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California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Posts Tagged ‘ABA’

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 7/7/10

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The MBA reports mortgage loan application volume increased 6.7 percent from last week. Delinquencies on home equity loans decreased to 4.12% in the first quarter. 89 percent of mortgage lenders intend to, or already, offer Web-based mortgage application services. The average price discount on foreclosed properties nationwide is 26 percent.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers AssociationMortgage Refinance Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (7-7-10)

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending July 2, 2010.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 6.7 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 6.5 percent compared with the previous week.”

CNet - “Freddie, Fannie reject energy retrofit loans” (7-7-10)

“The FHFA said it does not object to all energy retrofit loans, but specifically to those PACE or PACE-like energy loans that are essentially structured as property taxes and, therefore, have first lien. In the event of a foreclosure on the property, those loans are legally required to be paid off first before any money goes to the mortgage lender.”

Los Angeles Times“Home equity loan delinquencies fall for first time in two years” (7-7-10)

“The percentage of home equity loans on which consumers were at least one payment late declined to 4.12% in the first quarter from 4.32% the previous quarter. Not since the first quarter of 2008, when the rate fell to 2.34% from 2.39%, had there been a decline. Missed payments on consumer loans overall improved for the third straight quarter, the ABA said in its quarterly Consumer Credit Delinquency Bulletin. Bank card delinquencies fell from 4.39% to 3.88% of all accounts — the first time since 2002 that card delinquencies were below 4%.”

Housing Wire“When it Comes to Servicing Ginnie Mortgages, BofA Scores Again” (7-7-10)

“BofA-serviced Ginnie loans ranked among the lowest in terms of 60-day delinquencies (less than 1% in May), followed closely by Wells Fargo (WFC: 26.67 +6.04%) (just over 1%). Countrywide loans had the highest 60-day delinquency rate of around 3%”

Housing Wire“Tech Developer’s Survey Finds Lenders Expect Surge in Online Mortgage Volume” (7-7-10)

“18% of mortgage lenders offer so-called ‘smart’ Web-based mortgage application services. The survey defines ‘smart’ software products as those that are interactive mortgage-application systems that are a fully transactional, Web-based solution that intelligently guides borrowers through the application, adjusting the questions for applicants according to responses. Of the remaining companies that current do not offer the service, 71% said they will adopt online mortgage application technology sometime in the future, while 14% said they would not. The remaining 15% responded they were unsure.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Commercial Property Sales Trail Six-Year Average” (7-7-10)

“U.S. commercial real estate sales in the first half totaled about a quarter of the average of the previous six years as owners kept properties off the market, impeding investors with record funds for purchases. Buyers and sellers completed $34.2 billion of deals through June, or 26 percent of the average first-half dollar volume since 2004, according to preliminary figures from Real Capital Analytics. The total was about 12 percent of the 2007 peak, when $277.7 billion of properties changed hands in the same period, data from the New York-based real estate research firm show.”

Realty Times“Short Sale Tactics May Bring on Legal Liabilities For Agents” (7-7-10)

“Real estate agents know that short sales are likely to be time-consuming and frustrating. What many don’t know is that short sales carry high risks of legal liability for agents. One area of short sales that is fraught with liability is in the use of negotiators. In California, short sale negotiators must possess a real estate license and are subject to a variety of regulations. Moreover, a negotiator’s agency relation to the principals is frequently unclear and undisclosed. Undisclosed dual agency is a particular problem.”

Orange County Register“O.C. builders hit by tax break’s demise” (7-7-10)

“The total number of O.C. sales contracts — the start of escrow for new home purchases — tumbled to 191, down from 218 in April, according to Costa Mesa-based Hanley Wood Market Intelligence, which tracks new home sales. May’s total was up a mere 3.8% from year-ago levels. By comparison, O.C. contracts had been up 39.7% in April. April 30 was the deadline to open escrow on a home purchase to qualify for the federal tax credit.”

Orange County Register“Calif. has 4th largest foreclosure discount” (7-7-10)

“The company ranked of 44 states and Washington D.C. (other states don’t have enough data for valid analysis, according to Realtytrac) for the gap between pricing for homes sold somewhere in the foreclosure process vs. those that were not anywhere in foreclosure. As for fat foreclosure discounts, Ohio led the nation at 39.5%, followed by Kentucky at 35.2% and Illinois at 35.1%. The average sales price of properties nationwide that sold while in some stage of foreclosure in the first quarter was 26 percent below the average sales price of properties not in the foreclosure process.”

