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251-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2011 part 4 11-12-11

Thursday, November 10th, 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 continued his discussion with the panel on rental properties and homeownership. If some gigantic company owns 10,000 rentals, then Bruce for example would not know what to do with his because he would not know if the playing field was legit and if they are going to put 10,000 houses for sale. However, as a builder Bruce certainly would not carve up dirt waiting because that risk is out there that others could be his competitor at the drop of a hat. We should give investors a shot at taking the inventory down because it is manageable if we do not put it on the market.

Doug mentioned how he had come out of the venture capital industry, and a lot of folks in his industry put a lot of money into bad companies back in the late 90s. When there was a crash, they lost their money from bad investments. Therefore, the question is if Doug, for example, were to lend Bruce $100,000 and does not figure out what his ability to pay is and Bruce ends up stopping payments, then whose fault is it? The answer in this case is the lender. If you want to know how to fix things like this, from a market perspective the foreclosures should work through the system and let the banks take the loss. The issue in Washington is that the public has poured a lot of money into Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and a lot of those losses are going to rebound back onto taxpayers. You see the functions of the GSEs in terms of working other options other than the principle write-down piece, which will put those losses right back on taxpayers. Part of the reason that he hosted a meeting with some people at I Survived that night was to explore the investor option. They have a rule to have no more than ten loans per single investor. In the course of the bubble, the homeownership rate got well ahead of what was sustainable. There is not a broad based program to tear the properties down, and when Doug made a suggestion that it would be a good idea to tear them down, he was labeled within the company as “Dozer Duncan.”

Bruce said this actually happened in California with a brand new housing tract that The Norris Group made a bid on. Someone had sent Bruce an email with a YouTube video, and when Bruce saw the housing he thought they looked familiar. He asked Greg, and he told him those were the houses they had just made a bid on earlier. These were all brand new homes; the originals had all been torn down. Doug mentioned the evidence with the company’s portfolio from how they treated the properties, whether or not they were sold to owner occupants or to small investors and hedge funds was that the loss severity was greater. The loss severity on hedge funds is the greatest when you sell to owner occupants or small investors.

Sean talked about how you have 600,000 people right now who are 90 days or more delinquent, and there are another 200,000 who have a notice of default or are in the process of foreclosure. However, even though there are 800,000 in these groups, we have 2.4 million who are underwater. Between short sales and foreclosures, we’re cleaning up about 18,000 houses a month, so we’re looking at a span of five years if things stay at the same pace. It’s amazing that our pace of sales has stayed as high as it has, and it clearly would not have stayed this high without investors in California because repeat home-buying is gone.

Bruce next talked with a second group of representatives from the Mortgage Bankers Association, the National Association of Realtors, and the Appraisal Institute. The first, Debra Still, is President and Chief Executive Officer of Pulte Mortgage, a national lender headquartered in Inglewood, Colorado. She is the vice-chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association, and she has been in the mortgage industry for 30 years. This year marks the first time Debra Still has been on the panel for I Survived Real Estate.

The next person was Sara Stephens. Sara is the 2011/2012 president of the Appraisal Institute, and she will become president on January 1, 2012. She serves on the organization’s board of directors and on its executive committee. Sara has been active in appraisal institutes up to regional and national levels for 20 years, and she is owner and principal of Richard A. Stephens and Associates, the oldest appraisal firm in Little Rock, Arkansas.

The next representative, Gary Thomas, is the first vice president of the National Association of Realtors. He is the second-generation real estate professional and owns Evergreen Realty in Villa Park. He has owned the business for over 30 years and has served the industry in countless roles. One of the things that struck Bruce was he has 16 grand kids.

Debra Still went first to say that her company is a national company, so they do business in 29 states, wholly on subsidiary of the homebuilder. She is very pleased to say that real estate is very stable and feels pretty flat, even with some of the dramatic headlines they have had in the last couple months. Their new orders and sign ups are very steady. In the third quarter they ran around a 22% cancellation ratio.

Sara Stephens said the market in Little Rock is doing well, and their public supply is officially in the office area. The retail properties are multi-family, while the residential market is stable in some parts of the city, more than other parts. It’s specifically in the Delta where they see declines and real problems.

Gary talked about how Orange County has faired pretty well for Southern California. It’s actually the best performing county in the Southern California area. They are holding their own and doing fairly well. He has not seen any challenges with loan reduction amounts, but he thinks we will sometime, especially along the coast where the average sale price is much higher and will therefore have an effect there. Bruce wondered what his down payment would look like if he was getting a down-payment loan and if he would be able to be self-employed. Gary said this would be very tough as it is harder to get a loan when you are self-employed. He would probably still be able to make a 20% down payment, but the loan would be harder to obtain.

Legislation passed the Dodd-Frank bill about a year ago, but it is almost to be figured out later what it needs. We’re arm-wrestling right now for the terms of what Dodd-Frank is even though it already passed a year ago. Bruce wondered what they did and if they had said what they wanted accomplished and were still trying to find a way to get there. Debra said the Dodd-Frank Act has about 250+ rules that need to be written, about 100 focused on mortgage lending. Now, the regulators are charged with actually writing the rules and the definition to meet the spirit of the law. There is a lot of facets to it, but one of them is a qualified residential mortgage. This could be a problem for our industry because if in fact they adopt the rule, it would mean to receive the better rate, you would have to have a 20% down payment. The problem with the thinking that you have to have skin in the game or it’s not a performing loan is because they’re not concentrating enough on the underwriting, which is what they really need to focus on rather than the down-payment. If somebody can afford the payment, it does not matter whether they have put 10% down or 20% down, or even 5% down. It’s really about whether or not they are a qualified buyer and if they can afford the property that they are buying. That went out the window in the past, so now it has to come back. There is a thought that that is getting back to basics, so Bruce wondered when the basics existed because it was not true in his first house purchase.

