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California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Posts Tagged ‘affordability’

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

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Freddie Mac said 30-year mortgage rates fell to 4.71% last week. According to the MBA, commercial and multifamily mortgage originations increased 25% in the 1st quarter. The Labor Department reports jobless claims increased by 10% last week. According to Zillow’s analysis, home affordability is at a generational high.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“Mortgage rates drift lower, Freddie Mac says” (5-5-11)

“A Freddie Mac report on Thursday said the lenders it surveys were offering 30-year fixed-rate mortgages at an average rate of 4.71% early this week, compared with 4.78% the week before.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Bankers’ First Quarter 2011 Originations Increase 89 Percent Over First Quarter 2010″ (5-5-11)

“First quarter 2011 commercial and multifamily mortgage originations were 89 percent higher than during the same period last year and 25 percent lower than during the fourth quarter of 2010, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association”

Orange County Register“Poll: Just 24% of renters want to rent” (5-5-11)

“Pew surveyed 2,142 U.S. adults in March; 57% of respondents who own a home and 30% who are renters; the remainder has other arrangements, such as living with family members.”

Housing Wire“Jobless claims rose 10% last week” (5-5-11)

“The Labor Department said the seasonally adjusted figure of claims for the week ended April 30 increased by 43,000 to 474,000 from 431,000 a week prior, which was revised upward 2,000.”

Housing Wire“Bank of America triples number of help centers for troubled homeowners” (5-5-11)

“Bank of America (BAC: 12.30 -1.52%) will open 28 new centers over the next two months to put distressed homeowners in touch with mortgage specialists. The expansion will bring the total number of BofA help centers to 40, more than tripling the 12 it has already opened.”

Realty Times“Affordability Reaches Generational High” (5-5-11)

“Zillow notes that ‘today’s median home buyer can expect to pay about 17% of his monthly gross income on his mortgage, compared to a 25% average since 1975.’ In the 1980′s, when interest rates were dangerously near 20 percent, this would take up nearly 45 percent of a buyers gross monthly income. In comparison, today’s rates are an extreme bargain.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the MBA reported mortgage loan application volume increased by 4 percent from last week. Treasury Department secretary Timothy Geithner is supporting a tax on the liabilities of banks. Laurie Goodman, an analyst at Amherst Securities Group LP, claims that second mortgages are threatening the housing market.

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.

218-TNG Radio – Leslie Appleton-Young 3-25-11

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Leslie Appleton-Young

Vice President of C.A.R.

(Full Bio)


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This week Bruce is joined again by Leslie Appleton-Young. She is the Vice President and Chief Economist for the California Association of Realtors; a statewide trade organization with over 165,000 members. Leslie directs the activities of the association’s member information groups, she oversees the analysis of housing markets and broker industry trends, member communications and member development activities.  She is well known as a speaker in the California real estate community.

UCLA’s business school has projected that California’s unemployment will remain in the double digits until 2013. This does not surprise Leslie. We are experiencing cyclical job losses, because there are few sectors that have not been impacted. To some extent, our problem is structural. Sending jobs over seas to lower wage countries has been occurring for a long time.

During the downturn of the 90s, there were job losses concentrated in California due to a loss of migration. Leslie does not believe this is our main problem though. Our biggest issues are coming from the restructuring of corporations and businesses. 70% of costs are directly tied to labor, so the easiest way to become more efficient is to use fewer workers.

Leslie is uncertain of the impact that gas prices will have on real estate. Gas affects real estate because it impacts the overall economy. High prices means there will be less discretionary income available for purchasing. The cost of gas also impacts the ability of people to move further out. The UCLA forecast assumed there would be no significant long term reductions in gas supply, and that we would be able to weather the increases, but we do not know that.

Affordability is close to an all time high. The gap between California’s affordability and the U.S.’s affordability is much closer now as well. The California median home price peaked at $594,000, and the U.S. peaked at $230,000, so we were still over twice as expensive. California’s current median is $300,000, and the U.S. median is $170,000, so there is still a big gap between the two.

Bruce believes this all time low for housing affordability is going to give us a boost in migration. The challenge will be to provide job opportunities for the migration.

In a county like Riverside, where it is common to develop 250 to 300 subdivisions every year, there is going to be a huge increase in demand. The inventory that has been bought from lower priced years will be able to increase in value. Bruce notes that Riverside has only developed 10 subdivisions this year.

There has been a significant increase in household size over the last couple years, because families have been moving in with each other to weather the bad economy. Many people who chose to move in with their family will be looking to move once the economy improves, and that will create demand.

In another five years, Leslie believes down payment requirements and interest rates will be significantly higher. Getting rid of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will affect us for many years. The private sector will be demanding higher risk premiums to originate.

A number of surveys from Fannie Mae and others show that many people still aspire to own a home. Leslie does not believe this will change. However, financing will become a bigger burden. Leslie does not believe 30 year mortgages will be very popular in the future. Bruce believes that we must be heading towards a lower percentage of home ownership.

In business, when you have an advertising campaign that you know will work, that is called a control piece. The only way you change that control piece is by changing one thing at a time to see if something emerges as better or worse. We had a control piece called a zero down VA loan. This program produced less than 1% foreclosures, and FHA did the same thing for a long time. Unfortunately, we changed everything about how we performed loans within 5 years, and we got a bad result. Bruce does not understand why we won’t go back to the way things were before.

