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California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Archive for November, 2009

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/13/09

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

The FHA told Congress that its cash reserve fund has decreased to $3.6 billion. According to Move.com, the number of consumers displaying interest in purchasing a home has doubled since March of 2009.  Realtors and mortgage brokers are expressing dissatisfaction with HVCC because of its poor use of appraisal management companies.

In The News:

DSNews - “FHA Audit Shows Reserve Funds Below Mandated Limit” (11-13-09)

“The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) told Congress and reporters Thursday that its cash reserve fund has deteriorated to $3.6 billion – the lowest it’s been in the agency’s 75-year history.”

DSNews - “Low-Cost Foreclosures Attract Investors” (11-13-09)

“According to a homeownership survey released Wednesday by Move.com, the number of consumers interested in investing in real estate has doubled since March 2009. The number of buyers planning to purchase a home as an investment property increased to 12.1 percent, compared to 5.6 percent just seven months ago.”

DSNews - “Trade Group Challenges Critics’ Claims of ‘Out-of-Town’ Appraisers” (11-13-09)

“Realtors and mortgage brokers have voiced the most opposition to the HVCC rule, with one of their primary criticisms being that appraisal management companies (AMCs) assign properties to appraisers regardless of their geographic competency, resulting in low-quality and low-ball appraisals that impede home sales.”

Housing Wire“FDIC Asks Banks for $45Bn of Prepaid Assessments” (11-13-09)

“FDIC expects to collect around $45bn in prepaid assessments, which will strengthen the cash position of the Deposit Insurance Fund at a time when weekly bank failures take substantial hits on the fund. Institutions must prepay their estimated risk-based assessments for Q409 through Q412 along with the assessment for Q309, FDIC said in a financial institution letter. This prepayment, due December 30, will not immediately affect bank earnings, FDIC said, as the industry’s liquid reserve balances totaled more than $1.3trn as of June 30.”

Bloomberg - “Central Plains Recovery to Outpace Rest of U.S., Moody’s Says” (11-13-09)

“Central Plains states and cities are showing signs of recovery sooner than the rest of the U.S., thanks to strong commodities prices, lower unemployment and more stable housing, Moody’s Investors Service said.”

Inman - “MLSCloud.com looms larger” (11-13-09)

“An online network of public-facing multiple listing Web sites, launched six months ago, now features dozens of participating associations and MLSs that together represent about 612,000 Realtors, according to an announcement Thursday, which is more than half of the U.S. Realtor population. MLSCloud.com serves as a consumer portal to its participants’ individual public-facing property-search Web sites, and features a clickable U.S. map to bring consumers to the most relevant sites.”

Orange County Register“Home prices, sales up in 20 O.C. ZIPs” (11-13-09)

“37 of O.C.’s 83 ZIP codes had gains in their respective median selling price. Overall, prices were +4.8% vs. a year ago. 6 of 83 O.C. ZIPs had median sales prices above $1 million in the period vs. 11 million-dollar ZIPs when the county median price peaked in June 2007.”

Orange County Register“Best homebuying October in 4 years?” (11-13-09)

“Shoppers bought 3,082 residences — that is +9.2% vs. year-ago buying activity. (From 1997-2006, monthly sales averaged 4,304 per month.) Assuming the month finished at the last reported sale space, this would be the most active October for local homebuying since 2005!”

Realty Times“Challenges for Sales Professionals” (11-13-09)

“The proper screening of calls by an effective gatekeeper can save hours weekly. Too often, issues, problems, and challenges that could be handled by another penetrate the walls and enter our world. These problems could be minor or major in nature, but granting unfiltered access creates large amounts of lost time for many sales people. There should be a limit in terms of time and people who have access to you. Successful people have a short list of people who have unfiltered access to them. They do not deviate from this short list of people. These people on the short list can interrupt the schedule any hour of the day based on their importance. ”

Realty Times“Sixteen Ways to Keep Your Seller Happy” (11-13-09)

“1) Notify him as soon as the listing hits the MLS and send him a copy of the listing. 2) Send him links to all your online advertising (Realtor.com, Craigslist, Postlets, your virtual tour, your own blog, etc.). 3) Send him a copy of the home brochure before it goes to print and ask for feedback.”

Looking Back:

Last year, CitiGroup eliminated 50,000 jobs. Goldman Sachs was accused of attempting to make a profit at the expense of their clients by naked short selling. Housing starts were expected to hit a half-century low.

148-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2009 11-14-09

Friday, November 13th, 2009

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I Survived Real Estate 2009

Fundraiser for the Orange County Affiliate for Susan G. Komen for the Cure

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This week The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show and Podcast presents Part 9 of I Survived Real Estate 2009. This is the final installation of the audio for this event.