The risk retention rule is the rule that the definition of QRM comes up under, and the rule would say that someone who securitizes mortgages needs to retain 5% risk or reserve for the loans that they securitize. When the rule was originally published, there was no exemption other than FHA, USDA, and VA. One of the things the Mortgage Bankers Association lobbied very hard for was the notion of a carve-out for a qualified residential mortgage, and the definition of a QRM was left to the regulators to write. The regulators put out the first definition of a qualified residential mortgage that required the 20% down payment, a 28/36 jet ratio, and required no late payments within the previous 24 months. This is what the industry has been reacting to asking whether the regulators wrote a rule that was more conservative than the spirit of the law. Hundreds and hundreds of comments were filed, and whether it was mortgage bankers, realtors, homebuilders, or consumer groups, Debra believes everyone agrees that the rule went too far and we need to try again. The sound goal of it all was to encourage sound lending behaviors that reduce future default without harming responsible borrowers and lenders. This is where the rub is in that if it’s a 20% down purchase or 30%, it’s 30% equity for a refi. That is a big chunk of equity. The Mortgage Bankers research would suggest that if you look at the law, it provides for fully documented loans, no negative amortization, no exotic loan programs like IOs or payoffs in arms. Their research would suggest that the loan parameters inside the law were strong enough to prevent extraordinary default, and you don’t need the other underwriting restrictions that normal protocol for underwriting should prevail.
Risk retention sounds almost like a good thing because somebody who is creating a loan would have skin in the game, but there are unintentional consequences. If you think about the spirit of the regulation, it was to protect consumers; yet the regulation has gone so far that it is probably denying credit to well-qualified borrowers. Statistics would show that you can have the right risk balance without going as far as the 20% down or the debt-to-income ratios. MBA’s stats would show if you look at the 2009 Book of Business, which was a pretty conservative underwriting year, you see that still 70% of the consumers that received loans in 2009 would not qualify for a QRM loan. For a non-QRM loan, the difference in the interest rate would probably range from 100 basis points to 300 basis points. This would apply to a lender who would want to put capital reserves up and make a non-QRM loan. This is the concern as the Mortgage Bankers Association won’t have that kind of capital, so there would be too many of us that will not be making non-QRM loans. It would also eliminate a lot of buyers from the marketplace if your interest rate was 1 ½% higher. If it was necessary for safety, it would make sense, but if not then it would not make sense.

Another part of the bill is reps and warranties. This basically means that the person who has represented their mortgage as exactly what MBA would buy then has something go wrong with it; this person would be asked to re-buy it. If you look at one of the things those lenders are struggling with right now and the primary driver of some of the behavior that you see from lenders in terms of concerted underwriting guidelines is the notion of reps and warrants. When MBA sells a mortgage in the secondary market, they make reps and warrants to the investor as to certain parameters. They are always on the hook for borrower misrepresentation as well as on the hook for not following the investors’ underwriting guidelines. As investors have gotten more and more conservative and as loans have been put back to lenders, the lenders are starting to get more and more conservative in today’s environment because we are on the hook for reps and warrants. One of the parts of the law suggests that a third party do all of the reconfirming of verifications. This would probably get to the stated income loans that the industry was doing in the past. The fact that we did not have a third party with a verification of employment or depositor bank statements means it would address more a fully documented loan.

Sara went on to say that the appraisal business has not been left out of the Dodd-Frank Act. HVCC came first, and this did a fair amount of damage to the appraisal industry. Bruce wondered what changes happened with HVCC and if that has been replaced with what is intended with Dodd-Frank. Sara said one of the things that most real estate appraisers, especially those who are doing residential real estate, found was that the firewall was initially installed between the appraiser and the lender. Rather than communicating directly to the lender, the appraisers would be placed in a situation where they were directly communicating with the management system and management company. In many cases, their residential appraisers surveyed who worked with them extensively have lost 40-60% of their business. Whereas, when they had a direct relationship with the lender, they were suddenly thrust into the idea that they had to communicate with a management company. In many cases, rather than look for quality, expertise, education, things became quick and cheap. This is what so many of our people are facing now. We see people coming in from 250-400 miles away from markets where they probably had very little expertise. This has been a real problem for the Appraisal Institute, and it has changed the face of residential lending activity in a huge way.

Bruce said if he was an appraiser who had gone to sleep in 2007 and woke up in 2010, he would have been quite surprised at what had happened. You would have your income divided by multiples because you would have the assumption that you must be doing something crooked if you have a relationship, and you also now have to have a middle person taking half of your fee. This would be very frustrating, and the industry has unfortunately lost a lot of people who said they are not interested in this anymore. The statistics on renewal for our specific certification requirements has seen that in some states the renewal rate is as low as 30-40%. If you cannot continue to support your family doing what you are trained to do and what you have expertise to do, then you have to look for something else. This is what so many member of the Appraisal Institute have had to do. It is extremely difficult to re-train yourself to work in a lending environment where your expertise, education, and you qualifications really don’t mean that much to the person or persons that you are communicating with. This is unfortunate, especially for the consumer.

Bruce talked about how they had an interesting appraisal that happened the opposite way. Someone with no experience in a very unusual area where you received a lot of money for a certain located lot had a $1.3 million comp for the model-match house. They had the right location, but The Norris Group did not. They had a home for sale for about $700,000 for 90 days, which is not worth $1.3 million. When they went pending, the home was appraised for $1.3 million because it was a model-match house; someone had come in from out of the area who did not have a clue that it mattered there.

To find out more, tune in next week for I Survived Real Estate 2011, part 5. 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.

229-TNG Radio – Ivan Choi 6-11-11

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Ivan-Choi

Ivan Choi

President of REOMAC


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined once again by Ivan Choi. Ivan is recognized as a mortgage default expert and industry speaker. He serves as the president of REOMAC, a national non-profit trade association of mortgage servicing executives, asset managers, foreclosure attorneys, real estate brokers, and real estate closing service providers. Mr. Choi currently serves as a national default sales executive for New Vista Asset Management.

One problem occurring in the real estate market is the servicer’s interest is not aligned with the lender’s interest, which is difficult to understand. Bruce Norris services a certain amount of loans inside the hard money loan business alone, and in his opinion he is always directed by another lender and has to do what they say. However, for some reason servicers have a misaligned interest. A lot of times during a foreclosure process, it’s almost not in the servicer’s interest to proceed quickly and for some reason they get paid for not moving quickly. According to Ivan, there are a number of conspiracies regarding the foreclosure default topic and banks, and the aforementioned is one of them. There is a certain number of people who either misread mortgage servicing data or there is a certain specialized package of loans where for some reason the bank is indemnified against any losses. Therefore, they don’t have an incentive to move quickly on a foreclosure case. However, this kind of case is so far in the minority of the overall landscape of loans that this is actually not true most of the time. For the mass majority of all loans out there today, banks and loan servicers are under heavy pressure move through the foreclosure cycle and actually recover whatever value they can for a property if a borrower is not paying their mortgage on time and the loan is therefore not performing.

Bruce wonders what is mandatory for a lender. If someone stops making a payment and the lender decides it’s time to start foreclosing, would there be a process of phone calls or notifications that’s mandatory for the lender to make? Ivan does not believe it’s fully mandatory by anybody. Because of everything that has occurred during the meltdown and the dissent into foreclosure, all the major banks and significant loan servicers have adopted very firm policies. Therefore, the process of default, where phone calls are made and who they’re made to, the notices that go out, and the contact to the borrower is a lot more regimented and more of a defined process than most people may realize. The number of foreclosures files being dealt with is unprecedented by about 1,000%, which is ten times greater than ever. When you’re a loan servicer, you’re not thinking that you’re foreclosing on 10% of your inventory. It’s less than 1% historically. However, Ivan believes that today that number is closer to 5%. In a “normal market,” for any mortgage lender, typically less than 1% of their entire loan portfolio is in default. The number of loans in default is much smaller than people realize, and it has really been overblown because of a number of events during our financial meltdown in the last couple of years. It’s been more a crisis of confidence versus raw numbers.

Lenders today are more open to loan modifications and are aggressively pursuing them prior to the foreclosure process. Ivan has always been a bit skeptical of servicing and foreclosure release, but it’s very true that lenders are pursuing loan modifications more aggressively. If you were able to take an inside look at any banking institution today, you will see that they have essentially hired on and ramped up very significantly on staffing and in a lot of cases moved a lot of folks that they normally had on REO into the modification and short-sale areas. What’s interesting in trying to obtain a loan modification is that you have to prove a case of hardship, but the FBI has the exact opposite problem being created where stated incomes from loans received in 2005 were exaggerated. In 2011 when these same people are trying to get a loan modification, they’re trying to hide their exaggerated incomes from 2005. From a bank servicing standpoint, there is actually a little bias in favor of the homeowner. If you look at a scanned copy of the owner’s loan application from five years ago when they received their interest-only loan, you will see that at that time they were CEO of the world and making a lot of money. However, you look at today and see them trying to obtain a loan modification, you see that what happened years ago doesn’t really matter and that they are having a hard time finding a job.

There was a recent court case where somebody went to jail for falsifying information on a loan application for a stated income loan back in 2005. This should be a scare to several people as normally the borrower is not pursued. Ivan believes that not enough of these cases have come to light, and therefore most homeowners still think it’s safe for them to fudge some of the details of their situation. You speak with any real estate broker or agent that is heavily involved in trying to help with short sales, and you often hear a number of “war stories” of how they go visit a homeowner who is apparently in major distress, and the first thing they see in the driveway is a hummer and a late model Mercedes. Some reports and statistics have shown that if you’re surrounded by people that are not making payments and you are the last one in your family, there is a lot of pressure for you to join.

If Ivan were a lender, he does not have a specific preference whether he would choose a short sale or REO status. He says it all really comes down to the numbers. Typically when a loan servicer or lender evaluates a case for a short sale, they take in all the details they can on the property itself. This includes what the property is valued at today, hardship letters, and financial information from the borrower. They will take this information and put it on track for short sale, and they will also take this information and send it to their REO department. They essentially ask the REO department that if they were to try to sell the property in the next 60 days how much they could reasonably sell it. They then compare the short sale with the REO status; and if it’s less of a loss as an REO, then the loan will probably go to REO. This is where the servicer will recover value on behalf of the loan investor. As for hardship letters, the reason for having them on hand is you have to give the forum for a homeowner to explain details of their situation that otherwise are not explained well as well as giving them information on your financial status. As an example, a short sale would occur if someone wrote a hardship letter explaining that they owed $400,000 on a $200,000 house and decided this was not reasonable to pay. This would not make it very far, and yet more often than not this type of situation occurs.

One of the biggest roadblocks and frustrations stems from a second lien; in other words, a second loan or lender often gets in the way of a yes answer for short sales. This is what any real estate agent that’s been involved in a short sale or any homeowner or party to a short-sale transaction will tell you. The issue is getting a lender in first position and then a lender in second position to agree to the terms of a loss on the loan of the property. From a legal standpoint, the lender that holds the first mortgage is entitled to relief from losses before the second lien-holder. Most of the time, it’s hard to get both parties to agree and move ahead with the short-sale. However, there are times when the second would have recourse against the borrower, and if he signs something saying he wasn’t owed anything, then the sale would go away. Usually, however, this is not the case since the signing would usually be simultaneous with the purchase.

Securitization has not affected the foreclosure process or the ease of accessing information or receiving answers from lenders. Unfortunately, the process is still difficult as ever. There is a lot of focus and staffing since servicers and lenders really want to be able to help on loss mitigation and complete more short-sale cases. Sometimes in a lot of markets you have to buy necessity to do a short-sale transaction since these are really the only transactions getting done in today’s market. However, Ivan feels that if he was a real estate broker or agent today, as soon as he found an opportunity to diversify away from short-sale, he would run away from short sales as quickly as possible. The reason is it is still an inherently complicated situation because you have to have multiple decision-makers in line; you have to have a homeowner in distress be engaged to the process. A homeowner going through foreclosure is typically not in their right mind because they are under tremendous emotional and financial distress. In addition, you have to have a special buyer since they’re not talking about a 30-day escrow when they know they’re going to move. Therefore, if somebody makes an offer, they’re usually not informed until 3-8 months. For example, a first-time homebuyer with two kids is not the best candidate, even if they’re the ones who will pay the most for the property.

The reason for the long process is because you have to inherently go through a bureaucracy. The servicer takes in the information, then they go through their analysis of the situation, then they recommend whether a short-sale should be done or not, then that case goes to the trustee or whoever represents the loan investor. If there’s mortgage insurance, the mortgage insurance company has to weigh in on the decision. The other issue that doesn’t really get raised much is that there is a certain level of fraud, which slows down the cases as well because when the servicer is going through information, they’re trying to ensure that they’re doing the best they can to understand that what the homeowner and parties to the transaction are putting down on paper is in fact true. There are lots of schemes going on today, so if you look at it from the seller’s perspective they typically want to move out of the house and be done with it. They buyer, even today, is still thinking they’re going to get a good deal; and the agents are trying to figure out a way to work the system best so the transaction gets done. One example of fraud that occurs today is on the buyer’s side you have a buyer agent and a buyer. A common tactic of a buyer agent is they put in offers with straw buyers because they’re trying to figure out how low the bank is going to go on that short-sale. If it’s low enough, they will do the “switcheroo” of taking out the straw buyer at the last minute and putting in the real buyer and trying to close. Usually the intent is to resell the property right away. Bruce read an FBI fraud document that spoke of perpetrators. Some companies do transactional funding and are actually just buying and selling the property inside different escrows, flipping back and forth.

A term that usually comes up when someone is dealing with REO is “adverse occupancy.” You either have a homeowner that’s not happy they lost their house and have to start paying rent somewhere; or you have an occupant tenant that’s surprised that he no longer has a place to stay. Usually when properties are foreclosed on, approximately 50% are unoccupied by the time foreclosure is finally completed. The Norris Group buys about 15-20 homes a month at trustee sales, and there has been a transition in customer attitude. There is no one at a trustee sale who doesn’t know the term Cash for Keys. It’s almost become the expectation for people to get paid to leave; no one feels bad anymore about not making a payment on time for a while. On the flip side, in some metropolitan areas, especially cities where municipalities enforced an eviction moratorium, there are organized crime groups who have caught on and looked for vacant houses to send someone in and make up a false lease contract. When a bank representative comes by the property to do an occupancy check, the crime member simply shows their fake lease, and they get to stay in the house.

According to the California Association of Realtors, about 71% of the Norris Group’s transactions are either short-sale or REO. This means that, emerging from all the sales, there is not a repeat buyer amongst them. They simply would not qualify. Therefore, when the Norris Group sells 100 houses, only 29 buyers are emerging while 71 other properties are finding someone else to buy it. However, the statistics have never been close to this. Normally, if you have 100 sales you probably have about 95 buyers that reemerge for another property. Now, the percentage is about 29. This is one of the biggest problems, and one solution according to Ivan is you really have to help the buy side. You have to find a way to increase the buyer pool. This does not necessarily mean relaxing loan guidelines to a very significant degree to the point that we’re back into subprime lending. However, if you institute some guidelines to be able to institute the character portion of a borrower, and also do things to appeal to immigrant populations that are very focused on home ownership, then you’re increasing your buyer pool. If you have a large number of owner occupants within this buyer pool, then these strategies by far are the best solution to soak up some of the backlog of inventory out there and help the overall housing industry recover. Numerically and with the current policies in place and the direction of the new policies, this strategy is unfortunately probably not going to happen. You have lenders that are of the mindset that they have to make it very difficult for people to qualify, and you have policy decisions that are saying, “Let’s reduce the loan amounts that are available from FHA and Fannie Mae.” The Republicans just put in a bill into Congress demanding that FHA have a minimum of 20% down payment, which Bruce believes won’t fix much. They’re really under the gun in Washington, and some of the things they would like to do they don’t think they will be able to do. In D.C, there are a lot of people tackling head-on and coming up with very good solutions for very complex problems. At the same time, when you’re speaking of policy-makers, there are still agendas on other issues that get in the way of good solutions for housing.

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.

228-TNG Radio – Ivan Choi 6-4-11

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

Ivan Choi

President of REOMAC


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined by Ivan Choi. Ivan is recognized as a mortgage default expert and industry speaker. He is the president of REOMAC; a national non-profit trade association of mortgage servicing executives, asset managers, foreclosure attorneys, real estate brokers and real estate closing service providers. He serves as the national default sales executive for New Vista Asset Management.

The core membership of REOMAC are those who serve in the foreclosure or default function for any banking or depository institution. Also, real estate brokers are welcome; as well as title companies, escrow companies and outsourcing companies who handle REO/default activity. New Vista is an example of an outsourcer.

There has been a lot of foreclosure activity in the last 5 years. Many people want to join REOMAC, but as a non-profit company, the laws require that 33% of the members come from a financial/depository institution, so in order to add brokers into the company, REOMAC would have to add many people from financial institutions. REOMAC has closed membership to brokers and agents for the last few years, but membership has recently opened to those people. In order for an agent to become a member, they must recruit at least 3 additional bank employees.

Three years ago, we were expecting to see unprecedented levels of foreclosure activity in commercial space. REOMAC was pressured to create a commercial organization, but REOMAC did not succumb to this pressure. However, they are offering commercial education and networking sessions at downtown, Los Angeles at the Jonathan Club.

A company recently held a commercial property auction worth a total of $1 billion in Las Vegas. If you look at the catalog for this auction, you will notice that 85% of the value being auctioned from that company is held in trust deeds. Many of the trust deeds were worth $13 million, and their opening bids were $1 million.

Ivan’s professional background is in residential real estate. Because of all the discussion about commercial real estate over the past few years, many residential specialists have developed this mentality that they can work in the commercial foreclosure sector without serious difficulty. Ivan believes this is not a good idea. Commercial is completely different from residential, and the buyers have a completely different mentality.

REOMAC allows Ivan to speak to many of the servicers in the residential market, and it allows him to learn about the issues that everyone is facing. Ivan’s role at New Vista is to connect the company with more servicers in order to handle additional REO properties. There are not many REO properties currently on the market.

Ivan defines shadow inventory as property that is delinquent by 1 or more months and has not reached the final closing of the foreclosure process. Bruce believes this is the most accurate definition. After the meltdown, there were conspiracy theories that banks were intentionally holding inventory for a variety of reasons, for their own benefit. The truth is that banks are under tremendous pressure to recover values on foreclosure properties. Bruce feels that banks have handled this problem in a way that prevents them from reaching their goal. Ivan agrees.

REO inventory peaked in 2008. After we peaked in REOs, defaults tripled beyond that number, and yet we somehow ended up with fewer REO properties after that.

The lenders’ best interest would be to continue their foreclosure along a normal timeline, and recover as much value as they possibly can.

From mid 2008 to mid 2009, active REO inventory dropped by 45%. In that same time period, delinquencies went from 4% to 11.9%. There were many reasons why the flow of foreclosures got stopped. One reason for this is because of government intervention at the federal, state and municipal levels.

HAMP included guidelines around loan modifications, and HAFA included guidelines on how banks and servicers were to manage the short sale process. The intent was to get multiple servicers, and by extension, multiple loan investors, on the same page, so that they could use one process to handle loan modifications and short sales. Ivan believes everyone can agree that both programs were a failure.

When HAMP came out, 70% of the people who were given a mortgage modification fell back into foreclosure. Ivan believes this program just delayed the inevitable. The federal government still believes it was necessary to put these programs in place to help homeowners in trouble. The federal government was looking out for the overall benefit of the economy. It seemed that they perceived the failures in the real estate market to be collateral damage.

Ivan does not believe anything could have been done to make loan modifications successful. You have to truly distinguish between borrowers who were victims of predatory lending, and people who took advantage of the system. Ivan and Bruce believe there were far too many people lying on their applications to receive a loan they should not have taken. The people who lied on their applications were not going to take their loan modification seriously.

Some people think that principal reductions are the answer to our current problem. Some have even advocated forcing principal reductions in court. Bruce feels that would be a terrible choice to make. From a lending standpoint, principal reduction is a very slippery slope, because then you have to ask the question, “Where do we draw the line between who gets assistance and who doesn’t?” That line is very hard to define.

Another issue today is our lack of available loan programs. We have to solve our issues in a way that is fair to everyone including the lender.

Bruce was invited to speak with Fannie Mae last week. Fannie Mae suggested partnering with investors going forward, and split the upside. Bruce said he would not be interested in that deal.

Ivan feels that lenders are not making many independent decisions, because the government is guiding their actions. Mid to large lenders are still under a lot of scrutiny from the public, which affects the decisions of policy makers.

Bruce attended a trust sale in which a $1.1 million loan was being sold. The opening bid for that loan was $300,000 and it sold for $400,000. After the sale, Bruce discovered the seller was forced to declare his asset to be worth $400,000. Up until the day of the sale, he was still able to declare that trust deed to be a $1.1 million asset. This is why these sellers are in no rush to declare the position that they are actually in.

The robo-signing and MERS issue kept the loan industry stalled. Once this issue came out, all the major loan servicers had to recheck their documents to ensure their foreclosures were valid. Servicers are expecting many assets to come to the market by the third and fourth quarter, because the robo-signing issues have now been concluded.

30% of foreclosure in the country are over two years old. That pile of inventory will land somewhere, and California will experience a lot of it. Bruce does not know how we will produce buyers for all those properties.

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.

224-TNG Radio – Ray McLaine 5-6-11

Friday, May 6th, 2011

Ray McLaine

President of the Commercial REO Brokers Association


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined again by Ray McLaine. Ray is the founder and president of the Commercial REO Brokers Association. Ray began his career in commercial real estate 30 years ago. He has developed apartment complexes, condo projects and a mini warehouse.

Commercial real estate tends to follow the residential market. In 2006, many speculators invested in commercial real estate as prices began to rise. Many residential investors began migrating into the multifamily market.

During the commercial boom, one of the leading asset management companies was offering loans up to 95% of a property’s value. Many of these loans operated under stated income, which allowed many people to easily qualify for loans. Most of these loans are now coming back.

A mortgage backed security develops when real estate loans are sold to a bank. The bank then groups those loans into $100 million pools. The interest from those pools is then collected and sold. Commercial mortgage backed securities (CMBS) are the same thing as mortgage backed securities (MBS), except CMBS is for commercial loans.

Insurance companies are typically more conservative when loaning. During the boom, the insurance companies wanted 20 to 30% down, they only wanted properties from prime locations, and they wanted a debt to service ratio of about 125%.

One thing that the CMBS market did, which the banks did not also do, was they lowered the debt to service ratio to 100%. In some cases, loan pools were created to help people carry loans with a bad debt to service ratio until a later, more preferable time. Unfortunately for the people who did that, the preferable time period never came around. The market collapsed and their loans went into default.

Most banks offered 25% financing for non-owner occupant properties, but some of the community banks went up to 80%, and the CMBS market went up to 85%.

Today, the CMBS market is coming back. 2007 was the peak for the commercial market. The MBS industry grew to $260 billion in 2007. If you add 20% to that, you will have the total transaction value of the MBS industry at that time. In 2007, CMBS accounted for 80% of the loans in the MBS business. In 2008, after the bubble popped, about $100 billion in transactions were dropped. In 2009, the market had almost completely stopped. There were only $2.9 billion in CMBS mortgages in 2009. There was an 80 to 95% drop in transaction volume in 2009 from the major companies in the business. Most of the little companies just went out of business.

This year, it has been projected that CMBS sales will increase from $12 billion to $50 billion. The market is coming back on a steep curve.

You cannot sell trashy properties in the CMBS market today. Most mortgages in the CMBS market are similar to the subprime loans in the residential market. Most of the CMBS loans are adjustable for 10 years.

Bruce Norris recently bought a commercial property for $317,000, which was worth $1 million in 2006. During the peak, you could have taken on a loan for $950,000 for that property.

If a borrower is in need of a loan modification, a special servicer is assigned to the borrower to determine what is in the borrower’s best interest.

At the end of 2009, when it was obvious that the CMBS market was crashing, many people defaulted. The banks were in big trouble when this occurred, so they asked the regulators at the FDIC for help. At that time, the FDIC had a regulation requiring banks to make a report of all loans that are over 60 days delinquent. During the crash, the FDIC changed that regulation, so that banks were allowed to not report delinquent loans for 6 months. Also, if the seriously delinquent loans were fixed during the six month period, then they were rewarded by not having to report the delinquency at all. At first, the banks were not allowed to give extensions to upside-down loans, but the banks did it anyway. When the regulators started checking on the banks, they discovered the banks had been making these extensions against the will of the FDIC, but the regulators did not feel there was a good solution to the problem, so the allowed the banks to continue extending upside-down loans.

Ray’s website is CREOBA.com

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 5/4/11

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

A survey shows that 45% of homebuyers think they should always buy mortgage discount points. Freddie Mac ended the first three months of the year with a positive net worth of $1.2 billion, and will need no additional funding from Treasury for the first quarter. Automatic Data Processing Inc said the private sector added 179,000 jobs in April.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“Latest MBA Weekly Survey Shows Increase in Mortgage Applications, Driven by Refinances” (5-4-11)

“Mortgage applications increased 4.0 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association”

Washington Post“House GOP set to move ahead with legislation to limit new consumer bureau” (5-4-11)

“The political tug of war over the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will enter another round Wednesday, when House Republicans forge ahead with legislation aimed at curbing the fledgling watchdog’s powers even before it officially opens its doors in July.”

Sign On San Diego“Quiz: Homebuyers lack mortgage know-how” (5-4-11)

“Forty-five percent of those surveyed think they should always buy mortgage discount points, which are prepaid interest. The fact is, the decision hinges on how long you plan to own the property. It would not be worthwhile to buy them in certain cases.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. May Pursue More Lenders After Suing Deutsche Bank on Faulty Mortgages” (5-4-11)

“The U.S. Department of Justice may pursue claims against other lenders after suing Deutsche Bank AG for more than $1 billion, alleging the firm lied while arranging federal insurance on faulty mortgages.”

DSNews - “Trepp Reports Jump in CMBS Delinquencies to New Record-High” (5-4-11)

“The New York-based research firm says the percentage of loans 30-plus days delinquent, in foreclosure, or REO climbed 23 basis points last month to hit 9.65 percent. That number is, once again, the highest reading in the history of the CMBS market, according to Trepp.”

DSNews - “Freddie Mac Turns $676M Profit in Q1, Needs No Taxpayer Funding” (5-4-11)

“The nation’s second largest mortgage company reported Wednesday that it pulled in net income of $676 million during the first three months of this year. Freddie Mac closed the quarter with positive net worth of $1.2 billion. As a result, no additional funding from Treasury was required for the first quarter of 2011.”

Housing Wire“Private sector added 179,000 jobs in April” (5-4-11)

“Automatic Data Processing Inc. reported the private sector tacked on 179,000 jobs last month. The payroll giant conducts the monthly survey, which excludes federal jobs, in conjunction with Macroeconomic Advisers.”

Housing Wire“FDIC study blames mortgage servicing mess on big banks” (5-4-11)

“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. took a look into the foreclosure operations at the largest mortgage servicers and found significant breakdowns at almost every stage of the process. However, these issues are largely isolated to the servicers that hold the largest share of the mortgage finance business.”

Housing Wire“Revival in commercial real estate, mortgage finance needs more jobs” (5-4-11)

“absent strong improvement in U.S. job markets and demand for business space, the nation’s commercial real estate sector will likely continue its slow, bifurcated recovery over the coming year — with top urban markets outpacing recovery in secondary, non-gateway markets.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, pending home sales increased by 5.3 percent in February. Statistics from PMI indicated the home price reduction risk was significantly decreasing across most U.S. regions. The percentage of loans 30+ days delinquent, in foreclosure or real estate owned (REO) status increased to 8.02 percent in March 2010. McGraw-Hill reports the residential sector is up 35% in the first three months of 2010 compared to the same time one year ago.

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 4/27/11

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

If passed, a new California bill will require lenders to make a decision on mortgage modifications before beginning the repossession process. According to the Census Bureau, the national home vacancy rate fell to 2.6% in the first quarter. A study from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business shows that 35% of mortgage defaults in the U.S. were strategic during September 2010.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey”z (4-27-11)

“Mortgage applications decreased 5.6 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending April 22, 2011.”

Los Angeles Times“California bill ending ‘dual track’ foreclosures faces key vote” (4-27-11)

“A proposed law facing a key vote in Sacramento on Wednesday would require lenders in California to make a decision on mortgage modifications for delinquent homeowners before beginning the repossession process, in effect ending “dual track” foreclosures in the state.”

Bloomberg - “Home Vacancies Fall in First Quarter as Foreclosures Stall” (4-27-11)

“The U.S. home-vacancy rate, a measure of the share of properties empty and for sale, fell to 2.6 percent in the first quarter as foreclosures slowed amid a lender backlog in processing paperwork. The rate, down from 2.7 percent in the fourth quarter, is based on 2 million vacant properties for sale out of 74.5 million residences, the Census Bureau said today.”

Inman - “FICO to walkaways: You’re on our screen” (4-27-11)

“A study by researchers at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business found that during last September alone, 35 percent of mortgage defaults in the U.S. were strategic — up sharply from 26 percent in March 2009.”

Bloomberg - “Fed Says Recovery is ‘Moderate’; Bond Buying to End in June” (4-27-11)

“Federal Reserve policy makers said the economy is recovering at a ‘moderate pace’ and a pickup in inflation is likely to be temporary, as they agreed to finish $600 billion of bond purchases on schedule in June.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, The S&P Index showed home prices increased in February. Speculators believed the Federal Reserve would keep interest rates at the 2010 low. The LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute reported that fraud increased by 7 percent in 2009. According to the FHFA, the average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) of $417,000 or less was 5.09% during April 2010.

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 4/15/11

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Sources:
March sales and price report
Southland Home Sales Still Slow, Prices Edge Down
Calif. Mortgage Defaults on the Rise
Self-Evident Truth in Market Variables: Longer Foreclosure Timelines
Fitch reports slowing subprime delinquencies, foreclosure sales
Sales up, Prices Down for Bay Area Housing Market
California March Home Sales
Jobless claims unexpectedly rise to 412,000 last week
Banks to Pay Victims of Botched Foreclosures in Settlement With Regulators
Feds announce partial settlement with ‘robo signing’ servicers
OCC Takes Enforcement Action Against Eight Servicers for Unsafe and Unsound Foreclosure Practices
2011 Enforcement Actions
Bill introduced to speed up short sales
http://www.realtor.org/press_room/news_releases/2011/04/speed_sales

Today’s News Synopsis:

Bank of America expects a 25% downturn in the mortgage origination market, and has laid off 1,500 mortgage workers. Standard & Poor predicts the new risk-retention rule will further depress the housing market.

In The News:

Daily Bulletin“Casting a shadow: Housing market’s hidden inventory looms” (4-15-11)

“The shadow inventory is leading to the sentiment that any stability in today’s market is a false one, said Bruce Norris, president of The Norris Group, a Riverside-based real estate investment firm. Some delinquent homes will avoid foreclosure through loan modifications or short sales, but many will also go up for sale.”

Bloomberg - “Fed Policy Makers Differ Over Policy as Inflation Accelerates” (4-15-11)

“Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke said in Washington yesterday that rising commodity costs aren’t resulting from U.S. monetary policy and don’t warrant higher interest rates, while Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo said he sees no sign of inflation spreading more broadly. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker and Philadelphia’s Charles Plosser indicated they’re more concerned about prices, with Lacker saying the central bank must tighten credit before inflation gains speed.”

Housing Wire“New Democrat Coalition unveils housing finance reform priorities” (4-15-11)

“The New Democrat Coalition wants to wind down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and increase private-sector involvement in the residential mortgage market, according to a new document the group released Friday. The proposal includes preserving access to affordable loans, including the 30-year, fixed-rate loan, and strengthening taxpayer protections.”

Housing Wire“Bank of America lays off 1,500 mortgage workers” (4-15-11)

“Bank of America (BAC: 12.82 -2.36%) laid off 1,500 associates nationwide as the bank anticipates a 25% downturn in the mortgage origination market.”

Housing Wire“Risk retention will produce higher quality mortgages, depress housing: S&P” (4-15-11)

“The new risk-retention rule will produce higher quality originations, as intended, but will also constrict lending and further depress the housing market, according to Standard & Poor’s.”

Jacksonville - “Bank gives man foreclosed Jacksonville house for free” (4-15-11)

“Perry Laspina was in the middle of foreclosure with the possibility of losing the house he owned in Jacksonville. Then the mail came one day in late January telling him that the house was his. Despite the $72,000 mortgage that he barely paid anything on, despite the foreclosure … the house was his.”

Realty Times“Sell Your Home Now With These Tips” (4-15-11)

“That means that any and all pictures of your home should create web appeal — an instant attraction — drawing the buyer into your home for an in-person look. If your photos or videos are not properly composed with pleasant lighting and free of clutter and distractions, they won’t appeal to buyers browsing the web.”

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 4/11/11

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

RealtTrac reports military towns experienced an increased in foreclosure activity from 2008 to 2010. Congress agreed to a budget late Friday. Fannie Mae is creating more home ownership incentive by offering up to 3.5% in closing cost assistance. Federal Trade Commission settled with mortgage relief scammers Monday for $2.2 million in refunds to homeowners who were tricked into mortgage relief scams.

In The News:

Sacramento Bee“Southern California’s military towns have taken a crushing blow in real estate collapse” (4-11-11)

“Foreclosures rose 32 percent in ZIP codes near military towns over the last three years, from 2008 to 2010, compared with 23 percent nationwide, said Rick Sharga, senior vice president of RealtyTrac in Irvine.”

Housing Wire - “Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (4-11-11)

“With hours to spare Friday night, Congress agreed to a budget that would keep the government from shutting down for the first time since 1995.”

Housing Wire“Fitch reports slowing subprime delinquencies, foreclosure sales” (4-11-11)

“The percentage of borrowers with mortgages classified as 30 or more days delinquent fell by 5.3% in March from February and the percentage of borrowers who are 60 days or more delinquent fell by 4.4%, according to a report composed by Fitch Solutions director David Austerweil.”

Daily Bulletin“Casting a shadow: Housing market’s hidden inventory looms” (4-11-11)

“A nine-month supply of distressed homes in the U.S., about 1.8 million units as of January, are waiting to make their way onto the market, according to data released last week from Santa Ana-based CoreLogic.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Mae offers help with closing costs on HomePath properties” (4-11-11)

“As the housing market continues to lag in sales, Fannie Mae is laying the groundwork to entice buyers by announcing it will offer up to 3.5% in closing cost assistance on Fannie Mae-owned HomePath properties. To qualify, the buyer’s initial offering on the HomePath property must be submitted on or after April 11 and the sale must close by June 30.”

My Budget 360“The housing gamble: What if home prices remained stagnant until 2020?” (4-11-11)

“Given the current domestic and global trends, it is likely that housing will be suffering another troubled decade from 2011 to 2020 just like it experienced from 2001 to 2010.”

Housing Wire“FTC settles with mortgage relief scammers for $2.2 million” (4-11-11)

“The Federal Trade Commission settled with two companies and three individuals Monday to provide $2.2 million in refunds to homeowners allegedly duped into mortgage relief scams.”

Housing Wire“Ellie Mae, CoreLogic join forces to please Fannie Mae” (4-11-11)

“A new feature through Ellie Mae’s Encompass360 loan origination platform designed by CoreLogic (CLGX: 17.92 -0.28%) aims to reduce repurchase risk on agency loans by assessing fraudulent information before a mortgage is originated.”