In 2005, the GSE delinquency rate was 7.8%, and the private label delinquency rate was 28.6%. In 2006, GSEs had a delinquency rate of 23.3%, and the private label delinquency rate was 45.1%. For loans originated in 2007, the GSE rate was 14.9%, and the private label rate was 42%. This information must have been overlooked by the people discussing what to do with our financial system in the future. Fannie and Freddie worked until 2005 and 2006 when then decided to get into the subprime and Alt-A market. Bruce is not sure if our sufferings would have been eased much had Fannie and Freddie not gotten involved in subprime lending. If they had not touched subprime, there still would have been a large amount of inventory being overpriced because of the easy financing available at that time. What we did wrong was pretend that it was okay to loan people money based on a stated income and without a down payment.

39% of defaults between 2006 and 2008 were due to home equity borrowing. Leslie does not believe it is healthy for people, as well as the real estate market, to borrow in such a way that they owe more on their home after a year of ownership. Bruce does not totally agree with that, because in the past that behavior was not as simple. Leslie believes it is bad for people to leave themselves no cushion. Bruce agrees with this statement.

In 1934, FHA did 80% LTV loans with 20 year terms. Gradually we went to 30 year terms, and the down payment requirements went to 10, to 5, to even 3%.

Bruce is concerned that if we lower loan limits, it will cause a significant price drop, and then you will have a continuous negative equity position. Bruce and Leslie hopes the government does not restrict the market too much in this manner. Leslie has noticed that the government’s decisions tend to be imbalanced.

When Bruce bought his first home and mowed the grass for the first time, it made him feel like a man. Being an owner changed the way he felt about himself. It is a big deal, and it is one of the big reasons for why people come to California.

Bruce was very frustrated when the president of MERS was questioned in front of the senate, because not one of the senators read his deposition. If you are going to make a huge decision against a very influential company like MERS, why not take an hour to try and understand the problem?

CAR’s website is www.car.org

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.

215-TNG Radio – Sean O’Toole 3-5-11

Friday, March 4th, 2011

Sean O’Toole

President of ForeclosureRadar

(Full Bio)


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This week Bruce is joined by Sean O’Toole. Sean is president and founder of ForeclosureRadar. He has successfully purchased and flipped over 150 commercial and residential properties in foreclosure. He has leveraged the software industry for 15 years to make a trustee sale business.

The Mission of ForeclosureRadar is “to bring transparency, efficiency and honesty to the foreclosure market place.” Trustee sales have a notorious reputation. Sean believes they are generally honest, but there are always a few bad apples. The Norris Group bids on trustee sales every day, and there are some people accused of bid rigging. However, it would be difficult to rig a bid in Riverside because there are often 50 people bidding at a time.

The foreclosure process has not changed since the Great Depression. Most market places for goods and services have gone online. Online bidding is much more efficient than requiring investors to stand outside the court steps for property sales.

Sean is uncertain of whether or not a national foreclosure law may be implemented in the future. Because we are a republic, each state has its own rights, and many of those rights involved property. Sean believes a national foreclosure law may not be helpful.

Sean was recently elected one of the top 100 most influential real estate leaders, and Bruce feels his election was well deserved.

Sean bought most of his trustee properties from 2002 to 2005. He bought a few properties in 2006, but he eventually sold everything that same year because he thought the bubble was about to burst. When Sean sold his properties, he noticed the affordability levels were unsustainable, many buyers were unfit for purchasing property, and builders were discounting. People would pay $370,000 for a house, with no money down, and poor credit. Later that house would be selling for $350,000 with a swimming pool. Its not likely that the buyer, who thought property values would continue to increase, is going to keep making his payments.

Sean has met multiple investors who have told him that Bruce Norris’ predictions helped them leave the market before the bubble burst. Sean wishes he had known Bruce Norris during the bubble, because it was tough for him to leave the market while his partners were disagreeing with him.

Sean bought his first house when he was 18. Later, Sean’s father persuaded Sean to run a business for him in Hawaii. The business was a homes and land magazine. Later, Hawaii’s real estate market fell severely, and it became hard to sell real estate magazines during that time. Also, Sean’s house in his home town lost a lot of value, and he had to perform a short sale.

An event in another country can have an impact on our shores. The debt bubble in Japan had a strong impact on Hawaii’s market.

Sean once found a house that looked really nice on the outside and it had been boarded up. This lead Sean to believe that the inside was probably also well kept, so he bought the house. Unfortunately, Sean discovered the neighbors had been keeping the house clean, but they had also been using the inside of the house as a trash dump to avoid paying their trash bills. The house had 8 feet of trash and 30 dead animals. When Sean attempted to hire people to take the trash out, they came out of the house throwing up and quit.

Bruce does not believe you can have the kind of website that helps people in the business unless you have experienced the business for yourself. Sean has experienced the problems that come with being in this business, which is why he has been able to build such a helpful website. Sean believes that if half the people in Silicon Valley were willing to experience the problems they are trying to fix, then we would be building much better solutions for many problems.

When Sean first began investing in trustee sales, he had to watch the notice of trustee sales coming through the county records and the newspaper. The records would only tell you what is scheduled for the first time. You would go to the trustee sales and hear the auctioneer mentioning many other properties that were not in the records, because they were being postponed. It took months to compile a complete database of when certain sales were scheduled. This gave Sean a significant disadvantage over other buyers who had been in the business longer. There were some properties that you could get information on through calling, but for most of the properties you had to stand at the court steps.

