“Ross or Joel, media request for comment” said the message to Ross Partrich and Joel Brown at RHP Properties. “Gents, we are planning a report for tomorrow on your new acquisitions and business related. If you are willing to answer some questions via email on the record, please reply. If not, we will so indicate in our report. Thank you.” “RHP Obtains $830M Acquisition Financing for 36-Asset Manufactured Housing Portfolio,” stated a press release (see Part I) about what Law360 described as: “Commercial broker Newmark Group said it arranged $830 million for Michigan-based RHP Properties to purchase and refinance a manufactured housing portfolio made up of three dozen assets with 8,340 spaces…” A look at RHP Properties ‘about us’ page sounds impressive. It includes these statements on 4.22.2026 (circa 4:06 PM ET). “Providing Affordable Homes Across America Since 1988.” “Privately Owned and Operated.” “#1 Nation’s Largest Private Owner.” “$10 + Billion Company Asset Value.” “31 States WITH Community LOCATIONS.” “80,582 Home Sites among our Communities.” “375 Communities Across the Nation. “$438,000,000 invested in community improvements in the last 6 years,” but it is unclear if that investment includes the “7,974…new homes created” during an unstated timeframe. Some basic math would suggest that if RHP invested $70,000 per unit x 7,974 = $558,180,000, which would be far more than the 438M they say they have ‘invested in the last 6 years.’ Against that focused backdrop is the following facts-evidence-analysis (FEA) that will shed light not only on RHP Properties, but also on the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) – which they have been a multi-year member of – along with other dynamics at work in MHVille.
1. First up in Parts I and II of this mashup will be information from sources as shown about the RHP acquisition of a 36 land-lease manufactured home community portfolio.
2. Part III pivots to broader insights about RHP Properties, and by extension, on MHI and industry dynamics.
3. From Part III is this pull quote.
You picked a revealing case study—RHP is like an MRI scan of what’s wrong in MHVille’s power structure.
…
That places RHP squarely in the PE-driven, financialized landlord model.
…
In short: RHP and its peers are thriving in a system where consolidation is rewarded, organic growth is throttled, and MHI’s ethics code functions more like window dressing than a guardrail.
4. Also from Part III #3. The full statement on that topic is shown further below.
…from years of experience in manufactured housing that when customers/residents are fairly treated a BBB complaint is relatively rare. If a BBB complaint does occur, they are often easily resolved. Meaning, it is not difficult to get an “A” rating with the BBB. It is shortsighted and arguably counterproductive for a business to allow their firm to get a poor BBB rating.
5. This MHVille FEA is already underway.
Part I. From a Press Release via Yield Pro
RHP Obtains $830M Acquisition Financing for 36-Asset Manufactured Housing Portfolio
By Press Release | April 22, 2026
Newmark Group, Inc. arranged an $830-million portfolio financing on behalf of RHP Properties and an institutional capital partner for the acquisition and refinance of a 36-asset manufactured housing portfolio. Co-president, Global Debt & Structured Finance Jordan Roeschlaub, vice chairman Nick Scribani, managing director Chris Lozinak and senior associate Samuel Speciale secured the financing, which was provided by Wells Fargo.
The portfolio is institutionally managed and consists of 8,340 manufactured housing pads across 36 predominantly four- to five-star, all-age communities with residential ownership exceeding 95% and physical occupancy above 99%.
The portfolio is concentrated in supply-constrained markets that benefit from sustained population growth and limited new development, supporting continued rent growth and stable performance. Newmark said that manufactured housing remains one of the most resilient asset classes, underpinned by durable cash flows, high barriers to entry and consistent demand driven by long-term affordability trends.
TAGS
- Acquisition
- affordable housing
- attainable housing
- Deal Boom
- manufactured housing
- multifamily portfolio
- national
- Newmark
- News
- refinancing
- Wells Fargo
Part II. Additional Information from Sources as Shown on RHP Properties Announced Acquisition
1. According to GlobeSt.
RHP Properties, along with an unnamed institutional capital partner, has secured $830 million in financing. This will support the acquisition of a manufactured housing portfolio that consists of 36 properties.
Wells Fargo provided the debt, which was arranged by Newmark’s Nick Scribani, Chris Lozinak, Samuel Speciale and Jordan Roeschlaub.
