The Norris Group Blog

California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Archive for April, 2010

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/20/10

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to MDA DataQuick, 81,054 Notices of Default  were recorded at county recorder offices during the January-to-March period in California . Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services claims that the gap between monthly rents and mortgage payments is at its lowest level in almost 20 years, making it easier to rent. Cushman & Wakefield estimates the commercial real estate market will take the longest to recover. HAMP completed 230,000 permanent modifications over 12 months.

In The News:

DQNews - “California Foreclosure Activity Declines Again” (4-20-10)

“A total of 81,054 Notices of Default (“NODs”) were recorded at county recorder offices during the January-to-March period. That was down 4.2 percent from 84,568 for the prior quarter, and down 40.2 percent from 135,431 in first-quarter 2009, according to San Diego-based MDA DataQuick.”

Mercury News“New Obama mortgage plan at risk from fraud, report says” (4-20-10)

“Recent changes to the Obama administration’s mortgage assistance program may make it more vulnerable to fraud, a government watchdog says. The changes, announced last month, are intended to make it easier for struggling homeowners to avoid foreclosure. But the administration hasn’t done enough to warn the public about fraud and hasn’t included sufficient safeguards to prevent abuse, said the special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.”

Daily News“Should you buy or rent a home? Cost gap narrows” (4-20-10)

“Thinking of buying a home? Consider this: The gap between monthly rents and mortgage payments is at its lowest level in almost 20 years. In some markets, the difference can be less than $100, according to a national study conducted for The Associated Press by Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services.”

Housing Wire“Regulators Say Lehman Failure Makes Case for Financial Reform” (4-20-10)

“Driven to bankruptcy by massive downgrades of its failed subprime mortgage-related assets, now-defunct Lehman Brothers presents several lessons for lawmakers writing the policy response to ongoing financial fallout, expert witnesses told the House Financial Services Committee today. Sen. Ed Perlmutter (D-Colo.) cited a recent report on the causes of the Lehman bankruptcy, which found regulators supposedly knew of accounting gimmicks that allowed the firm the liquidity freedom to take on increasingly risky investments, but did not enforce corrective action.”

Housing Wire“C&W: Commercial Real Estate Recovery Uneven Across US” (4-20-10)

“The national real estate market is in better shape than analysts anticipated given the largest employment declines in more than 70 years, but regional markets with the highest job losses, and the related overabundance of commercial properties vacant as businesses fail, will take longer to dig out of the recession, according to a report from Cushman & Wakefield (C&W). C&W, a real estate advising firm, said in its Economic Pulse report, that the recession did not hit all real estate markets equally.”

Housing Wire“Financial Services Authority Begins Investigation of Goldman Sachs” (4-20-10)

“The Financial Services Authority (FSA), the market watchdog in the UK, will begin a formal enforcement investigation into Goldman Sachs (GS: 159.98 -2.05%) in the wake of the recent action by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Last week, the SEC charged Goldman for allegedly defrauding investors in a financial product tied to subprime mortgages. The SEC alleges Goldman and Fabrice Tourre, a vice president in the firm, misled and even omitted key facts about a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO), ABACUS 2007-AC1.”

Housing Wire“TARP Watchdog Says HAMP Changes Could Impede Modifications” (4-20-10)

“While foreclosures and bank repossessions rose in Q110 above year-ago levels — 16% and 35%, respectively — HAMP results in ‘very little progress’ so far, SIGTARP said, with only 230,000 permanent modifications completed over 12 months of operation (illustrated below). This represents only 8.2% of the foreclosures initiated in 2009, and fewer than only the most recent quarter’s bank repossessions.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. REITs May Raise More Than $25 Billion in 2010, NAREIT Says” (4-20-10)

“Real estate investment trusts in the U.S. may exceed the $25 billion they raised last year in share sales as an economic recovery boosts investor confidence, according to the industry’s main lobbying group. The money raised in the stock market last year principally went toward improving balance sheets after companies became too highly leveraged, said Michael Grupe, executive vice president of research at the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts. REITs will seek funds to acquire properties this year, he said.”

Orange County Register“Laguna Beach homes taking 32% less time to sell” (4-20-10)

“The community’s share of its new deals in escrow involving distressed properties — foreclosures or short sales — is 8% or -21.95 percentage points vs. countrywide share. Note that this community has 1.2% of all the deals in escrow countywide — and 1.1% of all distressed deals in the works. Meanwhile, the city of Laguna Beach has 4.0% of the entire supply of resale residences that are listed for sale in Orange County.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/19/10

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Irvine Co. is reentering the home construction business for the first time in over 20 years. Fannie Mae statistics show that the economy decelerated in the first quarter of 2010, but will likely increase in the near future. Real estate executive Anthony Ghio pled guilty to bid rigging in a scheme to profit off sheriff sale foreclosure auctions. The U.K. and Germany are interested in taking legal action against Goldman Sachs.

In  The News:

Orange County Register - “Irvine Co. to build its own homes” (4-19-10)

“The Irvine Co., sensing a shortage of financially strong homebuilders, is constructing homes on its own for the first time in over two decades. Using its Irvine Pacific brand that built parts of Irvine in the 1970s and 1980s, the giant land developer is making a twist in its unusual bet on a homebuilding rebound by re-entering the construction game.”

Inman - “A shorter wait to buy after deliquency” (4-19-10)

“To encourage distressed borrowers to agree to deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure, Fannie Mae is reducing the waiting period — from four years to two years — for them to become eligible for a new mortgage. The new policy, which will apply to loan applications submitted after June 30, requires a minimum downpayment of 20 percent from borrowers who have agreed to a deed-in-lieu within the past two years. Borrowers with a deed-in-lieu in the past two to four years will be required to put 10 percent down to be considered for a Fannie Mae-backed loan.”

