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California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Posts Tagged ‘bubble’

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.

197-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2010 10-23-10

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

I Survived Real Estate 2010

I Survived Real Estate 2010


 

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September 17th, 2010, The Norris Group returns with its award winning event I Survived Real Estate 2010. The video also now available on The Norris Group website.

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 The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show is broadcasting I Survived Real Estate 2010.

Investors buy about 1/3 of Freddie Mac’s properties. Freddie Mac does not offer financing for most of those investor purchases, but Fannie Mae does. Fannie Mae has a program called Home Path. Many investors can qualify for Home Path financing on rehab properties. The financing on the rehab program includes the cost of repair. It is somewhat similar to the 203K loan. The problem Bruce has experienced with these programs is they don’t offer enough financing to significantly help investors. Bruce is usually only offered about $4,000 for rehab financing.

It is hard to pull a pool of properties together in a way that is just as attractive for an investor as finding one good property.

Inventory levels are increasing. Freddie Mac started this year with 45,000 properties in inventory, but today we have about 70,000. 55% of those properties are in the redemption, eviction and prelist phase. That phase is taking longer now. Approximately 55% of Freddie’s properties are becoming occupied. Freddie has about 15,000 homes on the market, and the rest are in the closing process.

As inventory levels increase, and as the 90-day strategies fail, then Freddie might move to a ballroom or online auction. However, if a property has had sale fallouts or could use significant improvement, then it may be relisted. Freddie’s goal is to figure out what selling strategy will have the best recovery rate. On day 75 of the listing, Freddie gives the broker a two week notice, and then moves onto the auction process.

Fannie Mae has a web-based portal for investors who desire to qualify for bulk purchases. You must provide information about yourself, provide your tax I.D. number, and allow Fannie Mae to do a background check on you. Once you qualify, you are given access to the web-based portal. This portal contains listings of properties, and it allows investors to submit a bid. This portal is for the larger pools. The properties in the pool are located across the country.

Bruce believes that tax payers could be saved a lot of money if properties were sold to investors rather than being given to NSP programs. Sarah Letts suggests that those investors go to the auctions.

In the last 12 month, Fannie Mae sold 30,000 properties to owner occupants during the first look period, and 5,000 properties to people using NSP funds.

Tommy Williams was the person who suggested that Bruce should read The World Is Flat. One of the most significant quotes in the book says, “No institution will go through fundamental changes, unless it believes it is in deep trouble and must do something different to survive.” Tommy believes that no other country in the world provides us with the same amount of opportunity as the free enterprise system of the U.S. That opportunity is built upon the initiative of the individual. We need to focus on turning that individual initiative loose. When you restrict individuals from making free market decisions, there are greater repercussions.

Tommy believes in the auction process. The stock market is like an auction, and everybody agrees with that auction every day. What if tomorrow morning, the DOW Jones said, “If Microsoft doesn’t bring us 25 dollars, we won’t sell”? It wouldn’t work. This is the problem we are dealing with in our current housing problem. Three years ago, the market told us that we had to rethink what houses were worth. Unfortunately, we have found out how accurate the market was worth. Tommy Williams believes that Sean O’Toole’s estimates are accurate, but he wises it wasn’t true. Tommy believes we have a long road ahead of us before we reach real market value. The quicker we get to that value, the better.

“Unfortunately, it has been too long since America had a leader ready to call on our nation to do something hard. To give something up, not to get something more, and to sacrifice for a great national cause for the future, rather than live for today.” – The World Is Flat

Tommy believes that if a politician actually had the courage to stand up and tell America the truth, the citizens would elect that person instantly. Unfortunately, we have been given so much bs that we aren’t accustomed to politicians being honest.

A crisis is a terrible thing to waste. We’ve had two in the last decade – 9/11 and the current financial crisis. Bruce has been to baseball games where everyone stood up after the 9/11 crisis. When we have a crisis, we can make changes, but we have to have someone that we can support in the government.

Thornberg is worried about where our fiscal debt is going. We are borrowing $1.3 trillion this year. We do not currently have that much debt, because most of it is in social security. Our net debt represents about 50% of the economy right now. That seems high, but Christopher doesn’t believe that is actually extremely high. However, if you are borrowing $1.3 trillion per year, that debt percentage will quickly turn into a number over 95%. Unlike Japan, we are a nation relying on external capital. If we keep borrowing, there will come a time where the world bond market will say “enough is enough”.

Thornberg does not believe that household, and local debt is that bad. We do not have that big of a debt problem. Our pensions are in trouble, but other than that, Christopher thinks we are fine. Consumer debt spiked in proportion to asset values. It also fell significantly when the asset bubble popped, and Americans realized they had too much debt. Most of American debt is in mortgage debt from Fannie and Freddie. Non-mortgage debt didn’t really rise at all. Overall, that debt is not too significant.

Stock investments have nothing to do with GDP. When we spend stock profits, that money does not get counted into GDP. When you pay taxes on your stock portfolio, those taxes are recorded in GDP statistics, but then they have to subtract your capital gains income from the total.

Thornberg is worried about where our fiscal debt is going, but he is not sure at what point he would say “enough is enough”. We’ve never had an unmanageable amount of debt, but we’ve also never had a government that is so unwilling to acknowledge the reality of our problem. The government claims it wants to fix the deficit, but it won’t raise taxes. Thornberg is a proponent of paying taxes, and he thinks all the Bush tax cuts should be taken out. He doesn’t enjoy paying taxes, but if the citizens of the U.S. actually have to pay, then we will finally stop the government from spending it. We have developed the delusion that the Federal debt is not our debt. If the government is borrowing $1.3 trillion dollars, a lot of that money will come from the citizens. It would take $4,500 from every citizen to pay that debt.