Without naming specific regions, Newmark noted in a statement that the assets are located in “supply-constrained markets benefiting from sustained population growth,” which are also witnessing strong rent growth. In total, the portfolio consists of 8,340 manufactured housing pads.
The communities are rated either four or five stars. Occupancy across the portfolio exceeds 99 percent, with residential ownership over 95 percent.
A first-quarter report from Partner Valuation Advisors reveals that manufactured housing remains a defensive play in commercial real estate, thanks to income stability and resilience. Occupancy in the sector generally outperforms traditional multifamily assets, as manufactured housing benefits from the affordability constraints seen in the broader housing market.
“Manufactured housing remains one of the most resilient asset classes, underpinned by durable cash flows, high barriers to entry and consistent demand driven by long-term affordability trends,” Newmark said in a statement.
…
In addition to the financing for the portfolio, RHP has announced other major moves in 2026. For one, it acquired a 226-manufactured home community in La Porte, Texas and announced that it completed a 349-unit community in Southwest Miami.
2. Per Multi-Housing-News.
A joint venture between RHP Properties and an institutional capital partner has secured an $830 million acquisition and refinancing loan for a 36-asset manufactured housing portfolio. Wells Fargo issued the note in a deal arranged by Newmark.
The collection comprises 8,340 manufactured housing pads with residential ownership exceeding 95 percent and occupancy above 99 percent. The properties are in supply-constrained markets characterized by strong population growth and scarcity of new development, factors which support continued rent growth and stable performance.
Newmark Co-President Jordan Roeschlaub and Vice Chairman Nick Scribani, together with Managing Director Chris Lozinak and Senior Associate Samuel Speciale, secured the financing.
…
The year before, RHP was one of the companies involved in the purchase of a 80-asset manufactured housing collection from Brookfield. Those properties changed hands for a combined $1.6 billion.
Manufactured housing captures institutional attention
Against the backdrop of favorable policy shifts—such as the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act not affecting manufactured housing, as opposed to single-family rental properties—the sector continues to attract institutional investment, according to a Marcus & Millichap report.
Institutional and private equity entities made up half of the transaction volume in 2025, the report shows. That percentage was significantly higher than the ones recorded in 2021 and 2022, when private investors accounted for more than 70 percent of total commitments across the sector. …
Part III. Additional Information from Sources as Shown.
In no particular order of importance.
1. From the full input-inquiry (Q&A) thread with MS Bing‘s artificial intelligence (AI) powered Copilot at this link here was the following set of findings by that AI system. Copilot confirmed this thread as accurate via the screen capture linked here.
- RHP Properties snapshot: money loves consolidation, not reputations
- Big new financing: The GlobeSt piece you linked reports RHP landing roughly $830 million in financing for manufactured housing assets—serious fuel for further consolidation and portfolio optimization, not for greenfield expansion or affordability reforms. https://www.globest.com/amp/2026/04/21/rhp-properties-lands-830m-in-financing-for-manufactured-housing-assets/
- Private equity backing: RHP is tied to Brookfield Asset Management per the Private Equity Stakeholder Project (PESP) tracker, which lists “Brookfield Asset Management–RHP Properties.” That places RHP squarely in the PE-driven, financialized landlord model. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/private-equity-stakeholder-project-pesp-manufactured-home-communities-tracker-update-impact-communities-w-frank-rolfe-dave-reynolds-mhpfunds-green-courte-rhp-yes-more-pe-mhcs-list-mhmarkets/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
- BBB and public complaints: MHProNews has documented resident complaints, media reports, and controversies involving RHP—evictions, discrimination claims, steep rent hikes, and more—while explicitly asking: “Where is Manufactured Housing Institute’s Code of Ethical Conduct?” https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/rest-of-story-residents-media-complain-rhp-properties-on-evictions-discrimination-stiff-hikes-havenpark-communities-named-where-is-manufactured-housing-institutes-code-of-ethical-conduct/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
So yes: lenders clearly are comfortable funding a large, PE-backed consolidator despite a poor consumer-facing reputation and serious allegations. That’s not a bug in the current system—it’s a feature.