This week The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show presents Bruce Norris’ segment of I Survived Real Estate 2009.
Bruce begins by discussing the declining housing inventory. A declining inventory typically means that the market is doing well, because you have multiple offers being placed on homes. We currently have the highest affordability rates in the history of California. The volume of sales has gone up to normal, but we have high unemployment.
Delinquencies have exploded. From July 08 to July 09, we have gone from 5.3 percent to 9.7 percent delinquencies. The inventory of REOs has gone down, because banks have not taken back as many as they should. Some people have not made payments in 14 months. Trustee sales have also declined during this same time period. We had 28,795 trustee sales in July 08 and then we progressed to the 9.7 percent delinquency rate. We are currently 306,000 trustee sales short of where we should be. That averages 25,000 homes going out per month in the future. We have not peaked at delinquencies, and according to reports, we will soon be at 13 percent delinquencies. At 13 percent, we will be releasing 70,000 homes per month. Bruce does not believe that we can have a positive market if these statistics are true.
FHA is going to have a large number of defaults next year. They once had a 203K loan for investors in which investors could buy a property and include the repair bill in the loan. A lot of people would use this kind of loan and they would buy up to 7 homes and use them as rentals. Bruce thinks this would help clear up a lot of inventory.
Bruce thinks that Fannie and Freddie programs should be expanded so that qualified buyers can get unlimited loans. We are currently stuck at 10, and many investors are capped out because they exchanged their homes out of California and moved their investments to another state. Those investors cannot sell their property and come back to California.
We are currently giving away homes for 8,000 dollars. That money is coming from tax payers. Bruce thinks that we should just let people take these homes for no down payment. We will have people walk away, but the next buyer will be able to easily take it. Under this kind of proposed program, it would not matter if the buyer qualified or not because this loan can be continually passed down. These houses could go to investors with a 5 percent interest rate. This program would not have foreclosure, because the problems would be solved by the next buyer. The people who have recently foreclosed on their homes will not be able to qualify for homes, which may keep them out of the market for the next few years. We could just reintroduce these people as buyers if they did not have to qualify. This is not a program that we have never seen before. We are trying to solve this problem by selling the next house to the owner occupant who was shoved into home buying by the nonsense financing of 05 and 06.
We are already doing zero down deals. When Bruce sells a property, he usually pays part of the closing cost. The person getting 3.5 percent down on a 100 grand purchase is getting an 8,000 dollar check; that is better than nothing down. If you just had nothing down and these people qualified, we would get rid of a lot of homes.
Bruce and many other investors believe that we need to get rid of the FHA 90 day flip rule. When an investor fixes a property, which may only take 3 to 4 weeks, and they sell it within 90 days, the investor is believed to be guilty of fraud. The lender has to pay the cost for this, because the investor will subtract the amount that he or she must pay the lender for the property. We need to start looking at investors as people who can help this problem. At some point, we must either choose to not foreclose, or we must pay catch-up in a painful market.
Bruce asks Christopher Thornberg if he expects the dollar to lose value, and how the value of the dollar impacts interest rates. As the trade deficit gets wider, the dollar goes up. Now the trade deficit is going to close, so the dollar will get weaker. There is very little doubt that the dollar will weaken. Interest rates are undoubtedly going to go up. The federal reserve has increased the money substantially and that money is going to cause inflation. The Federal Reserve is either going to let inflation happen, which will raise interest rates, or they will fight inflation by selling the long range securities they bought, which will also raise interest rates. One way or another, interest rates are going to go up. In the shorter run, it will be faster to allow inflation to occur, because that would bail out the asset markets. In 1982, the mortgage rate was 18 percent, because of the fear of inflation.
Bruce thinks that we can absorb a higher interest rate and still have a good real estate market, because the combination with the cheap price could absorb a double digit interest rate, just like in the 70s. Thornberg says that a 1 percent increase in the mortgage rate means a 10 percent decline in prices. Bruce disagrees with this, because between 1974 and 1980 we had a tripling in real estate prices and interest rates doubled. Thornberg tells Bruce that he is talking about the real mortgage rate, which is the mortgage rate minus the rate of inflation.
Bruce asks Thornberg what the statement “Unemployment is a lagging indicator” means. Thornberg says that means that “the labor markets are the last to go into the toilet and the last to dry off.” Bruce asks if that means “when labor improves, every other category of real estate should have already started to improve”. Thornberg says that residential real estate leads commercial. Now, we keep waiting to hear about the collapse in the commercial market, but we are not seeing this at all. Thornberg says that this sort of lead and lag mentality can be exaggerated.
This is why Bruce brought this up, because in the last cycle, employment improved in California from 1994-96 but we did not have a price increase until 1997. If we do not have price increases, builders will not build anything. Bruce asks if you can have an improved labor market if builders do not have any work to do. Thornberg says that these two factors do kind of work together. The prices started to go up after the labor increases from 1994-96. Thornberg reminds Bruce that in the early 90’s we lost zero space, defense, and migration. In that market, the real estate was hampered by the excess supply. Thornberg takes issue with the idea that we should subsidize the building of new homes, because he believes that we have too many homes. Thornberg believes it would be a bad idea to subsidize the construction of homes when there is already too much inventory. Bruce says that some builders have been fixing existing inventory, and Thornberg believes that is all the builders can really do.
Robert Toll made 700 million dollars between 2000 and 2007 because he was selling too many houses at too high of a price, and now he wants tax payers to bail him out.
Bruce Norris asks Rick Sharga if people foreclosed for different reasons in 2008 versus 2009. Rick says that the reasons are not as different as the press would lead you to believe. The media has jumped ahead to the next wave of foreclosures. We are looking at a 3 wave foreclosure tsunami. The first wave began in the first quarter of 2006, because of the subprime meltdown and ARMs. The MBA numbers suggest that 33 percent of the new foreclosures are unemployment. That means that 2/3 of the foreclosure activity is not employment related.
What we are really seeing is increasing levels of foreclosure activity from the first wave, which is being made worse from the second wave. The second wave is about to pick up steam. If unemployment peaks around the first quarter of next year, we will see the foreclosures related to that peak around the 3rd or 4th quarter next year. That will be just in time for them to be augmented by the next wave. This next wave will be caused by the option ARMs. Many loans are going to reset, and people will owe more on their reset loans than their original loans.
Strategic defaults are going to be a problem. In the past American culture, people honored their contracts and chose to make their payments. Now people are realizing that the house they bought is worth half of what they owe, and they are wondering if it is in their family’s best interest to keep paying. If someone is only 10 percent upside-down on a loan then they will probably stick with the loan, but if they are upside-down by 50 percent then they will probably default.
Thornberg asks people if their credit or their equity will hear quicker. Thornberg says that most of these people will have their credit heal faster. Sharga responded to Thornberg with a story about a Coldwell Bankerk agent that was fired. This agent counseled her customers to default on their current loan after qualifying and buying a second house. Bruce feels that there is still a lot of character being shown in California; a state with a 9.7 default rate that has had a 50 percent value drop.

An economist from the building industry claimed that California needed to build 230,000 homes, but John was only able to build 70 homes this year. Economists who say things like this ruin the credibility of the people in their industry. Bruce feels that people owe more to their industry than they give.

Bruce thinks that now is a good time to buy property even though he thinks property values will go down. There is a combination of good interest rates and prices that make paying for properties an easy thing to do. Bruce thinks that the price declines that are coming will mostly affect the “as is” inventory, because loans will not be available to homes without kitchens.

Right now, investors are not being rewarded for the $35,000 they spend on repairs. The appraisal business is using a broken model which does not allow for proper adjustments on repaired properties. Every sale we have is an anomaly. The neighborhoods that Bruce is buying and selling in contain homes that are worth $60,000, but buyers want Bruce’s property at $130,000 because it has a kitchen and financing. If investors are going to make these improvements in the real estate market then they need to be rewarded for their efforts. The appraisal model being used right now is telling buyers that their decision to buy a repaired property is unwise. This hurts the market because fixed homes make neighborhoods more valuable. If these homes are left unfixed then more foreclosures will occur.

Joseph agrees with Bruce’s opinion that the appraisal process is broken. There is no magic number in appraising that makes it impossible to make a line item adjustment impossible. If an appraiser is going to make an adjustment worth more than 10 percent of the sales price, then they need to give an explanation for that. When there are multiple offers on a property, then an appraiser should consider those offers in their property evaluation. Unfortunately, the underwriters are not allowing these adjustments to take place.

For the final segment of the show, Bruce asks each speaker what they feel the biggest problem in real estate is.

Joseph believes that real estate’s biggest problem is appraisal management companies that hire incompetent people who are not qualified and do not have enough experience. Those people make bad decisions and they ruin deals.

Patt says that it is hard to tell what the biggest problem is. The biggest problem for Patt and many other realtors is getting inventory out of the market place. There are too many short sales that no one knows how to sell. When someone performs a search on the MLS and finds that 75 percent of the properties are being labeled as “subject to short sale”, you have a problem. 90 percent of the time, those sales will not close. The foreclosed homes are easy to get rid of, because a bank owns them, and they have answers for someone who wants the property.

Tommy thinks that the biggest problem is the tremendous volume of deteriorating, empty homes. These homes need to be put into the hands of investors or home owners as quickly as possible, and Tommy thinks that auctions do that very well.

 John Young agrees that we need to get through this inventory as quickly as possible. Previously in the show, Bruce proposed multiple solutions to the inventory problem such as zero down deals. He believes that this problem will not be solved by just one helping factor.

David Kittle believes that the biggest problem in real estate is the people who are making laws who do not understand the business, and have never run a business.

Rick Sharga believes that the entire real estate “ecosystem” is imbalanced. Valuations are imbalanced because we have less professional and competent appraisers who are under valuing properties. There is a freeze in the capital market, because lenders are afraid to risk lending money on homes that may not have proper valuations. Hundreds of thousands of homeowners are under water on their loans, and there is too much inventory for the market to buy. He does not believe that there is one central problem that has caused this real estate mess.