Bloomberg - “IMF Cuts U.S. Growth Forecast on Oil, ‘Lackluster’ Jobs Pace” (4-11-11)

“The International Monetary Fund lowered its forecast for U.S. growth this year, predicting higher oil prices and the pace of job gains will restrain the recovery. The world’s largest economy will expand 2.8 percent this year, down from the 3 percent projected in January, the IMF said today, citing the need to reduce deficits and boost exports.”

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 4/4/11

Monday, April 4th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Ed Haldeman said less than 4% of Freddie Mac’s single family loans are delinquent. The government dismissed two counts of wire fraud in the case against the former CEO of Taylor, Bean and Whitaker. Treasury Secretary Geithner warned that severe economic hardship could impact the United States when the nation reaches its debt limit.

In The News:

NAR - “NAR Study Finds Americans Prefer Smart Growth Communities” (4-4-11)

“Americans favor walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods, with 56 percent of respondents preferring smart growth neighborhoods over neighborhoods that require more driving between home, work and recreation.”

Daily News“Greg Wilcox: Realtors’ website focuses on short sales” (4-3-11)

“SHORT sales are complicated transactions and account for a big part of the real-estate market. Now the California Association of Realtors hopes to bring some clarity to the process. The Los Angeles-based trade association has launched shortsalescalifornia.org, which will provide resources, news and tips about homes that are valued at less than what is owed.”

Housing Wire“Less than 4% of single-family loans are delinquent: Freddie CEO” (4-4-11)

“Freddie Mac Chief Executive Officer Ed Haldeman said less than 4% of the government-sponsored enterprise’s single-family home loans are at least three payments behind or heading into foreclosure.”

Housing Wire“U.S. dismisses two wire fraud counts to speed up Taylor, Bean and Whitaker trial” (4-4-11)

“U.S. government prosecutors dismissed two counts of wire fraud in the case against Lee Farkas, the former CEO of failed mortgage lender Taylor, Bean and Whitaker.”

Housing Wire“House Committee to vote on Republican bills for GSE wind down” (4-4-11)

“One bill in particular introduced by Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.) hits a hot button issue on whether or not Fannie and Freddie should be exempt from the risk-retention standards of a qualified residential mortgage. According to Garrett’s bill, H.R. 1223 or the GSE Credit Risk Equitable Treatment Act, GSE securities would not be exempt from the risk-retention requirements of Dodd-Frank.”

Housing Wire“Geithner warns of economic hardship unless U.S. debt ceiling is raised” (4-4-11)

“Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner sent a letter to U.S. Sen. Harry Reid Monday warning the lawmaker that severe economic hardship could impact the United States when the nation reaches its debt limit on May 16.”

Orange County Register“Demand for O.C. homes jumps 22%” (4-4-11)

“Homes listed for under a million bucks have a market time of 2.85 months vs. 8.24 months for homes listed for more than $1 million.”

Orange County Register“O.C. rent hikes run half U.S. increases” (4-4-11)

“MPF found Orange County’s effective rents for new tenants — the asking rates minus concessions — as of March rising 1.5 percent in a year — vs. 3.3 percent nationwide. From the fourth quarter, Orange County effective rent was up 0.8 percent vs. 1.1 percent nationwide.”

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 3/30/11

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

The NAR said vacation home sales accounted for 10% of all transactions in 2010. A new proposal may force lenders to allow short sales for delinquent homeowners. The House voted 252 to 170 end funding for HAMP. CoreLogic estimates there are 1.8 million homes in the shadow inventory.

In The News:

NAR - “Vacation- and Investment-Home Shares Hold Even in 2010″ (3-30-11)

“vacation-home sales accounted for 10 percent of transactions last year while the portion of investment sales was 17 percent, both unchanged from 2009.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (3-30-11)

“Mortgage applications decreased 7.5 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending March 25, 2011.”

Los Angeles Times“Proposed settlement would force banks to allow short sales for delinquent homeowners” (3-30-11)

“Major banks may be forced to let severely delinquent homeowners sell their houses for less than the loan amounts owed as part of a broad settlement of federal and state investigations into botched foreclosure paperwork, according to government officials involved in the negotiations.”

CNN - “House votes to kill Obama mortgage plan” (3-30-11)

“The House voted 252 to 170 to stop any new funding for the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). Eleven Democrats joined Republicans to defund the program.”

Housing Wire“Job gains barely beat estimates on the long road back to pre-recession levels” (3-30-11)

“While the economy gained 201,000 private sector jobs last month, those additions are not enough to set the pace for a rapid economic or housing recovery, analysts say.”

Bloomberg - “Lenders Could Get Exemptions Under New Risk-Retention Rule” (3-30-11)

“U.S. regulators proposed exempting banks and bond issuers who meet high underwriting standards from rules requiring them to keep a stake in loans they securitize, according to a draft proposal.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Home ‘Shadow Inventory’ Totals Nine Months of Supply, CoreLogic Says” (3-30-11)

“About 1.8 million homes that are delinquent or in foreclosure loom as additional supply for the struggling U.S. housing market, according to CoreLogic Inc.”

Housing Wire“CBO drops estimate of TARP cost to $19 billion” (3-30-11)

“The Troubled Asset Relief Program will end up costing taxpayers $19 billion, according to the latest estimate Wednesday from the Congressional Budget Office.”

Housing Wire“‘Too big to fail’ legacy lives on: Rosner” (3-30-11)

“government intervention in 2008 forced bank mergers and acquisitions, leaving the financial market in the control of the nation’s largest financial firms.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, national home prices decreased by 0.7 percent from the previous year. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac estimated that mortgage rates would rise less than a quarter of a percentage point in the next three months. Interest rates on conventional 30-year FRMs increased to 5.13% in February 2010. The US Treasury Department announced it would allocate $600 million to HFA for foreclosure prevention programs in California, Florida, Arizona, Michigan and Nevada.

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.