Los Angeles Times“Builders likely to offer incentives after federal tax credits expire” (4-19-10)

“With the April 30 deadline looming, home buyers need to get a move on if they hope to qualify for the federal tax credits of $8,000 for first-timers or $6,500 for owners wishing to move up. But even if you don’t have a binding contract in place by the end of the month, there’s a good chance that plenty of incentives will be available after the federal stimuli expire.”

Housing Wire“Excess, Shadow Inventory Threaten Fragile Housing Recovery: Fannie” (4-19-10)

“Despite ‘encouraging’ recent growth in consumer spending, Fannie said economic growth likely decelerated from an annualized 5.6% in Q409 to 2.7% in Q110. Economists project a 3.1% rate of economic growth for all of 2010, according to the April outlook report by the Fannie Mae economics and mortgage market analysis group”

Housing Wire“Real Estate Exec Pleads Guilty to Foreclosure Auction Bid Rigging” (4-19-10)

“A real estate executive in Stockton, Calif. pled guilty to bid rigging in a scheme to profit off sheriff sale foreclosure auctions. As HousingWire reported over the weekend, Anthony Ghio admitted in his guilty plea that he conspired with a group of real estate speculators who agreed not to bid against each other at certain public real estate foreclosure auctions in San Joaquin County, Calif. in order to suppress and restrain competition and to purchase distressed real estate at non-competitive prices, according to an announcement by the US Attorney for the Eastern District of California and the Department of Justice’s antitrust division.”

Housing Wire“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (4-19-10)

“The piling on has already begun, and it’s probably just getting started. After the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Goldman Sachs (GS: 163.32 +1.63%) with fraud for subprime investments, the U.K. and Germany could be set to take legal steps of their own against the investment bank, according to Reuters. Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who is in the middle of an election campaign, told BBC News Sunday he wants Britain’s own investigation into the dealings.”

Bloomberg - “Commercial-Property-Backed Debt Has ‘Violent Rally’” (4-19-10)

“Bonds backed by commercial real estate loans are gaining as investors flush with cash seek higher returns and the economic recovery gains steam. Yields on senior top-rated securities backed by mortgage payments for skyscrapers, hotels and shopping malls fell 0.11 percentage point to 2.19 percentage points more than Treasuries in the week ended April 16, according to a Barclays Plc index. The debt yielded 2.66 percentage points more than Treasuries a month ago, and 3.96 percentage points on Dec. 31, the data show.”

Bloomberg - “Simon’s General Growth Plan ‘Crazy,’ Berkowitz Says” (4-19-10)

“Simon Property Group Inc.’s bid to invest in General Growth Properties Inc. would give the largest U.S. mall owner too much control over its biggest competitor, said fund manager Bruce Berkowitz, who’s backing a rival plan.”

Bloomberg - “Lehman to Recover $12 Billion From Real Estate” (4-19-10)

“Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the investment bank liquidating in bankruptcy, said it aims to recover $12 billion from real estate assets in the next five years, and another $17 billion from private equity and loans. Lehman, which filed the biggest U.S. bankruptcy in September 2008, disclosed the updated figures in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today. A bankruptcy judge on April 15 approved Lehman’s plan to retain illiquid assets in a unit called Lamco for as long as five years before selling them.”

Inman - “Skeptics don’t expect REO flood” (4-19-10)

“If you consider nearly all of those homes to be ‘shadow inventory’ — as analysts who track the performance of mortgage-backed securities did in one report last year — it’s difficult to imagine that there’s not more turmoil ahead in some housing markets. But estimates of the size of the shadow inventory overhang vary widely, ranging from as few as 770,000 homes to nearly 7 million. The wide range is due largely to differences in the way the term is defined, and on the assumptions made when calculating how many distressed borrowers are likely to lose their homes in coming years”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/16/10

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

California unemployment increased to 12.6 percent last month. The SEC charged Goldman Sachs with fraud. According to the Commerce Department, Housing starts climbed to an annual rate of 626,000 last month. Fannie Mae is developing a new program to help families in foreclosure gain access to a new mortgage within 2 years.

In The News:

Sacramento Bee – “Jobs rebound, but California unemployment at 12.6 percent” (4-16-10)

“California’s unemployment inched up to 12.6 percent last month even though the state added 4,200 jobs, the federal government reported today. The numbers from the Employment Development Department are further evidence of the economy beginning to stir.”

Los Angeles Times“Housing starts, permits rise as builders rebound” (4-16-10)

“Housing starts climbed to an annual rate of 626,000 last month, up 1.6 percent from February’s revised 616,000 pace, which was higher than initially estimated, Commerce Department figures showed Friday. Building permits, a sign of future construction, climbed to the highest level since October 2008.”

Wall Street Journal – “Mortgage Rates Reverse Course and Fall” (4-16-10)

“The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 5.07% for the week ended April 15, down from 5.21% last week. A year ago, the mortgage averaged 4.82%. The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.40%, down from 4.52% last week and 4.48% a year ago.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Mae Director Outlines Program to Turn Homeowners into Renters” (4-16-10)

“Miguel Gutierrez said the goal of Fannie Mae is to minimize family displacement for borrowers that participate in a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure program, launched early in November 2009, while managing it in a way so as to not put any undue pressure on Fannie’s ever-growing rental portfolio. The homeowner-turned-renter is required to pay fair market rent to stay in their home for up to 12 months. The renter must have enough income to sustain a 31% income-to-rent ratio and rental payments are not subsidized by Fannie Mae, but could include renters eligible for Section 8 payments.”