Real estate is a boom-bust phenomenon. When times are good, it is very good, but when times are bad, it is very bad. 2001 to 2006 was a phenomenal time for people in the industry, but because of that boom, they are suffering from a terrible crash. From a long run perspective, we are dealing with a mess of rules, regulations, subsidies and taxes. Local governments are constantly pushing all sorts of taxes on builders. Those taxes drive up prices on homes, and as a result, a constituency cannot afford those homes. Then they try to subsidize the price of a home by having an FHA mortgage. You do not want a loan on a house to be a normal loan, so you make it a no recourse loan, but then third party appraisers are more important than what someone is trying to buy a home for. We keep creating problems by trying to fix problems. Christopher believes that we need a massive deregulation of the market. We need to clear these regulations so the market can work efficiently.

Bruce hopes that the investor will have the chance to influence congress. Right now, investors are a very important solution to this problem, but they are currently having trouble. If investors are able to get financing, they will be able to fix homes and prevent them from returning as “for sale” inventory. If investors cannot get financing, then they must either leave these homes alone or they must pay for these homes with cash. Unfortunately, investors have a limited amount of cash to spend.

The video of the live event is not being aired online HERE.

You can visit isurvived2009.com to learn more about our sponsors and speakers.

Here are the speakers involved in the event:

Bruce Norris of the Norris Group

Bruce Norris

President

The Norris Group

David Kittle, President of the Mortgage Bankers Association

David Kittle

2009 Chairman

Mortgage Bankers Association

2007 President, National Association of Realtors

Pat Vredevoogd Combs

2007 President

National Association of Realtors

Tommy Williams, 2008 President National Auctioneers Association

Tommy Williams

2008 President

National Auctioneers Association

Christopher Thornberg, Principal and Beacon Economics

Christopher Thornberg

Principal

Beacon Economics

 

John Young

Vice President

California Builders Industry Association

Joseph Magdziarz, VP Appraisal Institute

Joseph Magdziarz

Vice President

Appraisal Institute

Rick Sharga, Senior VP RealtyTrac

Rick Sharga

Senior Vice President

RealtyTrac

To Benefit:

I Survived Real Estate 2009 Sponsors

A huge thank you to all of our sponsors who made this event possible.

Platinum Sponsors

San Diego Creative Investors Association
investClub for Women
Investors Workshop
Frye / Wiles - Web Design in Southern California

Entrust California
MVT Productions - Audio and Video
JK Short Sale
The Business Press
White House Catering
 
National Fix and Flip Network
 

Gold Sponsors

1 m 1 Properties
Appraisal Institute of Southern California
Dalmae
Thank you Elite Auctions for being Gold Sponsors!
Inland Empire Investors Forum
Las Brisas Escrow
Los Angeles Meeting and Event Center
Mortgage Equity Group
Northern California Real Estate Investors Association
Northern San Diego Real Estate Investors Association
Real Wealth Network
RE 411 Magazine
San Jose Real Estate Investors Association
Daniel Dear
Women\'s Council of Realtors - Inland Valley Chapter
Westin South Coast Plaza
Saddleback Valley Communities Petere Apostolos Awesome Limousines
RealtyTrac National Association of Real Estate Investors Far Below Market

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/12/09

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to RealtyTrac, foreclosure filings were found in approximately one out of every 385 U.S. homes. The MBA reports that mortgage loan application volume increased by 3.2 percent, on a seasonally adjusted basis, from one week earlier. The jumbo loan limit that was set to expire at the end of this year has been extended through 2010.

In The News:

DSNews - “Foreclosure Activity Slows for Third Straight Month: RealtyTrac” (11-12-09)

“According to the company’s October 2009 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report, foreclosure filings – including default notices, scheduled foreclosure auctions, and bank repossessions – were reported on 332,292 U.S. properties during the month. That number means one in every 385 homes received a filing.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Refinance Applications Increase, Purchase Applications at Nine Year Low in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (11-12-09)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending November 6, 2009. The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 3.2 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 2.8 percent compared with the previous week.”

Housing Wire“Foreclosures Continue to Drop Month on Month: RealtyTrac” (11-12-09)

“Foreclosure filings decreased 3% in October but remains 19% higher from a year ago, according to a report from RealtyTrac. RealtyTrac is an online market place of foreclosure properties, holding more than 1.5m listings. During October, 332,292 properties received a foreclosure filing, or one in every 385 homes. Foreclosures, however, decreased for the third consecutive month.”

Housing Wire“FDIC Extends ‘Safe Harbor’ for Transfer of New, Existing ABS Assets” (11-12-09)

“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) on Thursday approved an interim rule providing a “safe harbor” for the transfer of assets related to certain types of asset-backed securities (ABS) from insured depositary institutions. The transitional safe harbor applies to all securitizations issued before March 31, 2010, shielding the assets from seizure by the FDIC in instances where the insured depositary institutions fail.”

Housing Wire“Temporary Jumbo Loan Limits Extended Through 2010″ (11-12-09)

“The temporary increased maximum loan limits originally set to expire at the end of the year will remain in place through 2010, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).”

Housing Wire“Despite Low Rates, Purchase Applications Reach 2000 Low” (11-12-09)

“Mortgage rates hovered slightly above record lows, but as the debate on the extension of the first-time homebuyer tax credit raged, borrowers stayed away from the application process last week. The average rate of the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) was 4.91% with a 0.7 point for the week ending Nov. 12, according to Freddie Mac’s (FRE: 1.16 -1.69%) weekly survey of mortgage rates.”

Bloomberg - FHA Reserve Ratio Falls to 0.53%, Lowest in History” (11-12-09)

The net capital ratio, or reserves after accounting for projected losses, fell to 0.53 percent in the year ended in September, from 3 percent in fiscal 2008 and 6.4 percent in 2007, according to an sent today. While FHA said the fund ‘has good prospects,’ it is changing its risk models to account for the possibility of the ratio falling below zero.”

Orange County Register – “O.C. housing gets ‘riskiest’ ranking” (11-12-09)

“Risk? 99.9% chance of home prices falling in next two years. That score tied Orange County with eight other markets for the the crown of ‘nation’s riskiest!’”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/11/09

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

The CBIA report shows that September sales for new-home communities have decreased by 11 percent from 2008. Foreclosure activity increased by 5 percent from August to September. According to Trulia, nearly 26 percent of homes were decreased in price from the previous month, and the total value of those price reductions is $28.1 billion.

In The News:

CBIA - “California New-Home Sales Down Again in September, CBIA Announces” (11-11-09)

“The monthly CBIA/Hanley Wood Market Intelligence (HWMI) New-Home Sales and Pricing Report showed that sales in new-home communities of 10 units or more were 11 percent below September 2008, an improvement from the 13 percent year-over-year decline last month and the much higher declines in previous months. During September, 2,310 new homes and condominiums were sold in the subdivisions tracked by Costa Mesa-based HWMI, compared to 2,580 in September 2008. Sales of single-family homes were down by 17 percent, while sales of townhomes and ‘plexes’ – duplexes, triplexes, etc. – were down 11 percent and sales of condominiums were 12 percent higher than a year ago.”

Orange County Register“Foreclosure notices hit record 8,800″ (11-11-09)

“September’s total was up 5% from August and 90% from a year ago. The chart (click for larger image) shows outstanding auction notices going back to January 2007. Auction notices, also known as notices of trustee’s sale, are a warning that a property will be offered for sale, usually at a local courthouse.”

Los Angeles Times“Existing-home prices slide in most metropolitan areas” (11-11-09)

“The U.S. median sale price for an existing single-family home was $177,900, an 11.2% drop from the same period a year earlier, according to the National Assn. of Realtors in Washington. Distressed sales continued to weigh on prices despite a popular tax credit fueling the volume of deals. Still, the median was higher than in the second quarter of this year, when it was $174,200.”