Thornberg does not believe that deleveraging is deflationary, because leveraging is not inflationary. In the middle of the leveraging binge, Alan Greenspan was worried about deflation. When you pay debt off instead of spend, you can decrease demand somewhat. Reducing demand can reduce the velocity of money, which can cause deflationary pressure. That is why Greenspan went through quantitative easing, and he did a pretty good job.

If you have a willing buyer and seller that come to a fair price together, then you have market value. That definition of market value will never be able to stop a real estate bubble. The Norris Group built homes in Rosamond. In Rosamond, the market should have been $150,000, but Bruce was selling those homes for $280,000. In the commercial world, the appraisal has multiple pieces. You have to calculate for comps, cost of building and income generated. Bruce asks Joseph Magdziarz if he thinks we should change the structure of how we come to the proper value. Joseph believes the definition does need to be looked at. During the boom, California prices escalated quickly, but rental prices didn’t change much. So prices changed a lot, but the underlying value didn’t. Unfortunately, the government created too much artificial demand in the market, and that helped cause the market. We created programs for people who couldn’t afford a home.

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.

Thank you for being a Gold Sponsor for I Survived Real Estate 2010: Adrenaline Athletics, Benton Investment Group, Community RE-Invest Group, Delmae Properties, Elite Auctions, Entrust California, Everlast Photography, Inland Empire Investors Forum, Keystone CPA, Landwood Title, Las Brisas Escrow, Leivas Financial Services, Mike Cantu, North San Diego Real Estate Investors Association, Northern California Real Estate Investors Association, Personal Real Estate Investor Magazine, Realty 411 Magazine, San Jose Real Estate Investor Association, Rick and LeeAnne Rossiter, San Jose Real Estate Investor Association, Starz Photography, Summit Solutions, Tony Alvarez, Wealth Point, and Westin South Coast Plaza.

195-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2010 10-09-10

Friday, October 8th, 2010

I Survived Real Estate 2010

I Survived Real Estate 2010


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rss

September 17th, 2010, The Norris Group returns with its award winning event I Survived Real Estate 2010. The video also now available on The Norris Group website.

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 The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show is broadcasting I Survived Real Estate 2010.

We are in a bond bubble. This is what concerns Thornberg the most right now. We had a recent GDP revision. Savings rates are close to where they should be. Employment is flat, but incomes are growing. The panic over a double dip this summer was ridiculous. We are on a path to recovery, but we have created so much fear that we now have a bond bubble. We have ridiculously low rates. The spreads between returns on equities and returns on bonds have never been this wide. Either equities are severely underpriced or bonds are severely overpriced. Thornberg believes the bonds are overpriced, and eventually people will figure that out. If rates shoot up quickly, then we will have a big problem.

Real estate affordability is incredible right now. If interest rates went up to normal levels then affordability would go back to normal levels as well. Interest rates could spike from inflation, fears over the federal deficit, or if a sovereign debt crisis in Europe causes risk rates to increase. The problem is that we are relying too much on low interest rates right now.

Joseph Magdziarz spoke next. Despite the problems Joseph’s industry has had with appraisal companies, his industry has experienced growth. Appraisers had some success with getting legislation passed, such as bill 4173. When October 18th passes, AMCs will have to pay appraisers reasonable fees. Traditionally, when the AMCs have been used, they took all the money from the appraisers. Not all AMCs are bad, but some of them took advantage of people. AMCs were a risk to consumers, because consumers weren’t receiving the best appraisers.

When Joseph is asked to appear before congress, they usually have specific issues they want addressed. These issues are usually related to consumers.

Sean O’Toole was asked to give his perspective on whether or not we’ve done a good job of solving the real estate problem. The Fed has kept a balance sheet on the U.S. and it’s households. We went from $4.5 trillion of mortgage debt in the year 2,000 to $10.5 trillion at the peak. If you look at the number of new homes added, and the increases in income, we should not have gone about $6.5 trillion. That means there is $4 trillion in excess mortgage debt. Sean believes that in the best case, we have only dealt with $0.5 trillion of that excess debt. We have a long way to go before real estate is healthy again.

Sean wrote an article called Foreclosure Roulette: A Game of Extend and Pretend. Sean does not believe that the current levels of REO inventory accurately reflect the delinquency levels. We had foreclosures moving equally with delinquencies until 2008. That was when Paulson said that we shouldn’t force banks to sell these assets in distressed markets.

Currently, our REO statistics do not mean a lot. We have been bouncing around in a range that has nothing to do with delinquencies. The FDIC has loosened up on forcing lenders to get bad assets off their books. Since we changed these rules, foreclosures have stalled.

The treasury has admitted that their strategy for dealing with foreclosures was to not allow them to come out at once. They wanted to slow the process down. A new program is coming out in Fall, which will incentivize banks to write down principals on mortgages. That may have some success. Thornberg believes there will be 3 to 4 million foreclosures coming out. Sean O’Toole believes there will be more than 4 million.

Sean believes these new programs are causing problems. These programs are meant to continue the “extend and pretend” strategy. The government is telling us “hold on, we have HAMP to solve the problem”. HAMP had design flaws from the beginning, and Sean does not believe it was intended to be successful. The government then came out and said, “Hold on, we have HAFA”. HAFA also had design flaws. It was not intended to be successful. Sean will not be fooled by HAMP’s new principal balance reduction. Fannie Mae claimed it would damage people that strategically default.

The average foreclosure in California is $150,000 dollars upside down on a $250,000 house by the time it reaches the courthouse steps. The banks and the government do not want people making the right decision for themselves by walking away. This is why Fannie Mae recently encouraged banks to push through foreclosures. The banks are not actually going to push through foreclosures, but they want people to think they will, so that they won’t strategically default.

