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232-TNG Radio – John Burns 7-02-11

Friday, July 1st, 2011

 

John-Burns

John Burns

President, John Burns Real Estate Consulting


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined by John Burns.  John is president of John Burns Real Estate Consulting Inc, which helps real estate industry executives by analyzing and summarizing the information they need to make decisions with more confidence.  Mr. Burns is on retainer with a number of companies, both in the housing industry and Wall Street to monitor housing conditions and help them refine their strategies in an ever-changing environment.

Since John last spoke with Bruce, he has expanded his consulting services to new groups of people.  His two largest clients back in 2006 were John Laing Homes and Centex Homes, which no longer exist.  His company monitors the housing cycle and does a lot of research; so when he saw the downturn coming, he pulled out his rolodex from the early 90’s and asked himself who they worked for during the last downturn.  He thought he would end up doing a lot of work for the banks, which he has gotten a fair amount of work from even though it wasn’t what he thought it would be.  A whole new world of distressed investors has come in, and they have been Mr. Burns’ primary clientele.  As a consultant, when you mention something negative to a client, especially something like a downturn, how well it is received by the clientele is really in the way you say it.  If you say “Now is the time to take some chips off the table,” or time to sell some land, generally people would agree with this.  The publicly traded companies don’t want to hear this because by nature of their ownership they’re being forced to grow.  However, at least most of John’s clients had been through a downturn earlier.  During the time period of the downturn, John Laing Homes ran quarterly meetings called “Preparing for the Downturn,” and they were able to get out of the downturn, but they were definitely thinking about and prepared for it.  After the market corrected in 2007, somebody from Dubai came in and offered them a large sum of money for their company, which they sold.  The company the person from Dubai bought is now gone.  With Centex Homes, the CEO who had been there 40 years and seen a lot of cycles said he was dropping prices in February 2006.  From that time on, he was saying things were always worse than you think they are and always last longer.  He made a lot of smart maneuvers and ended up selling his company to Poulty and received a 38% premium on his stock.

As a consultant, when someone asks John Burns’ opinion and he tells them what he thinks will happen based on the data, there are times he has to make sure he says his opinion in an acceptable language.  His goal as a consultant is to get them to act, so you have to know your clients.  No one forecasted the economy was going to be as bad as it is now.  You would have really had to understand how financing was done.  So in early ’07 John talked to John Paulson and another man from Front Point, and they explained things such as CDOs and mortgage backed securities to him.  John still thought they were making some smart bets.  When you really realize what was going on at the time, it’s shocking that we got to the point where lending was so carefree that we really didn’t care who ended up with what.  This is how you ended up having the price go up so much because the lending rules really just didn’t apply as we might have assumed they still did.  Still to this day, there is no good data on underwriting.  You don’t know averages or even stratification on debt-to-income ratios, loan-to-value ratios, and people’s net worth.   John was asking people questions about these terms back in ’05 and ’06, and they had no idea.  The data was probably not collected.  At this point, it may have not mattered because they were inventing whatever was necessary to get a yes answer.  Nowadays, you won’t find data such as FICO scores or debt to income ratios published.   You can feel the impact when you try to sell a house, but it’s really all random.  On a one-to-one basis, you pick up the anecdotes, but if you had some data collection that showed the number of people who were not putting down any payment and had no means of paying it while home prices were flat, somebody would have raised a red flag.

We were very generous with financing in 2005 and 2006 when prices were ten times our median income.  Now the prices have been demolished.  The mood now is to take goods away from real estate.  This has happened every time in the past, and it is happening again.  John Burns and his team just had a meeting last week where they invited all of their clients into a room, held to about 60 people, and debated various issues.  The two people who knew the most about what was happening in D.C. said that Washington D.C. was not interested in helping housing at all and, if anything, to solve the budget issues they wanted to penalize housing and the banking industry.  They felt like they gave them a handout, which they did, and now it’s time to take some of it back.  The people in D.C. don’t realize prices could take a big tumble because 90% of the mortgages in this country are still supported by the government.  If we’re trying to sell a home today it’s going to be financed though some kind of government arm.  John Burns was at a conference a couple weeks ago where the CEOs of both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac spoke, and it was very clear to John that they were all about saving their charter right now.  The way they intend to do this is only to be extremely conservative and to show that they are making money now, which they are doing.   The CEO of Freddie Mac said that their average FICO score in the first quarter was 758.  In addition, the payment that is emerging is much different in the ratio of people’s income than it has ever been.  They’re only supporting great loans now.  It’s interesting that the sentiment starts dictating policy, and politics sometimes really get in the way of what would be a very common sense decision.  Fannie, for example, has been around for about 80 years, and for 4 years they made some egregious mistakes.  The management who made those mistakes is gone, so why are we going to “blow up” these organizations that worked for 75 years.  So overall, there are statements being made that seem perfectly logical, but if you were to see a chart you would see that charts defy what you thought was logically true.

One of the charts Bruce has is a historical foreclosure rate for Fannie, Freddie, FHA, and VA.  Shelia Bair suggests that if you require a 20% minimum down payment, with the rationale of somebody putting down 20%, they’re going to make that payment for sure.  If you look at the historic foreclosure rate on all the different loan types from VA nothing down to 20%, they’re all within a quarter of a percentage over four decades.  This is a very important chart because they’re going the other way.  They’re going to say that they will have a 20% down program, but people aren’t netting $200 grand from the sale of their houses anymore.  Cars are showing a net of 35%.  If you want a $150 grand median price, you have to make the rule that 20% is necessary.  What’s really disturbing is when they make policies on erroneous data.  Usually, the different factors are compared to earnings and price, but right now we have the lowest interest rates ever.  Therefore, if you have historical numbers on comparing earnings to payment, they show how significantly inexpensive this process is if lenders are aggressively financing.  We are most likely headed toward a slow 60% ownership, possibly less than that.  John Burns forecast is about 62.5%.  He thought the forecast should go lower, but his guys convinced him that the positive demographics and affordability would not make it go lower.