Housing Wire“CMBS TALF May Bring New Issue in November: Sources” (11-11-09)

“Industry reports indicate a number of firms are gearing up to sell the first round of debt under the Fed’s CMBS TALF program for new issuance. The firms include Developers Diversified Realty Corp. (DDR: 9.02 +5.99%), which in October said it obtained new first mortgage financing of $400m from Goldman Sachs Commercial Mortgage Capital, an affiliate of Goldman Sachs & Co.”

Housing Wire“Loss Severity May Reverse Recent Stability: Amherst” (11-11-09)

“the firm sees ‘temporary’ stabilization of house prices, as 7.5m units or 13.5% of US homeowners are in non-payment status. Amherst previously explained its reasoning for calculating 7m of those are ‘destined’ to liquidate, which hangs a shadow of distressed inventory over the positive signs seen in the US housing market.”

Housing Wire“Refinancing Interest Boosts MBA’s Weekly Mortgage Apps” (11-11-09)

“MBA’s refinance index increased 14.5% from the previous week. The association’s purchase index decreased 1.8%. Refinance applications took a 66.1% share of all applications, up from 62.3% in the previous week. The adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) share of all applications decreased to 6.1% from 6.9%.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Home Sellers Slash Prices by $28.1 Billion, Trulia Says” (11-11-09)

“The average discount was 10 percent, little changed from a month earlier, the San Francisco-based real estate data provider said today. Almost 26 percent of homes for sale were reduced at least once. Luxury properties — those costing $2 million or more — accounted for 25 percent of the dollar value of reductions and less than 2 percent of listings, Trulia said. ”

Inman - “Realogy in the black for Q3″ (11-11-09)

“Real estate franchisor and brokerage Realogy Corp. said it turned a $58 million profit in the third quarter, thanks in part to a debt restructuring that allowed the company to claim a $75 million gain and stay in compliance with agreements governing nearly $3 billion in loans.”

Inman - “GMAC Real Estate unites with Real Living” (11-11-09)

“A major real estate brokerage company merger gives GMAC Real Estate a new name while expanding the Real Living real estate brand and growing the U.S. operations of Canada-based Brookfield Residential Property Services. The merger of GMAC Real Estate and Real Living, which will operate under the Real Living name and under parent company Brookfield, represents the second sizable U.S. expansion of Brookfield operations in the past two years.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/10/09

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to the NAR, existing home sales increased by 11.4 percent in the second quarter. The Treasury Department reports that 20 percent of borrowers have signed up for a loan modification. A poll from Reuters shows that economists expect the unemployment rate to reach 10.5 percent next year.

In The News:

NAR - “Existing-Home Sales Surge in Many States in Third Quarter, Metro Prices Moderating” (11-10-09)

“Total state existing-home sales, including single-family and condo, increased 11.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 5.30 million units in the third quarter from 4.76 million units in the second quarter, and are now 5.9 percent above the 5.01 million-unit pace in the third quarter of 2008″

Los Angeles Times“Fewer banks tightened lending standards last quarter, Federal Reserve says” (11-10-09)

“Demand for most types of loans weakened at a smaller number of banks than in the second quarter, the Fed also said Monday in its quarterly Senior Loan Officer survey. For prime residential mortgages, a larger number of banks reported stronger demand, the central bank said.”

San Francisco Chronicle“Housing plan reaches 1 in 5 borrowers” (11-10-09)

“As of the end of October, more than 650,000 borrowers, or 20 percent of those eligible, had signed up for trials lasting up to five months, the Treasury Department said Tuesday. The modifications reduce monthly payments to more affordable levels.”

Housing Wire“Sen. Dodd Reveals New Financial Reform Proposal” (11-10-09)

“The bill, drafted by committee chairman Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), would create the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which provides consumers information when they shop for mortgages, credit cards and other products. The agency would prohibit hidden fees, abusive terms and deceptive practices.”

Housing Wire“House Prices Down Nearly 1% from August: Altos Research” (11-10-09)

“A market composite of housing prices compiled by Altos Research was down 0.4% from September to October and down 0.9% from August. The composite of 10 major housing markets put home sales prices at $501,377 in October, down from $503,401 in September and $506,180 in August.”

Housing Wire“Fitch Sees Prepayment Rate Near 7% for ‘04 Subprime RMBS” (11-10-09)

“Fitch’s ‘04 vintage subprime RMBS price index dropped 16.7% in the most recent month of data, while the overall subprime RMBS price index showed only a ‘marginal’ monthly fall. The ‘04 vintage loss erased the small monthly gains among ‘05, ‘06 and ‘07 vintages.”

Bloomberg - “Toll Brothers Revenue Declines Less Than Estimated” (11-10-09)

“Toll Brothers Inc., the nation’s largest luxury homebuilder, announced fourth quarter revenue that beat analysts’ estimates. The shares gained. Revenue dropped to $486.6 million in the quarter ending Oct. 31 from $698.9 million a year earlier, the Horsham, Pennsylvania-based builder said in a statement. Twelve analysts in a Bloomberg survey predicted an average of $373.5 million in revenue.”

Bloomberg - “PennyMac’s Kurland Plans New Effort in Mortgages” (11-10-09)

“PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust, the buyer of troubled housing debt, expects to start purchasing newly issued loans and packaging them into bonds by the middle of next year, Chief Executive Officer Stanford Kurland said. The new initiative would be run by Private National Mortgage Acceptance Co., the manager of Calabasas, California- based PennyMac, Kurland said in an interview. Private National Mortgage, which he also heads, is working to enter the business as well.”

CNBC - “Jobless Rate to Hit 10.5%, Keeping Fed in Box: Poll” (11-10-09)

“Unemployment in the United States will shoot to 10.5 percent by the middle of next year, constraining the Federal Reserve’s ability to raise interest rates, according to economists surveyed by Reuters.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/9/09

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

A survey of 1,500 registered voters shows that most citizens are still pessimistic towards California’s financial future. Default notices doubled in Los Altos, Greenbrae and Alamo from 2008 to 2009. Zillow reports that the number of under water mortgages decreased in the U.S. decreased by 2 percent in the third quarter.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“California’s best years have passed, voters say” (11-8-09)

“In a survey of 1,500 registered voters, 80% say the state is on the wrong track. Respondents express little confidence in state politicians and candidates, even as support for Obama remains high.”

San Francisco Chronicle“Default notices rising in upper echelon ZIPs” (11-8-09)

“In upscale communities such as Los Altos, Greenbrae and Alamo, where median prices top $1 million, about twice as many households received default notices from January to September as in the same period in 2008, according to recorders’ office data compiled by MDA DataQuick, a San Diego real estate research firm.”

Yahoo - “Why the new $6,500 homebuyer tax credit is wrong” (11-9-09)

“Congress and President Obama keep throwing money at the housing industry, hoping its revival will also revive the economy. The industry itself pines for the halcyon days of McMansions on every block and home prices that never fall. The latest example of this government largess: the extension and expansion of a tax credit for home buyers – $8,000 for first-time buyers and $6,500 for those living in homes at least five years – in a bill signed by the president Friday.”

DSNews - “Five More Community Banks Shuttered” (11-9-09)

“On Friday evening, the FDIC stepped in to help shut down San Francisco-based United Commercial Bank (UCB), the largest institution to be closed last week, whose failure is expected to cost the agency and estimated $1.4 billion. Last year, the Treasury gave $299 million in Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) funds to UCB’s holding company.”