For more information about The Norris Group’s California hard money loans or our California Trust Deed investments, visit the website or call our office at 951-780-5856 for more information. For upcoming California real estate investor training and events, visit The Norris Group website and our California investor calendar. You’ll also find our award-winning real estate radio show on KTIE 590am at 6pm on Saturdays or you can listen to over 170 podcasts in our free investor radio archive.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/15/10

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Statistics from 10 primary U.S. cities show that home prices declined by 1 percent. ABA expects economic growth to increase at 3.1 percent through 2010. The U.S. Treasury Department reports that 66,465 permanent modifications were made in December.  Chris Thornberg forecasts that home prices will dip again in 2011.

In The News:

Housing Wire“JP Morgan Says Sell Mortgage Bonds as Fed Snaps Up Record MBS” (1-15-10)

“The spread of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) bonds yields to Treasuries is tight and likely to remain tight in the near-term, but swap spreads are currently 5-10 bps too narrow to greatly entice private investors, according to a JP Morgan Securities conference call on MBS and asset-backed securities (ABS).While private investors largely hold on the buy side, the government continues to buy up agency MBS as part of its $1.25trn agency MBS-purchase program.”

Housing Wire“House List Prices Down 1% in December: Altos” (1-15-10)

“Altos Research’s listing price index declined 1% in December and 1.4% during Q409, but for the year, the 10-city composite price index was up 5.2%, the company said, adding it projects asking prices to continue to decline during the winter 2010 months.”

Housing Wire“ABA Expects Economic Recovery Will Fuel Job Growth in 2010″ (1-15-10)

“High unemployment and constrained consumer spending will keep the speed of recovery in check, but ABA economists indicated real gross domestic product (GDP) will grow at an annualized rate of 3.1% throughout 2010. It’s half the historic rate of GDP growth seen after previous deep recessions, leaving the unemployment rate fairly high – but below 10% – at year-end.”

Housing Wire“HAMP Servicers Permanently Modify More Than 66,000 Mortgages” (1-15-10)

“Servicers participating in the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) completed 66,465 permanent modifications through December, according to a report from the US Treasury Department. It’s more than double the 31,382 permanent modifications reported through the month of November. More than 40,000 more active modifications need only the borrowers signature to become permanent, totaling 112,521 permanent modifications approved by the servicers.”

Housing Wire“JP Morgan Posts Q4 Profit Despite Mortgage Losses” (1-15-10)

“JP Morgan said it made approximately 600,000 mortgage modification offers to homeowners and approved 120,000 modifications during 2009.”

Housing Wire“Treasury Raises Cap on HAMP to $35.5bn” (1-15-10)

“The US Treasury Department raised the total amount of potential capped incentive payments for the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) from $27.7bn to $35.5bn, according to the latest Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) report.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. REITs Poised to Boost Dividends After Raising $33 Billion” (1-15-10)

“A dozen U.S. real estate investment trusts, part of an industry that raised $33 billion last year, likely will increase their next quarterly dividends. Public Storage, Annaly Capital Management Inc., and Inland Real Estate Corp. are among those that may boost payouts, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Vornado Realty Trust said this week it would resume paying its dividend fully in cash after a year of issuing it partially in stock. ”

Inman - “RPR courting MLSs” (1-15-10)

“By promising not to compete with MLSs — and allowing them an opportunity to make a quick exit from RPR if they aren’t satisfied with the results — company executives say they are out to sign up half the nation’s roughly 900 MLSs by the end of the year.”

Orange County Register“Home sales, prices seen falling in 2011″ (1-15-10)

“Orange County-based homebuilders were told Thursday that the recession may be over, but the future for the economy and the housing industry remains uncertain. As if to underscore that point, economist Chris Thornberg released a forecast projecting that after modest gains this year, home sales and prices will dip again in 2011 because of rising foreclosures and interest rates.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the NAR announced that sales on homes priced above $750,000 had decreased by nearly 50 percent. The rate for 30-year fixed mortgages dropped below 5 percent. The CBIA claimed that new home sales in California were “glacially slow”. Statistics from the Federal Reserve showed that jobless claims were rising.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/13/10

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to the CBIA, condominium sales were 39 percent higher from last year. The MBA’s weekly survey shows that mortgage loan application volume increased by 14.3 percent from last week. Jumbo residential mortgage-backed securities increased to 9.2 percent from December 2008 to December 2009. All but two of the Federal Reserve districts reported increased activity or improved conditions.