Tommy Williams does not understand how we can give principal reductions to people who were irresponsible, but give nothing to the people who were responsible. This will not work in a capitalistic society. Tommy believes that Bruce’s idea was fantastic. Right now, the average American can afford a $150,000 home. However, people are trying to sell their home for over $300,000. All the mortgages in the United States that were selling for over $300,000 equate for 5% of the market. Right now, they are still selling homes for above affordable rates, and they are building homes that are still too big.

After 1992, we built 75% of what we needed for our population growth. The biggest problem is that we’ve been building big homes in the Inland Empire, but what we really need is lower rent apartments closer to urban areas. We are going to need more housing in 2011 and 2012, but not bigger homes. If builders still to smaller town houses, then they could make a living. However, if they do that, the builders will have to deal with zoning boards, local governments who are cashed strapped who want you to fix their streets, sewers, power lines and their pensions.

In 2008, there was very little capital available for commercial properties and there was little liquidity. In 2009, some of those capital sources started coming back. We have more capital available to us today, than we have had over the last 2 years. The problem is that many properties do not qualify for financing. Some properties have leasing issues, and no one will finance those. Most of those nonperforming properties are still in the hands of the owners. The banks will not foreclose on those properties, because they do not have the ability to write those properties down. We are starting to see the banks make progress now, because the Fed is giving the banks 0% interest rates on loans. The 0% interest allows the banks to make a small profit, which allows them to then foreclose on those properties. Dealing with this extended process is going to take even longer, because no one is putting a gun to the banks’ heads.

In the 90s, the rules were different. The FDIC forced lenders to give a notice of default if someone is 100 days delinquent.

In 2012, many commercial maturities will come due. A lot of that debt is from commercial mortgage backed securities. That debt is being held by bond holders. That debt will not be refinanced. A lot of non-refinancable loans are being pushed out for 2 years. CMBS is coming back, but values are not coming back. In 2006 -2007, we made 80% loans on an inflated value. Those properties may be 60 to 70% of what it was in 2007, but it still has a loan worth 110% to value. Just because we have money available to refinance doesn’t mean we can, because we don’t have the values we need.

Thornberg believes that if the people who own this debt just “close their eyes and hold their nose” until 2014, then they will be ok. Daniel says that is just the game that these debt holders are hoping on, but it may not work.

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.

Thank you for being a Gold Sponsor for I Survived Real Estate 2010: Adrenaline Athletics, Benton Investment Group, Community RE-Invest Group, Delmae Properties, Elite Auctions, Entrust California, Everlast Photography, Inland Empire Investors Forum, Keystone CPA, Landwood Title, Las Brisas Escrow, Leivas Financial Services, Mike Cantu, North San Diego Real Estate Investors Association, Northern California Real Estate Investors Association, Personal Real Estate Investor Magazine, Realty 411 Magazine, San Jose Real Estate Investor Association, Rick and LeeAnne Rossiter, San Jose Real Estate Investor Association, Starz Photography, Summit Solutions, Tony Alvarez, Wealth Point, and Westin South Coast Plaza.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 9/2/10

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Servicers made over 120,000 proprietary loan modifications in July, and 36,695 HAMP modifications. Pending home sales increased 5.2 percent in July, according to the NAR. MBA reports 30+ day commercial delinquencies increased to 8.22 percent in the second quarter. Freddie Mac’s weekly survey shows mortgage rates dropped again to a rate of 4.32%.

In The News:

The Press Enterprise“New ways of viewing the housing meltdown” (9-1-10)

“At a meeting last night of the Inland Empire Investors, Norris said the federal government’s apparent agreement to allow banks to delay foreclosing on homes where the owners have ceased paying their mortgages for months on end is probably helping to hold up the economy. After all, the money that isn’t paying mortgages is going into the homeowners’ pockets and being spent on goods and services. Ironic, huhn?”

Mortgage Orb“Proprietary Mods More Than Triple HAMP Mods” (8-31-10)

“Servicers completed more than 120,000 proprietary loan modifications in July – more than three times the number of mods completed through the federal Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), HOPE NOW reports. As reported by U.S. Treasury Department, servicers executed 36,695 HAMP modifications in July.”

Mortgage News Daily“HUD Secretary Tiptoes Around Another Tax Credit, Pushes Balanced Housing Policy” (8-30-10)

“Donovan said that the dip in house sales in July was not unexpected because it would mark the end of the homebuyers’ tax credit that had been successful in spurring those sales. But, he said, the numbers were clearly worse than expected. The Secretary said, in response the Administration would be launching two additional critical tools in the next few weeks. The first will be an FHA refinancing effort to help borrowers who are underwater in their homes, the second is an emergency homeowners’ loan program to help unemployed borrowers to in their homes.”

NAR - “Pending Home Sales Rise” (9-2-10)

“The Pending Home Sales Index,* a forward-looking indicator, rose 5.2 percent to 79.4 based on contracts signed in July from a downwardly revised 75.5 in June, but remains 19.1 percent below July 2009 when it was 98.1. The data reflects contracts and not closings, which normally occur with a lag time of one or two months.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“MBA: Commercial Delinquencies Up for CMBS, Flat for Banks in Second Quarter” (9-2-10)

“Between the first quarter and second quarter 2010, the 30+ day delinquency rate on loans held in CMBS rose 1.39 percentage points to 8.22 percent. The 60+ day delinquency rate on loans held in life company portfolios decreased 0.02 percentage points to 0.29 percent. The 60+ day delinquency rate on multifamily loans held or insured by Fannie Mae rose 0.01 percentage points to 0.80 percent. The 60+ day delinquency rate on multifamily loans held or insured by Freddie Mac increased 0.03 percentage points to 0.28 percent. The 90+ day delinquency rate on loans held by FDIC-insured banks and thrifts remained unchanged at 4.26 percent. ”

Inman - “Communities get ‘First Look’ at many REOs” (9-2-10)

“Federal housing officials have reached an agreement with mortgage lenders that will give nonprofit organizations and state and local governments right of first refusal to purchase foreclosed homes in certain targeted neighborhoods. Lenders participating in the ‘National First Look Program’ represent about 75 percent of the real estate owned (REO) marketplace, the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced Wednesday.”