Housing Wire “Fannie Shortens Wait for Some Distressed Borrowers to Get New Loans” (4-16-10)

“Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.24 -4.62%) announced it is reducing the wait time for some borrowers between when they complete a short sale or deed-in-lieu of foreclosure transaction and when they can obtain a new mortgage. Previously, a borrower was required to wait four years before getting a new mortgage, or two years if their home sold in a short sale. Under the new guidelines, a borrower that previously completed a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure transaction can get a new mortgage in two years, provided the borrower has a 20% down payment.”

Housing Wire“SEC Charges Goldman Sachs with Fraud Over Subprime RMBS CDO” (4-16-10)

“The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) today charged Goldman Sachs (GS: 160.70 -12.79%) and one of its vice presidents for allegedly defrauding investors by misstating and omitting key facts about a financial product tied to subprime mortgages, demanding a jury trial for the allegations to be heard.”

170-TNG Radio – Norris & Barlet 4-17-10

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Aaron Norris

Aaron Norris,
Marketing Director of The Norris Group

(Full Bio)

Diana Barlet

Diana Barlet,
Investor Relations with The Norris Group

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce Norris is joined by Marketing Director for The Norris Group, Aaron Norris, and Investor Relations Expert, Diana Barlet with The Norris Group.

Diana sold her Riverside home in November of 2006. That was a pushing slightly past the peak, but she bought the home in 2001, so she still profited from the majority of the price increase. She purchased the home for $145,000 in 2001 and she sold it for $400,000 in 2006. She was very pleased with the results. The original interest rate for her home was around 8 percent. The home was an owner carryback. She did a refi on the home afterwards for upgrades.

At that time, her decision to go from homeowner to renter was a big decision. Diana has been a homeowner since she was 21, so becoming a renter felt like giving up part of her identity. Diana also felt like she was loosing control of her life, because she had the property owner telling her what to do.

Her experience as a renter has been relatively unpleasant, but she has benefited from having someone else pay for repairs. However, some repairs are easier for Diana to take care of herself.

Aaron left California for New York in 1997. He stayed there for seven years, and moved 5 times during those years. Aaron lived in Hells Kitchen for part of that time. He was illegally renting from a renter, and he eventually got kicked out. Fortunately, he never worried about being homeless, because he had many friends as a performer. The smallest living quarters he lived in was 80 square feet. That is about the size of his current walk-in closet.

During his time in New York, Bruce arranged for him to own a house. He sold it a bit early, because he thought prices would stop going up, but he still made a decent sum of money. Aaron took the money he earned from the house and placed it in a trust deed. He considered buying a home in Washington Heights, but the house would have been painful to rehab.

Once Aaron came back to California, he began renting. In 2004, he moved to Los Angeles for 2 years. In 2006, he moved back to Riverside and began working full time for TNG. Unlike Diana, Aaron has enjoyed being a renter. He is accustomed to being in small spaces, so renting does not bother him. He just closed a house yesterday. His house is 2,500 square feet and he does not know what he will do with all the extra space.

Diana has lived in two rental units since she sold her house. Looking back, Diana is glad that she sold her house. If she had kept the home, she would now be in a position of negative equity. Being generous, that home might be able to sell for $160,000. When she refinanced the house, she brought the home’s total up to $225,000. The area has also devalued since she sold her home. Right before she sold the home, her car was stolen and her new fence was graphitized. There were a lot of things about that neighborhood that made her uncomfortable as a single woman.

Diana closed a home yesterday. She had 3 important criteria points for buying: a view, a master bath with a walk-in closet, and a 3 car garage. The home was bought as an REO. She looked for a home like this for 2 years. She had made offers on other homes, but her offers were not accepted. She found the home she just closed on through Foreclosure Radar. Her home eventually fell off of the reports on the website, and it popped up later on the MLS. This home originally sold for $565,000. When she bought this home it was extremely clean, so she has little work to do on it.

She had to compete with 10 other offers to get it, but hers was actually the lowest. This shows that price is not necessarily the determining factor when buying a home. The quality of the offer is most important. She beat the other offers because she was able to give assurance that her offer would close.

As was mentioned previously, Aaron just closed on a foreclosed home. He also had to beat multiple offers; one of them was an all cash offer. He beat the home by paying 5,000 more through a loan. Aaron has been looking for a home for 2 years, but he is very picky. He had other opportunities to buy, but those homes were made in the 60s and 70s, and he did not want to deal with the work that comes with an older home. This home originally sold for around $450,000, and he bought it for about half of that price. Aaron felt very discouraged by the process of buying the home. He received threats from the asset manager that they would not uphold the deal. His escrow was supposed to be 30 days, but he was warned that Fannie Mae REOs can take longer. Long escrows do cause problems, because he had to pay extra money to stay in his previous residence.

Aaron and Diana have great track records and FICO scores. Many people have had trouble getting loans. Fortunately, Diana had a good loan experience. She got a conventional loan with a 20 percent down payment. She was prequalified with her lender in November when she originally made an offer. Diana recommends her processor, Genie Ball from Pacific Sunrise Mortgage, to anyone interested in buying a home. Genie is very proficient and does a good job of keeping you informed. Diana had to have documentation for any deposit that wasn’t from payroll on her bank statement.

There are many things that can go wrong when you are trying to get a loan. You have to deal with both lenders and appraisers. When Diana’s appraisal came in, it was only $1,000 dollars over asking price, which happily surprised her. The view of Diana’s home gave her a $15,000 credit. The original interest rate for her home was 4.8 percent. She was prepared to close in 20 days, but the bank told her that they were not going to rush to close. That happens frequently in the loan business. There are many times in which Bruce is ready to provide money for an investment, but he won’t get all the information he needs to provide the loan. Because Diana’s lender did not close on time, the bank extended the closing date for over a week, which cost her an extra $1,000 dollars. Her final interest rate was 4.87. This low interest rate will probably not come back for many decades, if ever.