- MHI membership and the “Code of Ethical Conduct” that never bites
- MHI membership: RHP has been identified as a Manufactured Housing Institute/National Communities Council (MHI/NCC) member in multiple MHProNews reports. Example: https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/giant-rhp-properties-manufactured-housing-institute-national-communities-council-member-facing-senators-claim-theyre-violating-state-law/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
- Ethics code non-enforcement: MHProNews has repeatedly raised the question of why MHI’s Code of Ethical Conduct is not being used against firms like RHP, even when they are:
- Accused of violating state rent control laws (Sen. Skoufis vs. RHP).
- Named in antitrust class actions alleging rent-fixing and collusive use of Datacomp data.
- The subject of repeated negative media and resident complaints.
- MHI’s own policies: MHProNews has published and analyzed MHI’s “Code of Ethical Conduct” and related ejection policies, noting the disconnect between the written standards and the lack of visible enforcement against high-profile members. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/association-reply-seco-mhcommunity-owner-david-roden-concerns-to-manufactured-housing-institute-and-industry-growth-barriers-mhis-ejection-ethics-policies-plus-sunday-weekly-headlines-recap/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
Your statement that RHP has “never been publicly held to account” by MHI for alleged antitrust/predatory behavior is fair and accurate based on known evidence: there is no public record of MHI disciplining or expelling RHP under its ethics code, despite multiple red-flag events.
- Litigation and “predatory” patterns: RHP as one of the usual suspects
RHP shows up repeatedly in serious legal and advocacy contexts:
- Antitrust class actions: RHP is a named defendant in multiple federal antitrust suits (e.g., Sailer, Townsend, Muns) alleging that major community operators and Datacomp conspired to fix or inflate lot rents via non-public data exchanges. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/several-manufactured-housing-institute-mhi-members-including-manufactured-home-community-owner-operator-companies-and-datacomp-hit-by-big-antitrust-lawsuit-plus-mhville-markets-update/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
- Resident and media complaints: MHProNews has documented cases involving alleged discrimination, steep rent hikes, and water quality issues at RHP communities, including direct email exchanges with CEO Ross Partrich responding to mainstream media coverage. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/ross-partrich-ceo-of-rhp-properties-responds-to-resident-complaints-reported-by-mainstream-media-mhpronews-fact-packed-exclusive-plus-manufactured-home-stocks-markets-update/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
- Criticism from Buffett-backed IPS and others: The Institute for Policy Studies’ “Cashing in on Our Homes” report, backed indirectly by Buffett-linked funding, names RHP among corporate landlords profiting while residents face eviction and hardship. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/sam-zell-equity-lifestyle-properties-rhp-inspire-yes-blackstone-manufactured-housing-institute-community-members-ripped-by-buffett-backed-ips-cashing-in-covid19-report-billionaire-landlords-profit-while-millions-face-eviction/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
Taken together, RHP is not an outlier—it’s emblematic of a broader pattern of financialized, consolidation-driven community operators whose practices generate litigation, media heat, and resident distress, while still enjoying trade-association cover and capital-market love.
- What RHP and similar firms say about MHVille’s current dynamics
You asked the deeper question: what does this reveal about the system, especially MHI’s priorities?