In The News:

CBIA - “California New-Home Market Dips Slightly in November, CBIA Announces” (1-13-10)

“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 4 percent below November 2008, representing a less impressive result than last month’s year-over-year increase, but was nevertheless an improvement from most months in 2009. During November, 1,860 new homes and condominiums were sold in the subdivisions tracked by Costa Mesa-based HWMI, compared to 1,934 in November 2008. Sales of single-family homes were down by 18 percent, while sales of townhomes and “plexes” – duplexes, triplexes, etc. – were up 8 percent and sales of condominiums were 39 percent higher than a year ago thanks to strong sales at projects in the Los Angeles and San Diego areas.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationMortgage Refinance Applications Increase While Purchase Applications Remain Flat in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (1-13-10)

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending January 8, 2010.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 14.3 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 66.0 percent compared with the previous week, which was a shortened week due to the New Year’s holiday.”

San Francisco Chronicle“State adopts greenest building codes in U.S.” (1-13-10)

“The new code, dubbed Calgreen, will take effect next January and requires builders to install plumbing that cuts indoor water use, divert 50 percent of construction waste from landfills to recycling, use low-pollutant paints, carpets and floorings and, in nonresidential buildings, install separate water meters for different uses. It mandates the inspection of energy systems by local officials to ensure that heaters, air conditioners and other mechanical equipment in nonresidential buildings are working efficiently. And it will allow local jurisdictions, such as San Francisco, to retain their stricter existing green building standards, or adopt more stringent versions of the state code if they choose.”

Housing Wire“Prime Jumbo RMBS Delinquencies Swell to 9.2%: Fitch” (1-13-10)

“Delinquency of more than 60 days among prime jumbo residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) nearly tripled to 9.2% in December 2009, from 3.2% at the end of 2008, according to Fitch Ratings.”

Housing Wire“GSEs Could Lose $448bn of MBS Guarantee Business, Says Amherst” (1-13-10)

“Losses on the combined credit-guarantee books of government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.41 +2.17%) and Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.14 +1.79%) could reach 9.6% – or $448bn – according to market analysis by Amherst Securities Group.”

Housing Wire“Housing Sales Up, Prices Remain Steady: Beige Book” (1-13-10)

“All but two Fed districts reported increased activity or improved conditions, with Philadelphia and Richmond seeing mixed results. In the December 2 edition of the Summary of Commentary on Current Economic Conditions, commonly called the Beige Book, eight districts reported an uptick in their perspectives economy. The book is published eight times a year and is a nationwide economic indicator compiled from the 12 Fed districts.”

Housing Wire“Government to Earn Billions on Bailouts” (1-13-10)

“The US Treasury Department expects profits of at least $19bn from bank investment programs under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), according to market commentary Wednesday by the American Bankers Association (ABA). Originally projected to cost $76bn according to the ABA, the outlook for TARP bank programs was updated in December in anticipation of actual profits.”

Housing Wire“FinestExperts Ranks Top 2010 Real Estate Investment Markets” (1-13-10)

“FinestExpert.com named Dallas-Fort Worth as the hottest real estate investment market for 2010. After analyzing more than 10,000 real estate markets to identify stable, growth-oriented for investors, San Francisco-based FinestExpert.com formed its first top-20 hottest real estate investment market list for 2010.”

Housing Wire“Cancelled Foreclosures Outnumber Sales in California: ForeclosureRadar” (1-13-10)

“The amount of California foreclosure cancellations increased 26.5% in December to 13,243, primarily due to loan modifications. And for the first time this number overtook foreclosures reaching real-estate owned (REO) status, according to ForeclosureRadar, which tracks foreclosure activity in the state. In December, the amount of foreclosures heading back to the banks, REO, dropped 11.9% from the previous month to 12,437. Significant declines in foreclosure discounts by lenders drove the decrease in sales to third parties, according to the report.”

Bloomberg - “Obama to Announce Fee on 20 Banks to Recoup TARP” (1-13-10)

“President Barack Obama will announce tomorrow his intention to impose a fee on roughly 20 of the country’s largest banks and financial institutions to help recoup taxpayer bailout money and trim the federal budget deficit. Obama will outline his proposal to raise as much as $120 billion at 11:45 a.m. local time at the White House, Obama’s press secretary, Robert Gibbs, told reporters. Gibbs said the president’s economic team has worked on a structure to prevent the levy from being passed onto consumers.”

