Note Pricing

Balloon Risk

The risk that a borrower cannot pay or refinance a balloon payment at maturity — a key factor a note buyer prices into any note with a balloon.

Balloon risk is the risk that, when a balloon payment comes due at the end of a loan's term, the borrower will not be able to pay it — because they cannot refinance, cannot sell the property, or lack the cash. Since a large share of many owner-financed notes' value sits in that final lump sum, balloon risk is one of the most important things a note buyer evaluates. Understanding it helps a seller see why notes with balloons are priced the way they are and how to present a balloon note well.

Why balloon risk exists

Many owner-financed notes use a long amortization schedule (e.g., 30 years) with a short maturity (e.g., 5–7 years). The monthly payments stay affordable, but because a 30-year schedule pays down principal slowly, most of the original balance is still owed at the balloon date. The borrower is expected to refinance into a conventional loan or sell the property to pay it off. Balloon risk is the chance that plan fails:

  • The borrower's credit or income may not qualify them for a refinance.
  • Property values or lending conditions may have tightened.
  • The borrower may simply be unprepared for the lump sum.

How balloon risk affects note value

A note buyer discounts the balloon to present value and then prices in the probability it isn't paid on time. The more the note's value depends on the balloon — and the less certain the borrower's exit — the more conservatively the note is priced. Factors that reduce balloon risk (and support a better price):

  • Strong equity / low LTV — a borrower with lots of equity can refinance or sell to cover the balloon
  • Good seasoning and payment history — a reliable borrower is more likely to execute their exit
  • A reasonable runway — enough time before the balloon for the borrower to build credit/equity
  • A strong property in an active market — easier to sell or refinance against

What happens if a balloon can't be paid

If the borrower cannot pay the balloon at maturity, the options are typically an extension or loan modification (rewriting the terms), a refinance once they qualify, a sale of the property, or — if none works — default and foreclosure. A note holder facing a balloon a borrower can't meet often modifies rather than forecloses, especially if the borrower is otherwise paying.

Consumer-loan limits

For owner-occupied residential loans, the Dodd-Frank Act restricts certain balloon structures precisely because of balloon risk to consumers. Balloons are more freely used on investment / business-purpose notes. A compliant, well-disclosed balloon is far easier to sell than a problematic one.

What it means when you sell

If your note has a balloon, disclose its size, timing, and the borrower's likely exit, and lead with the factors that lower balloon risk — strong equity, good payment history, and a marketable property. A clearly documented balloon on a low-LTV note with a reliable borrower carries modest risk and prices well. A partial purchase is also a useful tool: you can sell near-term payments while you and the buyer address the balloon separately. Mortgage Note Capital prices balloon notes on their merits — an honest picture of the borrower's exit is what supports the best offer.

Questions about balloon risk

What is balloon risk?

The risk that a borrower cannot pay or refinance the balloon payment when it comes due at maturity. Because much of a note's value can sit in that final lump sum, buyers price in the probability the balloon isn't paid on time, discounting the note accordingly.

How can I reduce the balloon risk on my note's price?

Show the factors that make the borrower's exit likely: strong equity and low LTV, good documented payment history, a reasonable runway before the balloon, and a marketable property. These reduce the chance the balloon goes unpaid and support a better offer.

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