Housing Wire“Amherst Sees $476Bn of Non-Agency MBS Non-Performing” (11-9-09)

“The count of non-performing and re-performing loans within non-agency or private-label mortgage-backed securities (MBS) slipped 0.48% to 2.36m in October, from 2.37m in September, according to Amherst Securities Group. The firm now sees $965.4bn of private-label MBS in performing status the end of October, $476.5bn of MBS non-performing and $115.6bn of MBS re-performing.”

Housing Wire“More Lenders Raise Prime Mortgage Standards: Fed” (11-9-09)

“The portion of lenders that increased standards for prime residential mortgages and revolving home equity lines of credit increased slightly this quarter, according to the Federal Reserve’s October 2009 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices.”

Housing Wire“BofA Lends $96bn of First Mortgages in Q309″ (11-9-09)

“During the quarter, BofA originated $96bn in first mortgages for nearly 450,000 borrowers purchase homes or refinance mortgages. During the first nine months of the year, the bank said its originated $292bn in first mortgages for more than 1.3m borrowers.”

Housing Wire“Treasury Denies Fannie’s Request to Transfer Housing Tax Credits” (11-9-09)

“After posting a $19.8bn quarterly net loss, Fannie asked its conservator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), to submit the request on its behalf. FHFA also requested on Fannie’s behalf another $15bn draw on the Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement with the Treasury, to cover Fannie’s net worth deficit as of September 30.”

Bloomberg - “Fewer U.S. Homeowners Owe More Than Properties Are Worth” (11-9-09)

“The number of U.S. homeowners who owe more than their properties are worth fell in the third quarter as values stabilized and some homes were lost to foreclosure, Zillow.com said. About 21 percent of owners of mortgaged homes were underwater, down from 23 percent in the second quarter, the Seattle-based real estate data provider said today in a report. ”

Inman - “RPR madness! NAR unleashes national property database with Cyberhomes” (11-9-09)

“The NAR has taken over certain technology assets of Cyberhomes from LPS (formerly known as FNRES) in order to bring its RPR (Realtors Property Resource) project, as well as its consumer-facing play, HouseLogic, to market. To do this, they have created Realtors Property Resource LLC — a wholly owned subsidiary of the NAR.”

147-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2009 11-7-09

Friday, November 6th, 2009

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I Survived Real Estate 2009

Fundraiser for the Orange County Affiliate for Susan G. Komen for the Cure

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This week The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show and Podcast presents Part 8 of I Survived Real Estate 2009.

This week The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show presents Bruce Norris’ segment of I Survived Real Estate 2009.
Bruce begins by discussing the declining housing inventory. A declining inventory typically means that the market is doing well, because you have multiple offers being placed on homes. We currently have the highest affordability rates in the history of California. The volume of sales has gone up to normal, but we have high unemployment.
Delinquencies have exploded. From July 08 to July 09, we have gone from 5.3 percent to 9.7 percent delinquencies. The inventory of REOs has gone down, because banks have not taken back as many as they should. Some people have not made payments in 14 months. Trustee sales have also declined during this same time period. We had 28,795 trustee sales in July 08 and then we progressed to the 9.7 percent delinquency rate. We are currently 306,000 trustee sales short of where we should be. That averages 25,000 homes going out per month in the future. We have not peaked at delinquencies, and according to reports, we will soon be at 13 percent delinquencies. At 13 percent, we will be releasing 70,000 homes per month. Bruce does not believe that we can have a positive market if these statistics are true.
FHA is going to have a large number of defaults next year. They once had a 203K loan for investors in which investors could buy a property and include the repair bill in the loan. A lot of people would use this kind of loan and they would buy up to 7 homes and use them as rentals. Bruce thinks this would help clear up a lot of inventory.
Bruce thinks that Fannie and Freddie programs should be expanded so that qualified buyers can get unlimited loans. We are currently stuck at 10, and many investors are capped out because they exchanged their homes out of California and moved their investments to another state. Those investors cannot sell their property and come back to California.
We are currently giving away homes for 8,000 dollars. That money is coming from tax payers. Bruce thinks that we should just let people take these homes for no down payment. We will have people walk away, but the next buyer will be able to easily take it. Under this kind of proposed program, it would not matter if the buyer qualified or not because this loan can be continually passed down. These houses could go to investors with a 5 percent interest rate. This program would not have foreclosure, because the problems would be solved by the next buyer. The people who have recently foreclosed on their homes will not be able to qualify for homes, which may keep them out of the market for the next few years. We could just reintroduce these people as buyers if they did not have to qualify. This is not a program that we have never seen before. We are trying to solve this problem by selling the next house to the owner occupant who was shoved into home buying by the nonsense financing of 05 and 06.
We are already doing zero down deals. When Bruce sells a property, he usually pays part of the closing cost. The person getting 3.5 percent down on a 100 grand purchase is getting an 8,000 dollar check; that is better than nothing down. If you just had nothing down and these people qualified, we would get rid of a lot of homes.
Bruce and many other investors believe that we need to get rid of the FHA 90 day flip rule. When an investor fixes a property, which may only take 3 to 4 weeks, and they sell it within 90 days, the investor is believed to be guilty of fraud. The lender has to pay the cost for this, because the investor will subtract the amount that he or she must pay the lender for the property. We need to start looking at investors as people who can help this problem. At some point, we must either choose to not foreclose, or we must pay catch-up in a painful market.
Bruce asks Christopher Thornberg if he expects the dollar to lose value, and how the value of the dollar impacts interest rates. As the trade deficit gets wider, the dollar goes up. Now the trade deficit is going to close, so the dollar will get weaker. There is very little doubt that the dollar will weaken. Interest rates are undoubtedly going to go up. The federal reserve has increased the money substantially and that money is going to cause inflation. The Federal Reserve is either going to let inflation happen, which will raise interest rates, or they will fight inflation by selling the long range securities they bought, which will also raise interest rates. One way or another, interest rates are going to go up. In the shorter run, it will be faster to allow inflation to occur, because that would bail out the asset markets. In 1982, the mortgage rate was 18 percent, because of the fear of inflation.
Bruce thinks that we can absorb a higher interest rate and still have a good real estate market, because the combination with the cheap price could absorb a double digit interest rate, just like in the 70s. Thornberg says that a 1 percent increase in the mortgage rate means a 10 percent decline in prices. Bruce disagrees with this, because between 1974 and 1980 we had a tripling in real estate prices and interest rates doubled. Thornberg tells Bruce that he is talking about the real mortgage rate, which is the mortgage rate minus the rate of inflation.
Bruce asks Thornberg what the statement “Unemployment is a lagging indicator” means. Thornberg says that means that “the labor markets are the last to go into the toilet and the last to dry off.” Bruce asks if that means “when labor improves, every other category of real estate should have already started to improve”. Thornberg says that residential real estate leads commercial. Now, we keep waiting to hear about the collapse in the commercial market, but we are not seeing this at all. Thornberg says that this sort of lead and lag mentality can be exaggerated.
This is why Bruce brought this up, because in the last cycle, employment improved in California from 1994-96 but we did not have a price increase until 1997. If we do not have price increases, builders will not build anything. Bruce asks if you can have an improved labor market if builders do not have any work to do. Thornberg says that these two factors do kind of work together. The prices started to go up after the labor increases from 1994-96. Thornberg reminds Bruce that in the early 90’s we lost zero space, defense, and migration. In that market, the real estate was hampered by the excess supply. Thornberg takes issue with the idea that we should subsidize the building of new homes, because he believes that we have too many homes. Thornberg believes it would be a bad idea to subsidize the construction of homes when there is already too much inventory. Bruce says that some builders have been fixing existing inventory, and Thornberg believes that is all the builders can really do.
Robert Toll made 700 million dollars between 2000 and 2007 because he was selling too many houses at too high of a price, and now he wants tax payers to bail him out.
Bruce Norris asks Rick Sharga if people foreclosed for different reasons in 2008 versus 2009. Rick says that the reasons are not as different as the press would lead you to believe. The media has jumped ahead to the next wave of foreclosures. We are looking at a 3 wave foreclosure tsunami. The first wave began in the first quarter of 2006, because of the subprime meltdown and ARMs. The MBA numbers suggest that 33 percent of the new foreclosures are unemployment. That means that 2/3 of the foreclosure activity is not employment related.
What we are really seeing is increasing levels of foreclosure activity from the first wave, which is being made worse from the second wave. The second wave is about to pick up steam. If unemployment peaks around the first quarter of next year, we will see the foreclosures related to that peak around the 3rd or 4th quarter next year. That will be just in time for them to be augmented by the next wave. This next wave will be caused by the option ARMs. Many loans are going to reset, and people will owe more on their reset loans than their original loans.
Strategic defaults are going to be a problem. In the past American culture, people honored their contracts and chose to make their payments. Now people are realizing that the house they bought is worth half of what they owe, and they are wondering if it is in their family’s best interest to keep paying. If someone is only 10 percent upside-down on a loan then they will probably stick with the loan, but if they are upside-down by 50 percent then they will probably default.
Thornberg asks people if their credit or their equity will hear quicker. Thornberg says that most of these people will have their credit heal faster. Sharga responded to Thornberg with a story about a Coldwell Bankerk agent that was fired. This agent counseled her customers to default on their current loan after qualifying and buying a second house. Bruce feels that there is still a lot of character being shown in California; a state with a 9.7 default rate that has had a 50 percent value drop.