Housing Wire“Weekly jobless claims down 1.25% to 472,000″ (9-2-10)

“The Department of Labor said Thursday seasonally-adjusted initial claims fell to 472,000 for the week ended Aug. 28, down from an upwardly revised 478,000 for the previous week. The consensus estimate of analysts surveyed by Briefing.com expected claims to drop to 475,000 last week.”

Housing Wire“Freddie 30-year FRMs set record low at 4.32%” (9-2-10)

“The Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey reported the average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) at 4.32% with an average 0.7 origination point for the week ending Sept. 2, down from last week’s average of 4.36% and a year ago, when the average was 5.08%. This is the lowest rate the survey has recorded since its inception in 1971.”

Housing Wire“Bernanke says stopping housing bubble was not an option” (9-2-10)

“Speaking before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission this morning in Washington, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said if steps could have been taken three years ago to stop the bubble in the economy, which eventually lead to today’s recession, it would not have been a prudent decision to do so.”

Housing Wire“OCC: lending standards loosen somewhat from year earlier” (9-2-10)

“The 2010 survey of credit underwriting practices by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency showed 65% of banks tightened standards for commercial products and 74% tightened up retail lending. The survey measures the most-common types of credit offered by 51 of the largest national banks for the 12 months ended March 31. The value of the loans surveyed was $4 trillion, or more than 93% of all outstanding loans in the national banking system, according to the OCC.”

Housing Wire“Serious HFA delinquencies decline in Q110: S&P” (9-2-10)

“Overall delinquency rates for HFA loans remained high, increasing 1.67% between Q409 and Q110 to 6.05%; however, seriously delinquent HFA loans decreased to 6.05% from 6.57%.”

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.

187-TNG Radio – Sean O’Toole 8-14-10

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Sean O’Toole

Founder and CEO of ForeclosureRadar


 

 

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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 InvestorsAssociation and Bill Tan, Investors Workshops and Shawn Watkins and Angel Bronsgeest, Invest Club for Women and Iris Veneracion and Bobby Alexander, San Jose Real Estate Investors Association and Geraldine Barry, Claudia Buys Houses, Frye Wiles, MVT Productions, and White House Catering.

This week Bruce is joined by Sean O’Toole. Sean is the Founder and CEO of ForeclosureRadar.com. ForeclosureRadar is the only company that tracks every foreclosure in California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington and Oregon. It makes updates daily on all foreclosure auctions. Prior to ForeclosureRadar, Sean spent 15 years building and launching software companies. In 2002, Sean entered the foreclosure business, and bought and sold over 150 properties.

Bruce thinks everyone who is a trustee sale buyer should be a member of ForeclosureRadar. When Sean started Foreclosure Radar, there were only about 40 trustee sale buyers who bought the majority of the deals within the state, but now there are thousands. The invention of the lower bid has created activity. We wish they would drop their opening bids even lower.

5 to 10 billion dollars worth in properties go to the courthouse steps every month. 80 percent of those properties go back to the bank as REOs. The number of REOs have decreased 50 percent from July 2008. However, there are still a huge number of properties being taken back by banks. From a historical perspective, we still have an outrageously high number of REOs.

People tend to have this mentality that nothing bad can happen from here on out, because they don’t think the lenders will unload a bunch of inventory into the market. However, in 2007 and 2008, that is exactly what they did. Up until the end of 2008, regulations required you to file a notice of default after 60 to 90 days of delinquency. In September of 2008, Paulson changed the rules, and since then, they have changed the rules to mark to market. Lenders now have this mentality that discourages them from foreclosing so long as there is some hope of receiving payment at some point in the future.

People are wondering when all the shadow inventory is going to show up and ruin everyone’s day. Shadow inventory has a few different holding tanks. The banks are holding it and not releasing it. In 2008, there was growing evidence that banks had inventory that were not being listed. In 2009, banks started selling more foreclosures than they were taking back. In the mean time, we had delinquencies that were over 90 days delinquent and were not going into foreclosure. Some properties are as much as 180 days delinquent. We have 1 million homeowners in California that are not making payment, but only 200,000 in foreclosure, and only 15,000 to 20,000 being foreclosed on per month.

There is a report claiming that “once a person is behind, the odds of them making that payment current again without a loan modification is 1%”. Sean thinks that may be true historically, but right now, the situation is worse than that. In the past, people went delinquent because of job problems, but this time, they are going late because we had a massive credit bubble that doubled home prices fictitiously. We have now corrected those prices, but we have 4 trillion dollars in excess mortgage debt. People are realizing that they are never going to get that money back, and paying the interest doesn’t help them.

ForeclosureRadar noticed an increase in investor activity in 2009. Subscriptions increased slightly around that time. Right now, people are concerned that the economy and housing might double-dip. Bruce thinks that a double-dip will probably occur.

A lot of ForeclosureRadar’s growth has come from builders and commercial real estate brokers. The court house steps have become much more competitive because of these two groups. They can’t just stop working because their niche isn’t doing well.

From 2002 to 2006, good investors could get a 50 to 75 percent return on capital. In 2007, the market went away because the banks weren’t dropping the bids. In 2008 and 2009, Sean heard plenty of stories about investors getting an 80 percent return on capital. It got really good for a little while, but over the past six months, the market got a lot more competitive. There are plenty of risks with buying at auctions. Bruce believes that someone makes a mistake every day at the courthouse that alters their financial life for a while.