Aaron got a conventional loan on his home. His escrow was supposed to be 1 month, but it actually took over 2 months. He began the loan process immediately after his offer was accepted. There were a couple documents he had to refill during the process. The original interest rate he was given was 4.87 percent, and even though he extended the closing process, he still got that same rate.

Aaron’s escrow was chosen by his lender in Redondo Beach. Aaron had an overall good experience with her. There ended up being a lot of fighting and ego involved towards the end of the deal because of the good faith estimate. When people like you on the service side, you will find they will do things for you that they would not consider with other people. Aaron’s escrow manager was rooting for him, because he was helpful to her. Aaron helped solve an asset management problem in which $2,600 of city fines were overlooked, but Aaron got that taken care of over the weekend. Aaron did not have any problems with his appraisal, because the house was overpriced to begin with, and he expected a higher appraisal.

Aaron took 2 months to close because of the lender and the asset manager. The lender did not want to give away certain pieces of information. This caused problems with the asset manager, and Aaron eventually had to speak to the lender’s supervisor. Aaron was concerned at multiple times that the property would not close. He was threatened multiple times with an expected closing date, but it was actually Fannie Mae’s asset manager’s fault.

If Aaron was on the other side of the table, he would have chosen a different lender. This is important because when you are selling property as an investor, there are many times when you are not in control of that choice. Knowing the truth is helpful, because that allows you to be a part of the solution.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/15/10

Friday, April 16th, 2010

In The News:

DQNews - “Bay Area March home sales and median price rise above prior month and ‘09″ (4-15-10)

“Bay Area homes sold at a below-average pace again last month but rose sharply from February, as they normally do, to a three-year high. Sales in some lower-cost inland communities dipped below year-ago levels while they rose in many higher-cost coastal areas, helping to drive the region’s overall median sale price up by more than 30 percent from its absurdly low level in March 2009, a real estate information service reported. Buyers paid a median $380,000 for all new and resale houses and condos that closed escrow in the nine-county Bay Area last month. That was up 7.3 percent from $354,000 in February and up 31 percent from $290,000 in March 2009 – the median’s low point for the current housing cycle, according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego.”

CBIA - “California New-Home Market Stumbles Through February, CBIA Announces” (4-15-10)

“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 nearly 25 percent below February 2009. This was worse than both the 12 percent year over year decline last month and the 15 percent drop in December. During January, 1,938 new homes and condominiums were sold in the subdivisions tracked by Costa Mesa-based HWMI, compared to 2,570 in February 2009. Sales of single-family homes were down by 24 percent, while sales of townhomes and “plexes” – duplexes, triplexes, etc. – were off by 22 percent and sales of condominiums were 29 percent lower than a year ago.”

Daily Breeze“Foreclosures drop in California despite nationwide rise” (4-15-10)

“Foreclosure activity in the Golden States dropped in the first quarter of 2010 compared to a year earlier, even as filings rose nationwide, according to a report released today. California foreclosure filings – default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions – dropped 6 percent in the January-to-March period, compared to a year earlier.”

NAHB - “Federal Government Needs Central Role in New Housing Finance System” (4-15-10)

“Degree and structure of government support. While government support is needed to ensure that mortgage credit is available and affordable in all areas of the country under all economic circumstances, for the conforming conventional portion of the mortgage market, that support should not be provided directly to private companies. Rather, the federal government should provide an explicit guarantee of the timely payment of principal and interest on securities backed by conforming conventional mortgages, in the same manner that Ginnie Mae now provides guarantees for investors in securities representing interests in government-backed mortgages.”

Bloomberg - “Homebuilders in U.S. Less Pessimistic as Tax Credit Lifts Sales” (4-15-10)

“The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo index of builder confidence increased to 19, exceeding the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, from 15 the prior month, data from the Washington-based group showed today. Readings less than 50 mean more respondents said conditions were poor.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Foreclosure Filings Rise 16% as Bank Seizures Set Record” (4-15-10)

“Foreclosure filings in the U.S. rose 16 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier and bank seizures hit a record as lenders stepped up action against delinquent homeowners, according to RealtyTrac Inc. A total of 932,234 homes, or one out of every 138 households, received a default or auction notice, or were repossessed by banks, the Irvine, California-based firm said today. In March, filings rose 8 percent to the most in any month since RealtyTrac began publishing reports in January 2005.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/14/10

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The U.S. Treasury reports more than 1.4 million borrowers have been offered trial modifications under HAMP. The MBA’s weekly survey shows that mortgage application volume decreased by 9.6 percent from last week. Banks required over 25 percent more time to foreclose a property in in California last month than in March 2009. According to statistics from the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, overall economic activity increased in nearly all parts of the country since March.

In The News:

MBA - MBA’s Story Testifies on Revisions to the Home Affordable Modification Program” (4-14-10)

According to Treasury, more than 1.4 million borrowers have been offered trial modifications under HAMP.  One million borrowers are in active modifications, of which almost 230,000 represent permanent modifications.  An additional 100,000 permanent modifications are pending borrower acceptance.  And servicers have substantially increased the pace with which permanent modifications are being done.”

MBA - Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (4-14-10)

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending April 9, 2010.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 9.6 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 9.5 percent compared with the previous week.  This is the third lowest Market Index recorded in the survey since the end of June 2009.”

Inman - “Foreclosure process slows in California” (4-14-10)

“It took banks 27.9 percent longer, or 225 days, to foreclose on a property in California last month than it did in March 2009, and 0.45 percent longer than it did in February, according to data tracked by foreclosure data company ForeclosureRadar.com.”