There are a lot of people that will be going from ownership to non-ownership.  If the policies start going along with that trend, then you start making down payments bigger, qualifying harder, and reducing loan amounts.  Orange County is probably one area that will be affected quite a bit if you start having Fannie and Freddie go from the 7’s to the 6’s and someday to the 4’s.  You are looking at a very different financing world.  All of the homes would become jumbo mortgages, so it would be about 50 basis points higher.  Usually, it is possible to have the money readily available, thus making it possible to take the volume that’s going to be necessary.  John has a number of clients that run huge bond portfolios, and the appetite for a decent pool of loans that pays a 5-6% interest rate is pretty strong.

If John was managing Fannie, Freddie, and HUD, for example, and he looked at how much REO and non-performing loans he controls, the last thing he would want to do is drive down home prices because that is where it would hurt him the most.  Therefore, the more distressed sales we have in the market, the more likely home prices are going to decline.  In his example, John pitched to the three organizations and didn’t get to the highest level when he did, but would tell them to create a restructure where you put REO homes into a pool that you rent out for five years.  You offer a deal to the current occupant, for example, charge them $900 a month for rent, and if they can’t pay it you rent it to somebody else.  This is no different than what a lot of Bruce’s investor clients are doing.  The only difference is Bruce’s clients are on an individual basis and therefore it’s harder to manage; but if you give somebody 300 properties in an MSA, they can be pretty efficient in it.  The model the FDIC uses is they take an ownership interest and they sell the property to somebody who manages it rather than the government managing it and the managing person gets paid for it.  Their upside is limited because the FDIC would participate in any kind of upside.  This was Bruce’s suggestion when he met with Fannie that they would sell to investors with a partnership arrangement where they shared in the upside.  They had just done this with their multi-family portfolio with a company called Related.  Bruce is not sure he would want the government as his partner because he wouldn’t be sure who would be making the decisions at the time he says it’s time to sell, and the government might disagree and think it’s not the best time to sell.  If you look at the FDIC, there were different partners who formed their own divisions.  Lennar formed a division called Rialto; Toll and Oaktree formed a group called Gibraltar.  There is also a contract that guarantees that they are going to make a small return, and if they perform they will do quite well as will the government.  Unfortunately, the reaction to John’s suggestion was ridiculous bureaucracy.  People were asking if the house needed to be fixed up and if they needed to hire a union.  People feel like the government is their landlord while they write the check to the U.S. government.  You hear things like this, and you just think that we’re not going to get anywhere.  This would be very frustrating, especially since John is surrounded by very smart people in his clientele, and he therefore would know a lot about the market and how to solve the problems if people would just listen.  It’s like the political process gets in the way of practical methods.  If you’re Fannie and Freddie, you’re very political right now because it’s the politicians who determine whether or not your organization is going to get blown up or saved.  You don’t want to do anything to rock the boat.  When they gave away the $8,000 tax rebate, in an area like the Inland Empire that was not only equivalent to nothing down, it was equivalent to cash back.  It was saying that you’re buying an $80,000 property and getting $8 grand, and your down payment for that would probably be $3 grand.  It would seem the loan portfolio then would have performed quite well because the payment that emerged was quite reasonable.  The CEO of Freddie said that their 09-2010 loan vintages had performed very well.

In 1981 and ’82, interest rates were crazy, along the lines of 17-18%.  60% of California sales did not require a new loan.  What they did require was that you had access to financing that already existed.  The 70’s before that had inexpensive interest rates, so they were allowed to buy and sell houses with the financing in place.  Bruce’s suggestion therefore is that they create a loan for only 3 years, and you sell the properties with qualifying.  Somebody has to qualify, such as by FHA standard or VA standard, but they don’t need a down payment.  This expands the demographics under 30 a tremendous amount, so you would get a lot of young adults to own a house.  The criterion with that loan program is that if you fail to make the payment, the ownership can get transferred to a new owner without them having to qualify except for when it closes escrow.  Then it has to be current.  If skin in the game is important, we need to make it come from the second person. On just this program, if you go to a trustee sale where everyone failed to make the payment, the opening bid at the trustee sale would not be the principle, but only the back payment.  Therefore, instead of having sales for hundreds of thousands of dollars, they would be ten thousand or twenty thousand dollars.  This would finance new buyers, give financing availability to people who already lost homes that had become non-owners, and it would finance investors who went to trustee sales and took over existing loans subject to closing.  They would pay the back payment and take over the existing loan.

Back in 2004, E-trade came up with a portable mortgage, which essentially let people take their mortgage with them when they moved, similar to taking their credit card debt with them when they moved.  This was called assumable debt.  Interest rates were low at the time, so who wouldn’t want to take on a 5% loan that they could then take with them when interest rates increased.  Securities in the securities market traded about 50 basis points higher because they traded it as premium over 30-year treasuries rather than 10-year treasuries, which would not be repaid quickly.  What E-trade found was that consumers didn’t want the extra 50 basis points.  It was huge news, on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, and hardly anyone took advantage of it.  It was likely a very different environment at the time.  Right now, if you give somebody a chance to go from a $1500 rent to a PITI payment of $1100 with nothing down, there isn’t much risk.  All of the mortgages at the end of the day get pushed off into some security, so the required interest rate on the mortgages would probably be 50 basis points higher than a traditional mortgage and would find a great deal of acceptance.  One of the niches that investors use right now is they’re not afraid of a lender calling a loan due that is current.  Bruce can’t imagine getting a call from a lender saying that he has reached the due-on-sale clause, so they’re going to foreclose on a current loan.  Therefore, you wrap it and you sell a property to somebody for 7 or 8% that doesn’t have a chance to own.  This kind of market does exist.  Rather than trying to figure out how to move another few million homes reasonably, they should instead go to owner occupants.  Our country should remain thinking that owning and occupying a home is a priority as opposed to protecting lenders or protecting politically what is appropriate.

There is a big chance of policy changes taking place in the future that will start taking away some of the deductions or other things that we take for granted in real estate.  Ken Mueller, a lobbyist/policy analyst who John Burns has spoken to a lot and believes to be the most right, believes there is a 75% chance that the mortgage interest deduction is going to get dropped to $500,000.  This will be tied into the debt reduction plan that is due August 2nd, which is coming up pretty soon.  You’re also going to see all the government guarantees at best get more expensive or, at worst, go away or become available on fewer loans.