The government has decided that it is better to avoid taking a property back to the lender. ForeclosureRadar is tracking the lenders who are willing to work problems out. Investor short sales concern Sean, especially if the deal is being bought to be flipped. Some people are claiming you can make a lot of money by doing a short sale through a double escrow. Sean thinks people who do that are going to get themselves into trouble. Bruce interviewed the FBI on this subject, and the FBI described the people who do double escrows as perpetrators. There are short sale opportunities out there, but there is a lot of risk involved. It can be difficult to convince lenders that you have added a significant amount of value to a recent short sale.

Lenders understand that auctioned properties are being sold at a discount. On a short sale, lenders believe that a market sale is being made, and they will not like the idea of selling a short sale at $100,000 below market.

Deutsche Bank recently made a report on mortgage servicers and how long it takes to do a short sale. With prime mortgages, GMAC took six months on average, CitiGroup took 7.5 months, Wells Fargo took 8 months, and Countrywide took 13 months. There is a buyer attached to the end of these deals, and no one is going to wait 13 months.

People involved with HAFA brag about their ability to sell within six months, and Bruce thinks that is ridiculous. The problem is that people are not coming to terms with the losses they are going to take. The government also has a few policies that are affecting speed. If Bruce was attached to that business, he would be very frustrated.

Mortgage insurance companies know they will have a better income and have less of a loss with a short sale, but if they have that loss right now, then they’ve got a payout to make. If they do not approve a short sale, and force a property into foreclosure, they may not have to payout for 8 or 9 months.

Sean believes that companies are moving away from principal reductions. Freddie claimed that they are not going to do principal reductions, because they have been tasked with protecting tax payer funds and they cannot just give out principal. If GSEs, who hold a lot of the mortgage debt, start giving out principal reductions, then that comes directly at the cost of the taxpayers. Freddie has a deed-in-lieu lease back program with a lease option. If someone does a deed-in-lieu under this program, they have a two year waiting period before they get to buy a property, and Bruce has the feeling that the property they will buy is that same property they were previously in. That would cause less volatility in the market, because it would discourage buyers from moving around.

Sean recently did some research for American Banker Magazine on jumbo loans. Loans under $417,000 are the fastest to be foreclosed on. Mini jumbos, which range from $417,000 to $729,000, take 30 days longer to foreclose on, and it takes even longer to foreclose on big jumbos. If lenders are struggling to deal with reality anywhere, it is at the high end of the market. Lenders sometimes try to aggressively foreclose with the hope of scaring the borrower into paying, but when they don’t get scared, the borrowers will simply vacate and move, and then the foreclosure gets cancelled. When lenders do not foreclose because they do not want the house, they are usually cancelling foreclosure by the masses. These lenders are often working to get people into the HAFA program, so that they can get a short sale or deed-in-lieu. Sean thinks the HAFA program is just like HAMP last year. It is not meant to conclude a bunch of short sales, it is meant to put people through another six months of delay only to tell them that they do not qualify.

Sean O’Toole’s website is www.foreclosureradar.com

Sean will be on the I Survived Real Estate 2010 panel in September.

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 5/7/10

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Looking Back:

Analysts are claiming that an increase in the average family size could reduce demand for housing. The US Senate is proposing many new changes to the Restoring American Financial Stability Act. The Department of Labor reports that national unemployment levels increased to 9.9 percent. According to the US Census Bureau, the homeownership rate fell to 67.1 percent in the first quarter.

In The News:

USA TodayIncrease in household size could slow economic recovery” (5-7-10)

“The number of people living under one roof is growing for the first time in more than a century, a fallout of the recession that could reduce demand for housing and slow the recovery. The Census Bureau had projected the average household size would continue to fall to 2.53 this year. Instead, the average is likely to hit 2.63, a small but significant increase because it is a turnabout.”

Housing WatchHousing Bubble Was Whose Fault? Not the Fed’s, Says New Study” (5-7-10)

“Don’t blame the Federal Reserve for the country’s housing troubles. At least that’s what a controversial new study claims. Economic researchers from Harvard’s Kennedy School and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania believe they’ve proved that reduced interest rates and lax regulations were not the primary cause of the housing bubble. The authors of the study instead point to the currently allowable mortgage interest tax deduction as the main culprit.”

Housing Wire“GSE Wind-Down, Derivatives Reform Amendments Await Senate” (5-7-10)

“The US Senate added a number of amendments this week to S 3217, the Restoring American Financial Stability Act sponsored by Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT), that aim to reform regulation of the financial markets. Many more amendments await consideration by the Senate, which plans to return to voting on Tuesday.”

Housing Wire“Despite Job Growth, Unemployment Rises to 9.9%” (5-7-10)

“Payrolls in the US added 290,000 workers in April, according to data released today by the Department of Labor (DOL) Bureau of Labor Statistics. It marks an increase from the 162,000 jobs added in March. Despite the gain in employment, the overall unemployment rate rose to 9.9%. Additionally, the U-6 measure of both un- and under-employment continued to rise — inching up to 17.1% in April, from 16.9% last month.”

Bloomberg - “Beazer Homes Sells Debt as Issuance Falls to Lowest This Year” (5-7-10)

“Sales of U.S. corporate bonds fell 86 percent this week to the lowest this year amid rising investor concern that Greece’s debt crisis will spread to other European countries and beyond. Beazer Homes USA Inc., the Atlanta-based homebuilder, sold $300 million of notes and Lennox International Inc., the maker of heating and air-conditioning systems, issued $200 million of debt to lead $2.55 billion in corporate bond offerings, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.”