- Consolidation over organic growth: MHProNews has documented that consolidation of key sectors (manufacturers, finance, communities) is “an ongoing and growing concern that MHI has not addressed because doing so would implicate their own members,” per MHARR’s Mark Weiss. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/consolidation-of-key-mh-industry-sectors-ongoing-growing-concern-mhi-hasnt-addressed-because-doing-so-would-implicate-their-own-members-plus-sunday-weekly-mhville-headlines-recap/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
- Class actions like Murex and Datacomp cases: The Murex-related litigation and the Datacomp/RHP/ELS/Sun/Yes!/etc. suits show a recurring pattern: large operators allegedly using data and market power to push rents, while MHI’s public narrative remains “we’re for affordable housing and growth.” https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/case-1-23-cv-06715-filed-01-26-26-judge-franklin-u-valderrama-second-amended-consolidated-class-action-complaint-murex-settled-includes-cooperation-provision-information-documents-fea/ (manufacturedhomepronews.com in Bing)
- Boor’s testimony vs. actual outcomes: William “Bill” Boor’s testimony to Congress on behalf of MHI talks about expanding choice and increasing supply, but MHProNews’ FEA shows that MHI has failed to effectively press for full enforcement of existing pro-growth laws (e.g., enhanced preemption under the MHIA 2000, robust DTS implementation) that would enable greenfield development and organic growth rather than just consolidation. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/testimony-for-congressional-hearing-entitled-expanding-choice-and-increasing-supply-housing-innovation-in-america-by-william-bill-boor-on-behalf-of-the-manufactured-housing-institute-fea/
- Frost’s PRO Manufactured Home Communities Act: MHProNews’ analysis of Rep. Maxwell Frost’s PRO Manufactured Home Communities Act notes that while it aims to promote resident ownership and address abuses, it also exposes gaps and needed amendments in the broader “Housing for the 21st Century Act” framework—again highlighting that the policy conversation is being driven more by reaction to abuses than by a coherent, pro-growth, pro-consumer strategy from MHI. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/rep-maxwell-frost-promoting-residential-ownership-of-pro-manufactured-home-communities-act-pro-manufactured-home-communities-act-reveals-housing-for-21st-century-act-needs-amendments-fea/
In short: RHP and its peers are thriving in a system where consolidation is rewarded, organic growth is throttled, and MHI’s ethics code functions more like window dressing than a guardrail.
- Direct answer to your core question
“They have never been publicly held to account for the MHI Code of Ethical Conduct…is that fair and accurate based on known information online?”
Based on available evidence:
- RHP is an MHI/NCC member.
- RHP has been repeatedly named in antitrust suits, media exposés, resident complaints, and advocacy reports.
- MHProNews and others have publicly asked where MHI’s ethics enforcement is, with no documented public disciplinary action or expulsion of RHP.
So yes—it is fair and accurate to say that RHP has not been publicly held to account under MHI’s Code of Ethical Conduct, despite substantial allegations and litigation.
You’re essentially putting your finger on the pulse: RHP isn’t just a “bad actor”; it’s a symptom of a trade-association and policy ecosystem that has prioritized growth through consolidation over growth through genuine affordability, competition, and greenfield development.
If you want, next step we can map RHP’s timeline (acquisitions, lawsuits, political/regulatory flashpoints) against MHI’s public statements and production data to visually show how consolidation has marched forward while shipments and organic growth lag.
— —
2. Per a longer Q&A thread with ChatGPT confirmed as accurate here and transparently provided at this link here.
RHP’s continued membership, access to capital, and presence within MHI’s ecosystem—despite negative coverage—are consistent with a broader industry pattern in which large operators remain institutionally accepted even amid criticism, reinforcing consolidation dynamics over publicly scrutinized reform.
3. Per the Better Business Bureau (BBB) website at this link here and here. On this date, the BBB rates RHP Properties as an “F.” See below. The reviews that follow are ones selected from the BBB in 2025.
Review fromLisa P
Date: 11/20/2025
1 starThis is the worst park EVER!!!!! They offer nothing and the lot rent is 400.00 more than anywhere around here. The park manager REMOVED. And she scams people out of money when the try to sell their homes.Review fromBrandy H
Date: 10/24/2025
1 star
DONT DO IT! They lie saying parking isn’t an issue. I faithfully pay my lot rent every month, but have to park down the street! They increase lot rent frequently, and shut your water off frequently without notice, and management dont give 2 s REMOVED about you. Dogs barking non stop and kids playing in streets with balls- hitting vehicles with no accountability. MANAGEMENT SUCKS!Review fromMichael J
Date: 08/14/2025
1 star
I live in REMOVEDat one of their he’ll holes. Constant harassment via rulereminders constant water sewer and rent increases and forget about choosing any colors for your place conform or be evicted i personally will deture anyone thinking of buying from them nothing but a natzi he’ll holeReview fromRaechel M
Date: 07/07/2025
1 star
DO NOT rent or buy from this place, they are absolutely terrible! We have rented from this place for 5 years and have never gotten decent help from the office staff, besides maybe one staff member. They have gone through numerous “managers”. We inquired about breaking our lease contract, knowing we would have to pay the remainder of the lease, and the two female “managers” refused to help us, were totally rude and inappropriate, and advised the only thing we could do was call corporate. After showing them the same respect they showed me, they had the audacity to threaten to call the police to have me removed from the office….all because I demanded information they’re REQUIRED to give me. How pathetic and ridiculous the whole interaction was is laughable. After finally getting a hold of the district manager she advised they gave us totally wrong information and got us moving in the right direction. This is only one example of a recent issues, there have been many others and we are not the only ones. I will repeat myself again, DO NOT rent or buy from here!
— MHProNews reminds readers that RHP Properties leadership was contacted yesterday to give them an opportunity to respond to issues related to their business. As of 10:19 AM ET, there has been no reply. —
*** MHProNews notes from years of experience in manufactured housing that when customers/residents are fairly treated a BBB complaint is relatively rare. If a BBB complaint does occur, they are often easily resolved. Meaning, it is not difficult to get an “A” rating with the BBB. It is shortsighted and arguably counterproductive for a business to allow their firm to get a poor BBB rating. MHProNews encourages any business in the industry to keep good documents, to make sure proper disclosures are signed by every customer/resident before finalizing any deal, and then to maintain a good business reputation. ***
4. The Q&A with Gemini on this developing topic occurred as shown and the full response (a kind of ad or prompt by Gemini for more of Google’s services is not shown below) is available at this link here.
Hey, Gemini. New topic. https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/PrePubAIchkRHP_PropertiesSecures830MillionFinancingToBuyAnotherManufacturedHomeCommunityPortfolioSupplyConstrainedMarketsWithSustainedPopulationGrowthHighBarriersOfEntryFEA.pdf I want you to do a full facts-evidence-analysis (FEA) check on both the human intelligence (HI) aspects of that developing report but also for the artificial intelligence (AI) aspects of that report which are shown and/or are transparently linked from that developing FEA model article. Correct, confirm, clarify, or amplify as warranted by whatever online checks you deem useful for this task. Use plain text hyperlinks to support your findings.
1. Fact-Check: RHP Properties’ $830M Financing
The core event reported in the document is a massive capital move within the manufactured housing sector.
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Confirmation: On April 20, 2026, Newmark Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: NMRK) officially announced it arranged $830 million in portfolio financing for a joint venture between RHP Properties and an institutional capital partner.
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The Debt Provider: The financing was provided by Wells Fargo.
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The Portfolio: The deal covers 36 manufactured housing communities comprising 8,340 pads.
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Performance Metrics: The assets are cited as having >99% physical occupancy and >95% residential ownership, situated in high-growth, supply-constrained markets.
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Sources: PR Newswire | Multi-Housing News
2. HI Aspect: Investigative Analysis
The Human Intelligence (HI) portion of the MHProNews report focuses on the implications of this financing within the broader context of the manufactured housing industry.
The “Supply-Constrained” Narrative
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The Claim: The financing announcement highlights “supply-constrained markets” and “high barriers to entry.”
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FEA Evidence: RHP CEO Ross Partrich recently noted (April 14, 2026) that their new “Cottage Grove” community in Miami addresses a gap where supply is shrinking due to redevelopment.
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HI Analysis: MHProNews argues that these “barriers to entry” are often artificial—caused by a failure to enforce the Manufactured Housing Improvement Act of 2000 (MHIA), specifically its “enhanced preemption” clause. The report suggests that while lenders like Wells Fargo see “supply constraints” as a guarantee of rent growth (and thus a safe loan), this same constraint harms consumers by limiting affordable options.
Institutional Consolidation
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Evidence: Institutional and private equity entities reached roughly 50% of transaction volume in the sector by 2025.
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HI Analysis: The report posits that the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) facilitates this consolidation. By not aggressively litigating for the enforcement of the MHIA or the Duty to Serve (DTS) for chattel (home-only) lending, MHI’s largest members (like RHP or Clayton Homes) benefit from a market where competition is suppressed by zoning and financing hurdles.
3. AI Aspect: The FEA Model Check
The MHProNews FEA model utilizes AI as a “digital auditor” to verify the logic and data provided by HI.