Sean’s website has leveled the playing field, and it has hastened the time it takes to go from being a novice to being fully functional. Sean believes ForeclosureRadar has significantly helped the data aspect of foreclosure sales. However, there are still other inefficiencies, such as being required to show up with cash, and not having title insurance. As the market becomes more efficient, the discounts will become smaller, and that will decrease profitability.

“Get Rich Quick” gurus and disreputable list peddlers have thrived on the industry’s darkness, and Bruce believes ForeclosureRadar has brought transparency and understandability to the business. If you are looking to get rich quick, you should probably seek another venue, but you can still make a great living in the foreclosure business. Sean does not believe in “get rich quick” ideas.

2007 was an awful year to be in the foreclosure business, because the banks were not discounting anything. During that time, he started focusing more on his software business.

Sean is always anxious after wining a foreclosure bid, because he worries that his competitors may know something he doesn’t. Bruce feels most anxious when he is the only bidder on a property. In Southern California, no one will come to your rescue if you are making a mistake. Sean once stopped a man from purchasing a second which would have resulted in a minimum $150,000 loss. After stopping the man, the other investors were furious with Sean, because they were hoping the man would destroy his ability to compete against them. Bruce understands the desire to beat out the competition, but he is glad that he was able to help someone else in a similar situation. Bruce once attempted to test the kindness of his competition by purposely qualifying for a bad sale. Once he had qualified, 4 other investors decided to qualify with him, but no one made a bid. After the foreclosure sales ended, one of the competing investors asked Bruce, “Why did you do that?” Bruce responded, “I wanted to see if you would tell me it was a second.” What the 4 investors did was worse than just letting Bruce bid on the property. The reason why they qualified for the property along side him was because they wanted to make him feel comfortable about making a bad choice. Sean has even seen an investor bid an inexperienced investor up on a bad deal in an attempt to increase the inexperienced investor’s losses.

In Sean’s hometown, he has 4 times as many properties in foreclosure as he has listed for sale. If you want to claim to be a market expert, you have to be able to understand the foreclosures in your area.

Sean’s website is www.foreclosureradar.com

We will be doing a second interview with Sean next week.

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 2/10/11

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Existing home sales increased 15.4% in the 4th quarter of 2010, according to the NAR.  Housing affordability for first-time buyers increased to 69% during the final quarter of 2010, said the CAR. RealtyTrac reports foreclosure filings fell 17% year over year. Kevin Warch resigned from the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.

In The News:

NAR - “Home Price Stabilization Seen in Most Metro Areas during Fourth Quarter, Sales Up” (2-10-11)

“Total state existing-home sales, including single-family and condo, jumped 15.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 4.80 million in the fourth quarter from 4.16 million in the third quarter, but were 19.5 percent below a surge to an unsustainable cyclical peak of 5.97 million in the fourth quarter of 2009, which was driven by the initial deadline for the first-time buyer tax credit.”

CAR - “Q4 First-time Buyer Housing Affordability” (2-10-11)

“The percentage of first-time buyers who could afford to purchase an entry-level home in California rose to 69 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, matching the record-high set in the first quarter of 2009, according to C.A.R.’s First-time Buyer Housing Affordability Index (FTB-HAI). In the third quarter of 2010, the Index was 66 percent, and was 64 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009, C.A.R. reported.”

Los Angeles Times“Obama to outline options for future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac” (2-10-11)

“The Obama administration plans to give Congress three blueprints for reducing or eliminating the government’s role in guaranteeing mortgages and providing funding for home loans.”

Housing Wire“Report: FHA should lower loan limits” (2-10-11)

“The Federal Housing Administration substantially raised its risk when it agreed to insure loans valued as high as $729,000 during the financial crisis, says a new report from the George Washington University Center for Real Estate and Urban Analysis.”

Housing Wire“CalHFA implements $2 billion ‘Keep Your Home California’ initiative” (2-10-11)

“California residents who are unemployed or owe more on their mortgages than what their homes are worth now have four new state programs that will help them stay in their house and current on their mortgage.”

Housing Wire“Kevin Warsh resigns from Federal Reserve Board of Governors” (2-10-11)

“Kevin Warsh, one of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors that steered the nation through the recession, resigned Thursday after five years of service.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Foreclosure Filings Decline for Fourth Consecutive Month” (2-10-11)

“Foreclosure filings in the U.S. fell 17 percent in January from a year earlier, the fourth straight month of declines, as legal scrutiny of lender practices slowed actions against delinquent homeowners, RealtyTrac Inc. said.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the MBA reported that mortgage application volume decreased by 1.2 percent within a week. According to the NAHB, there were approximately 234,000 homes for sale at the end of 2009. Statistics from Zillow showed that the national median price was $186,200 in Q409 of 2009. The total number of FHA-insured single-family mortgages in default reached 531,671 in Q409 of 2009.

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 8/31/10

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to Capital Economics, business investment rose 17% during the second quarter. Multiple forecasters suspect the housing market and the economy are in a double dip. Zillow reports that 18.2% of all O.C. homes sold for a loss. The Case-Shiller 20-city home price index shows prices increased 1% from May to June.