There is a proposal being supported by 16 senators to increase the tax credit to $15,000 dollars for next year. The current $8,000 dollar tax credit started at $15,000 dollars, but it was then taken down to $7,500 dollars, and then it was increased to $8,000 dollars. MBA is supporting an open $15,000 dollar tax credit. That includes owner occupied and second homes. Every time someone buys a house, they spend an average of $7,500 dollars. That money goes into places like Home Depot, Lowes, Porter Paint, and furniture companies. MBA’s economist estimates that if the $15,000 dollar tax credit was approved today, then an additional 400,000 purchases would take place over the next year. $7,500 multiplied by 400,000 is a lot of money. David Kittle would argue that when these people begin to buy these homes that they would most likely be buying a foreclosure. The government is going to have to spend money to bail out that market anyway, so David thinks this is a better option.

Christopher Thornberg believes that this proposal is ridiculous, because you cannot expect the government to continuously subsidize everything. However, Christopher does think that there is a reason for governments to provide these opportunities, because the market can get into a death spiral. Temporary credit causes a short term burst in sales to stabilize the market, but then you must stop subsidizing and let the markets fix themselves.

One year ago, Fannie and Freddie were put into conservatorship. They were not too big too fail. If the government had allowed everything to fail, things would have been ten times worse than they are right now, but these problems would be over by now. We need to allow businesses to fail. Independent lenders are going out of business, because they cannot get warehouse line capacity. This is because the Obama administration has put on a capital requirement which forces these lenders to put a dollar into reserve for every dollar they lend. One year ago, we had 120 facilities that gave warehouse lines to lenders, but we now have only 12. As individual mortgage bankers go out of business, all the money is being funneled to Wells Fargo, Chase, BB&T, Bank of America, and Citi.

Bruce asks Joseph Magdziarz who has the final say as to what a property is worth. Is it the appraiser, the review appraiser, the underwriter, or is there a boss of the underwriter. The problem with government subsidies is that we cannot find the real market. When subsidies are affecting the market, we cannot find the true demand and supply balance. An appraiser usually has the opportunity to observe the property. An AVM is just an awful valuation model that may tell you which appraisal should be reviewed based on statistics. Joseph thinks that it is wrong for lenders to use AVMs to turn down an appraiser’s opinion. You should stay with you appraiser’s opinion, or you should get a review appraisal done. Unfortunately, that is not going to happen. We must remember that government intervention only postpones the eventual. We need to have a free market.

Joseph talked to five major builders in his market area. Most of them build 700 to 800 homes per year. One had taken 3 permits out this year, and he told Joseph that he never wants to own lots and subdivisions. He hired The Appraisal Institute to come up with a pricing mechanism, but he wanted a real value, because he did not believe that he could build his properties for what he could sell them. In most companies, the underwriter has the final say in the value of the property. Bruce asks if there is a boss of the underwriter who can trump the underwriter’s decision. The speaker claims that his company does not do this, but this may be true in other companies. One of the problems that Joseph has come across is that many of the underwriters are not certified, yet they are responsible for second guessing someone who is trained in appraisal.

Bruce asks what happened to the buyer’s ability to look at the market and say, “I’ve seen all the vacant houses that are listed for $75,000 and I want to buy this property at $135,000.” The system is trumping the buyer’s decision as if they have no idea what they are doing. Bruce provides an example of how this problem is affecting his company. Bruce bought a property in Moreno Valley for $50 grand and he fixed with $35 grand. When he attempted to sell the property, he got six offers within 48 hours for $120 grand to $122 grand. From Bruce’s perspective, that states market value. There were six buyers looking at all the market inventory and they thought Bruce’s property was a better deal than the other property’s priced at $120 grand, and they also thought his property was superior to the properties being sold at $75 grand. The appraisal for Bruce’s property came in at $102,000, and the review appraisal came in at $85,000. Bruce would not have been rewarded for his efforts if he sold the property at $85 grand, so he no longer makes the effort to buy and sell in Moreno Valley. The consequence for this is that there could have been a $120 grand comp for the entire neighborhood to enjoy, but now they have a $50 grand comp to look at, because they did not let the buyer determine what market value is. Bruce chose to keep this property and rent it for $1,150 dollars. The value of owning a house is being topped at half of rental value. Bruce thinks that is ridiculous.

Tommy tells Bruce that this problem would not have occurred if the property had been sold through an auction. Auctions are not contingent on financing. Most of the homes that Tommy sells are financing, but the buyer already knows what they are qualified for. In Tommy’s entire life, he has never had an appraiser dispute a house price that was sold in an auction.

Christopher Thornberg says the problem is that the banks worry about the appraisals, and they are not under the assumption that buyers are concerned about the appraisals. If we allowed a system where we had recourse mortgages again, then we would have deals in which buyers could buy houses above the appraisal value. However, the buyer would have to sign a deal which would allow banks to take the buyers assets if the buyer goes bankrupt. Bruce interrupts Thornberg, exclaiming that what Thornberg is proposing is that the appraisal system is correct. Bruce feels that we must respect the buyer’s decision more than that. Thornberg explains that the bank does not know that Bruce had six offers. They are under the assumption that there is only one accepted offer, and the appraisal came in at less than that offer. The bank is worried that if the buyer cannot pay his mortgage, which is half of rent, then they must turn around and they can only sell that property for $85 grand. If the buyer could sign a secondary note, making the deal a full recourse loan, then it shouldn’t make a difference.