You can find out more about John Burns and John Burns Real Estate Consulting at www.realestateconsulting.com.  At this site you can find a wealth of information and blogs that discuss things pertinent in our market.

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

169-TNG Radio – Harry Dent 4-10-10

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Harry-Dent

Harry Dent

Author and Economist

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce Norris is joined once again by Harry Dent. Harry is the president of the H.S. Dent Foundation, which publishes the H.S. Dent forecast. His mission is to help people understand change. He is the author of many books, which include The Great Boom Ahead 1992 and The Roaring 2000s and The Great Depression Ahead.

The title The Great Depression Ahead is gutsy. This book came out in 2009. Harry finished writing the book in the first half of 2008. However, we had some significant events occur at the end of 2008. The only thing that really surprised Harry was the stock market rally. He assumed that the economy would get worse, and as it got worse, the government would stimulate it. Harry predicted the stock market would bounce to 9800 and maybe even 11,800. We are right in the middle of that zone right now. Short term indicators predict that we might go even higher in the near future. However, he thought this stock bounce would begin and end earlier. Harry does not believe the recovery will last, because the baby boomers will go from spending to saving.

Harry defines a depression as an extended downturn in which you also see a deflation in prices. The reason why prices go down is because banks and loans are failing. This destroys credit and money. The deleveraging of credit causes deflation. In a depression, everything goes down. In an inflationary downturn like the 1970s, real estate goes up. Real estate does well during inflation. The failure of the banking system is the biggest shock an economic system can have. Harry believes that later this year and in 2011 we will go into a depression.

Alan Greenspan once said, “I watched my whole intellectual education fall apart in 2008”. That took a lot of guts to say, and it was astonishing to think that someone like Greenspan had studied economics for 50 years but still estimated incorrectly. Economists can look at a chart and come to two completely different conclusions.

Anyone who has studied business cycles throughout history knows that human greed takes over every time. Anytime you have low regulation, low interest rates, and bubbles building, people go nuts. People start thinking that the market will never go down, and the banks will lend to anyone. If bubbles go on for long enough, anyone will buy into a bubble. Its not a matter of intelligence, it’s a matter of understanding human nature, and that is where economists fall short. All economists look at is statistics.

There are no exceptions to the cycle of economics. The economy always goes from summer to fall, from inflation to disinflation. In the fall season is when you get bubbles, and when you get bubbles, the government always claims it can fix the problem, but they cannot and they have proven this over and over again. Bubbles have to deflate. We don’t want real estate to be so expensive that young people cannot afford it.

The bigger the boom the bigger the bust. Fortunately, we have a tool that tells you how long a boom will last approximately, and when it will wind down. Harry predicted how the economy would change by looking at the birth index. Booms always lead to excesses, and excessive lending and business expansion.

Japan had a real estate bubble similar to ours. They had excessive lending and unaffordable real estate prices. They had a demographic boom peak before the rest of the world, because they were the only major country who did not have a baby boom after WWII. Japan went through their downturn while the rest of the world was in the greatest boom of history. They didn’t have as much deflation as we will have, and their export industries can still be working at 120 percent. Japan also entered their crisis as a net creditor to the world. Almost all their debt was financed by their own citizens, so they had more capacity to stimulate and keep stimulating.

The U.S. is entering this downturn, and the whole country is going down with it. Baby boom demographics are down around the world. The world has also had a banking crisis and real estate bubble. We’re dragging people down with us, but they would have gone down anyways. The U.S. is the biggest net debtor in the world. We owe trillions of dollars to other countries. 50 percent of our debt is financed by foreign investors. This is contributing to the world downturn.

In 2011, Harry believes debt will overwhelm the banking system. This will cause the deficit to reach about $22 trillion. Harry thinks the debt will encourage our government to borrow even more, and we will pay for it. Japan tried to do this, and they will be sorry for it. Their debt to GDP ratio is 2.5 times what ours is. The only reason why they are surviving is because they are still paying interest rates on that debt at less than 2 percent. In the next decade, they will have to pay market rates like the rest of the world. Japan never truly deflated their bubble. They deflated their businesses, but they didn’t deflate their financial institutions. They have no way to easily get themselves out of this trouble.

Harry believes that Europe is going to start having debt trouble as well. When this happens, France and Germany will have to pick up the tab, but they won’t want to have any part in that. They will demand that the other countries cut their spending and raise taxes to cover their own debt.

In the United States, healthcare and social security expenses are already at costs above what we can afford, and we are now looking to expand that. Company and government pensions are unrealistically generous. Once we get to the point where we have to cut those pensions, people are going to go nuts. There may be riots. Bruce agrees with Harry on this issue. $46 trillion in unfunded medicare, Medicaid, and social security liabilities have already been promised to people. That is 4 times as much as the current government debt. We can’t afford the healthcare we have, and now they are trying to pass another healthcare bill.

The government will have to confess its inability to pay the baby boom generation its social benefits around 2012 or 2013 when the crisis will be at its worst. We will not get out of the mortgage and housing crisis until 2012. Harry believes that Obama will not be reelected, because he became president at a bad time.

We are going to have an enormous amount of debt in the next couple years, which is part of the reason why Harry does not support the new health reform bill. We will not be able to sustain the cost of this new program, and Bruce doubts that Congress has fully read through this health care bill.

When you have deflation, it exaggerates the current debt level. Harry believes that this will cause the government to scale back on age limits for social security and health care. Private debt will scale down substantially. All the debt ratios will get worse. Many businesses will go under or merge with other businesses. Banks will have to write off trillions in loans. Deflation works to restructure debt, rather than pay it off. If we had to pay all that debt off with deflated dollars, it would be much more difficult. At the end of this deflation period, we will be much stronger. Stronger companies will take over weak companies, costs get cut, and real estate goes down.

There are very few properties for sale in California right now, and it is easy to resale. The default rate has doubled in the last 12 months, but the foreclosure numbers have been cut in half. Banks are not foreclosing on people, because they do not know what to do with so many properties. Despite the 6 percent GDP, which Harry does not believe will last, defaults will continue to increase and foreclosures will continue to hit the market. This will suppress real estate prices. Banks will eventually have to write off a lot of those loans and foreclose. This is what will kill the recovery. Once the banks realize that real estate won’t recover, we will see the next banking crisis.