In The News:

Housing Wire“Dallas Fed says fiscal stimulus is a quick fix, not a permanent solution” (8-30-10)

“The fiscal stimulus plan, formally known as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, signed into law by President Obama in February 2009 has succeeded in everything it planned to do, in theory. It designated the majority of funding toward the people who need it the most and at the most crucial time they need it. But Jason Saving, senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, doubts the plan is showing the anticipated results in practice.”

Housing Wire“Restricted credit for small businesses driving delinquencies up” (8-30-10)

“According to Capital Economics’ U.S. Quarterly Outlook, business investment in Q210 rose 17%. However, Moody’s Analytics reported last week that commercial mortgage-backed security delinquencies spiked since after Sept. 2008, passing 23% by March 2010.”

Housing Wire“Home values drop 0.2% from a year ago: Freddie Mac” (8-30-10)

“Home values in the U.S. fell 0.2% in the second quarter of 2010 from the same quarter last year, according to the Freddie Mac Conventional Mortgage Home Price Index (CMHPI).”

Orange County Register“1-in-5 O.C. homes selling at a loss” (8-30-10)

“While 18.2% of all homes sold for a loss, that’s down about 2.5% from the same period a year earlier. Zillow spokeswoman Jill Simmons said that losing deals in O.C. peaked at 25% in February 2009, the month after median home prices hit bottom.”

Orange County Register“Apartment occupancy up in first half of year” (8-30-10)

“A survey of large apartment managers indicated that U.S. apartment occupancy has recovered steadily throughout the first half of 2010, following more than two years of decreasing occupancy.”

Orange County Register“Realtors report increase in house supply” (8-30-10)

“Steve Thomas of Altera Real Estate reported that the supply of unsold homes on the Orange County market increased to 11,650, up from 7,300 in January. Still, at 7.2 months, O.C.’s July inventory is below a countywide average of eight months dating back to the early 1990s.”

Associated Press - “Home prices rise in 17 cities in June” (8-31-10)

“The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index released Tuesday posted a 1 percent increase in June from May and was up 4.2 percent from a year ago. Home prices nationally were up 4.8 percent in the second quarter compared with the first quarter. That was largely because buyers could take advantage of government tax credits of up to $8,000.”

Inman - “Appraisers publish homebuying guide” (8-31-10)

“A new homebuying guide offers consumers advice on timing their purchase, selecting a real estate agent, and choosing the best home on the market from the ‘uniquely unbiased perspective’ of a real estate appraiser, according to its publisher, the Appraisal Institute. Because appraisers are not paid by sales commissions, ‘they have the unbiased perspective needed to help homebuyers weigh their options carefully, make logical decisions and effectively navigate the sales negotiation and mortgage application processes,’ the Appraisal Institute said in announcing the publication of the 190-page book.”

Housing Wire“FDIC bank ‘problem list’ hits highest point since 1993″ (8-31-10)

“The number of banks on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s (FDIC) ‘Problem List’ rose to 829, the highest level since March 1993, according to second-quarter earnings released today. The 829 figure is up from 775 problem banks in Q110 and accompanies a total of 45 failed FDIC insured banks for the second quarter.”

Housing Wire“More borrowers refinance to shorter FRMs with higher monthly payments: CoreLogic” (8-31-10)

“An increasing number people are choosing to pay off their mortgage loans in a shorter time period, according to data provided by CoreLogic. The data shows at 26% of all loans, or 252,600 loans, were refinanced to a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM), up from 18.5% in 2009 and 16.3% in 2008. In 2007, only 9.4% of loans were refinanced to a 15-year FRM.”

Housing Wire“Consumer confidence rises in August, but conditions weaken” (8-31-10)

“An improved short-term outlook boosted consumer confidence for the first time in two months in August but the average American’s take on current economic conditions continued to weaken during the month, according to the private research firm The Conference Board. The board’s consumer confidence index for August was 53.5, topping the consensus analysts’ estimate of 50.5, according to Thomson Reuters, and up from a revised July figure of 51.”

Bloomberg“Home Prices Probably Cooled, U.S. Consumer Sentiment Languished” (8-31-10)

“‘The housing market is in the midst of a double dip, with sales declining and prices likely to,’ said Guy LeBas, chief fixed-income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC in Philadelphia.”

Realty Times“Real Estate Outlook: Mixed Figures” (8-31-10)

“Affordability is another key area where things have been slowly improving with little attention. The Wells Fargo-National Association of Home Builders ‘housing opportunity index’ — which looks at home prices, mortgage rates and what median-income families can afford to buy — is at a near record high point. Thanks to 30-year mortgage rates in the mid-four percent range, 72 .3 percent of median-income American families can now afford to buy the median-priced house. Historically that number has stayed in the low 60 percent range, and sometimes slipped below 50 percent.”

Realty Times“American Savings” (8-31-10)

“Nowadays, the average American has 3.5 open credit cards, with an average household carrying credit card debt equaling $15,788 (Federal Reserve). And on that they pay an average of nearly 15 percent interest!”

Realty Times“When Should an HOA Be Able to Restrict an Owner’s Right to Rent Out His Unit” (8-31-10)

“Is it fair for an HOA (Homeowner Association) to prohibit or restrict a unit owner from renting out his property? Should there be a law about this? In California, these issues are currently being argued in both the legislature and the courts. In some other states the issues may already be settled; in others the debate is no doubt going on.”

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 event 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.