Orange County Register“Hear why builders now focus on price” (5-7-10)

“Homebuilding is on the upswing, which is not terribly surprising considering how slow things had been in recent years. So we asked Mark Buckland, CEO of Southern California builder CityVentures, what he was seeing in the new-home market. Buckland tells ocregister.com in a podcast interview that this is clearly no boom. The region’s home pricing has stabilized at levels that are as much as half off the peak. That’s because builders have to actively compete with the resale housing market. What’s helping builders’ bottom line is that land prices and construction costs have come down so low that new homes can now be very price competitive.”

Housing Wire“Falling back to 2000: Homeownership rate sinks” (5-7-10)

“The nation’s homeownership rate fell to 67.1 percent in the first quarter, a rate not seen since first-quarter 2000, according to a report from the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S Department of Commerce. The rate reached its peak in 2004, when it was at 69.2 percent for both the second and fourth quarters.”

Housing Wire“Clash over NAR’s MLS rules for photos, disclosures” (5-7-10)

“Multiple listing services are asking the National Association of Realtors to stand behind them if they choose to require that brokers submit photos or property disclosure forms with their for-sale listings. Many MLSs have had such rules in place for years, particularly for photos. But NAR staff members say the trade group’s existing MLS policy does not expressly grant MLSs such authority.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the Federal government declared the California wage cuts, which would have saved $74 miilion, to be in conflict with the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Fannie Mae reported a first-quarter loss of $23.2 billion. The Labor Department reported that payrolls fell by 539,000 in April 2009.

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.

168-TNG Radio – Harry Dent 4-3-10

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

 

Harry-Dent

Harry Dent

Author and Economist

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce Norris is joined 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.

Before he wrote his books, Harry was working towards a degree in Economics, but then changed to Finance and Accounting. He felt that economics did not teach much, and that most economists were not able to predict anything. He eventually went to Harvard Business School and studied business strategy and marketing. This is probably why he comes to different conclusions than many economists.

Harry has been studying demographics in his consulting work. In 1998, he was sitting in front of the S&P 500 and the Birth Index for Baby Boomers. He looked at those 2 charts and he noticed that they looked a lot alike. Harry knew that the peak in spending was between 45 and 49 for the average economy, and this knowledge led him to conclude that he could predict the economy 50 years in advance with just one indicator. A boom typically starts when a generation is young, and ends when they begin hitting their 40s. Not too long after, he discovered that there were many correlations between different economic factors.

Harry’s business of predictions has been an ongoing learning process. He has extended his studies to real estate and different pieces of the economy. Recently, he had to revise his book The Great Depression, because he got new information about merging markets between countries like Europe and Australia. Emerging countries do not have the same kind of spending habits as that of developed countries. This is why he makes different predictive calculations for merging countries.

Attempting to accurately predict the future can be exhausting, because every time you think you’ve accounted for all the factors, you discover there is something missing. Harry has to account for political cycles, commodity cycles, urbanization and other factors which affect the merging of countries. Bruce feels that Harry’s non-arrogant mentality lends credibility to Harry’s work. The fact that Harry is open to new information, and to the idea of revising his own theories, is why Bruce pays attention to him.

Harry’s first book was named The Power to Predict. This book is about indicators like “the spending wave”, “the 46 year lag,” and “the inflation indicator.” This book also contained the “S-curve,” which describes the 4-stage business and economic cycle. Harry predicted that DOW would hit 10,000 by the early 2000s, and that the boom would end by about 2007. This book accounted for new technologies like the internet and new car models. When new technologies develop, they cause bubbles.

Japan was mentioned in this first book as well. Harry claimed that Japan was going to slow, and that the United States and Europe would improve. People thought he was crazy for making that claim, because at that time, Japan was booming with growth. In 1992, people thought the U.S. had seen its best days, but Harry claimed that there would be a boom around the year of 1998 to 2000, which would result in a government surplus. Harry also predicted at that time that inflation and interest rates would decrease around that time.

Bruce feels that the legitimacy of Harry’s predictions is confirmed by his ability to predict both bad times and good times. Also, Harry uses very specific terms when describing the future of economics. Harry doesn’t use moderate language in his predictions. He has noticed that economies tend to either be bullish or bearish. The good times don’t last forever, and he thinks that people who make predictions about never-ending prosperity are foolish. When markets go up, they tend to increase for 25 to 27 years. When markets go down, the downturn typically lasts 12 to 14 years. Harry currently believes that we will have a period of demographic weakness from 2008 to 2023.

Every 40 years we get a major downturn and the government tries to fix it, but they cannot do this because they cannot fight demographics. When you’re in a demographic boom, the government can stimulate because you have a generation that needs to spend and borrow a larger amount of money. Harry is claiming that the current government stimulus program will fail, because it is simply causing the younger generation to buy earlier when they would have bought a home in the future. Also, Harry does not believe the baby boom generation will be affected by the stimulus, because they are done with the home buying part of their lives.

Most people only study one theme of economics. This means that if they are bullish, then they will selectively read bullish material. These people have already come to a conclusion before studying the evidence.

In the early 70s, Bruce read a book from Howard Ruff named The Coming Bad Year. At that time, Bruce did not have much knowledge of economics, so he read this book as if it came from God. One of the suggestions that Howard made in this book was to buy 200 pounds of wheat. At that time, Bruce had two kids and he didn’t want to run out, so he bought 1000 pounds. This experience taught Bruce that you cannot believe everything you read from proclaimed experts.

Economists don’t have tools to project 50 years in advance, but Harry believes that demographics can do this. Harry predicts that the value of gold will decrease in value during the downturn, because this is a deflation season not an inflation season. This is contrary to the opinions of many people, but Bruce actually tends to lean in favor of Harry’s opinion on this matter.

The more popular you are as an economic writer, the more people respect your opinions, and the more likely they are to plan their lives according to your predictions. This is something that Harry thinks about frequently. Harry actually encourages people to read other authors who think contrary to his opinions, so they can have a fully educated opinion.