CNN - “10 foreclosures for every home saved” (4-14-10)

“The Obama administration’s mortgage-modification program is not keeping pace with the deluge of foreclosures hitting the market, a government watchdog found. Only 168,708 homeowners have received long-term mortgage modifications under the president’s plan, as of February, a small fraction of the 6 million borrowers who are more than 60 days behind on their loans, according to the Congressional Oversight Panel’s latest report, released Wednesday.”

Mercury News“Mortgage market: Government asks for advice on how to improve it” (4-14-10)

“The administration has not drafted any formal proposals to reform the housing finance system. Mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac nearly collapsed in September 2008. Propping them up has cost taxpayers about $126 billion so far. Among the questions the Treasury Department is asking are: What level should the federal government play in stabilizing the housing market? What kind of lending standards should be established? How should consumers be protected from abusive practices?”

Housing Wire“Fed Beige Book Sees Increase in Housing Activity” (4-14-10)

“Overall economic activity increased in nearly all parts of the country, with many districts reporting increased activity in residential housing markets, according to the latest edition of the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book. The St. Louis district was the only one to not report an increase in overall economic activity, indicating a thaw may be in the works since the March edition of the Beige Book showed the toll taken by harsh winter weather.”

Housing Wire“Donovan: Eliminating GSEs May Threaten Fragile Recovery” (4-14-10)

“Hasty action to quickly change the composition of the GSEs or to eliminate them would further drive down this housing market and cause taxpayer losses to increase”

Housing Wire“One Year Down the Road, COP Says Success Still Escapes HAMP” (4-14-10)

“The private sector has found less success in modifying mortgages through HAMP than through other in-house strategies. According to testimony by Bank of America (BAC: 19.40 +3.91%) Home Loans president Barbara Desoer to the House Financial Services Committee this week, of BofA’s 14m mortgages, 1.4m are 60 or more days delinquent. All told, BofA completed 560,000 of its own modifications to those borrowers. Similar success escapes government-led initiatives as even though 391,000 borrowers at BofA were offered a HAMP mod, only 33,000 are now permanent through HAMP.”

Bloomberg - “FDIC Plans $1.97 Billion Sale of Loans From 22 Seized Banks” (4-14-10)

“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is seeking bids on a $1.97 billion portfolio of loans from 22 seized banks, pushing the agency’s structured asset sales this year beyond the 2009 total. The sale consists of 1,739 loans mostly tied to commercial real estate, with borrowers late on payments for almost half the portfolio, according to a preliminary announcement obtained by Bloomberg News.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/13/10

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

MDA DataQuick reports 20,476 new and resale homes sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. Schwarzenegger signed a bill allowing taxpayers to be exempt from paying for forgiven mortgage debt. In 2008 and 2009, the income needed to buy a median-priced home decreased in 93 percent of U.S. markets. According to IAS, national house prices fell 0.6% in February.

In The News:

DQNews - “More Incremental Gains for Southland Real Estate Market” (4-13-10)

“A total of 20,476 new and resale homes sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. That was up 33.3 percent from 15,359 in February, and up 5.0 percent from 19,506 in March 2009, according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego.”

Sacramento Bee“California won’t tax forgiven home debt” (4-13-10)

“Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed legislation Monday to spare thousands of Californians big tax bills on mortgage debt forgiven in 2009. The bill, signed days before Thursday’s tax filing deadline, will eliminate state taxes on forgiven mortgage debt from 2009 through the end of 2012. The U.S. government has already done the same.”

Los Angeles Times“Washington Mutual created ‘mortgage time bomb,’ Senate panel says” (4-13-10)

“Before Washington Mutual collapsed in the largest bank failure in U.S. history, its executives knowingly created a ‘mortgage time bomb’ by making subprime loans they knew were likely to go bad and then packaging them into risky securities, a congressional investigation has found. In some cases, the bank took loans in which it had discovered fraudulent activity — such as misstated income by borrowers — and rolled them into mortgage securities sold to investors without disclosing the fraud, according to the report released Monday by the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.”

Inman - “The workers homeownership left behind” (4-13-10)

“Between 2008 and 2009, the income needed to purchase a median-priced home fell in 93 percent of the markets studied, while the income needed fell a median of 9.1 percent, the study said.”

Housing Wire“Top Four Banks Ready to Write-Down Second Liens” (4-13-10)

“In a hearing today before the House Financial Services Committee, representatives from Bank of America (BAC: 18.67 +0.05%), Citi (C: 4.62 -0.43%), JP Morgan Chase (JPM: 45.87 -0.59%) and Wells Fargo (WFC: 32.15 -0.83%) report that they do not feel efforts to satisfy second lien obligations represent a conflict of interest between the desires of investors and the needs of distressed borrowers. As a result, they are willing to write-down second liens if first lien lenders are doing the same. All four lenders are participants in the Second Lien Modification Program, known as 2MP, which is struggling to gain traction.”

Housing Wire“Seven Months of House Price Declines Keep IAS Index Near 2004 Levels” (4-13-10)

“National house prices fell 0.6% in February, the seventh consecutive month of decline, keeping prices ‘only fractionally higher’ than levels seen in 2004, according to collateral valuation firm Integrated Asset Services (IAS). Although February’s decline is smaller than recent months — like 0.7% in December — the IAS house price index is now down 25% from its peak in July 2007.”

Housing Wire“New Inspection Report Helps REO Holders Market Homes to FHA Borrowers” (4-13-10)

“Altisource Portfolio Solutions (ASPS: 25.61 -0.70%), a real estate portfolio services provider, introduced a new inspection report with increased data and repair information on subject properties. According to the company, while a traditional property inspection report outlines the general condition of a property, the new report includes information on the existence and condition of appliances, carpets or other flooring, and whether electrical systems are functioning.”