189-TNG Radio – Christopher Thornberg 8-28-10

Friday, August 27th, 2010

christopher-thornberg

Christopher Thornberg

Founder and Principle of Beacon Economics


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September 17th, 2010, The Norris Group returns with its award winning event I Survived Real Estate 2010. The Norris Group has assembled an incredible line up of industry experts to discuss the state of REO from the inside. Topics will include regulatory intervention and aftermath, bulk buying, myths and facts, and opportunities emerging for real estate professionals. 100 percent of the proceeds support the Orange County affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. This event would not be possible without generous help from the following platinum partners: Foreclosure Radar and Sean O’Toole, the San Diego Creative Real Estate Investors Association and Bill Tan, Investors Workshops and Shawn Watkins and Angel Bronsgeest, Invest Club for Women and Iris Veneracion and Bobby Alexander, Claudia Buys Houses, The Business Press, Frye Wiles, MVT Productions, and White House Catering.

This week Bruce is joined by Christopher Thornberg. Christopher is the founding principle of Beacon Economics, and is widely considered to be one of California’s leading economic forecasters. He is an expert in economic forecasting, regional development, real estate dynamics and labor markets. He was one of the earliest and most adamant predictors of the housing crash and the recession that followed. In 2008, he was appointed chief economist for the California State Controller as well as the Controller’s Council of Economic Advisors. He serves on the advisor board of Paulson & Company Inc., one of Wall Street’s most successful hedge funds. Dr. Thornberg holds a PhD in business economics from the Anderson school of UCLA, and a BS in business administration from the state university of New York at Buffalo.

Public sentiment tends to wander between optimistic and pessimistic. No one wants to believe that this recovery might be too slow. Instead, people either hope for a rapid recovery, or they panic over a double dip. Earlier in the year, people were far too optimistic about a rapid recovery, and now they are in a state of unwarranted pessimism. Thornberg does not believe that either of those beliefs are true. He believes that slow growth is most likely going to occur.

Expectations can have an economic impact. Forecasters tend to think that the stock market is a leading indicator of the economy. Paul Samuelson once said “The stock market has predicted 9 out of the last 5 recessions.” We must remember that when we see market swings, it has a material impact on the economy. When the market dumps 15 percent, you are literally talking about a couple trillion dollars in wealth disappearing from the U.S. economy. That does have an influence on spending, particularly at the top end of the income scale. From that perspective, unwarranted worries can create a self fulfilling prophecy and slow the economy.

Over the last 20 years, we have seen unprecedented volatility in the equity markets. We would help ourselves by putting in some rules to dampen that volatility. Thornberg describes the problem as “the tail controlling the economic dog”.

GDP growth in the 90s was caused by stocks. In 2000, it was from real estate equity withdrawal and profits. Currently, our limited growth seems to come from stimulus money. Thornberg does not believe there will be any sort of big driver, and that is part of the reason we will have a slow recovery.

In the mid 70s, there was a consumer let down with the oil shock. Consumers responded to the loss of jobs, high energy prices, and the overall pessimism by cutting back on spending, and that caused a down turn. At the back end of that down turn, consumers who were under-spending started to ramp up their income. They then bought the car they would have bought during the down turn plus another one. That caused a huge surge in consumer spending growth.

Similarly, in the 2001 down turn, we saw a cycle in business spending. Business spending was very high, and then it collapsed. When business spending came back in 2002, we pulled out of the down turn and we got back to normal growth in 2003.

This time, there is no single great source that will cause us to bounce back. The economy was vastly overheated in 2008, and the pain of the down turn was severe, because the pull back occurred in multiple markets at one time. The government got massively involved in both monetary and fiscal policy. In their attempt to stabilize things, they prevented our imbalances from returning to a steady state.

Consumer spending should represent about 80 percent of income, and the other 20 percent should go to savings, taxes and a couple other things. In the midst of the asset bubble, we went from 80 to 84 percent. That extra 4 percent represents approximately half a trillion dollars in excess spending. Savings rates have popped back up in the midst of the crisis, which is good, but the pain of that decline in consumer spending was profound on the economy. As a result, part of the stimulus package was a huge cut in taxes. Right now, Americans are the lowest tax rate in 65 years. This has steadied consumer spending at 82 percent of income. The government is running a deficit of $1.4 trillion per year. At some point, the government will have to raise taxes. When they raise taxes, consumers are going to have to cut back on spending, and that will slow the economy.

We have a lot of deleveraging going on. 23 percent of Riverside is not making a house payment. Because so many people aren’t making their house payments, Bruce believes that people will have plenty of money to spend. Thornberg disagrees, because he does not feel that the money saved from not paying mortgages will amount to that much. Mortgage payments in the U.S. amount to 15 percent of income. Thornberg believes the non-payment of mortgages only adds up to .5 percent of personal income. That is a much smaller number than what happens to personal income as a result of the rise and fall of the unemployment rate.

Bruce explains that in California, a house payment typically represents 40% of someone’s gross. When they don’t make mortgage payments, that saves money, and that fuels GDP. Thornberg understands this, but 1/3 of homeowners in California homeowners own their house free and clear. Of the 2/3rds that are left, the majority are still making their payments. You only have 10 percent of the people in the state that aren’t making their payments. Thornberg does believe that this will make a small difference in the economy, but it is not as significant as people make it out to be.

