The Norris Group Blog

California Real Estate Headline Roundup

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/04/09

Today’s News Synopsis:

The unemployment rate declined to 10 percent during November. As of September, less than 0.3 percent of all trial modifications have become permanent. The FDIC announced plans that may require some lenders to make principal reductions on mortgages, rather than forbearing payment and reducing interest rates.

In The News:

Wall Street Journal“Unemployment Rate Falls to 10%” (12-4-09)

“U.S. job losses in November posted the smallest drop since the start of the recession and the unemployment rate unexpectedly declined, a sign the labor market is finally healing as the economy recovers.”

Time - “Why the Loan-Modification Program Isn’t Working” (12-4-09)

“The problem the Administration is out to tackle is related to the structure of the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). The first three months of a mortgage rewrite are something of a probation period— and very few homeowners are making it out of that trial. More than 650,000 borrowers have been placed in trial modifications, but as of September, fewer than 2,000 had become permanent.”

Housing Wire“Moody’s Links Option ARM, Subprime Performance” (12-4-09)

“More than $200bn of outstanding pay-option adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) originated and securitized from ‘04-’07, according to market commentary by Moody’s Investors Service this week. This sector shows ‘dismal’ performance, with more than 40% of borrowers 60 or more days past due on payments. And many of these loans have yet to experience a recast event, when initial minimum monthly payments jump as much as 60%, according to sources interviewed by HousingWire for an upcoming issue.”

Housing Wire“Forget Forbearance; FDIC Eyes Principal Forgiveness” (12-4-09)

“Institutions that acquire failed banks taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) may soon be required to cut principal off mortgages instead of simply forbearing a portion until a later day or lowering interest rates, according to comments and FDIC official made to Bloomberg this week. The principal forgiveness might apply to as much as $45bn of mortgages from failed banks. Regulators so far in 2009 shut down 124 banks, costing the FDIC’s insurance fund billions of dollars and putting billions more in assets up for acquisition.”

Housing Wire“Foreclosure Activity Outpaces Mods in October: Hope Now” (12-4-09)

“The mortgage servicing industry completed 271,563 total loan workouts in October, according to Hope Now, the private sector alliance of mortgage servicers, investors, insurers and non-profit counselors. Workouts included 198,373 repayment plans and 73,190 modifications. At the same time, the industry completed 94,450 foreclosure sales and initiated another 222,107 foreclosure starts.”

Press Enterprise - Low interest rates are no panacea for region’s housing” (12-4-09)

“Inland experts say a shortage of inventory is suppressing sales of existing homes. Also, the high cost of land that home builders acquired makes it impossible for most of them to construct houses that can sell cheaply enough to compete with the foreclosure-ridden resale market.”

Mercury News“Now’s really the time to buy a home, many say” (12-4-09)

“Mortgage rates are hovering at historic lows, home prices are just starting to edge up from total collapse, and the government is offering tax breaks to first-time and move-up buyers. It all adds up to this: In the real estate agent’s overworked phrase, there may never be a better time to buy a house. And this might not last for long, brokers and real estate agents say, especially since mortgage rates are probably headed up.”

Inman - “Buyer discounts continue slide” (12-4-09)

“For the ninth month this year, buyer discounts — the price paid compared to the last listing price of homes — shrank in October to a median of 2.7 percent, according to Zillow’s Real Estate Market Reports. That’s down from 2.9 percent in September and 4.6 percent in January.”

Bloomberg - “Banks Take Losses on Short Sales as Foreclosures Soar” (12-4-09)

“Banks are beginning to go along with short sales in increasing numbers, three years into a U.S. housing slump that pushed the economy into a recession and cut resale values by 30 percent from the peak in July 2006. Short sales almost tripled to 40,000 in the first six months of 2009 from the same period a year earlier. Yet for each short sale, there were 25 foreclosures started or completed in the first half of this year, according to data from the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. ”

Looking Back

One year ago, a little over 42,293 new and resale houses and condos were sold for the year. Orange County was listed as the 9th riskiest home lending market. Bernanke estimated that as many as 20 percent of all homeowners owed more on their homes than their homes were worth.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply