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California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Posts Tagged ‘delinquencies’

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/4/12

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

Today’s News Synopsis:

In a big news story, pending home sales are on the rise, being at their highest level in almost two years according to the National Association of Realtors.  The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a decrease in unemployment for the month of November.  Mortgage applications also decreased during the holidays according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

In The News:

DS News“Serious Delinquencies Decline, Foreclosure Rates Steady” (1-3-12)

“Serious delinquencies are on the decline, while foreclosures have steadied at 5.5 percent, according to recent data from Foreclosure-Response.org, a joint venture of the Local Initiatives Support Corporation, the Urban Institute, and the Center for Housing Policy.”

Housing Wire - “Unemployment rate drops in most metro areas in November” (1-4-12)

“The majority of U.S. metropolitan areas reported lower unemployment rates in November with 351 of the 372 localities seeing a decline from a year earlier.  The Bureau of Labor Statistics said unemployment rose in 16 areas and remained the same in five, according to nonseasonally adjusted figures released Wednesday.”

Mortgage Bankers Association - “Mortgage Applications Decrease Over Two Week Holiday Period” (1-4-12)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the weeks ending December 23, 2011 and December 30, 2011.”

Realty Times - “Pending Sales Rise” (1-4-12)

“According to the latest report from the National Association of Realtors Pending Homes Sales Index, pending home sales are at the highest level in 19 months.”

CNN Money - “Manhattan home prices fall in final months of  2011″ (1-4-12)

“Despite a number of multi-million dollar home sales, including a record-setting $88 million penthouse deal in December, Manhattan real estate prices fell significantly during the final months of 2011.”

San Francisco Chronicle - “BofA Loses Ruling Against MBIA in Fight Over Mortgage Loans” (1-4-12)

“Bank of America Corp. lost a ruling in a court fight against MBIA Inc. that will  help the bond insurer as it tries to recover losses on home loans made by the  bank’s Countrywide Financial unit.”

Housing Wire - “Obama to make recess appointment for CFPB head” (1-4-12)

“President Barack Obama will install Richard Cordray later Wednesday as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, according to White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer.”

Wall Street Journal - “General Growth Starts Year With a Gamble” (1-4-12)

“After a tumultuous first year as chief executive of General Growth Properties Inc., Sandeep Mathrani is about to make perhaps his boldest move yet: The shopping-mall owner later this month is set to spin off 30 of its weaker malls as a separate company.”

Inman - “Re/Max LLC sues North Carolina brokerage over red, white and blue signage” (1-4-12)

“Denver-based global franchisor Re/Max LLC    is suing a North Carolina brokerage for alleged trademark infringement and unfair competition.”

Housing Wire“Multifamily delinquency rate in CMBS falls to 15.6% in December” (1-4-12)

“Despite projections showing increased demand for apartments will spur multifamily growth in 2012, analysts viewing December data on commercial mortgage-backed securities say multifamily loans are the worst performing mortgages.”

Hard Money Loan Closed

Carson, California hard money loan closed by The Norris Group private lending. Real estate investor received loan for $200,000 on a 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom home appraised for $325,000.

California Real Estate Investor Events:

The Norris Group posted a new event.  The Norris Group will be at the Real Estate Investor Rewind at CVREIA on January 10, 2011.

Bruce Norris will be speaking at the Apartment Owners Association-Discover Wealth Strategies for 2012 Los Angeles on January 12, 2012.

Looking Back:

Nearly 5% of Freddie Mac’s single-family mortgages were seriously delinquent. The FOMC chose to keep the federal funds target rate between 0 to 0.25%. Office buildings added 2.5 million square feet of occupied space in the 4th quarter of 2010, according to REIS. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports jobless rates rose in 49% of all U.S. metro areas.

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 12/19/11

Monday, December 19th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Home sales increased again in November for the fifth month in a row, increasing 8% from last year.  The latest data from the Lender Processing Services showed that the number of loans delinquent at the end of last month had increased almost 3% on a monthly basis.  In another big story, homebuilder confidence increased for the third month in a row.

In The News:

Realty Times - “Real Estate Outlook: Distressed Properties’ Far Reaching Effects” (12-19-11)

“The number of distressed properties across the nation has resulted in a range of effects. Most notably, though, has been the effect on non-distressed homes in neighboring areas and communities.”

Housing Wire - Home sales up for fifth-straight month” (12-19-11)

“November home sales in the 53 largest metro areas rose 8.1% from last year, the fifth-straight month of increases from a year earlier, according to the real estate network RE/MAX.

Los Angeles Times - “4 House members got Countrywide VIP loans, Rep. Darrell Issa says” (12-19-11)

“Four current House members received special VIP loans from Countrywide Financial Corp., and their names have been forwarded to the Ethics Committee for possible action, Rep. Darell Issa (R-Vista) said.”

DS News - “Delinquencies on the Rise as Loans Languish in Pipeline” (12-19-11)

“Lender Processing Services (LPS) has released new data detailing mortgage performance at November month-end. The most troubling statistic shows a nearly 3 percent month-over-month increase in the number of loans 30 or more days past due but not yet in foreclosure.”

NAHB - “Builder Confidence Rises for the Third Consecutive Month” (12-19-11)

“Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes edged up two points from a downwardly revised number to 21 on the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) for December, released today. This marks a third consecutive month in which builder confidence has improved, and brings the index to its highest point since May of 2010.”

Bloomberg - “Industrial Property Delinquencies Hit 22-Year High, Standard & Poor’s Says” (12-19-11)

“Delinquencies on industrial-property loans that were packaged into commercial mortgage-backed securities rose to a 22-year high amid a decline in rental income from warehouses, Standard & Poor’s said.”

Housing Wire“Home remodeling activity continues record rise: BuildFax” (12-19-11)

“The BuildFax residential remodeling index reached a record high in October, extending its 23-month climb another month, as homeowners opt to stay put and remodel rather than buy a new home.”

DS News“Year’s Failed-Bank Tally Rises to 92 with Closings in Arizona and Florida” (12-19-11)

“Following a month without a single bank failure, state and federal regulators stepped in over the weekend to seize community-based lenders in Arizona and Florida after losses pushed the institutions’ capital levels below acceptable thresholds.”

Bloomberg - “Single-Family Home Building Headed for Worst Year on Record” (12-19-11)

“More than two years after the U.S. recession ended in June 2009, construction of single-family homes is heading for its worst year on record.  The CHART OF THE DAY shows that while total housing starts bottomed in 2009, construction of one-family houses will probably post a new low this year at around 419,100, about 11 percent less than in 2010, according to Bloomberg News calculations.”

Inman“NAR to release revised home-sale stats” (12-19-11)

“The National Association of Realtors on Wednesday will issue revised estimates for existing-home sales going back five years, saying the formula it had been using to adjust the sales data it collects from multiple listing services had drifted out of whack and was overestimating sales.”

Hard Money Loan Closed

Victorville, California hard money loan closed by The Norris Group private lending. Real estate investor received loan for $36,000 on a 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom home appraised for $62,000.

California Real Estate Investor Events:

The Norris Group posted a new event. Bruce Norris will be speaking at the Real Estate Rewind at IRCA Los Angeles on January 3, 2012.

The Norris Group will be at the Real Estate Investor Rewind at CVREIA on January 10, 2011.

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.

256-TNGRadio – Carolina Reid 12-17-11

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Carolina Reid

Carolina Reid

Senior Researcher at the Center for Responsible Lending

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined once again by Carolina Reid. Carolina joined the Center for Responsible Lending in August 2011 as a senior researcher working out of the Center’s California office. Before coming to CRL, Carolina served as the research manager for the Community Development Department for the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. At the Fed, she published a substantial number of journal articles, working papers, and policy reports on the Community Reinvestment Act, the Foreclosure Crisis, Access to Credit, the role of anti-predatory lending laws. She also helped build the capacity of local stakeholders, including banks, nonprofits, and local governments, to undertake community development activities, especially in the area of affordable housing.

In their last interview, Bruce and Carolina had just broached on the subject of the need for a down payment. Shelia Bair stated as she was leaving office, “If people put down 20%, it makes perfect sense that they are going to have a better payment history.” Based on that assumption, we’re going down the road of Dodd-Frank and making it mandatory for a 20% down payment before we’re able to receive the best rate loan. Bruce believes the timing of this is disastrous. Shelia agreed, and she also does not think that 20% down payment is necessary in order to ensure that borrowers stay in their homes and receive responsible loan products. Carolina said they have a history of providing no down payment or very low down payment loans with very high success rates. The questions are how you underwrite these loans, what kind of product features do these loans have, and if you have really considered the borrower’s ability to repay the loan over the long term. There is evidence from city programs and state affordable housing programs and other programs like the Community Advantage Program, which has run out of self-help and is affiliated with CRL and a CRA motivated lending program and has very low foreclosure rates. We have also seen the aforementioned in an FHA loan, although historically FHA foreclosure rates have been slightly higher than the market overall. Over this most recent time period, they have actually performed quite well compared to the Alt-A and the negative amortization as well as the other risky loan products that were originated during the subprime boom.

Bruce believed they were probably not a big participant in the years that Carolina covered. In California they would have been non-existent, but they are certainly going to have their fair share of 2009 foreclosures. The deal is not so much the down payment as much as the negative equity, which has not really been discussed. The majority of the country’s problems are really located in areas that had ridiculous prices rises and then ridiculous price declines. Bruce wondered if the negative equity was really the driving force to most of the foreclosures. Carolina was uncertain and said there is some debate among economists about what actually caused the foreclosure crisis. Once prices start to decline, it becomes really hard to come up with an alternative of exiting your home if you are having payment difficulties other than foreclosure, whether it is because you cannot resell or do not have enough equity. However, it is a big part of the problem now and is certainly hurting homeowners, particularly homeowners who have lost their jobs or otherwise financially struggling due to the recession. It is one thing to have a negative equity position; but if you’re attached to the real estate industry then the odds of you making the same money that you were making in 2006 is very unlikely. If you are in the lending business and are paid a point-to-loan, you are now making a loan at half of the price and a lot less transaction. Even if you are employed, you are not as fully employed as you once were. Carolina said she believes families are really struggling right now because the after effects of the recession have gone on so long and unemployment still remains so high that even people who had considerable savings have burned through that. This has made it increasingly difficult for them to make their mortgage payments. Bruce said there is also acceptability right now to not making your payment that is definitely taking hold.

When The Norris Group buys foreclosure property, they have seen that the average length of people have been in the property for two years or more and have therefore been making payments for a couple years. There is a study that says if your circle of people starts performing strategic foreclosures, then there is pressure. You may be sitting next to your cousin, who is on vacation on a cruise ship, and he may be thinking, “The only reason this is possible for me to take this vacation is I stopped making that payment.” You begin feeling the urge to join the party. Carolina is not sure of the extent to which this may be a real problem across the state. In the many interviews she has done she has found that borrowers are really committed to making their mortgage payments, and they feel a real obligation to that with a real sense of self-worth about being able to make that payment and that commitment. Carolina said she wishes we had a way to empirically tease out which of the stories is the strongest, but there are probably just as many borrowers who are actually desperately trying to make their payments. Bruce believes if it was a lot more, you would have a gigantic foreclosure percentage. Bruce said he is dealing with the most foreclosures ever, but we are still not talking 10%. There are a lot of people upside-down making payments on things they know is over encumbered because it is the way they have been taught to be built.

One example of a group is there was an owner of a head shrunk fund in New York who owned a home in a real nice area in Orange County on a cul-de-sac. There were twelve houses, and he was the only one making his payment in the whole cul-de-sac. They actually had meetings every month with the eleven other people to discuss how it was going. This was considered a neighborhood strategic default, which Bruce had never heard of prior. Bruce also wondered about NSP funds. We have this foreclosure crisis, and the County of Riverside has their share of funds. The Norris Group met with the city and tried to figure out a way to work with them, but they could not really come up with something. Therefore, Bruce wondered how successful the NSP fund program has been and whether it was a wise expenditure of money. Carolina believed it was and that it was not a very big expenditure of money in terms of the housing market. We have to remember that it was a program that was developed in a period of crisis, so therefore there were a lot of mistakes made both in terms of initial program design and program implementation. Several municipalities and other areas that received NSP funds really struggled with the capacity to deploy those funds; but in other places they really have worked in the way they were intended and really helped to support non-profits and city governments in both purchasing distressed properties and returning them to productive use and affordable homeownership programs. Carolina believes there are a lot of examples of really innovating approaches to NSP implementation that maybe are not at the scale we would like them to be at but are certainly making a difference at the local level.

Bruce wondered why it is felt that the private investor would not be able to take on the inventory and provide a completely perfect house for these types of programs. It is not that the end buyer is getting a big discount, but he is getting a fixed-up home in a neighborhood area that has some challenges. In some places, they really are working to use NSP funds to turn them into permanently affordable homes through community land trusts. There is a very innovative program out of Boston Community Capital that tries to keep the distressed borrower in their home using NSP funds, but the best NSP funds usually go beyond this. There are a lot of investors out there who are not necessarily as responsible as others are. The idea behind NSP is trying to keep some of the wealth and some of the equity that exists in the home within community hands rather than in investor hands. Carolina does not see this as competition with other investors, but rather a very nice way to promote affordable housing within locally hard-hit areas. One of the challenges for NSP funds is they do have to compete with investors, and they did not end up with as many properties as they thought. This is one example of where you do not know when you are in the middle of a crisis, and people thought there would be plenty of properties that they would have been able to quickly acquire them. However, this turned out to not be true.

The delinquencies in California tripled in about a twelve month period, and foreclosures declined during the time period when delinquencies went from 3.4% to 11%, and foreclosures went from 1 ½% to .8%. Lenders stopped foreclosing. Carolina said they had problems with inventory even as early as 2009, but during that specific timeframe in 2008 they stopped. The reason they stopped in 2008 was when The Norris Group was buying REOs at the time, the lenders were receiving about $.18 on the dollar on their loan amount because there was so much inventory that the price was hammered to death. They stopped foreclosing on the inventory for a combination of reasons, such as they were capable of being fined by the city and prices were sinking because they had 16 months of inventory that was now down to 5 or 6. However, it is not churning in the background, and this is part of what Carolina’s report is saying that we are not finished with any of this.

One of the discrepancies that is a little scary is that we have already foreclosed on 2.3 million and have a little over 3 million to come, and in addition there was a wildcard statement that there was another report saying there was probably 10 million more to come. Bruce wondered where they obtained this figure, and Carolina said a lot of it was in the difference of measurement. The bigger figure, which was the 10 million, included the borrowers who were current but were significantly underwater. The estimate, therefore, was for borrowers who may still become delinquent, which CRL does not include. The estimate also included estimates of short sales, which CRL also does not assess in their reports. However, short sales are definitely gaining momentum in our world, so as far as the investor world they see that there is a shift. If you look at the California Association of Realtors’ figures, the short sales have already passed the number of REO sales in the counties of Orange and L.A. Riverside and San Bernardino are gaining momentum and you also have a fair amount of properties that will not necessarily go to the NSP stage because they are lowering the opening bids at the trustee sales to move the properties before they become an REO. Therefore, they are preventing as many REOs as they can, and there are also bulk deals where they are selling the notes in bulk to where people then have a chance to get a workout done because the new owner of the note owes a lot less than the face value of the note. In the $600,000 example Bruce used before, they might go buy the note for $350,000, and they would be in a great position to sit down with the owner to make a deal.

One thing that is a little aggravating is we never make a differentiation on the person that is upside down on how they got to that point. It’s the idea that one size fits all. So one person is upside down, but you had refinanced your way there and had pulled out $300,000. Or, in another example, someone’s application may have not been true. There is never a mention that when we are talking about a loan modification program we look at some of those categories and say we should not do it. Carolina agreed saying people got underwater under a multiple different ways, and the more careful studies do look at this. One of the things we are plagued by in this research is the lack of data that really helps us to combine all the different factors that went into both the loan origination decision and the outcome, particularly where borrowers are now given changes in house prices.

Bruce wondered what the next few years will be like for housing, and if when Carolina looks at the information if she is looking at it on a national basis or California specific. Carolina answered saying she is looking at national data, and she thinks the policy choices that we make now stand to make a real difference in what happens, how many people are affected, what neighborhoods are affected, and how long this downturn is really going to last. We do not need to throw up our hands at this point, but instead we need to continue thinking creatively about solutions. We also need to really understand that there are things we know we can fix, such as servicer behavior as well as aligning servicers and improving their servicing practices. We also need to get creative on the policy front in terms of reducing foreclosures and delinquencies as well as stabilizing housing markets.

Bruce wondered what ramifications happen, because it seems inevitable that we are going to have a decline of homeownership as we resolve this next pile of properties. He wondered what societal benefits has there really been having the biggest percentage of people ever owning their own home and what this has meant to cities and neighborhoods in the way of stability. Carolina answered that she has never been one who has been for getting the U.S. homeownership rate as high as possible, and she is not sure this is the goal for which we should be striving. Instead, we need to minimize homeownership gaps between different groups and making sure that where there are barriers to homeownership we should be able to overcome with prudent public policy. We should hope to overcome these because it remains true that owning a home is the best source of wealth for all families but particularly for low income and minority families. This is true partly because it is a savings mechanism and also because it is such a nicely leveraged asset. As Bruce said before, we know how to do this well. During the 1980s and 1990s, we really did help to increase homeownership rates among those groups of people and close the homeownership gap in a way that was responsible and actually promoted stability for both neighborhoods and families. Therefore, we should not lose sight of this goal.

Bruce believes homeownership is very important to our country. He was married at 17, so he was on the other side of the equation at that point. He remembered when he and Marsha bought their home after saving for two years, which at the time was only $750 a month; Bruce had the grant deed recorded in his name when he did not have a dime of equity. However, on the Saturday that followed he was able to mow his own grass, and he could tell you it felt like he was a man. It was then engrained in him that part of being an American is you are able to call the shots within your own yard. Bruce would really not like there to be policies that dictate big down payments and are so restrictive that you eliminate a lot of people from that privilege. It really does not make much sense. The pull of homeownership is strong among all different groups. People really do want to become homeowners to a large degree, and Carolina believes the evidence is very strong that when done responsibly it is good for wealth building, for communities, and families, particularly children in terms of later life outcomes. Therefore, when done right it really can be a very great way of expanding access to opportunity.

Bruce Norris and Sean O’Toole had the opportunity to go to Washington to talk to Fannie Mae and FHA about some of the solutions that they talked about at I Survived Real Estate at the Nixon Library. One of the things they talked about was the nothing down loan program and its ability to maybe move to another owner without formal qualification. That idea came from the early 80s when Bruce became an investor. To become a full-time investor, Bruce refinanced his house at 17 ½% fixed. He almost owned it free and clear. However, about 60% of real estate transactions in California between 1981 and 1983 were accomplished by not needing a new loan. They were allowed to take over the existing loans in a term called “Subject To.” You literally did not fill out paperwork from the lender and get approved. All you had to do was make sure the loan payment was current and you sent it one sheet of paper that says to take one person’s name off and put on another name.

If in the next two years we could have a program where you had nothing down, qualified people getting a VA loan and who could make the payment, and also made the loan transferrable to another owner someday; then that would be a very big benefit. The reason is because this low interest environment that we are enjoying right now will not always be there, but it is a huge savings. For the people who can get in now, especially the beginning group or the people who have not had a bigger share of ownership, to receive a 4% mortgage rate is bragging rights for 30 years. The housing cost would also be so low compared to their neighbor over time that they have a lot of spendable money. This would be a very big difference in their life, so hopefully we will not become so restrictive with our policies that we eliminate the chance to own homes for a good percentage of our people.

It is important to realize that owning a home is still an earned privilege. Sometimes we cross over to where it has become a right, and this is something that shows with people who are not making their payments. They have the mindset that they really deserve their house anyway, even if they cannot make the payments. These kinds of people are not in the communities that Carolina has been working in, but she can imagine if you ran into these people it would be frustrating. They do not realize that the bill is being passed onto others.

Carolina has been working for the Center for Responsible Lending for only a few months, but for the upcoming year they will be doing some more research on qualified residential mortgage, both working with definitions and trying to show that a 20% down payment is not necessarily in everybody’s best interest. They also hope to look a little bit at neighborhoods, neighborhood stabilization, and see what is happening in different places, particularly hard-hit areas in California.

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.

253-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2011 part 6 11-24-11

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011


(Full Bio)

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On October 14, 2011, The Norris Group returned with its award-winning event I Survived Real Estate. An expert line-up of industry specialists joined Bruce Norris to discuss current industry regulation, head-scratching legislation, and the opportunities emerging for savvy real estate professionals. 100% of the proceeds support the Orange County Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. This event would not have been possible without the generous help of the following platinum partners: ForeclosureRadar and Sean O’Toole, Housing Wire, the San Diego Creative Real Estate Investors Association and President Bill Tan, Investors Workshops with President Shawn Watkins and Angel Bronsgeest, Invest Club for Women and Iris Veneracion and Bobbie Alexander, San Jose Real Estate Investors Association and Geraldine Berry, Real Wealth Networks, Frye Wyles, MVT Productions, and White House Catering. The event video can be found on isurvived2011.com.

Bruce asked the panel if they see anything in Dodd-Frank or the changes in qualified mortgages that threaten a 30-year mortgage for some of the stratuses of loans. Debra said she does not really see anything in the QM or the QRM that would specifically attack the 30-year mortgage. For the most part this has been a product that housing in America has depended on. Debra does not worry about the 30-year mortgage going away as a result of the regulation. Bruce also wondered if there was any discussion on where Fannie and Freddie will end up. In response, Debra said our fragile housing market right now is delaying the government’s desire to shrink the footprint in housing. The white paper at the beginning of this year would launch the debate for the future of the government’s role in housing, the future of the GSEs, and how to rebuild the nation’s secondary mortgage markets. Debra does not believe the debate is really going to get going until most likely after the elections. The future of the GSEs is uncertain. There are a couple bills that have been introduced that would suggest all the way from completely privatizing what would now be Fannie and Freddie to maybe private companies with a government wrap for the securities that are issued. However, she reiterated to say debate would probably not start until the end of next year.

Sean O’Toole, Doug Duncan, and Eric Janszen returned to continue the discussion with Sara, Gary, and Debra. The first thing Bruce talked about with all six panelists was a recent Moody’s report he read that talked about the qualified residential mortgage in place, and it talked about FHA only being about 10% of the market. This really surprised Bruce because in California, even on the low side first-time buyers were 30% on the low side and 50% on the high side in the market right now. He wondered how FHA could only be 10% unless it was really being restricted. He wondered what would be the restriction that would prevent it from being a normal percentage as this would be the loan to which you would think those kinds of people would go. Debra said if you look at what the government is willing to do to get FHA from a 30% market share down to a target of 10-15%. They have already raised the mortgage insurance premiums, so an FHA loan is slightly more expensive than it was. We have just seen the stimulus loan limits expire, so that is another nudge toward a smaller market share. There has been talk about possibly looking at a median income restriction somewhere in our future. We will most likely not see anything like this anytime soon, but we will most likely see small moves to get the market share down from about 30%. Doug Duncan said part of the discussion will be getting the private market more involved. If you go back to some of the history of the FHA loans, the underlying theory for FHA was that there was part of their credit spectrum that would not get served by the private market. This was because the returns most likely did not reach private market returns, and therefore there were external benefits encouraging home-ownership by providing a subsidy through the FHA program to get credit to the households. In return for that, there was also a ceiling on the size of loans that was available in the market. We may see some discussion on this come up again, but Doug said it will all be done in context of what is done with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Bruce wondered what would happen if we lowered the loan balance. For instance, in California we had a median price of $600,000, and we now have a median price of under 3. Even though we reduced the loan limit, it has to serve more households with a new loan limit than it served with the big loan limit because there are a lot fewer expensive homes at least when it comes to going forward. At the same time, you might have a problem with refis. Bruce wondered if we are supposed to have government program that is over twice the median price of an area. Doug said if you looked in their book of business between the previous limit and the conforming limit to where it dropped; it was less than 5% of the book. The problem is it is regionally targeted, so you will see California, New Jersey, Maryland, Washington, and all your high-class markets hit more than the national. Debra said from modeling their business she could see the impact is very small, although you really have to question anything right now that would be negative to housing and if this is what we really want to be doing.

Sean O’Toole discussed how one of the things he has always found interesting about the federal programs is that it’s at the county level. One of the biggest drops we had in California was in Monterrey County where you have Watsonville, which is close to Carmel, Pebble Beach, and Monterrey. You have two completely different markets, even though they are 15 miles apart, so Monterrey and Carmel are going to take a $200,000 hit on the conforming loan limit; whereas in other areas such as San Jose and Contra Costa County that are not as desirable, they are not going to take as hard a hit. It does not make any sense, and it happens in any place where this kind of decision is made. This would not be a factor in Santa Ana, for example, but it would be a factor in Newport Beach. It goes back to applying a broad-based national policy to anything that overrides the local conditions and requires some of the expertise that was being talked about in the appraisal space and a whole host of other things that relate to real estate. Doug said for a long period his company looked at the national home price, and then they talked to their friends and neighbors about how all real estate is local.

Bruce mentioned a document that talks about saving $2-$4 trillion off of the budget going forward, and real estate would be an actual target for trying to get some of our chips. Bruce wondered if we have ever thought about what might be okay to take of if we cannot have anything. Bruce said he had a questionnaire, and one half of the people said it was not okay to take anything, but Bruce wondered if it will not happen one way or the other. For example, if an interest rate went down to $500,000, Bruce wondered if this would be that impactful to our market. Gary Thomas answered that the National Association of Realtors does believe it would be impactful. They do not think this should be touched at all because of the unintended consequences. One of the proposals is to take the interest rate down on second homes in resort markets. However, you have to ask what this will do to the resort market and what it will do to the communities where you cannot resell properties. The unintended consequences are it affects the grocery stores, the pharmacists, and everybody. It does not only affect the person who owns the property and cannot deduct it anymore.

Eric Janszen agreed with Bruce in that it is most likely a real target since it is a government subsidy, and subsidies in both of the ideological camps are obvious targets for cuts. It is always the other person’s subsidy that is the bad one. If it did happen, Eric was not sure if it would have as big an impact as everyone thinks it would. The real big problem we have right now is incomes and employment. We are not really going to fix the housing problem. All of these are marginal issues and marginal solutions until we start having job growth. Riverside County is 15% unemployed, and usually we really count on construction. However, we have a price per square foot on some inventory that is half of the construction cost. It is almost like the dominoes have to fall backwards before they can fall forward. We have to get rid of a lot of what we would consider shadow inventory. We first have to know what shadow inventory is and what to do about it. Until you end up with that disseminated into the marketplace to where no one fears it coming out later below replacement cost, you won’t be able to go forward. Sean O’Toole jokingly said the newest version of shadow inventory moves to help provide cover to whoever got it wrong the first time.

In 2008 when the subject of shadow inventory first came up you had foreclosures just on a tear, banks taking back lots of property, and we were not seeing the property back on the market. It occurred to them that the banks were really holding a lot of property that was not making it through the market. This is what Sean O’Toole originally talked about with shadow inventory and had a lot of statistics on it. A lot of people talking about the foreclosure way and other issues needed to change this over time, and it has grown to then include everyone in foreclosure and everyone who is delinquent. It also includes negative equity, and Sean said he has heard people say it also includes all those who would like to sell at the prices that are in 2006 but now cannot. This has been nicknamed the “delusional inventory.” However, if you start talking with people about it, you will see that there is a lot of “delusional inventory” and a lot of property that should be and would be on the market if people were not still holding out some hope that there is going to be some fix in Washington. This is as big a problem as anything else.

Bruce noted in some markets you have 3,000 square foot houses that cost a lot to build being bought for $140,000. There might be a pile of them, so the shadow inventory is not only what the lender owns, but what is being refused to be foreclosed on. Bruce said this is where he would go with shadow inventory. It’s a ball of two-year late people that for some reason are not being forced to the finish line. Whether credit for this goes to MERS or robo-signing, long before this became a front-line issue it looked like lenders made a decision to not foreclose on specific things. The question is what the reasoning is for waiting so long. The last time we had this problem was in the 90s, and lenders began to wait. People were getting close to a year behind, and then the FDIC came in and said this was not okay. Bruce remembered the chart and remembered how there were foreclosures declining in California back in ’95, yet delinquencies were increasing. There was a rule passed that said when you were 100 days late you had to file an NOD. This came basically from instruction. This time, however, it seemed not only was there nothing in the instructions, but it seemed like people were getting free passes and being told, “Whenever you want to or don’t want to, it is okay.” Eric said the thing that changed was there was just not a large enough pool of credit worthy buyers by the new definition of credit worthy. Bruce would say if you want to sell it to investors, you would have all that you can give to the market. However, Bruce does not believe that there is a fear of there not being enough cash because with everything that is bought at trustee sales a month, there is a lot of money spent.

Debra does not get the sense that lenders are purposely delaying foreclosure by design as much as working through the process, meeting regulations, meeting investor requirements, state requirements, and other requirements unless there are REOs that have not come back out on the market. She does not get the sense that lenders are purposely delaying the foreclosure process by the same token that lenders are going overboard right now to make sure they are doing the responsible loss mitigation activities that they need to do to help keep borrowers in their homes, structure short sales, or whatever the appropriate process is one buyer at a time. It’s possible they are also trying to figure out who owns the loan.

Sean mentioned how we had more than double the foreclosures that we have today in 2008. The idea and the notion that the lenders need more time to figure things out is ridiculous. They have had plenty of time to figure it out, and we are four years into this thing. This is not really the problem. Doug touched on earlier the notion that Fannie and Freddie don’t really want to talk about principle balance reductions. They are worried about foreclosures because ultimately these losses flow through to the taxpayer. The taxpayer is not in much of a position to take them right now, and neither are the banks. If you start looking at just the seconds that a bank has where maybe the first are held by Fannie and Freddie, but they have a portfolio of seconds that are on their portfolio that exceed the equity of the institution. When you really start clearing things through, you have a much different problem than simply processing the paperwork. You are talking about banking and government solvency.

Doug said it is a grand social experiment of the question, “Would the welfare of the economy and the populace be better served by a rapid and deep clearing of inventory, which would bring into question the solvency of the significant part of the financial system; or do you obtain a better result through a variety of policies to make a slow move to bring prices back into equilibrium?” Sean said the latter would be great, except now it is extend and pretend because you have to confess and say you have more losses than you can afford to bear. You have to tell the American people that this is really the situation and we’re going to on purpose drag this out so we have an orderly disillusion, like back in Grease, rather than a disorderly one. We cannot continue to extend and pretend and not have a conversation about how bad it really is. We created $4 trillion of excess debt; and we have worked through half a trillion of it. So far we have $3 ½ trillion to go, but we cannot afford it today. Therefore, we have to have a solution.

One of the things Bruce noticed was back in 2008, we really had a lot of price damage and when he was buying houses for $.18 on what the lender was owed. That was really the number because there were so many inventories. At that time our default was about 3.4%, and our foreclosures were 1.2%. About 9 months later, our defaults were 11%; and our foreclosures were .08%. They had just stopped foreclosing, and you had tripled the default. One of the disservices this does is there are gentlemen in the audience at the time of ’08 who had 800 REO listings. They had a business plan around that volume and were never told that the listings were going to turn into 200. One of the things that would have been helpful would have been to tell an industry that they will simply not do it at that pace anymore and could have had a better business plan. This was one thing that would have been frustrating for mortgage people and appraisers as well. This is all business that is turning in a red ball behind us that is not producing a fee, a commission, or a rental.

Bruce wondered if the losses that are in a second position behind the firsts that are a 200% loan-to-value are being booked at zero value or face-note value. Sean mentioned that back in 2008 when Paulson announced TARP, everyone thought it was about loans to banks. However, if you go back and read his statement, it was really about how we should not force banks to sell specific properties into a distressed market at certain distressed prices. This sounded good on paper except that the issue was not a distressed price but rather a reversion of the mean and the price at which things were supposed to be. The losses were real, and we need to figure out how we recognize them and deal with them. Four years later, we have not even started having honest discussion about recognizing and then dealing with them. Bruce wondered what would happen if we were to say, “Let’s foreclose on the red ball.” Do you absorb $4 trillion and survive? Sean reiterated saying Doug may have been right and that we need to think about a different social experiment. At the end of the day, what we need is a clear housing policy because what most people realize that extend and pretend is not working, and that is one of the reasons we are not seeing home sales take off in Riverside where it is now an incredible bargain. It is hard to take risks when you don’t know the rules of the game.

Debra said you have a lot of uncertainty in the lending community right now waiting for regulation and waiting to understand the government’s role. Doug said he had been surveying 1,000 people a month for 16 months and publishes the report on his website, so he asks what their expectation is on interest rates and prices. In the most recent quarter, Fannie Mae also asked them what they thought about stability when it came to unemployment. 26% of the people who were employed were worried about not being able to stay employed.

To find out more, tune in next week for I Survived Real Estate 2011, part 7. The Norris Group would like to thank their gold sponsors for the event: Adrenaline Athletics, Coldwell Banker Pioneer Real Estate, Conaway and Conaway, Delmae Properties, Elite Auctions, Inland Empire Investors Forum, Inland Valley Association of Realtors, Keller Williams of Corona, Keystone CPA, Kucan & Clark Partners, LLC, Las Brisas Escrow, Leivas Associates, Mike Cantu, Northern California Real Estate Investors Association, Northern San Diego Real Estate Investors Association, Pacific Sunrise Mortgage, Personal Real Estate Magazine, Raven Paul and Company, Realty 411 Magazine, Rick and LeaAnne Rossiter, Southwest Riverside County Board of Realtors, Starz Photography, uDirect IRA, Wilson Investment Properties, Tony Alvarez, Tri-Emerald Financial Group, and Westin South Coast Plaza. Visit isurvived2011.com for more details.

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 4/1/11

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Sources:
House votes to kill Obama mortgage plan
U.S. Home ‘Shadow Inventory’ Totals Nine Months of Supply, CoreLogic Says
Calif. tops in new construction jobs
House Democrats give Geithner plan to revamp HAMP
U.S. Treasury to Publicly Grade Mortgage Servicers Over Loan Modifications
CBO drops estimate of TARP cost to $19 billion
S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices
Vacation- and Investment-Home Shares Hold Even in 2010
Press Release
MBA Reacts to Risk Retention Proposal
Regulators vote for 20% down on QRM
House Republicans Introduce Eight Bills to Speed Wind-Down of GSEs
In Foreclosure Settlement Talks With Banks, Predictions of a Long Process
Proposed settlement would force banks to allow short sales for delinquent homeowners
In Prison for Taking a Liar Loan

Today’s News Synopsis:

Freddie Mac claims mortgage rates increased slightly to 4.86% last week. Construction spending decreased 1.4 percent in February, according to the Commerce Department. Statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show the U.S. economy added 216,000 nonfarm payroll jobs in March. Veros estimates Orange County home prices will fall 1.3% within a year.

In The News:

San Francisco Chronicle“30-year fixed-rate mortgages inch up to 4.86%” (4-1-11)

“That’s the average interest rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage in the week that ended Thursday, according to Freddie Mac. The rate fell to a record low of 4.17 percent in November as home foreclosures dragged on, then climbed above 5 percent in February. After dipping to 4.76 percent this month on turmoil in the Middle East and the nuclear crisis in Japan, loan rates are creeping up again.”

Los Angeles Times“February construction activity drops, manufacturing cools” (4-1-11)

“The Commerce Department says construction spending tumbled for a third straight month, dropping 1.4 percent in February. The weakness pushed total activity down to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $760.6 billion, the smallest total since October 1999.”

Housing Wire“US added 216,000 nonfarm payroll jobs in March” (4-1-11)

“The U.S. economy added 216,000 nonfarm payroll jobs in March and unemployment inched down to 8.8%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday.”

Housing Wire“Loan officer compensation ruling delayed” (4-1-11)

“The Federal Reserve’s rule governing how mortgage loan officers are paid is delayed until next week, giving the appellate court time to review lawsuits seeking to overturn the rule. Lawyers add they are confident the rule can be overturned.”

Housing Wire“Obama housing stats underscore the fragility of the market” (4-1-11)

“Mortgage delinquencies along with foreclosure-related activity are dropping compared to a year ago, according to the Obama administration’s most recent housing scorecard. But experts are unwilling to say the figures signal positivity in the market. Department of Housing and Urban Development Assistant Secretary Raphael Bostic said February’s stats undermine the true fragility of the marketplace.”

Orange County Register“Forecast: O.C. home prices to dip 1.3% in year” (4-1-11)

“Orange County home prices will fall 1.3% in the next year, according to the latest forecast from real estate tracker Veros from Santa Ana.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the Commerce Department reported that construction spending decreased by 1.3 percent across the United States. The delinquency rate for CMBS loans increased to 7.61% in March. The delinquency rate for single family mortgages increased to 4.08 percent in February.

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 3/25/11

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Sources:
California incomes rose 2.5% in 2010
February Existing-Home Sales Decline following Sustained Gains
New-Home Sales Hit Record Low in February
California pending home sales, distressed sales rise in February
California Housing Production Continues Decline in February, CBIA Announces
Housing raises US recession alert
U.S. Commercial Property Prices Fell for Second Straight Month in January
Stress tests suggest economy may slide back into crisis: IRA
FDIC Files Lawsuit Against Former WaMu Execs and Wives

Today’s News Synopsis:

RadarLogic claims national home prices declined 3.8% in December. California added 100,000 jobs in February. Freddie Mac completed 23,017 loan modifications in January and February. Jerry Brown’s bid to dissolve around 400 redevelopment agencies may make a come back in a compromise on tax increases.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“California adds nearly 100,000 jobs in February” (3-25-11)

“A hiring surge led the California’s hallmark industries – high-tech, movies and tourism – generated nearly 100,000 new jobs in February and provided the surest sign yet that the state economy is on the mend. The seasonally adjusted jump in the number of people working to 96,500 was the highest monthly increase since the current record system began in 1990, state officials said.”

Housing Wire“January home prices drop to a four-year low” (3-25-11)

“RadarLogic said an oversupply of homes, high rates of mortgage defaults, tighter lending standards and a housing market riddled with foreclosures weighed down January prices. The index, which tracks home prices across 25 major markets, declined 3.8% between December and January and 3.4% year-over-year.”

Housing Wire“Freddie Mac completes 23,000 loan mods, single-family delinquency rate drops” (3-25-11)

“Freddie Mac completed 23,017 loan modifications during the first two months of 2011 and said single-family delinquencies on mortgages held or backed by the GSE dropped in February.”

DSNews - “SEC Rules Banks Must Allow Audit of Foreclosure Practices” (3-25-11)

“The NYC Pension Funds called for an audit of the banks’ practices in November and again in January to no avail, but this week the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) ruled that the request from the shareholders must be upheld.”

Housing Wire“Broker compensation rule captures more heat in federal court” (3-25-11)

“the final rule not only prohibits loan originators from arranging loan terms that result in higher consumer costs, the same prohibition applies to offering consumers lower cost mortgage loans to meet competition and to save the consumer money.”

Bloomberg - “California Redevelopment Agencies May Be Back in the Shadow of the Gallows” (3-25-11)

“California Governor Jerry Brown’s bid to dissolve about 400 redevelopment agencies and use their revenue for schools and local government may be resurrected in a compromise on tax increases to close the budget deficit, according to a fiscal adviser to the Senate’s top Democrat.”

Looking Back:

New rules for the HAMP program may require servicers to screen borrowers for modification after only 31 days of delinquency. ForeclosureListings.com shows that California experienced an 11.9% increase in foreclosures. Freddie Mac reports the 30-year FRM rate is currently at 4.99 percent. According to the Comptroller of the Currency,  the re-default rate for modified loans is over 50 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 3/17/11

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Statistics from the MBA show outstanding commercial/multifamily mortgage debt  fell by 0.5% in the 4th quarter of 2010. FHA mortgage delinquencies decreased about 7% year over year. According to MDA DataQuick, 4,991 new and resale houses and condos sold in the Bay Area during February. Also, 27,320 new and resale houses and condos were sold statewide last month.

In The News:

MBA - “Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Debt Outstanding Fell by $67 billion, 2.7 Percent in 2010, Driven by CMBS Declines” (3-17-11)

“The level of commercial/multifamily mortgage debt outstanding decreased by 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, to $2.4 trillion, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) analysis of the Federal Reserve Board Flow of Funds data. On a year-over-year basis, the amount of mortgage debt outstanding at the end of 2010 was $67 billion lower than at the end of 2009, a decline of 2.7 percent.”

Housing Wire“Senate committee delays foreclosure mediation bill again” (3-17-11)

“The Senate Judiciary Committee delayed voting on a bill that would authorize bankruptcy courts to establish a mediation program in foreclosure cases nationwide. It is the second delay in as many months.”

Housing Wire“FHA delinquencies drop due to higher quality mortgage origination” (3-17-11)

“The serious delinquency rate for mortgages in the Federal Housing Administration portfolio declined about 7% in the first quarter of 2011 from one year ago. The 8.29% rate dropped from 8.9% a year earlier, according to a quarterly update from the FHA. In the fourth quarter of 2010, the delinquency rate was 8.84%.”

MDA DataQuick“Bay Area Housing Market Stuck In Neutral; Investors, Cash Buyers Active” (3-17-11)

“A total of 4,991 new and resale houses and condos sold in the nine-county Bay Area last month. That was up 0.5 percent from 4,966 in January but down 0.9 percent from 5,035 in February 2010, according to San Diego-based DataQuick Information Systems.”

MDA DataQuick“California February Home Sales” (3-17-11)

“An estimated 27,320 new and resale houses and condos were sold statewide last month. That was down 1.4 percent from 27,706 in January, and down 2.8 percent from 28,111 for February 2010. California sales for the month of February have varied from a low of 20,153 in 2008 to a high of 48,409 in 2004, while the average is 32,117. DataQuick’s statistics go back to 1988.”

Housing Wire“Jobless claims drop 4%” (3-17-11)

“The number of initial jobless claims filed by unemployed Americans fell 4% last week to 385,000 initial claims filed on an seasonally adjusted basis, according to the most recent Labor Department survey.”

Housing Wire“Small investors play big role in healing housing market” (3-17-11)

“Small, local investors who earn less than $100,000 a year are playing a major role in the housing recovery by acquiring distressed REO properties, fixing them up and renting them out to future buyers.”

NAHB - “Young Home Buyers Will Lead Housing Market Recovery, Says NAHB” (3-17-11)

“Generation X –young families and adults ages 31 to 45 – are likely to lead the home buying recovery as it gets underway, according to real estate experts who spoke at an educational webinar produced by the National Association of Home Builders”

Housing Wire“RE/MAX: February home sales down 3%” (3-17-11)

“February home sales dropped 3% from one year ago, but increased from January, according to the RE/MAX national housing report.”

Looking Backing:

One year ago, the CBIA reported that new home sales decreased by 12 percent from January of 2009. Mortgage loan applications decreased by 1.9 percent from the previous week. HOPE NOW made over 99,000 modifications in January 2010, and HAMP made over 50,000.

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 2/18/11

Friday, February 18th, 2011

  

Home Construction Rises in January

January Sales and Price Report

Majority of Freddie Mac borrowers refinanced to fixed-rate loans in 4Q 

West Coast Foreclosure Sales Clime to Pre-Robo-Signing Levels 

FHA to increase mortgage insurance premiums one quarter of one point

Short-term Delinquencies Fall to Pre-Recession Levels, Loans in Foreclosure Tie All-Time Record in Latest MBA National Delinquency Survey

Testimony of John Walsh Acting Compcontroller of the Currency Before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs

Big Banks Face Fines on Role of Servicers

MERS

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Federal Reserve will require borrowers who get their mortgages through a broker to receive the lowest  possible interest rate. LPS claims the national delinquency rate increased to 8.9% in January. A lawyer was held in contempt of court for helping his clients break back into their house after the foreclosure was ruled legitimate. RadarLogic said national home prices decreased 1.6% in December.

In The News:

New York Times“New Fed Rule for Mortgage Brokers” (2-17-11)

“STARTING April 1, under a new compensation rule from the Federal Reserve, borrowers who get their mortgages through brokers will most likely pay less for their services and must be offered the lowest possible interest rate and fees for which they qualify.”

Housing Wire“Fort Myers attorney indicted in mortgage fraud scheme” (2-18-11)

“A disbarred Florida attorney is facing three decades behind bars for lying on a mortgage application as part of a much larger $4.2 million scheme.”

Housing Wire“Homeowner attorney found in contempt for breaking into foreclosed home” (2-18-11)

“The Ventura County Superior Court in California found attorney Michael T. Pines in contempt of court Wednesday for helping his clients Jim and Danielle Earl break back into their home after the foreclosure was ruled legitimate.”

Housing Wire“January delinquencies decline over year-ago period: LPS” (2-18-11)

“The national delinquency rate stood at 8.9% in January, up 0.8% from the month prior, but down 18.8% over the year-ago period, according to the ‘First Look’ report from Lender Processing Services (LPS: 33.37 +0.30%).”

Housing Wire“RE/MAX: US home sales returned to positive territory in January” (2-18-11)

“the RE/MAX National Housing Report also reported a 3.6% month-over-month drop in housing inventory and a 5.6% decline in inventory on a year-over-year basis.”

Housing Wire“Critics say MERS foreclosure halt shows broken business model” (2-18-11)

“He said a New York bankruptcy judge already held that MERS cannot assign a mortgage, so Pennell explains, if they can’t make the assignment, they are not going to be able to legally assign the mortgage out of MERS and back to servicers as part of this recent change, he said.”

Housing Wire“RadarLogic home prices revert downward” (2-18-11)

“For December, RadarLogic reported a 1.6% decrease compared to the month prior, as well as a 3.6% drop compared to 2009.”

Bloomberg - “Apartment Construction Climbs in U.S. as Switch to Renting Crimps Supply” (2-18-11)

“‘There will be a spike in rents over the next one to three years,’ Parker said in an interview at the company’s U.S. headquarters in Seattle.”

Bloomberg - “Lennar Bets on Ex-Officer Housing `Party’ as Calif. Rebounds” (2-18-11)

“Emile Haddad, a former Lennar Corp. executive, sold 12,000 acres in California for a $277 million profit at the housing market’s peak four years ago. He and his partners then reacquired it at half the price in 2009. Now, Haddad says, it’s time to build.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, Freddie Mac’s weekly survey showed that mortgage rates dropped this week. 4,853 new and resale houses and condos closed escrow within a month in the Bay Area. The U.S. Treasury claimed that its foreclosure prevention program had cut mortgage payments for approximately 947,000 homeowners. S&P estimated there were approximately 947,000 houses in shadow inventory, which would take nearly 3 years to sell.

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 2/16/11

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Commerce Department said home construction rose 14.5% in January. Mortgage delinquencies decreased 6.41% in the 4th quarter, according to TransUnion. The FOMC voted to keep rates between 0 to 0.25%.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (2-16-11)

“The Refinance Index decreased 11.4 percent from the previous week and is the lowest Refinance Index recorded in the survey since the week ending July 3, 2009. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 5.9 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 0.9 percent compared with the previous week and was 18.2 percent lower than the same week one year ago”

CNN - “Home construction rises in January” (2-16-11)

“Housing starts, the number of new homes being built, rose 14.6% to an annual rate of 596,000 in January, up from 520,000 in December, the Commerce Department said.”

Mercury News“Silicon Valley real estate: Foreclosure lull ends in Santa Clara County” (2-16-11)

“In Santa Clara County in January, 398 home were either repossessed or sold by lenders to third-party buyers, a nearly 70 percent jump from the month before, according to real estate information service ForeclosureRadar. San Mateo County had 160 foreclosures in January, a 75 percent jump from December. ”

Housing Wire“Decrease in mortgage delinquencies losing momentum: TransUnion” (2-16-11)

“The ratio of borrowers 60 days of more delinquent on their mortgages dropped to 6.41% in the fourth quarter from 6.44% the quarter before. Compared to the same period in 2009, mortgages delinquencies are down about 7%, TransUnion reported. In the third quarter, the national rate tumbled 3.5%.”

Housing Wire“HUD Secretary: Reforms will not substantially impact affordable housing” (2-16-11)

“Raising the Federal Housing Administration’s annual mortgage insurance premium 25 basis points will not have a dramatic impact on the affordability of homes in America, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan said Wednesday.”

Housing Wire“FHA’s Stevens says mortgage servicers could face potential fines, claims” (2-16-11)

“Federal Housing Administration Commissioner David Stevens said mortgage servicers under review for improper foreclosures could face fines and potentially forced reimbursements, according to his testimony before a House subcommittee Wednesday.”

Housing Wire“FOMC: High unemployment, limited construction continue to hinder recovery” (2-16-11)

“the Federal Open Market Committee voted unanimously to keep the target federal funds rate at next to nothing – 0% to 0.25% – and continue with its controversial $600 billion bond-buying plans.”

Housing Wire“Frank proposes amendment to increase SEC funding by $131 million” (2-16-11)

“U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) is pushing to increase budget funding for the Securities and Exchange Commission as House representatives debate a bill that could cut funding to the agency by $41 million.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the median home price in Southern California decreased by 6 percent within a month. CBIA reported that home sales in new communities decreased by 15 percent from last month. John Burns estimated that 5 million houses and condominiums with delinquent mortgages would end up in foreclosure over the next few years. TransUnion reported that mortages over 60 days delinquent increased to 6.89% in quarter four 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 1/5/11

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Altera Real Estate forecasts an increase in interest rates for 2011. Hope Now reports mortgage lenders completed nearly 1.65 million permanent loan modifications in November. President Obama signed the National Credit Union Stabilization Act.

In The News:

Orange County Register – “Realistic sellers eyed as key to stable prices” (1-5-11)

“There’s a ton of pressure on rates to increase. An increasing deficit with the Fed printing money at warp speed, a government unwilling to cut spending, and no leader anywhere in the world willing to come up with a definitive game plan to get us out of this pickle, translates to mounting pressure on interest rates.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Drop the Week Before Christmas and Increase the Week After in Latest MBA Weekly Surveys” (1-5-11)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the weeks ending December 24, 2010 and December 31, 2010. For the week ending December 24, 2010, the Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 3.9 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from the prior week. For the week ending December 31, 2010, this index increased 2.3 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis.”

Housing Wire“Hope Now: November mortgage modifications doubled foreclosure sales” (1-5-11)

“Mortgage lenders completed about 1.65 million permanent loan modifications through November vs. 1 million foreclosure sales, according to Hope Now.”

Housing Wire“CMBS delinquencies hit record high in December” (1-5-11)

“The delinquency rate on commercial mortgage-backed securities reached 9.2% in December, the highest on record, according to analytics firm Trepp.”

Housing Wire“Treasury relaxes rules to free-up HAFA short sales” (1-5-11)

“The Treasury Department took action in December eliminating some rules it said have held back short sales through the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program.”

Housing Wire“Obama signs credit union stabilization act for NCUA to avoid Treasury borrowing” (1-5-11)

“President Obama returned from his vacation to a heavy workload, and on Tuesday signed 35 bills into law (pictured below). One of which is the National Credit Union Stabilization Act.”

Housing Wire - “Trade groups urge Federal Reserve to adjust Reg Z’s rule on appraisal fees” (1-5-11)

“Four appraisal trade associations urged the Federal Reserve Board to require appraisal management companies to disclose their fees to consumers and to reconsider the language and implementation of an interim rule that requires AMCs to pay ‘customary and reasonable’ appraiser fees.”

Orange County Register“Great Park homebuilder gets financing” (1-5-11)

“FivePoint Communities, a company spun off by Miami-based builder Lennar Corp. to plan and build the Heritage Fields housing and other major projects, reportedly will get $400 million. Those funds will help FivePoint move forward on what is expected to eventually be a master-planned community with 5,000 new residences in Irvine. According to the WSJ, the fresh funds come from Boston-based State Street Bank & Trust Co. plus other investors.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, pending home sales decreased by 16 percent from October to November. The Mortgage Bankers Association believed that the third quarter of 2009 likely marked the end of the recession, but expected to see continuous trouble in the real estate market. Lockhart predicted there would be another spike in foreclosure activity. Realtors warned that buying REO properties can be risky for business.

For m ore 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.