Bruce asks, “What does seeing a 2.6 10-year T-build tell you?” Thornberg laughs and exclaims that the t-builds are in a bubble. You got to call it as you see it. Sometimes that works and sometimes it doesn’t. A few years ago, Thornberg claimed the housing market was going to crash, and he was right. One of the worst forecasts Thornberg ever made happened 3 months ago when he claimed that interest rates would never go lower. Thornberg has seen some crazy things happen lately. He never could have forecasted this. He believes these things have been driven by worries about sovereign debt in Europe, and a potential for a double dip. This is why Bruce asked his question about Thornberg’s expectations for the t-build, because people’s fears have skewed a lot of categories.

The raw ratio of prices to income will show you that we have not seen a level of retraction that brings us back to the levels we were at in 2000. Prices are still high in comparison to income, but once you adjust for interest rates, affordability levels have never been this great. We have never seen such an affordable housing market when considering current interest rates. Thornberg does not believe that the current interest rates will be maintained. They are going to rise, but he wonders when they will rise and how fast they will rise. If we are on the path to recovery, we could have problems if the credit bubble pops rapidly. If interest rates increase 4.5% to 6.5% in 6 months, then it will severely damage the housing market.

Fannie Mae is planning to hire 1,000 REO agents in Southern California. This tells Bruce that Fannie intends to release inventory; perhaps as soon as the 4th quarter. FHA has 73,000 REOs and 555,000 people that are 90 days late. There are a lot of properties that the bank has not released, but we also have to be concerned about the properties that the banks are not foreclosing on yet. There are probably 4 to 5 million homeowners that are behind on their payments.

Because affordability is so good right now, there will probably be some demand for the shadow inventory. One thing that distinguishes California from states live Nevada, Florida and Arizona is the fact that we did not over build. Nevada and Florida have years of home supply.

Rental vacancies typically stay high after a recession, but vacancies are actually starting to drop quite quickly, especially in California. Thornberg does not believe there will be enough inventory in California, so when the shadow inventory gets released, it will probably be easily picked up. Thornberg believes we will have a stronger housing market over the next couple years because of the inventory levels in relation to the population. It surprised Bruce to hear Thornberg speak so positively about the housing market.

Bruce and Thornberg do not believe we have pent-up demand, but Thornberg does believe that we have a lack of overall supply. When you look at permits over the past 20 years, the numbers show that we have not built enough housing relative to the population growth since 1995. Even in the midst of the bubble, Thornberg believes we were only building an amount that was appropriate for our population growth.

The builders do not have many vacant unsold homes right now, but their competition, which is an REO, is going to be much to competitive. This competition will force them to build smaller houses. Going forward, Bruce believes that vacant homes are going to increase a tremendous amount. Thornberg does not believe prices will come back a lot.

The kind of building going on right now is on the basis of already finished lots. The inventory of finished but unused lots is disappearing rapidly. In the peak of the housing bubble, local economies ramped up fees. Given what people were willing to pay, there were enormous profits to be made in the sale of a new home. Now that the bubble is gone, cities need to reduce their fees, but they probably won’t. Right now, local governments have a lot of pressure placed on them because of the down turn in revenues. Thornberg believes we will have crowded housing, because many people will not be able to purchase new property due to the excessive fees.

In a down turn, people tend to start living together rather than moving out. This is actually starting to change, which is part of the reason why apartment vacancies are going down. We are not in a strong recovery, but it has been a year since the recession ended. Things have stabilized, and fears are beginning to lift.

Overall, jobs are down right now, but that is mainly due to losses in the public sector. Construction jobs actually bounced a decent amount from June to July. Thornberg does not believe the construction industry will come roaring back to what is was like 5 or 6 years ago, but we are seeing more stability in that sector.

Here are the pros and cons of our current situation: On the con side, we still have problems in the housing market. Many people are not making payments and many are underwater. California has some of the worst unemployment rates, which means we have more to recover from. On the pro side, prior to this down turn, this state was driven by internal demand. This means that our demand was coming from consumers with excessive amounts of false housing equity. At the same time, our external sources of growth were getting hammered. The dollar was over-valued and housing was too expensive, which made it hard to run a business here. Those internal sources of demand will not come back. On the other hand, with a weaker U.S. dollar and cheaper housing, other things will begin to improve. Despite our high unemployment rate, people are beginning to migrate back to California.

The percentage of homeownership is probably headed down. Thornberg does not believe that this is a real concern. He does not believe there are any particular benefits for owning vs renting.

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.

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The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 5/20/10

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to MDA DataQuick, a total of 7,003 homes closed escrows in the nine-county Bay Area last month. CBIA reports that California families earning the median-income could have afforded 60.8 percent of the new and existing homes that were sold during the first quarter of 2010. Statistics from Freddie Mac show 30-year fixed-rate mortgage decreased 4.84 percent this week. CoreLogic predicts average national home prices will fall 0.5 percent in the next 12 months.

In The News:

DQNews - “Mixed results for Bay Area April home sales” (5-20-10)

“Last month a total of 7,003 homes closed escrows in the nine-county Bay Area, up 0.2 percent from 6,992 in March but down 1.9 percent from 7,139 in April 2009, according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego. On average, Bay Area sales have risen 4.2 percent between March and April each year since 1988, when DataQuick’s statistics begin. Last month’s sales tally was 24.5 percent below the April average of 9,278 sales since 1988, and was the second-lowest for an April since 1995.”

CBIA - “California Housing Affordability Increases in First Quarter, CBIA Announces” (5-20-10)

“Housing affordability in California increased overall in the first quarter of 2010, but 13 of the state’s 28 metropolitan areas included in the report saw decreases, the California Building Industry Association said today.  On a statewide basis, the HOI found that a family earning the median-income could have afforded 60.8 percent of the new and existing homes that were sold during the first quarter, up from 56.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009. The report also found that California is now home to seven of the top ten least affordable markets in the nation.”

CNN - “Problem bank list hits 775″ (5-20-10)

“The government’s list of troubled banks climbed to its highest level since 1992 in the first quarter, although the pace of growth moderated, according to a government report published Thursday. The numbers, published as part of a broader survey on the nation’s banking system by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, revealed that the number of banks at risk of failing climbed to 775 during the first quarter.”

Orange County Register – “Mortgage rate at 5-month low” (5-20-10)

“30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.84 percent — down from last week when it averaged 4.93 percent and the lowest since Dec. 10. Last year at this time, the 30-year fixed averaged 4.82 percent.”

Inman - “4 markets where prices will fall hardest” (5-20-10)

“National home prices were up 1.7 percent in March when compared to a year ago, but will probably give back some of those gains in the year ahead with the expiration of the federal homebuyer tax credit, data aggregator CoreLogic said in releasing its latest home-price index. While 51 out of the 100 largest markets saw year-over-year price appreciation in March — up from 42 markets in February — CoreLogic predicts average national home prices will fall 0.5 percent in the next 12 months.”

Housing Wire“New Survey Finds 59% of Homeowners Would Not Consider Strategic Default” (5-20-10)

“Of those homeowners surveyed by Harris Interactive, 59% said they would not consider walking away from their mortgage no matter how far underwater they sank. Harris conducted the survey of more than 2,500 adults, including 1,690 homeowners from May 10-12. The survey was conducted for the online foreclosure marketplaces, Trulia.com and RealtyTrac.”

Housing Wire“FBI Mortgage Fraud Investigations Jump 400% in Five Years” (5-20-10)

“FBI investigations of mortgage fraud increased 400% in 2009, compared with five years earlier, according to an Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) report on fraud and insider abuse (download here). The FBI investigated more than 2,100 mortgage fraud cases in 2009. The OTS said at least 63% of all pending FBI mortgage fraud investigations during fiscal year 2008 involved dollar losses of more than $1m each.”

Bloomberg - “Mortgage-Bond Yields Guiding Loans Decline to Six-Month Low” (5-20-10)

“Yields on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage securities that guide home-loan rates fell to the lowest in almost six months, as the response of European authorities to the sovereign-debt crisis drove investors to the relative safety of U.S. government-related debt. Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30-year fixed-rate mortgage bonds tumbled 0.10 percentage point to 4.05 percent as of 9:55 a.m. in New York, down from 4.67 percent on April 5 and the lowest since Nov. 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.”

Bloomberg - “Idle Capacity in U.S. Economy Keeps Fed Asset Sales on Hold” (5-20-10)

“Officials led by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke raised their forecasts for growth this year while predicting the rebound will be slower than past recoveries from deep recessions as consumers contend with elevated unemployment and a decline in home values. Some expressed concern the Greek debt crisis could shake U.S. financial markets, curbing growth.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the NAR predicted that commercial real estate would remain week for the remainder of 2009. The House of Representatives voted 367 to 54 to pass the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act. Toll Brothers Inc., the largest U.S. builder of luxury homes, said fiscal second-quarter revenue fell 51 percent.

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 2/17/10

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

 CBIA announced that housing affordability has decreased in 22 of California’s 28 metropolitan areas. The Commerce Department reports that housing and apartment construction increased by 2.8 percent last month. According to SFAR, there is a 3.5 month supply of housing inventory in the San Francisco market. A survey shows that large investment companies are spending more on REIT investments.

In The News:

CBIA“California Housing Affordability Continues Slide in Fourth Quarter, CBIA Announces” (2-17-10)

“Housing affordability in California continued to fall throughout most of the state during the fourth quarter of 2009, the California Building Industry Association said today. The quarterly National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index found that homes were less affordable in 22 of the state’s 28 metro areas included in the report.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (2-17-10)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending February 12, 2010.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 2.1 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 0.5 percent compared with the previous week.”

Los Angeles Times“Housing construction rises 2.8 percent in Janury” (2-17-10)

“The Commerce Department said Wednesday that construction of new homes and apartments rose 2.8 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 591,000 units. That was better than the 580,000 annual pace that economists were forecasting.”

Housing Wire“Continental Conflicts Arising Over Banker Pay” (2-17-10)

“The majority of banking executives oppose government intervention in setting bank compensation parameters, according to a bank executive survey conducted from Nov. 17-Dec. 3, 2009 by US audit firm Grant Thornton. The sentiment, however, is not as greatly embraced abroad. The survey found 96% of 246 respondents do not agree the government should play a role in determining compensation, while 61% do not think a requirement to evaluate compensation will reduce excessive risk-taking.”

Housing Wire“San Francisco Inventory at 3.5 Month Supply” (2-17-10)

“Despite a lull in luxury home sales, prices are up and inventory is down in the San Francisco market, according to a joint research report released by the Rosen Consulting Group and the San Francisco Association of Realtors. The report said there is a 3.5-month supply of single-family homes on the market, down from 5.8 months in January 2009. Condo inventory was at a 4.1-month supply, down from 9.5 months in January 2009.”

Housing Wire“FHFA Proposes New Performance Goals for Fannie, Freddie” (2-17-10)

“The FHFA required, as the first goal for single-family housing, that 27% of the total number of mortgages purchased by Fannie and Freddie be of low-income family housing. The FHFA defined low-income as not exceeding 80% of the area median income.”

Inman - “5 arguments for open houses” (2-17-10)

“Want to pick a fight in a roomful of real estate agents? Ask them whether they think open houses are worthwhile. We did the virtual equivalent of that, sending out an online request for comments from real estate agents about the effectiveness of open houses — and they responded by filling up the old inbox faster than we could clean it out. Their responses range from passionate conviction that open houses are ‘a must,’ to cynical observations that they’re of benefit to no one other than to agents who are trolling for new clients.”

Realty Times“Investor Report: REITs” (2-17-10)

“New York and London-based research firm Preqin reports that 62 percent of the large investment companies it surveyed said they plan to buy into – or add to their holdings – of private equity REITs, or real estate investment trusts. That’s up from 45 percent in a similar survey Preqin conducted in early 2009.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the NAHB reported that builder confidence reached an all-time low. CBIA claimed that the pace of new home sales was continuing on a decreasing trend. The California government ended 20,000 jobs. S&P estimated that commercial real estate defaults would reach 3.5 percent by the end of 2009.

57-TNG Radio – Gary Watts 3-1-08

Friday, February 29th, 2008

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Gary Watts

Real Estate Economist

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Bruce Norris and economist Gary Watts of Impact Real Estate continue their conversation from last week. This week they discuss when this current real estate downturn began, what statistic told us we were headed into a downturn, if Southern California is different from the rest of California, what percentage of the market was second home purchases, what has changed in the lending industry, the Federal Reserve and why they waited so long to do anything about the lending troubles, the new rules of being a lender, how certain minority groups stand to be hit hardest and how it happened, Bruce and Gary’s differing opinion on affordability, resets in 2008, lenders stalling on resets, if banks can truly be proactive and what choices they have in dealing with delinquent borrowers, due-on-sale clause, the media misleading the public on foreclosure rates, how the media’s lack of experience and understanding of the topics lead to bad reporting, press and its impact on real estate in an up market, consumers and attention paid to news articles, Orange County foreclosures, what cities are most affected, did builders overbuild in Orange County, how builders make mistakes, state-wide foreclosures and the never-before-seen sales ratio for Southern California, forecasting in 2008, why California wins migration, and how some areas in California are almost ready to cash flow.

Gary Watts has long been recognized as a forecasting expert by the real estate industry. His long-term analysis has also drawn the attention of the media due to his consistent accuracy. His Economic Outlook has been spotlighted in regional newspapers, including the Orange County Register and the Los Angeles Times. He has been seen on the PBS TV program Real Orange, he has been heard on the radio at KNX Money Talk and was featured in Fortune magazine. He holds a degree in economics with advanced studies in psychology from California State University at Sacramento. Gary’s economic forecast and lecture notes are among the information pieces most widely circulated by real estate agents in Orange County. Gary’s last speaking season drew over 17,000 real estate agents. His talks are also available in DVD and an English or Spanish CD format

55-TNG Radio – John Burns 2-16-08

Friday, February 15th, 2008

 

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John Burns

President, John Burns Real Estate Consulting

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Bruce Norris is joined this week by builder consultant and founder of John Burns Real Estate Consulting, John Burns. Bruce and John discuss how busy John has been consulting investors and builders who have never experienced a downturn, what industries these new investors are coming from and if it’s cyclical, if builders had a chance to do it over what they might choose to do differently, land shortages, debt strategies of builders, options versus cash, land value decrease in California, portfolio deals, supply of homes the builders are currently holding, construction starts, how lending has changed the game, who the typical buyer is in 2008, the possibility of builders constructing smaller homes, if the cities like that idea, why do builders repeat the same mistakes, are those in trouble the old or new companies, Northern versus Southern California market, affordability changes in the coming years, if affordability will help the housing market, if any of the FED actions will come to the rescue, how the freezing of foreclosure won’t change anything, how interest rates might help, the California employment picture for 2008 and its effect on housing demand, recession in California, migration, presidential elections and possible tax law changes, the state of the commercial industry, commercial foreclosures in 2008, and the new loan limits proposed by the FED.

Prior to founding the Company, John Burns was at KPMG Peat Marwick for 10 years, where he was a Senior Manager in the Real Estate Consulting group. He was also a Principal and Vice President for four years at a national consulting firm, where he completed custom consulting assignments and developed several market monitoring subscription products for the 75 largest housing markets in the United States.

John Burns is a frequent speaker, and has been quoted as an expert by CNN, ABC World News Tonight, The Wall Street Journal, The Associated Press, USA Today, Bloomberg, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, Builder magazine, and others. He designed and authored a weekly e-mail received by more than 25,000 industry participants, and authored the U.S. Housing Markets publication. He also created and edited several highly successful market research subscription reports.

John has a M.B.A. from the University of California, Los Angeles and a B.A. in economics from Stanford University. He is also a Certified Public Accountant. He is a full member of the Urban Land Institute and a board member of the Building Industry Association.