Bloomberg - “Real Estate Bull Laub Sees Unprecedented Workout From Bad Debt” (1-13-10)

“Kenneth Laub has been through three commercial real estate boom and bust cycles during almost five decades as a broker and consultant to corporations such as Hess Corp. and International Paper Co. He says the current downturn will overshadow all of the others, Bloomberg Markets reports in its February 2010 issue.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the NAHB encouraged congress to use a portion of the $700 billion bailout to increase credit for home purchases, and to stem foreclosures. California lost a total of 144,000 people from 2008 to 2009. Ben Bernanke warned that a fiscal stimulus would not cause an economic recovery. In November of 2008, 4 percent of homes were bought with adjustable rate mortgages.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/12/10

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Federal Reserve made $46.1 billion last year. The MBA predicts that mortgage originations will decline by 39 percent in 2010. According to Integrated Asset Services, national home prices fell by 0.3 percent in November of 2009. FHA reports that foreclosure starts on mortgages from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac decreased by 15 percent from the second quarter to the third quarter of 2009.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“Fed’s reaction to crisis helps deliver record $46.1-billion profit” (1-12-10)

“The Federal Reserve today announced it made a record $46.1-billion profit last year, countering concerns that the central bank has put too much taxpayer money at risk in attempts to stabilize the financial industry.”

Housing Wire“MBA Expects Mortgage Originations to Fall 40% in 2010″ (1-12-10)

“The mortgage finance industry will likely see a continued slow-down in 2010 as unemployment remains high and home sales slide, the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) said Tuesday at a media briefing over the state of the real estate industry. The MBA projected total mortgage origination on residential one- to four-family properties is likely to plummet to $1.28trn in all of 2010, from $2.11trn in all of 2009. The projection marks a 39% decline in total mortgage origination in 2010.”

Housing Wire“MetLife to Provide Reverse Mortgage Program for ABA Banks” (1-12-10)

“The American Bankers Association (ABA) partnered with MetLife Home Loans to provide member banks a reverse mortgage program. Banks provide reverse mortgages to let homeowners convert their home into cash and can allow older borrowers to supplement social security, meet medical expenses and make home improvements.”

Housing Wire“Tax Refund Gives KB Homes $100m Q4 Profit” (1-12-10)

“A tax return from profits earned during the housing bubble put KB Home (KBH: 15.72 -4.03%) in positive net profit territory in its fiscal year Q409 that ended Nov. 30. Excluding a $191.7m tax refund, KB Home would have lost $91m in the quarter, but instead posted a $100.7m, or $1.31 per share, net profit. With or without the tax refund, the quarter’s results are better than the $307.3m loss in Q408.”

Housing Wire“IAS Price Index Dips on Declines in Northeast, Midwest” (1-12-10)

“The Integrated Asset Services (IAS) index of national house shows prices fell 0.3% in November, the collateral valuation and management services firm said. That’s better than the 0.5% decline in prices the index experienced in October and the 0.6% decrease in September.”

Housing Wire“Sellers Cut Listing Prices on 21% of Homes: Trulia” (1-12-10)

“As of Jan. 1, 2010, sellers cut listing prices on 21% of homes currently on the US market, according to the real estate site, Trulia.com.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Subpoenas 15 FHA Lenders With High Mortgage Defaults” (1-12-10)

“The U.S. Housing and Urban Development Department said it subpoenaed 15 mortgage companies today to seek out possible fraud in an effort to stem losses on loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration. HUD officials, who oversee the FHA mortgage insurance program, said they haven’t haven’t found any evidence of wrongdoing at the lenders, and were singling out those with the highest default rates.”

Bloomberg - “Life Insurers to Sidestep CMBS Losses, Barclays Says” (1-12-10)

“U.S. life insurers, a group led by MetLife Inc. and Prudential Financial Inc., will sidestep losses on investments tied to commercial mortgages, said Eric Berg, an analyst with Barclays Plc. ”

Bloomberg - “PMI Drops After Goldman Sachs Sell Recommendation” (1-12-10)

“PMI Group Inc., the third-largest U.S. mortgage insurer, fell the most in five months after a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst said he expects more losses as foreclosures increase.”

Inman - “More loans going bad, but more get help” (1-12-10)

“More homeowners fell behind on their payments during the third quarter of 2009, but fewer were funneled into the foreclosure process as loan servicers engaged in more loan workouts, modifications and short sales, according to a new report. Foreclosure starts on loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fell 15 percent from the second quarter to the third quarter, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said in its quarterly Foreclosure Prevention and Refinance Report.”

Orange County Register“Housing market warming up in south coast?” (1-12-10)

“In a typically slow quarter for real estate, all three south coast cities saw their expected market time speed up a bit, according to a biweekly report by Steven Thomas of Altera Real Estate. Two weeks ago, it would have taken an expected 6.86 months to sell all of Dana Point’s active home stock, which has sped up slightly to an expected 5.16 months.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, some economists estimated that the Modesto, Stockton, Bakersfield, Riverside and Sacramento housing markets would take the longest to recover. President Bush requested the remaining $350 billion of the financial rescue, and handed his economic authority to Barack Obama. Distressed home sales in Orange County decreased by 7.2 percent.