Bloomberg - “Mortgage-Bond Yields That Guide Loan Rates Fall to 3-Week Low” (4-13-10)

“Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30-year fixed-rate mortgage bonds fell about 0.01 percentage point to 4.44 percent as of 3:02 p.m. in New York, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s down from an eight-month high of 4.67 percent on April 5.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, distressed properties represented 25 percent of U.S. home sales. Jeff Greene confessed to his 2006 investment estimation that money could be quickly made by buying credit default swaps on mortgage backed securities. Experts warned that FHA loans would be the next biggest risk in the U.S. housing market.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/12/10

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to First American CoreLogic, distressed home sales in Orange County are selling 34 percent under the typical market place. Altos Research reports a 0.5 percent in the national median home price. A modification becomes permanent through HAMP after the borrower makes all three monthly payments during the trial period. Fiserv estimates that home prices will not return to the past peak levels until 2025.

In The News:

My Desert“Valley’s Housing Market Warming” (4-12-10)

“The median sales price of new and single-family homes rose 11 percent to about $200,000, about $20,000 higher than in February 2009. Home sales also rose 9.4 percent compared to the same period last year. Real estate sales have been outpacing sales from the previous year every month since October. Sales volume rose 31 percent in November, 29 percent in December, and 22.2 percent in January.”

Orange County Register – “Distressed home discounts at 6-month high” (4-12-10)

“Orange County homebuyers got a 34% price discount when they chose a distressed property vs. overall market prices in January, according to First American CoreLogic. That’s the biggest discount in six months.”

Wall Street Journal“Second Mortgages Vex Borrowers” (4-12-10)

“Banks are coming under increasing political pressure to write off or at least write down second-lien and other junior mortgages as a way to help borrowers keep their homes or extract themselves from heavy debt. As the Wells Fargo suit shows, however, banks often are reluctant to give up on loans when they see a chance of recovering all or part of their money. This issue will be the focus of a hearing Tuesday by the House Financial Services Committee in Washington. Panel members are due to quiz executives from Wells Fargo, Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. about their junior-lien mortgage policies.”

Bloomberg - “Bank Profits Dimmed by Prospect of Home-Equity Losses” (4-12-10)

“Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. may have to set aside an additional $30 billion to cover possible losses on home-equity loans, an amount almost equal to analysts’ estimates of profit at the three banks this year. The cost of these reserves was calculated by CreditSights Inc., a New York-based research firm whose prediction almost four years ago proved prescient after banks reported unprecedented mortgage-related writedowns. Recognizing the home- equity loan losses is unfinished business from the housing bubble, CreditSights said in a March 29 report.”

Housing Wire“So, Where Will Housing Double Dip?” (4-12-10)

“Put in more plain terms, a state with a 1% foreclosure rate and an 11% delinquency rate should be expected to feel the impact of distressed properties moving through the pipeline far more than a state with a 5% foreclosure rate and a 5% delinquency rate, for example. The reasoning is simple: distressed property sales (short sales or REOs) are a drag on retail home prices. In markets that have seen comparatively less foreclosures relative to the volume of delinquencies stuck in the pipeline, the impact of those delinquencies will be felt proportionately more strongly as they are finally dealt with.”

Housing Wire“Altos Sees House Price Decline Decelerate in March” (4-12-10)

“The median house listing price declined 0.5% in the Altos Research 10-city composite in March, improved from February’s 1.3% decline in an indication the pace of decline may be decelerating. March, the eighth consecutive month of decline, brings the Q110 price decline to 1.8%. But weekly price changes have shown a modest upward trend in the past seven weeks, which means a uptick in house prices could arrive in the coming months, Altos said.”

Housing Wire“BofA Completes 33,000 Permanent HAMP Mods” (4-12-10)

“Bank of America (BAC: 18.66 +0.38%) completed almost 32,900 permanent mortgage modifications through the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) through March, up from 20,666 in February. The Treasury Department launched HAMP in March 2009 to provide incentives to servicers for the modification of loans on the verge of foreclosure. When Treasury first reported permanent modifications in November 2009, BofA reported 98 permanent modifications. A modification becomes permanent through HAMP after the borrower makes all three monthly payments during the trial period.”

Housing Wire“Despite HAMP, Mortgage Delinquency Grows 21% over 2009: LPS” (4-12-10)

“The number of mortgages delinquent at the end of February 2010 is 21.3% higher than the same time last year despite government-led modification efforts, according to the latest monthly report from Lender Processing Services (LPS: 37.61 +0.94%).”

Housing Wire“Peak House Prices Will Return to Sand States after 2025: Fiserv” (4-12-10)

“Housing markets that experienced the greatest inflation in house prices — including certain metro areas in sand states California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada — will not see a return of peak-level home prices before 2025, according to financial services technology provider Fiserv.”

Wall Street Journal“AIG, Goldman Unwind Soured Trades” (4-12-10)

” The derivatives unit of American International Group Inc. has unwound most of its soured mortgage trades with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. still left after the insurer was bailed out by the U.S. government in 2008, according to people familiar with the matter. The move by AIG Financial Products to terminate credit-default swaps insuring about $3 billion of mortgage-asset pools arranged by Goldman caused AIG to realize a $1.5 billion to $2 billion loss last year, the people said.”

Bloomberg - “Pimco Says Investors to Hold Down U.S. Mortgage Rates” (4-12-10)

“Investor demand for mortgage-backed securities will keep U.S. home-loan rates down after the Federal Reserve ended its purchases of the debt, said Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the world’s biggest bond fund. The Fed’s unprecedented program to buy $1.25 trillion of the securities that guide home-loan costs stopped U.S. housing prices from falling, Scott Simon, who is in charge of investing in the notes at Pimco, wrote on the company’s Web site.”

169-TNG Radio – Harry Dent 4-10-10

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Harry-Dent

Harry Dent

Author and Economist

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce Norris is joined once again by Harry Dent. Harry is the president of the H.S. Dent Foundation, which publishes the H.S. Dent forecast. His mission is to help people understand change. He is the author of many books, which include The Great Boom Ahead 1992 and The Roaring 2000s and The Great Depression Ahead.

The title The Great Depression Ahead is gutsy. This book came out in 2009. Harry finished writing the book in the first half of 2008. However, we had some significant events occur at the end of 2008. The only thing that really surprised Harry was the stock market rally. He assumed that the economy would get worse, and as it got worse, the government would stimulate it. Harry predicted the stock market would bounce to 9800 and maybe even 11,800. We are right in the middle of that zone right now. Short term indicators predict that we might go even higher in the near future. However, he thought this stock bounce would begin and end earlier. Harry does not believe the recovery will last, because the baby boomers will go from spending to saving.

Harry defines a depression as an extended downturn in which you also see a deflation in prices. The reason why prices go down is because banks and loans are failing. This destroys credit and money. The deleveraging of credit causes deflation. In a depression, everything goes down. In an inflationary downturn like the 1970s, real estate goes up. Real estate does well during inflation. The failure of the banking system is the biggest shock an economic system can have. Harry believes that later this year and in 2011 we will go into a depression.

Alan Greenspan once said, “I watched my whole intellectual education fall apart in 2008”. That took a lot of guts to say, and it was astonishing to think that someone like Greenspan had studied economics for 50 years but still estimated incorrectly. Economists can look at a chart and come to two completely different conclusions.

Anyone who has studied business cycles throughout history knows that human greed takes over every time. Anytime you have low regulation, low interest rates, and bubbles building, people go nuts. People start thinking that the market will never go down, and the banks will lend to anyone. If bubbles go on for long enough, anyone will buy into a bubble. Its not a matter of intelligence, it’s a matter of understanding human nature, and that is where economists fall short. All economists look at is statistics.

There are no exceptions to the cycle of economics. The economy always goes from summer to fall, from inflation to disinflation. In the fall season is when you get bubbles, and when you get bubbles, the government always claims it can fix the problem, but they cannot and they have proven this over and over again. Bubbles have to deflate. We don’t want real estate to be so expensive that young people cannot afford it.

The bigger the boom the bigger the bust. Fortunately, we have a tool that tells you how long a boom will last approximately, and when it will wind down. Harry predicted how the economy would change by looking at the birth index. Booms always lead to excesses, and excessive lending and business expansion.

Japan had a real estate bubble similar to ours. They had excessive lending and unaffordable real estate prices. They had a demographic boom peak before the rest of the world, because they were the only major country who did not have a baby boom after WWII. Japan went through their downturn while the rest of the world was in the greatest boom of history. They didn’t have as much deflation as we will have, and their export industries can still be working at 120 percent. Japan also entered their crisis as a net creditor to the world. Almost all their debt was financed by their own citizens, so they had more capacity to stimulate and keep stimulating.

The U.S. is entering this downturn, and the whole country is going down with it. Baby boom demographics are down around the world. The world has also had a banking crisis and real estate bubble. We’re dragging people down with us, but they would have gone down anyways. The U.S. is the biggest net debtor in the world. We owe trillions of dollars to other countries. 50 percent of our debt is financed by foreign investors. This is contributing to the world downturn.

In 2011, Harry believes debt will overwhelm the banking system. This will cause the deficit to reach about $22 trillion. Harry thinks the debt will encourage our government to borrow even more, and we will pay for it. Japan tried to do this, and they will be sorry for it. Their debt to GDP ratio is 2.5 times what ours is. The only reason why they are surviving is because they are still paying interest rates on that debt at less than 2 percent. In the next decade, they will have to pay market rates like the rest of the world. Japan never truly deflated their bubble. They deflated their businesses, but they didn’t deflate their financial institutions. They have no way to easily get themselves out of this trouble.

Harry believes that Europe is going to start having debt trouble as well. When this happens, France and Germany will have to pick up the tab, but they won’t want to have any part in that. They will demand that the other countries cut their spending and raise taxes to cover their own debt.

In the United States, healthcare and social security expenses are already at costs above what we can afford, and we are now looking to expand that. Company and government pensions are unrealistically generous. Once we get to the point where we have to cut those pensions, people are going to go nuts. There may be riots. Bruce agrees with Harry on this issue. $46 trillion in unfunded medicare, Medicaid, and social security liabilities have already been promised to people. That is 4 times as much as the current government debt. We can’t afford the healthcare we have, and now they are trying to pass another healthcare bill.

The government will have to confess its inability to pay the baby boom generation its social benefits around 2012 or 2013 when the crisis will be at its worst. We will not get out of the mortgage and housing crisis until 2012. Harry believes that Obama will not be reelected, because he became president at a bad time.

We are going to have an enormous amount of debt in the next couple years, which is part of the reason why Harry does not support the new health reform bill. We will not be able to sustain the cost of this new program, and Bruce doubts that Congress has fully read through this health care bill.

When you have deflation, it exaggerates the current debt level. Harry believes that this will cause the government to scale back on age limits for social security and health care. Private debt will scale down substantially. All the debt ratios will get worse. Many businesses will go under or merge with other businesses. Banks will have to write off trillions in loans. Deflation works to restructure debt, rather than pay it off. If we had to pay all that debt off with deflated dollars, it would be much more difficult. At the end of this deflation period, we will be much stronger. Stronger companies will take over weak companies, costs get cut, and real estate goes down.