Bruce asks John what the percentage of his sale price to his cost is in this market.  The sticks and bricks costs about $50 dollars per square foot, but that does not include the land and the additional fees. In Fontana, John has built homes in the last 5 years that are now repos. John’s company tried to sell to people who were qualified and had good FICA scores. At that time, Wells Fargo was very nervous about the Alt A and subprime loan. John’s competitors would sell to anybody including investors and people who were not occupying the properties.

The federal first time homebuyer tax credit allows you to get the credit regardless of whether or not you paid any taxes. The state program only gives you as much credit as you have already paid in taxes. John must decrease his prices to encourage buyers to buy his homes. His homes are more expensive than foreclosures, so he must show the value difference between his homes and foreclosures.

John says that builders are not building 225,000 homes as Chris mentioned previously. Builders are currently only building about 40,000. John’s company will only build about 70 homes this year.

The video of the live event is not being aired online HERE.

You can visit isurvived2009.com to learn more about our sponsors and speakers.

Here are the speakers involved in the event:

Bruce Norris of the Norris Group

Bruce Norris

President

The Norris Group

David Kittle, President of the Mortgage Bankers Association

David Kittle

2009 Chairman

Mortgage Bankers Association

2007 President, National Association of Realtors

Pat Vredevoogd Combs

2007 President

National Association of Realtors

Tommy Williams, 2008 President National Auctioneers Association

Tommy Williams

2008 President

National Auctioneers Association

Christopher Thornberg, Principal and Beacon Economics

Christopher Thornberg

Principal

Beacon Economics

 

John Young

Vice President

California Builders Industry Association

Joseph Magdziarz, VP Appraisal Institute

Joseph Magdziarz

Vice President

Appraisal Institute

Rick Sharga, Senior VP RealtyTrac

Rick Sharga

Senior Vice President

RealtyTrac

To Benefit:

I Survived Real Estate 2009 Sponsors

A huge thank you to all of our sponsors who made this event possible.

Platinum Sponsors

San Diego Creative Investors Association
investClub for Women
Investors Workshop
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Entrust California
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JK Short Sale
The Business Press
White House Catering
 
National Fix and Flip Network
 

Gold Sponsors

1 m 1 Properties
Appraisal Institute of Southern California
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Inland Empire Investors Forum
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Los Angeles Meeting and Event Center
Mortgage Equity Group
Northern California Real Estate Investors Association
Northern San Diego Real Estate Investors Association
Real Wealth Network
RE 411 Magazine
San Jose Real Estate Investors Association
Daniel Dear
Women\'s Council of Realtors - Inland Valley Chapter
Westin South Coast Plaza
Saddleback Valley Communities Petere Apostolos Awesome Limousines
RealtyTrac National Association of Real Estate Investors Far Below Market

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/6/09

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

Fannie recently developed the “Deed-for-Lease” program which allows qualified borrowers to deed their properties back to Fannie and continue to live in the house for up to 12 months. Fannie Mae is asking for $15 billion in support from the Treasury Department. Ronald Pressman from GE Capital Real Estate believes that the commercial real estate market is far from a recovery. The U.S. unemployment rate increased to 10.2 percent in October.

In The News:

Housing Wire“BarCap Sees ‘Limited Use’ of Fannie’s Deed-for-Lease Program” (11-6-09)

“The Deed-for-Lease (D4L) program allows qualified borrowers to voluntarily deed the property back to Fannie and remain in the home on lease for up to 12 months. It targets borrowers that do not qualify for other workout alternatives like the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), which allocates federal incentives to servicers that pursue modifications before foreclosure.”

Housing Wire“Higher Unemployment Means Many More Distressed Properties to Come” (11-6-09)

“The US Conference of Mayors, a nonpartisan organization that represents cities with populations greater than 30,000, is sending out an industry warning that they expect employment rates to continue to climb in 2010, reaching levels as high as 15% in some municipalities. Servicers in these areas should prepare to face a much heavier distressed asset portfolio as borrowers struggle to cope with lose of income, says Dave Gatton, a director at the firm.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Asks Treasury for $15Bn, May Sell Housing Tax Credits” (11-6-09)

“Financial fallout at mortgage giant Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.0299 -8.04%) continues to develop following the $19.8bn quarterly net loss, with the agency’s conservator confirming Fannie may sell as much as $2.6bn of low-income housing tax credits to investors and is requesting another $15bn in support from the US Treasury Department.”

Housing Wire“Calif. Commercial Delinquency Rate Drops to 0.23%: CMBA” (11-6-09)

“The delinquency rate for commercial loans in California slipped 3bps from 0.26% to 0.23% in Q309, according to a survey conducted by the California Mortgage Bankers Association (CMBA).”

Housing Wire“Fed Buys Another $16Bn of Agency MBS” (11-6-09)

“The Federal Reserve Bank of New York bought $16bn of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) from housing finance agencies Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.19 -4.80%), Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.03 -8.04%) and Ginnie Mae in the week ending November 4. The Fed bought $3.27bn from Freddie, $12.55bn from Fannie and $175m from Ginnie. For the first week in months, were no MBS sales listed in the week ending November 4.”

Bloomberg - “Commercial Property ‘Long Way’ From Rebound, GE’s Pressman Says” (11-6-09)

“The U.S. commercial property market is far from recovery and needs job growth, sustained low interest rates and further government support, said GE Capital Real Estate Chief Executive Officer Ronald Pressman. ”

Reuters - “Surge in temp jobs points to stronger U.S. economy” (11-6-09)

“U.S. temporary staffing — historically one of the first areas to show evidence of a jobs recovery — surged in October, adding about 34,000 jobs in a positive sign for the overall economy even as the overall employment rate rose above 10 percent.”

Orange County Register – “1 in 4 Surf City home sales distressed” (11-6-09)

Three charts are displayed which contain data on Huntington Beach listings and escrows.

Inman - “15 best iPhone apps for mobile agents” (11-6-09)

“Home Tracker. You’ve seen a lot of homes and it can make your head spin. Home Tracker keeps track for you. Store information on each property such as address, ZIP code, price and size; add notes; take photos; rate the property condition, location and appeal; star your favorites; map the property; and best of all, e-mail the summary of home tours to your clients.”

Realty Times“Is Your Agent Experienced in Distressed Properties?” (11-6-09)

“the National Association of Realtors (NAR) is coming to the rescue with real estate agents specifically schooled in those subjects. A new Short Sales and Foreclosure Certification Program (SFR) trains agents how to manage short-sales, foreclosures, and real estate owned (REO or bank owned) transactions, and keeps agents current on national and state-specific information and regulations on these issues.”

Wall Street Journal“Broader U-6 Unemployment Rate Hits 17.5%” (11-6-09)

“The U.S. jobless rate jumped up 0.4 percentage point to 10.2% in October, the highest level since April 1983. The government’s broader measure of unemployment shot up even more, rising half a point to 17.5%.”

Wall Street Journal – “Real Time Economics” (11-6-09)

“The bad news is that the jobs situation seems to have stalled out after improving dramatically through the summer. Private payroll declines actually widened slightly in September and in October. Thus, while we still strongly believe based on anecdotes, surveys, and other statistics that the labor situation is improving and that job losses will come to an end within a few months, the payroll numbers themselves do not indicate much positive momentum. In contrast to the payroll survey results, the household survey data were unambiguously negative. The unemployment rate surged to 10.2%, as the household gauge of employment plunged by almost 600,000 on top of September’s 785,000 drop. –Stephen Stanley, RBS”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/5/09

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

The U.S. Senate signed an extension to the federal tax credit. Commercial and multifamily mortgage loan originations decreased by 12 percent from Q2 to Q3 of 2009. Fannie Mae reported a loss of nearly $20 billion in Q3 of 2009. According to ZipRealty, housing inventory in 27 major U.S. cities decreased by 2.8 percent.