There is a psychology attached to exaggerated events like booms. When booms occur, people rationalize their decisions and the same thing happens in a down cycle. When things go down, people develop a pessimistic attitude towards the future. Baby boomers have not yet had a major downturn in both the real estate and stock market at the same time. This crash is going to cause retirements to disappear for baby boomers, and this loss will cause them to save even more. They will have to work longer but they may not be able to get jobs, because older people cost more in benefits. Harry is forecasting 15 percent unemployment.

Harry believes interest rates will increase this year. However, the bond market will eventually notice that the economy is slowing and then interest rates will decrease. This is what happened in 1931 when the crisis was building. We had a great boom market in bonds from 1932 to 1940 when interest rates were falling. In the next decade we will see deflation. If you want to buy long term bonds, Harry encourages people to wait until later this year or early next year. If you want to refinance, you may want to wait until interest rates come back down. This downturn in interest rates will happen between 2011 and 2013.

Bruce never thought he would see interest rates go down this low. Bruce began his real estate career in 1981 when he refinanced his house at 17.5 percent. Now we are at sub five percent rates, and we may see rates go even lower. Harry agrees and claims we may see rates go down to 3 to 4 percent.

168-TNG Radio – Harry Dent 4-3-10

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

 

Harry-Dent

Harry Dent

Author and Economist

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce Norris is joined by Harry Dent. Harry is the president of the H.S. Dent Foundation, which publishes the H.S. Dent forecast. His mission is to help people understand change. He is the author of many books, which include The Great Boom Ahead 1992 and The Roaring 2000s and The Great Depression Ahead.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Harry Dent’s website is www.hsdent.com

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/11/09

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

Mark Greene of FICO forecasts that credit-card and mortgage defaults will increase during the next six months. Former director of the FHFA James B. Lockhart III, claims that the housing downturn may not be finished. Statistics from both Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings show that the default rate for CMBS increased during November.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“MBA Comment on Passage of Regulatory Reform” (12-11-09)

“Regrettably, the House moved forward and passed a bill that could adversely impact borrowers and lenders alike. By not creating a uniform, national regulatory standard, the bill continues the conflicting and confusing patchwork of state and local laws that result in increased costs for borrowers.”

Bloomberg - “Mortgage ‘Cram-Down’ Amendment Fails in U.S. House” (12-11-09)

“The U.S. House rejected a mortgage ‘cram-down’ amendment that would have given federal judges the power to lengthen mortgage terms, cut interest rates and reduce loan balances for homeowners in bankruptcy court. Lawmakers voted 241-188 today against the amendment, which was to be part of broader legislation reining in excessive risk taking on Wall Street. All but four of the Republicans who voted opposed the amendment, pulling with them 71 Democrats to defeat the measure.”

Bloomberg - “Defaults to Rise as Credit Issues Remain, Greene Says” (12-11-09)

“The next six months will bring more credit-card and mortgage defaults, said Mark Greene, chief executive officer of FICO, maker of the credit-scoring formula most widely used by U.S. lenders.”

Bloomberg - “Lockhart Says Housing May Take ‘Another Leg Down’” (12-11-09)

“James B. Lockhart III, vice chairman of WL Ross & Co. and the former director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said the U.S. housing decline may not be over. Lockhart said at a conference in New York that he’s concerned there may be ‘another leg down’ because of the pace of foreclosures. Foreclosures will ‘spike’ unless the Obama administration’s programs to spur home loan modifications do more to reduce homeowners’ debts, he said.”

Housing Wire“CMBS Delinquency Jumps Most in November: Moody’s” (12-11-09)

“The delinquency rate among US commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) jumped in November, according to separate surveys by Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings. Moody’s saw a 46bps increase over last month’s delinquency rate — the largest monthly increase of the current downturn — bringing CMBS conduit and fusion loans to 4.47% delinquent.”

Inman - “Feds: BofA lagging in loan mods” (12-11-09)

“Bank of America — which has more mortgages eligible for the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) than any other participating loan servicer — continues to lag behind the industry average in modifying troubled borrowers’ loans, according to the latest report from the Treasury Department. Through the end of November, Bank of America had made trial or permanent modifications on only 14 percent of the estimated 1 million HAMP-eligible loans it’s servicing that were delinquent by 60 days or more, the Treasury Department said”

Realty Times“Short Sales May Rise Due to New Government Incentives” (12-11-09)

“‘The push right now is for servicers to avoid foreclosure and the push is coming not only from The Obama administration and the Treasury but also from the owners of the loans such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. And the focus right now is on short sales. So, I think in 2010, you’re going to see a lot more short sales and hopefully reduced foreclosures,’ says Travis Hamel Olsen, chief operating officer of Loan Resolution Corporation.”

In The News:

One year ago, Bank of America announced plans to cut 30,000 to 35,000 jobs.  U.S. Regulator James Lockhart claimed that mortgage rates would fall below 4 percent. An estimated forecast from UCLA showed that home-price declines since 2006 had amounted to $4.5 trillion.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/10/09

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to RealtyTrac, foreclosure activity decreased  by 8 percent in November. Hanley Wood Market Intelligence reports that Orange County builders had their first positive month in October, after 13 months of contract declines. A survey from HomeGain shows that 48 percent of agents and brokers believe that home prices will stay the same, and 24 percent believe that prices will increase.  Data from the U.S. Treasury Department shows that 31,382 of the 1 million three-month modifications have become permanent.

In The News:

DSNews - “Foreclosure Activity Recedes for Fourth Straight Month: RealtyTrac” (12-10-09)

“The foreclosure tide appears to be subsiding, according to the latest numbers from RealtyTrac. The company said Thursday that foreclosure activity fell 8 percent in November, compared to October – it’s the fourth consecutive month that RealtyTrac’s data has shown a decrease in foreclosure filings.”

CBIA - “California New-Home Market Breaks into Positive Territory, CBIA Announces” (12-10-09)

“The monthly CBIA/Hanley Wood Market Intelligence (HWMI) New-Home Sales and Pricing Report showed that sales in new-home communities of 10 units or more were 25 percent above October 2008, a strong improvement from the lingering year-over-year decline last month and represents the first notable increase since the start of the housing downturn. During October, 2,294 new homes and condominiums were sold in the subdivisions tracked by Costa Mesa-based HWMI, compared to 1,838 in October 2008. Sales of single-family homes were up by 4 percent, while sales of townhomes and ‘plexes’ – duplexes, triplexes, etc. – were up 36 percent and sales of condominiums were 94 percent higher than a year ago thanks to strong sales at projects in the Los Angeles and San Francisco areas.”

Orange County Register – “Losing streak ends for O.C. builders” (12-10-09)

“Hanley Wood Market Intelligence says after 13 straight months of annual declines in new home sales contracts, Orange County builders recorded their first up month in October. According to the Costa Mesa research firm, homebuyers signed 90 contracts to buy a new Orange County home that month, up 13.9% from October 2008.”

Inman - “Survey: Hopeful on home prices” (12-10-09)

“Forty-eight percent of agents and brokers surveyed think home prices will stay the same and 24 percent think prices will go up, the company reported. That’s a slight increase from the third-quarter survey, when those numbers were 46 percent and 23 percent, respectively. This marks a major change from HomeGain’s first-quarter survey when 36 percent thought prices would remain flat and 11 percent thought prices would increase. The survey had 928 respondents.”

Housing Wire“30,000 Trial HAMP Mods Go Permanent” (12-10-09)

“Of the 1m homeowners who have been offered three-month trial modification under the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), 31,382 have received a permanent modification, according to from the US Treasury Department.”

Housing Wire“Mortgage Volume to Decline in 2010, Says Dorado” (12-10-09)

“Mortgage origination volume will decline next year compared to 2009 levels, but the use of software-as-a-service (SAAS) applications will rise, San Mateo, Calif.-based SAAS developer Dorado Corporation said in its projections for next year. Dorado projects more than 30% of mortgages created next year will be originated with SAAS applications, which generally work as Web-based tools a developer hosts on its own servers and distributes access through subscription licenses.”

Housing Wire“Treasury Used $364bn of TARP funds in 2009″ (12-10-09)

“The Treasury Office of Financial Stability (OFS) used $364bn of the $700bn available funds, mostly in investments according to the report, and $73bn of the TARP funds have already been repaid. Bank of America last week committed to repaying the $45bn it received through the program.”

Housing Wire - “Mortgage Rates Rise off Record Lows” (12-10-09)

“Freddie Mac’s (FRE: 1.12 +0.90%) survey put the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) at 4.81% with an average 0.7 point for the week ending Dec. 10, up from the previous week when it was a record low average of 4.71%. A year ago, Freddie Mac put the 30-year FRM at 5.47%.”

Bloomberg“Wells Fargo Cuts as Much as 30 Percent in Principal” (12-10-09)

“Wells Fargo & Co., the bank that gained a portfolio of option adjustable-rate mortgages when it bought Wachovia Corp. last year, cut the principal for delinquent borrowers in some loans by as much as 30 percent. Wells Fargo has forgiven an average of $46,000 in principal, or 15 percent, for the 43,500 option-ARM loans it has modified this year through September, said Franklin Codel, chief financial officer at the bank’s home-lending unit.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, Orange County tax collectors reported that property tax collections decreased by $145 million. One hundred twenty-seven financial companies received preliminary approval for $60.4 billion from TARP.

110-TNG Radio – Ward Hanigan 2-21-09

Friday, February 20th, 2009

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Ward Hanigan

Foreclosure Specialist

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Bruce Norris is joined this week by California trustee expert and trustee sale trainer, Ward Hanigan.

Ward talks about training people about trustee sales from different states. He does so to train investors how to specialize in their area. Different states handle foreclosures differently and he makes sure he caters his training to the area they are investing.

Is the foreclosure explosion good or bad? Ward says its good it’s mind boggling. Comparing it to past downturns, there’s nothing like it. Credit is frozen, the stock market is bad, and unemployment is way up, it’s a bad combination. This is definitely the worst downturn he’s seen. Bruce says the speed has been surprising too.

Bruce asks what niches Ward sends people to. Ward says there’s some niches that work and some that don’t. Bruce brings up a sample of a 10 year old house that went to trustee sale that had no equity. Prices have really got hit hard.

Bruce asks Ward why people are losing their homes. Ward apologizes for his abruptness but says he doesn’t really care. He tried to figure it out but the end result is still the same. You can’t change personal situations and it’s whether or not you are going to purchase the house.

Ward says anything negative, including unemployment, frightens the average person. There’s less competition right now. That’s good for investors. Bruce says that many people think the foreclosure business is simple. Ward sees too many people who don’t do their due diligence and are buying seconds. Google Earth photo and Zestimates aren’t real research. No one helps other investors at trustee sales and even if they did, the person probably wouldn’t believe it. It’s a pros game and not to be taken lightly.

Ward talks about trustee sale buyers and how it is typically the only thing they do. It takes a lot of research and you don’t have time to do other things. Bruce says he knows very few trustee sale buyers that do other investments strategies.

Bruce and Ward discuss their first time bidding at a trustee sale and overbidding by $100. Both talk about if you don’t know your information, you better not show up. Ward teaches his students to over analyze the deal so they’re filled with confidence and nothing can rattle them.

Bruce and Ward talk about lenders now lowering the specified bids at auction. Ward says they are doing it so often and frequently he’s worried about competition showing back up. Bruce asks how much warning you get. Ward says hardly any if at all. Lowering the bid at the last minute doesn’t have the desired effect. If they don’t let the investors know, the investor can’t do the research. Some lenders are posting one day in advance.

Bruce and Ward discuss some new terminology they are using at the trustee sales. Drop bid means the bid is going to be dropped. It could also mean the lender can raise it on you, it becomes almost like a reserve auction and the caller is bidding on behalf of the lender. The lender, in this case, is fishing. Specified bid means the purchase price is dropped and it’s in essence an absolute auction. Ward talks about what he does with that information at the beginning of the sale.

Bruce talks about title. In the trustee sale business, you MUST have access to that information. Ward says title companies need the work. Now is the time to work with them and ask for access in exchange for a partnership.

Bruce and Ward talk about how Ward got into the business of foreclosures and trustee sale investing.

Ward says he is getting back to trustee sales now. He says people laugh at him because he still does it but he loves it. He’s putting together funds now to invest more.

Ward joins us again next week for the second interview. You can find out more about Ward Hanigan and Foreclosure Forum at foreclosureforum.com.

Ward Hanigan is a full-time foreclosure specialist and trainer in San Diego County. He brings you over 37 years of real estate experience, with a degree in Economics and a Doctorate in Law. He has worked in California’s foreclosure market exclusively since 1982, and as a consequence he has extensive experience finding cash, researching title, handling evictions, rehabbing, reselling, consulting, and is a “one-on-one” trainer and mentor to some of the most successful foreclosure practitioners in the Western United States.

108-TNG Radio – Mike Cantu 2-7-09

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Mike-Cantu

Mike Cantu

Expert California Investor

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Bruce Norris is joined this week by expert investor, Mike Cantu.

Bruce starts by asking Mike what he did before real estate. Mike talks about his background in professional skate boarding. Mike moved from being a skate boarder to a very young start in real estate. Bruce says in the 1980s the interest rates were not that great so was curious why Mike liked real estate. Mike Cantu talks about an info commercial that changed his life and how he started.

Bruce asks Mike about his education and why he is such a supporter of education since he’s already so successful in the business.

Mike talks about his long-term plan. He’s really built as a buy and hold guy. Mike talks about his overall strategies and his mentors.

Bruce asks about the difference between a “B” and “C” neighborhoods and how Mike chooses which properties he’s interested in holding. Bruce and Mike talks about how important being able to purchase below market was to his business.

Bruce asks Mike if he thinks 2009 will be the best buy and hold opportunity we’ve ever seen. Mike thinks that this year will be a great year. Prices for houses are very low in some areas and rents are still relatively high.

Bruce asks Mike where he’s buying his properties and how long it’s taken for some of the properties he’s buying to close. They discuss the extraordinary price declines. Mike says he’s still contacting people directly but not as much. He says 2/3 of sellers are still in denial of what’s happened in the market.

Mike and Bruce discuss about carrying paper to have deals make sense. Mike says he did that he did that in the 80s and 90s but not as much recently.

Bruce asks Mike if he had to do something over in 2006 what would it be. Mike says take a two year vacation! It was a lot of work for sometimes little results.

Bruce and Mike talk about different strategies and how it changes the outlook on what real estate is going to be for different investors. Mike has a large portfolio of rentals and he knew prices were going to fall. Mike has a different philosophy. He wasn’t too interested in leveraging them all to the hilt. Mike says he saw leveraging work for some and others it was their downfall.

Mike talks about each of his houses and having a job description for each one. Mike doesn’t plan to touch any of these. Sometimes people feel it’s sometimes unsophisticated but “unlocking equity” has its own risks and Mike says he’s very clear on what his portfolio does. He heard horrible stories of people’s lifetime of work being wiped out by being too risky.

Mike discusses his two piles of houses and his goal for each pile. Bruce asks how he thinks people can get back on their feet if they have lost everything. He says go back to the basics.

Bruce asks about his calmness level over the past few years as the market has tanked. Mike says he planned for this and knew it was coming. He went through it before and was determined not to make the same mistakes. Bruce said he was glad to go through the 90s. Going through the pain makes you learn some important lessons. Going through the 90s for both Mike and Bruce gave them a very different outlook and respect for down markets and they’ve done things very different this year.

Mike is teaching his Rental and Property Management Seminar for the first time in conjunction with The Norris Group coming up February 21st. More information available at thenorrisgroup.com.

Mike Cantu is undoubtedly one of Southern California’s best real estate investors and a long-time friend of The Norris Group.

Mike Cantu has been a full time real estate investor for over 25 years. This is round three of a down market for Mike. He runs a buy/sell operation, wholesales, and manages a rental property portfolio.

89-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 10-4-08

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

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I Survived Real Estate 2008

Part Seven

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Part seven of “I Survived Real Estate 2008” picks up with the panel interview from the last session where Bruce talks about how Wall Street keeps calling to find out when bottom is so they can profit even though they are part of the reason we’re in this current situation.

Rick talks about large pools of money purchasing these loans at deep discounts and then fixing the principles of the people in the homes.

Bruce then responds by talking about HR3221 about how HUD can buy first trust deeds at a discount and how the new structure would allow them to alter the loan of the person in the property. Bruce worries about the ramifications of this program. It is limited in who can apply since it applies to adjustable mortgages only. The people who really get burned are those next door who qualified for a fixed loan and are making the payments. They did everything correctly but they don’t apply for the principle reduction. With California being a non recourse state, Bruce worries the dominos that might fall. Bruce then asks Philip Tirone if bailing from mortgages is becoming more acceptable.

Philip says clients don’t care about the moral issue of walking away; they are more concerned about the credit ramification. Philip talks about the raised loan limits and how everyone thought it would make a difference. They think things are going to help but when you get into the legislation, it doesn’t.

Bruce agrees with Christopher in that the median price has to become more reasonable. Christopher thinks another 6 months and everyone will qualify.

Tommy Williams brings up the very important point of moral hazard in letting something like a bailouts occur. Not holding consumers accountable sets up a larger problem for the future.

Bruce asks Christopher about Merrill Lynch taking .22 cents on the dollar for a $30 billion package of CDOs . He says they actually got 5% in cash and carried back a note and guaranteed the pile. Bruce asks whose money was actually lost. Christopher says it was the consumer investing in their company. Christopher says this buyout is another instrument and accounting mechanism. The financial system, Christopher says, is an absolute mess. All banks are having a difficult time. We’re having an issue with cash because of it.

Bruce asks Christopher about how FDIC can handle writing these sort of checks and if the government will just keep writing checks. Christopher says that they’ll have to be bailed out as well. Bruce asks if stagflation will be a problem. Christopher says he doesn’t think it will be an issue.

Bruce asks Rick Sharga about the difference between a bank owning a loan and the individual owner. Rick explains how the process works. Banks can accept the losses but the private investors can’t as easily take the hit. These loans are not as flexible as the securitized loans. Bruce talks about HR3221 and how the second must be wiped out first.

About 10% of the foreclosures list in Riverside being non-owner occupied but 70% out of the 90% that are owner occupied have simultaneous first and second at the time of purchase. Almost 100% of these properties are 100% financed.

Joel Singer brings up refinancing. The number of first payment defaults is huge because of bad credit and no skin in the game. The good news, he says, 2 out of 3 will stay in their home most likely. However, he is much more concerned about price drops then the mortgage resets. He thinks more people will walk if the prices get too low.

Bruce also brings up unemployment and how it will continue to go up. He says out migration will then probably force more to leave.

Bruce asks Annemaria if loan tightening happens during every cycle. Annemaria talk about how there’s a cycle and she thinks that this will never happen on this scale again. Lenders are in sheer panic because of what’s gone on and all the legislation now being presented. It’s a little late to implement since everyone has already got in. Bruce feels once we get into a safe market, the next person will dream up the next special mortgage.

Christopher says financial investors are always slipping in risk and hiding it. Incentives from Wall Street are bazaar and we need to not trust them so this doesn’t happen.

Bruce sees the foreclosures coming as being a huge problem and much worse then the 90s. In the 90s we had two times as many sales as we had foreclosures. This year, we’ll have two times as many foreclosures to sales.

Joel Singer says the 90s downturn was caused by unemployment. There were 7 years where prices were flat. Joel is curious to see if the market will clear faster because of the steep price drop. He thinks we have to make the market clear and he feels that it really already has. Joel is stunned at how many sales are currently being made and he doesn’t think it’s investor purchases. It’s cheaper to buy then rent in some places. Builders are having a hard time competing because homes are being bought below replacement costs.

Bruce talks about his Grand Junction, Colorado experience buying all of HUD’s condos. Bruce set all the costs at $8,000 a condo but no one would buy because the market was too scary. Emotions definitely play a role.

Rick says he talked to a man who handled the REO assets at a credit union and the man was wondering if RealtyTrac could supply him a list of who owned the first. Rick was surprised since he thought that would have been information that was gathered. The man said they did not have the information as little information was gathered on the first mortgage and little was taken on the homebuyer. More next week or see YouTube or Google video for the entire program. Next week is the final week of the audio.

The following partners and sponsors without whom the event would not have been possible:

Platinum Sponsors:

The San Diego Creative Investors Association (SDCIA): sdcia.com

Investors Workshops: investorsworkshops.com

Frye Wiles: fryewiles.com

Proxibid: proxibid.com

White House Catering: whcatering.com

MVT Productions: mvtpro.com

Pechanga Resort and Casino: pechanga.com

The Denver Nuggets: nba.com nuggets

The Chicago Bulls: nba.com bulls

The Cleveland Cavaliers: nba.com cavaliers

Gold Sponsors:

7 Steps to a 720 Credit Score and Philip X. Tirone – 7stepsto720.com

Chicago Title – ctic.com

Elite Auctions – sellwithauction.com

Foreclosure Trackers – foreclosuretrackers.com

Investors Resource Center of America LA and Steve and Robyn Love – irca-losangeles.com

Las Brisas Escrow – lasbrisasescrow.com

National Club of Real Estate Investors and Sam Saddat – ncrei.com

Northern California Real Estate Investors Association (Norcalreia) and David Granzella – norcalreia.com

North San Diego Real Estate Investors and Linda Wessels – nsdrei.org

RealtyTrac – realtytrac.com

RE Ventures and Michael Pines – reventuresrealty.com

Real Estate Investors Club of Los Angeles and Phyllis Rockower – realestateclubla.com

Real Wealth Investor and Scott Whaley – realwealthinvestor.com

Saddleback Valley Communities – svc4.com

Silverstar Finance and Janet French – silverstarfinance.com

Sunset Hills Memorial Park and Mortuary – sunsethills.cc

The Mission Inn – missioninn.com

The Mortgage Equity Group – http: themeg.net

The Naked Real Estate Investor Club – Rosie Nieto – nakedrealestateinvestorsclub.com

The Short Sale Processor and Nick Manfredi – theshortsaleprocessor.com

Virtual Real Estate Tour and Layla Tusko – 1wealthcreation.com

Wholesale Capital Corporation – wccmtg.com

86-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 9-20-08

Friday, September 19th, 2008

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I Survived Real Estate 2008

Part Four

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Part four of “I Survived Real Estate 2008” picks up with Bruce Norris introducing CEO of the California Builders Industry Association of the Southern California, Richard Lambros. There’s a little repeat from last week to get the show going.

Richard discusses real estate as a speculative investment and the cycles. Richard warns us not to think of it as a cycle because that means we can have no influence over the outcome. Total new home production is down and will produce the lowest number of homes in history. In the building industry, they say it’s a building depression. In three years, production has been cut to one third. 2009 is not looking very good. Riverside and San Bernardino account for much of the cuts.

The economic impact of less building is very important. Just in Southern California, the building industry created $48 million of economic activity in 2005. In 2008, reaching $18 billion

Homes today are no longer shelter, they are infrastructure. Energy efficiency in California is already cutting edge and new guidelines are making them even tougher. New homes are unfairly being forced to make up for the 99% of retail homes that aren’t energy efficient. This inequality is difficult for builders to manage at times as costs and regulations add not only costs but time.

At the same time, a new home is a “Prius” and an old home is the “Hummers.” New homes have come a long way in building standards and built-in efficiencies. Buying a home today is very different than buying

New home projects are difficult to get approved. He speaks on residual land value and how builders figure price for a project. Builders work from comparables down to land price and not the other way around. Valuing land right now is too difficult and no one wants to loan on it right now. Builders are focusing on costs control and concerned about anything that adds time or costs to a project.

Real strength will return to building when strength returns to all the other sectors. The state needs jobs and economic growth for builders to thrive.

Bruce Norris then introduces Joel Singer, Executive VP for the California Association of Realtors. Joel discusses the myth versus the reality of the market place. As a former CAR economist Joel has experience after being through other downturns. This downturn is definitely different. It’s unique in that price decline is really steep.

The adjustment process we can’t look at past cycles because the adjustment of each cycle is different. Joel gets asked often “When is bottom.” Joel does not know. Joel is looking at activity picking up and feels we’ve hit bottom.