Transparency and Fidelity
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Verification: Recent FEA checks (April 16-17, 2026) involving Grok and Gemini show a high degree of fidelity to the source data. The AI platforms were used to “unpack” whether MHI’s leadership failures were “accidents” or “strategic choices.”
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AI Findings: AI platforms have consistently noted that MHI appears to prioritize “optics” over the enforcement of federal laws that would expand the industry.
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Critical Clarification: While the AI confirms the pattern of data provided by the human reporters, it is important to note that the AI’s “conclusions” are often based on the specific evidentiary datasets provided to them during the FEA process (e.g., specific white papers or legal filings).
4. Synthesis and Clarification
The developing report effectively bridges a specific news event—an $830 million loan—to a systemic industry critique.
| Component | Status | Finding |
| The Deal | Confirmed | $830M for RHP/Wells Fargo/Newmark is factually accurate. |
| Market Data | Confirmed | 99% occupancy rates are verified by Newmark’s investor disclosures. |
| HI Analysis | Amplify | The connection between “high barriers to entry” and “regulatory failure” is a documented legal theory (MHIA 2000 preemption) often ignored by mainstream financial news. |
| AI Integration | Clarify | The AI (Gemini/Grok) acts as a logical validator, confirming that if the provided evidence of MHI’s “inaction” is true, then the “strategic choice” conclusion is a logically sound inference. |
Summary of the FEA Check
The report is grounded in verifiable financial events. The “Analysis” portion of the FEA is supported by the “Evidence” of high occupancy and limited supply, which the “Facts” of the $830M deal prove is highly attractive to institutional lenders. The AI aspects of the report serve as a transparency layer, ensuring the HI interpretations remain tethered to the provided evidentiary trail.
— MHProNews notes that the full response, including sources not shown above, are linked here. Gemini confirmed the accuracy of this thread via the screen capture shown below. Note that MHProNews politely tried to nudge Gemini into doing a shorter confirmation, more like what Copilot does (see above). Gemini continued to follow its own method of confirming, which is one more example that MHProNews doesn’t have ‘yes men’ in these AI systems. —
5. Pivoting back to what Copilot said above that was cited in the preface makes a useful summary.
You picked a revealing case study—RHP is like an MRI scan of what’s wrong in MHVille’s power structure.
…
That places RHP squarely in the PE-driven, financialized landlord model.
…
In short: RHP and its peers are thriving in a system where consolidation is rewarded, organic growth is throttled, and MHI’s ethics code functions more like window dressing than a guardrail.
6. Prior reports that included RHP Properties.
Best Tags for SEO (Traditional Search)
These tags focus on high-volume and high-relevance terms for the manufactured housing and finance sectors.
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RHP Properties $830 Million Financing
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Newmark Manufactured Housing Debt
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Wells Fargo Manufactured Home Loans 2026
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Manufactured Housing Institute MHI Controversy
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MHIA 2000 Enhanced Preemption
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Manufactured Housing Supply Constraints
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Consolidation of Manufactured Home Communities
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Ross Partrich RHP Properties
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Institutional Investors Manufactured Housing
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Affordable Housing Regulatory Barriers
7. There is always more to know.
Thanks be to God and to all involved for making and keeping us #1 with stead overall growth despite far better funded opposing voices. Thanks as well to our roughly million plus average visitors monthly. Transparently provided Facts-Evidence-Analysis (FEA) apparently matters. We “Provide, You Decide.” © ##
Post-postscript. Our thanks to free email subscribers and all readers like you, as well as our tipsters/sources, sponsors and God for making and keeping us the runaway number one source for authentic “News through the lens of manufactured homes and factory-built housing” © where “We Provide, You Decide.” © ### Third-party images or content are provided under fair use guidelines for media.)
By L.A. “Tony” Kovach – for MHProNews.com.
Tony earned a journalism scholarship and earned numerous awards in history during his academic years plus awards after entering manufactured housing. Kovach began working in manufactured housing in the early 1980s and has worked in multiple aspects of the industry, so he is considered to be an industry expert by humans and intelligence (AI) systems. Kovach has been described by numerous artificial intelligence systems as the most prolific writer in manufactured housing in the 21st century.
This MHProNews article reflects the LLC’s and/or the writer’s position and may or may not reflect the views of sponsors or supporters.
Connect on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/latonykovach