A long-term boom prediction is bound to have some down cycles mixed in. Bruce asks how one can know the difference between an anomaly downturn and a downturn which leads to a depression. If demographic trends are still up when downturns occur, then the market will eventually recover. Baby boomers are moving into their 50s and 60s. During this time, they will be saving more and spending less. This tells Harry that the government stimulus will not work.

It is easier to predict long trends than it is to predict precise downturn points. For example, during the past crash, our indicators led us to believe that the DOW wouldn’t go past 7200, but it actually went down to 6440.

Harry claims there is an 80-year new economic cycle. This 80-year cycle is described as the 4 seasons model. There are always 4 seasons that occur in economics just like summer, spring, winter, and fall. We had the spring boom during the 1940s to 1960s. From 68 to 82 we had the summer downturn in which we experienced inflation and low spending. From 1980 to we went through the fall boom in which the baby boom generation began to spend a lot. We are going from high inflation to low inflation, which causes lower interest rates. The stock market does well when interest rates are low and this causes a bubble. Now we are up against the winter season, in which all our bubbles will decrease and cause deflation.

This 80-year cycle occurs over two generation booms which last around 38 to 40 years each. This cycle is repetitive going backwards, but there is an exception. If you go back into the 1800s, we still had a similar cycle system, but the two generation cycles only lasted about 28 to 30 years. This is because we were more of a farming society at that time. We did not have so many powerful middle class consumers. Right now, the commodity cycle is less important to our countries cycle. Commodities only represent about 10 percent of our economy.

Bruce asks if Harry has a process to determine whether or not false predictions are based on something unforeseen. Harry assumes that when bad predictions are made, that something was missed. Most people assume that the markets just aren’t getting something, and those people will be vindicated. The automobile industry correlated with a technology bubble from 1912 to 1919, and then a big crash occurred in the 1920s. We assumed another bubble would happen in 2006, but we did not see this. Harry tried to find an explanation for this by searching through history. He found a commodity cycle and a geopolitical cycle. During the boom of 2006, we had oil prices dramatically increasing which affected our ability to accurately predict the effect of the boom. Also, we had war problems which affected Harry’s predictions.

Harry Dent’s website is www.hsdent.com

You can find his books there and other activities which his company is involved with.  Join us for part two with harry Dent next week.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 2/1/10

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The MBA reported there is a $1.45 trillion balance of outstanding mortgages held by non-bank investors. SIGTARP predicted a second housing bubble. Fannie Mae’s mortgage delinquency rate increased to5.29% in November 2009. U.S. home construction spending decreased by 2.7 percent in December.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association -Only 13 Percent of Non-Bank Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Debt to Mature in 2010; Seven Percent in 2011″ (2-1-10)

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released the results of its 2009 Commercial Real Estate/Multifamily Survey of Loan Maturity Volumes. The survey indicates that the volume of commercial and multifamily mortgage debt maturing in 2010 and 2011 is relatively low.  Of the $1.45 trillion balance of outstanding mortgages held by non-bank investors, only 13 percent of the total ($183.9 billion) will mature in 2010 and 7 percent ($99.8 billion) in 2011.  The survey also found that maturities vary considerably by the type of investor holding the loan.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationWells Fargo/Wachovia, PNC/Midland and Berkadia Lead National Rankings of Commercial/Multifamily Servicing Volumes” (2-1-10)

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its year-end ranking of commercial and multifamily mortgage servicers as of the end of December 31, 2009.  On top of the list of firms is Wells Fargo/Wachovia Bank with $473.8 billion in U.S. master and primary servicing, followed by PNC Real Estate/Midland Loan Services with $322.9 billion, Berkadia Commercial Mortgage with $217.9 billion, Bank of America Merrill Lynch with $131.7 billion, KeyBank Real Estate Capital with $128.5 billion, and GEMSA Loan Services LP with $102.3 billion.”

Housing WireSIGTARP Warns of Second Housing Bubble” (2-1-10)

“The Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP), which oversees the federal government’s economic recovery program, called for reform to prevent government bailouts in the future and warned of a government-induced second housing bubble.”

Housing Wire“Officials Contend FHA is Going to be OK” (2-1-10)

“Despite a huge growth in business over the past few years, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) says its huge portfolio, now worth $750bn, is safely managed as the firm becomes comfortable with dealing with risk.”

Housing Wire - “VIEWPOINT: Waiting for the Fed to Withdraw” (2-1-10)

“The Fed will end the program by March 31 at $1.25trn. There is still chatter, however, about what circumstances would prompt the Fed to resume MBS purchases after March 31. It boils down to two things: a substantial re-weakening in home sales and prices or an excessive spike in mortgage rates.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Mae Serious Mortgage Delinquencies Rise Above 5%” (2-1-10)

“The government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.03 +7.29%) reported a serious delinquency rate for its mortgage portfolio of 5.29% in November 2009, the latest month of data, the highest in recent memory. That number grew from 4.98% in October and more than doubled the 2.13% in November 2008, according to its monthly summary.”

Bloomberg - “MetLife Cut by Fitch on Commercial Real Estate Losses” (2-1-10)

“MetLife Inc., the largest U.S. life insurer, was downgraded by Fitch Ratings on the prospect of losses tied to investments including commercial real estate holdings.”

Inman - “Home construction down in December” (2-1-10)

“The rate of U.S. home construction spending nationwide fell year-over-year and month-to-month in December, according to a report released today by the U.S. Census Bureau of the Department of Commerce. Spending for December dropped to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $268.7 billion, a 2.7 percent drop from $276.2 billion the month before, and a 10.3 percent drop from $299.4 billion in December 2008. This rate is a projection of a monthly spending total over a 12-month period, adjusted to reflect typical seasonal fluctuations in construction activity.”