In The News:

NAR - “Tax Credit Extension a Positive Step Toward Sustained Real Estate Recovery, Say Realtors®” (11-5-09)

“The National Association of Realtors® today commended the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives for passing a bill that includes an extension and expansion of the current home buyer tax credit as an important step in ensuring a real estate and economic recovery.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationMBA Study: Commercial and Multifamily Mortgage Originations Remained Low in Third Quarter 2009″ (11-5-09)

Commercial and multifamily mortgage loan originations for the third quarter of 2009 were 12 percent lower than during the second quarter of 2009, and 54 percent lower than during the same period last year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Quarterly Survey of Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Bankers Originations.”

Housing WireFannie Mae Loses $19.8bn in Q309″ (11-5-09)

“Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.12 +2.75%) posted a net loss of $19.8bn, or $3.47 per share, in Q309, compared with a net loss of $15.2bn in Q209, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing.”

Housing Wire“Mortgage Modifications ‘Insignificant’ to Credit Scores: VantageScore” (11-5-09)

“Restructuring plans on a mortgage, whether in the form a forbearance, modification or short sale, have a relatively insignificant effect on the consumer’s credit score, said Sarah Davies, vice president of VantageScore, at the Loan Modifications Conference now underway in Dallas, Texas.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Pushes Rental Alternative to Foreclosure” (11-5-09)

“Mortgage giant Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.12 +2.75%) released details Thursday of a deed-for-lease program designed to offer borrowers an alternative to foreclosure. The Deed-for-Lease (D4L) Program aims to minimize neighborhood blight and encourage house price stabilization by cutting down on foreclosures, real estate-owned (REO) and vacant properties, and distressed home sales.”

Housing Wire“Just Do It! HUD Tells Servicers to Fix First and File Later” (11-5-09)

“The new and multi-faceted approach will aid servicers to quickly reclaim expenses from Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured properties in the event of short sale, foreclosure, etc. The changes will also apply to properties where there is still an occupant, protected by the Tenant Act, which states that, even if a borrower defaults, the servicers must honor the leaseholders’ agreement in non-owner occupied scenarios.”

Housing Wire“Freddie’s Weekly Mortgage Rate Dips Below 5%” (11-5-09)

“Freddie Mac’s (FRE: 1.25 +2.46%) survey of mortgage rates saw a key long-term fixed rate dip back below 5% this week. Freddie Mac said the average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) was 4.98% with an average 0.7 point, down from an average 5.03% the previous week. One year ago, the average rate for a 30-year FRM was 5.88%, Freddie said.”

Housing Wire“US Housing Inventory Falls 2.8%: ZipRealty” (11-5-09)

“Listings of single-family homes and condominiums declined an average 2.82% across 27 major US metropolitan markets in October, according to data compiled by Web-based real estate brokerage ZipRealty (ZIPR: 4.08 +0.25%).”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/4/09

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

The MBA’s weekly mortgage survey shows that loan application volume increased by 8.2 percent, on a seasonally adjusted bases, from last week. The FHA expects 24 percent of all loans insured in 2007 to default. The Federal Reserve’s FOMC announced that it will not buy the full $200 billion debt amount that it had previously planned to take. BarCap reports that the 30-plus day delinquency rate increased to 5.5 percent in October.

In The News:

Orange County Register – “Are we headed for the same real estate winter doldrums?” (11-4-09)

“Historically, over a 30 year trend, 70% of all Orange County homes sell in the first seven months of the year. Seasonality is the term used by real estate experts. Typically, most buyers are active in the spring and summer markets. Once Labor Day comes, they tend to focus on the holidays. Activity drops off each month. December is the slowest month.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Refinance Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (11-4-09)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending October 30, 2009. The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 8.2 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 7.9 percent compared with the previous week.”

Wall Street Journal“FHA Digging Out After Loans Sour “ (11-4-09)

“Although the FHA has tightened credit standards, many of the 2007 and early 2008 mortgages are going bad. The agency expects defaults on 24% of all loans insured in 2007, and 20% of those backed in 2008.”

Housing Wire“In This Corner: QuestSoft President and Founder Leonard Ryan” (11-4-09)

“Mortgage Disclosure Improvement Act (MDIA) is causing issues because most loan software products keep track of only the latest disclosure dates due to the complexity of the calculations. S.A.F.E. Act is causing the most internal personnel problems due to education and registration requirements that differ from state to state. Higher Priced Mortgage Loans (HPML) with the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) changes as of October 1 are becoming an out and out nightmare without automation because every time an Annual Percentage Rate (APR) changes or the note rate adjusts, the loan must be completely recalculated and possibly re-underwritten.”

Housing Wire“Fed Won’t Purchase Full $200bn Agency Debt, FOMC Says” (11-4-09)

“The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) said it won’t purchase as much agency debt as it previously announced. The $175bn of agency debt purchases is less than the previously announced $200bn, but the FOMC said the amount ‘is consistent with the recent path of purchases and reflects the limited availability of agency debt.’”

Housing Wire“CMBS Delinquencies Swell to 5.5% in October, says BarCap” (11-4-09)

“The 30-plus day delinquency rate jumped 41bps to 5.5% in October as current loans deteriorated and transferred to special servicers. For the past three months, delinquencies have grown an average of 34bps, and BarCap analysts expect the pace to increase through 2009 and into 2010.”

Housing Wire“Pulte’s Closings Slip in Q309, Despite Merger” (11-4-09)

“Pulte Homes (PHM: 9.55 +3.47%) lost $361.4m, or $1.15 per share, in Q309, compared to $280.4m, or $1.11 per share, in Q308. Results were impacted by $86.7m in charges and transaction costs associated with Pulte’s merger with Centex Corporation, and $163.8m in inventory impairments and other land-related charges.”

Housing Wire“GMAC’s Mortgage Unit Loses $747M in Q309″ (11-4-09)

“The Q309 loss was due primarily to legacy assets in GMAC’s mortgage operations. The unit experienced a pre-tax loss from continuing operations of $747m during the quarter. The loss is an improvement from Q308’s $1.9bn pre-tax loss from continuing operations”

Bloomberg - “Senate May Pass Homebuyer Tax Credit Extension Today” (11-4-09)

“The U.S. Senate may approve as early as today a $45 billion plan to expand a tax credit for first- time homebuyers, extend jobless benefits and provide tax refunds to money-losing companies.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Home Price Slump to Last to Mid-2010, Pimco Says” (11-4-09)

“The slump in U.S. housing prices is unlikely to end before the middle of next year, and statistics portraying rising values are misleading, according to Pacific Investment Management Co. An S&P/Case-Shiller index for 20 metropolitan areas showed values rising 4.8 percent in the four months through August after a record 33 percent drop from its July 2006 peak. Such statistics are being distorted by U.S. efforts to reduce foreclosures, which are temporarily limiting sales of seized homes, said Scott Simon, Pimco’s mortgage-bond chief.”

Inman - “ZipRealty narrows losses” (11-4-09)

“ZipRealty Inc. edged closer to profitability during the third quarter, as transactions grew 30.6 percent and revenue by 12.8 percent from a year ago, the company said.”