There are very few properties for sale in California right now, and it is easy to resale. The default rate has doubled in the last 12 months, but the foreclosure numbers have been cut in half. Banks are not foreclosing on people, because they do not know what to do with so many properties. Despite the 6 percent GDP, which Harry does not believe will last, defaults will continue to increase and foreclosures will continue to hit the market. This will suppress real estate prices. Banks will eventually have to write off a lot of those loans and foreclose. This is what will kill the recovery. Once the banks realize that real estate won’t recover, we will see the next banking crisis.

There is a psychology attached to exaggerated events like booms. When booms occur, people rationalize their decisions and the same thing happens in a down cycle. When things go down, people develop a pessimistic attitude towards the future. Baby boomers have not yet had a major downturn in both the real estate and stock market at the same time. This crash is going to cause retirements to disappear for baby boomers, and this loss will cause them to save even more. They will have to work longer but they may not be able to get jobs, because older people cost more in benefits. Harry is forecasting 15 percent unemployment.

Harry believes interest rates will increase this year. However, the bond market will eventually notice that the economy is slowing and then interest rates will decrease. This is what happened in 1931 when the crisis was building. We had a great boom market in bonds from 1932 to 1940 when interest rates were falling. In the next decade we will see deflation. If you want to buy long term bonds, Harry encourages people to wait until later this year or early next year. If you want to refinance, you may want to wait until interest rates come back down. This downturn in interest rates will happen between 2011 and 2013.

Bruce never thought he would see interest rates go down this low. Bruce began his real estate career in 1981 when he refinanced his house at 17.5 percent. Now we are at sub five percent rates, and we may see rates go even lower. Harry agrees and claims we may see rates go down to 3 to 4 percent.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/8/10

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

John Husing estimates that 10,500 new jobs will be created in Riverside during 2010. First American CoreLogic reports distressed sales accounted for 29 percent of the U.S. market. According to the Clear Capital Home Price Index, US home prices dipped 3.9% in the first quarter of 2010. The current rate for 30-year FRM loans is at 5.21%.

In The News:

The Press EnterpriseInland economy to improve in 2010: forecast” (4-7-10)

“Inland Southern California will start regaining some of the jobs it lost in the last two years, the area’s leading economist told a gathering of business leaders Wednesday. John Husing, whose forecast each spring is considered one of the clearest snapshots of the region’s economy, said Riverside and San Bernardino county residents will see about 10,500 new jobs created in 2010. If it happens, it would be the first annual growth for the area’s job base in three years.”

Housing Wire“Distressed Sales Reach 29% of Entire Market: First American” (4-8-10)

“Distressed sales, including short sales and real estate owned (REO) transactions, accounted for 29% of the entire US market in January, according to First American CoreLogic. It’s the highest level since April 2009 and close to the February number calculated by Clear Capital, another analytics firm, which released a report showing how those transactions are pressing home prices down. Distressed sales took the largest chunk of the market in January 2009 when 32% of sales fell into that category, according to First American.”

Housing Wire“REO Sales Push Home Prices Down 3.9% in March: Clear Capital” (4-8-10)

“After nine months of quarterly gains, US home prices dipped 3.9% from January to March as real-estate owned (REO) property takes more of the market, according to the Clear Capital Home Price Index. Home prices did grow 5.1% from last year, a sign that increases are flattening. In February, prices grew 5% on a yearly basis as well. All four US regions reported positive yearly gains for the first time since spring 2006. However, when Clear Capital analysts drilled down to the quarterly scale, they found renewed declines in regional prices.”

Housing Wire“Freddie Mac Mortgage Rates Continue Climb for Fourth Week” (4-8-10)

“The Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.34 0.00%) weekly survey put the average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) at 5.21% with an average 0.6 point for the week ending April 8, up from the previous week, when the average was 5.08%, and up from the same time last year, when the average rate was 4.87%. It’s the highest average rate for 30-year FRM since August 13, 2009, when it averaged 5.29%. It is the fourth week Freddie’s rates have inched upward.”

Orange County Register - “Homebuilder’s future in doubt?” (4-8-10)

“California Coastal Communities filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October to gain more time to repay $182 million in debt due this spring. That debt grew to $204 million by the end of 2009, according an annual report the company filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 30.”

Inman - “ZipRealty: Data shows rising median price” (4-8-10)

“A monthly review of multiple listing service data in 26 market areas found that the median price of for-sale homes rose 1.07 percent in March, to $263,753, according to real estate brokerage company ZipRealty. Prices have been reduced on 40.35 percent of homes that were for sale in March, which is down slightly from February. And the median price reduction on for-sale homes fell 3.02 percent in March, to $20,200.”

Realty Times“Top 10 Home Buying Mistakes” (4-8-10)

“Going solo Buying a house is a complex transaction. It should be a team effort. You’ll need a real estate agent, lender, inspector, insurer, perhaps a lawyer and other team members to help you through each step of the way. Team build before you start the search. Love at first sight If you believe in fairy tales you probably shouldn’t be buying a home. You won’t live happily ever after if you emote your way through the home buying process. Your home should fit your real needs, not your yen for drama. Buy a home that fits your budget and your lifestyle. Be sure the home is in a community and neighborhood you desire. Visit neighborhoods several times before you buy to check out schools, noise and traffic patterns.”

Realty Times“Nonresidential Construction Industry Continues to Struggle” (4-8-10)

“Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) reports that its Construction Backlog Indicator (CBI) sharply declined by 9 percent between November 2009 and January 2010. CBI has slipped 16.3 percent during the last year and currently stands at 5.5 months, the lowest point reported in the 15 months ABC has gathered data. CBI is a forward-looking indicator that measures the amount of construction work under contract to be completed in the future.”