116-TNG Radio – David Rosnick 4-4-09

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

David-Rosnick

David Rosnick

Economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research

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Bruce Norris is joined this week by David Rosnick, Economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

Bruce talks about reading several years back that the Baby Boom generation was worth trillions and in great position to retire. David says the Baby Boomers have a fair amount of wealth and every generation typical has grown in wealth over the years. Baby Boomers, however, have been recently hit by the stock market and housing bubble that has caused some great losses.

In a recent report written by David and his team on this very issue, it says the Baby Boom situation looks much bleaker than 8 months ago. Bruce asks how they are coping with this fact. David says the Baby Boom generation has been witnessing the trend for two years. Last summer the savings rate started to increase and consumption has really slowed. The full effects of this contraction in spending and consumption has yet to fully hit the market. David says he’d like to see the government continue the money stimulus and look into subsidizing shorter work weeks, vacation, and sick leave.

Bruce asks if the wealth members of the Baby Boom generation would be harder hit by stock prices and the poorer be more affected by the real estate declines. David says the wealthiest are indeed more likely to own stock but are also more likely to be home owners. The bottom 1/5 of households could get completely wiped out with foreclosure.

Bruce asks David how he feels about recent solutions presented by the government such as the cramdown. David says he’s not so concerned but would like to see the homes go back to the bank and perhaps the individuals getting to stay in their homes and pay market rent. David says the bank doesn’t want to try to take it over and sell the property in this market. By keeping the homeowner in the home, it’s a win-win situation. Bruce brings up that the prices are very skewed in California. David says the bank just needs to decide how they want to take the loss. By not making this mandatory the banks would not participate as they are being a stubborn. Bruce asks how the lenders would react if this was made mandatory. How much would then be available for lending? David says there will always be solid prospects and that it wouldn’t really matter.

Bruce asks David about people stating their income and if they should be held responsible for that. David says that lenders were more responsible for that as he understands it. When real estate was headed up, it didn’t matter and no one cared. This is an example of an unsustainable home bubble that people refused to acknowledge.

David created a housing cost calculator which compares owning vs. renting the same home. Bruce asks if the price to own is much more than renting. David says historically it hasn’t been that different. David says when it went way out of whack that it was almost guaranteed that there would be loss.

Bruce asks if bubbles ultimately benefit people. David says bubbles that are uncontrolled is a problem. Bruce says many were refinancing and spending the money. There must have been a short-term streak of wealth. David says people thought they were very wealthy and savings rates went way down.

Bruce asks if there should be some acceptance of risk when any investment is made. David says experts gave people a lot of bad advice and since there was a lack of an alternative voice, it wasn’t very fair. People were told that real estate was the way to wealth. Bruce asks if people should absorb that risk or if there is a backstop to save them. David says Social Security and defined benefit plans act as that backstop. Personal savings is only one alternative. David explains the difference between defined benefit plans versus defined contribution plan. Bruce says that guarantees of payout were as good as investments made. David says the bubble market really hurt these potential retirement funds. When things get so out of line, people make bad planning decision.

Bruce asks if defined benefit plans for cities like Vallejo that just declared bankruptcy will ever see that money. David says in California he’s not sure who is getting what. Bruce says that defined benefit programs typically have a projected return rate and almost all have seen losses. David says that those promises will most likely not be able to be upheld because of the economy.

Bruce asks David is he is afraid for seniors as they retire. The Baby Boomers encompasses the 45-64 age range. The older baby boomers are about to retire so there’s a little more concern there. The younger Baby Boomers have a little more time to get back on track. Overall, they aren’t looking good so far. He says the lower 1/5 could be completely wiped out because of foreclosure.

Bruce asks if we should be worried about the Social Security Program since the baby Boomers will have less population paying for benefits as they retire. He says it’s nothing urgent but today the health care costs are getting worse and are more of an issue as Medicare and Medicaid need to be helped. David says socialized medicine might be a possibility since it’s worked in other countries. We have the best medicine but the worst delivery system.

In David’s report entitled “The Wealth of the Baby Boom Cohorts After the Collapse of the Housing Bubble,” David says the net worth of Baby Boomers that owned a home was less than those that were renters in 2009 which is surprising. David says wealth isn’t just in equity and the housing and stock bubble real caused a problem.

More on this report at the Center for Economic and Policy Research at cepr.net. Next week join us as we welcome back Tommy Williams, co-founder of Williams and Williams auction company.

David Rosnick is an Economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. He has a Ph.D. in Computer Science from North Carolina State University and an M.A. in Economics from George Washington University. He has written numerous policy papers including “The Burden of Social Security Taxes and the Burden of Excessive Health Care Costs” with Dean Baker, March 2005; “Poor Numbers: The Impact of Trade Liberalization on World Poverty”, with Mark Weisbrot and Dean Baker, November 2004; “NAFTA at Ten: The Recount,â€� with Mark Weisbrot and Dean Baker, March 2004; and “Black Swans, Conspiracy Theories, and the Quixotic Search for Fraud: A Look at Hausmann and Rigobon’s Analysis of Venezuela’s Referendum Vote” with Mark Weisbrot and Todd Tucker, September 2004; and “The Forty-Four Trillion Dollar Deficit Scare,” with Dean Baker, September 2003.

He is the architect of a growing number of calculators including CEPR’s Accurate Benefits Calculator which compares current-law Social Security benefits to the Bush Plan based on “Progressive Indexing.” He also created the Housing Cost Calculator, which compares the cost of owning a home relative to renting for a potential new homeowner. It gives homebuyers a sense of how the current bubble in the housing market might affect them. Prior to joining CEPR, he worked as a Research Associate (postdoc) at the North Carolina State University at Raleigh Department of Computer Science.