Joel is aware it feels bad because price is down so much. New builders and the civilian sellers have been squeezed out. The market is full of short sales and foreclosures; all have-to-sell inventory. Roughly 2 out of 3 of all sales are distressed transactions. Joel does agree 2009 will be bad and thinks foreclosures will continue but not sure what will happen beyond 2009.

Unemployment is a problem. A bigger wild card is the notion that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are dead. They are insolvent. (At this point in time, Fannie and Freddie were not government controlled). One they are nationalized, Joel expects a further jolt to the marketplace. Fannie and Freddie account for 90% (with FHA) of all loans in the market place.

Affordability has improved and the number of first time buyers will be 50% of the market place. It will be the highest level in three years. Three years ago, any idiot could be a successful investor. In today’s market, good investors will make a difference. The opportunities will be risky, look at the opportunities but don’t assume explosive growth. Assume the property makes economic sense. It will be challenging but the pros will be very successful.

Bruce Norris then announces Tommy Williams, president of the national Auctioneers Association and co-founder of Williams and Williams Auction Company. Conversation to resume next week.

Special thanks to the following partners and sponsors without whom the event would not have been possible:

Platinum Sponsors:

The San Diego Creative Investors Association (SDCIA): sdcia.com

Investors Workshops: investorsworkshops.com

Frye Wiles: fryewiles.com

Proxibid: proxibid.com

White House Catering: whcatering.com

MVT Productions: mvtproductions.tv

Pechanga Resort and Casino: pechanga.com

The Denver Nuggets: nba.com nuggets

The Chicago Bulls: nba.com bulls

The Cleveland Cavaliers: nba.com cavaliers

Gold Sponsors:

7 Steps to a 720 Credit Score and Philip X. Tirone – 7stepsto720.com

Chicago Title – ctic.com

Elite Auctions – sellwithauction.com

Foreclosure Trackers – foreclosuretrackers.com

Investors Resource Center of America LA and Steve and Robyn Love – irca-losangeles.com

Las Brisas Escrow – lasbrisasescrow.com

National Club of Real Estate Investors and Sam Saddat – ncrei.com

Northern California Real Estate Investors Association (Norcalreia) and David Granzella – norcalreia.com

North San Diego Real Estate Investors and Linda Wessels – nsdrei.org

RealtyTrac – realtytrac.com

RE Ventures and Michael Pines – reventuresrealty.com

Real Estate Investors Club of Los Angeles and Phyllis Rockower – realestateclubla.com

Real Wealth Investor and Scott Whaley – realwealthinvestor.com

Saddleback Valley Communities – svc4.com

Silverstar Finance and Janet French – silverstarfinance.com

Sunset Hills Memorial Park and Mortuary – sunsethills.cc

The Mission Inn – missioninn.com

The Mortgage Equity Group – http: themeg.net

The Naked Real Estate Investor Club – Rosie Nieto – nakedrealestateinvestorsclub.com

The Short Sale Processor and Nick Manfredi – theshortsaleprocessor.com

Virtual Real Estate Tour and Layla Tusko – 1wealthcreation.com

Wholesale Capital Corporation – wccmtg.com

80-TNG Radio – Richard Lambros 8-9-08

Friday, August 8th, 2008

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Richard Lambros

CEO of the Builders Industry Association of Southern California

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Bruce Norris is joined this week by CEO of the Builders Industry Association of Southern California and panelist for I Survived Real Estate 2008, Richard Lambros. Richard and Bruce discuss the current market, when the slow down was anticipated, how much worse it’s been than expected, percentage off in building permits in Southern California, how this downturn differs from the past downturns, the speed of deceleration, the leading factors causing the problem, the credit market getting tight really causing problems, light at the end of the tunnel, HR3221 and how it will change and help the market, stabilizing credit markets, helping the foreclosure issue, how HR3221 will help builders directly, FHA and the new loan limits, why it’s so important that limits have changed, median home prices, supply shortage of housing, homeownership levels and how California compares to other states, affordability, misconceptions that builders make huge returns on projects, cities adding fees during a boom, cities focusing on product that produce taxes and creating fees for product that does not, how some cities are actually helping by differing fees in this down market, if a big budget deficit is a concern for the building industry, some cities actually putting together incentive packages to stimulate building but a deficit causing a decline, Prop 13 and concerns, the Builders Industry Association and legislation and how the BIA is involved, how builders are highly regulated, green building and zero net energy homes, the BIA’s stance on green, how California already builds some of the most energy efficient homes in the nation, construction loans in the current market and lenders willingness to lend for building, land prices in the current market, how builders took bad outlooks in a booming market, the statistics builders watch that will suggest a comeback, biasc.org.

Richard Lambros is the Chief Executive Officer of the Building Industry Association of Southern California (BIA/SC), a non-profit trade association representing over 2,200 member companies involved in all aspects of the building industry in the six-county Los Angeles metropolitan area. The 38,000-square-mile region is home to over 16-million residents.

Richard is responsible for the day-to-day management of the sixth largest local homebuilding trade association in the nation and the largest local association in the state. He works with BIA/SC’s Board of Directors, six chapters and twelve councils to craft and implement strategies that will grow the size and strength of the association, provide valuable member services, advance industry causes and create a pro-housing climate that is conducive to sustained housing growth in Southern California. At BIA/SC, Richard has utilized his wealth of political, business and association management experience to help the association reestablish itself as the leading regional voice for the homebuilding industry. His efforts and skills were recognized nationally in 2004 when he won the National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) “Executive Officer of the Year Award.”

After nearly winning an election in 1996 to represent California’s 56th Assembly District, Richard served a two-year term as Executive Director for the California Republican Party, where he managed the administrative and political activities for the largest state Republican Party in the nation.

Prior to his political post, Richard spent over 10 years representing the interests and efforts of the housing industry. He served as the Vice President and Director of Public Affairs for the Apartment Association of Orange County (AAOC) and as Director of Governmental Relations for the Rancho Los Cerritos Association of REALTORS©. His years of service and contributions to the housing industry earned him special recognition in 1996 as the Alliance of Real Estate Associations’ “Legislative Advocate of the Year.”

A second-generation California native, Richard was born in Los Angeles and raised in Downey, California. He attended the University of Southern California, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science. Richard is married and lives with his wife, Colleen, and four children in Fullerton.

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