends often find him pushing a manual mower back and forth across the baby lawn but he doesn’t mind. ‘It’s a little therapeutic,’ he said. ‘I get out there and do my thing. It kind of softens up the hard life of New York City.’”

Another article on NYTimes.com reports on the unique penthouses being constructed atop an apartment building in Manhattan! The penthouses look like quaint little suburban tract homes. But the most interesting part of the story is the reaction of neighbors watching these mini-Manhattan-miracles make their way onto the (above) streetscape:

“Ms. Gavilanes found the penthouses alluring. ‘I would get a car,’ she said, ‘and put it out in the driveway. And then I’d add a white picket fence, and AstroTurf. Maybe have a golden retriever playing in the yard.’”

Even Jaded New Yorkers Are Intrigued By The Little Houses On The Roof. —NYTimes.com August 31, 2008

I’d like to say, “Only in New York” but the fact is, these articles/comments all reflect the deep-seated understanding that there is something special about owning a home. That understanding isn’t unique to a bunch of New Yorkers, either. I’ve believed it for so long, I’ve forgotten just how long. And I’ve defended this intangible benefit vehemently, even during the “fantasy boom” when all the rage was “values going up, up, up,” and then later during the meltdown when all the pessimists said, “Don’t buy NOW. Wait ’til the prices drop.”

You can’t put a price on this stuff. Period.

To The Rescue!

This afternoon we’re closing another loan we rescued from previous disaster with not one, but two other mortgage companies. This morning, we’re continuing to process the “rescued” loan from two nights ago.

Last night I spoke with yet another Realtor down and out because he had a purchase transaction dragging on and on into oblivion with no hope of ever closing. The Seller’s attorney advised him yesterday that today, Friday August 29th was the absolute last day to get an approval.

The Realtor said, “I think I’ll just let this one go and lose this deal.”

I pointed my finger at him and admonished him not to every say such a thing while I was around. Told him to get the file ready and show it to me today at 1pm when I return to his office. Turns out I also know the Seller’s attorney and I’m certain that, after reviewing the file and determining if I can get it approved and closed, that one phone call to that attorney will provide us with the time we need to finally get it done right.

Rescue, rescue, rescue. I encounter so many of these situations, whether it’s for folks trying to refinance their homes or families trying to purchase their first homes. Many times I have to say, “No, this is truly not possible. There is no way to make this loan work.” But my “No” comes in a few minutes, or, at the most 24 hours. The losers keep wasting everyone’s time as if some magic wand is going to fall out of the sky, hit them in the head and provide a miracle cure for the loan in question.

Days turn into weeks as everyone waits for the mortgage loser to come up with a solution, approve the loan and close it. And the losers are not just mortgage brokers, they are mortgage bankers and loan officers of regular banks, too.

This is the fallout of the mortgage meltdown of 2007. Too many losers still populate the mortgage industry, wasting the time of hopeful homebuyers, serious sellers, and realistic Realtors.

Message to mortgage losers: GET OUT OF MY BUSINESS!!!

For those of you industrious readers, working honestly every day in your field, let me wish you a peaceful Labor Day weekend!

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