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256-TNGRadio – Carolina Reid 12-17-11

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Carolina Reid

Carolina Reid

Senior Researcher at the Center for Responsible Lending

(Full Bio)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/15/11

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

In a big news story, 30-year mortgages decreased to below 4%, matching with the lowest ever recorded.  Housing Wire reported an improvement in housing prices for the whole year, despite a month-over-month decrease in prices.  Unemployment claims decreased to 366,000, the lowest on record since May 2008.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“Three of Four Major Investor Groups Increased Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Investments During The Third Quarter “ (12-15-11)

“The level of commercial/multifamily mortgage debt outstanding was essentially unchanged in the third quarter of 2011, as three of the four major investor groups increased their holdings, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).”

Housing Wire - “California home sales show year-over-year improvements” (12-15-11)

“Home sales in the San Francisco area edged up in November over year-ago figures, although they dipped from October. Statewide, sales across California also declined month-over-month, but showed an increase from year-ago figures, DataQuick said.”

Bloomberg“Mortgage Rates for 30-Year U.S. Loans Fall to 3.94% as Record Low Matched” (12-15-11)

“Mortgage rates for 30-year U.S. loans declined, matching the lowest level on record, as the European debt crisis drove investors to the relative safety of Treasury bonds.”

Los Angeles Times - “New jobless claims drop to lowest level since 2008″ (12-15-11)

“Initial claims for unemployment insurance dropped to 366,000 last week, the lowest level since May of 2008, in another sign that the job market is making a significant improvement.  ”

Housing Wire“FHFA extends loan data implementation deadline for GSEs” (12-14-11)

“The Federal Housing Finance Agency extended the deadline for changes to how lenders will submit mortgages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”

Hard Money Loan Closed

Los Angeles, California hard money loan closed by The Norris Group private lending. Real estate investor received loan for $165,000 on a 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom home appraised for $244,000.

In The News:

Wall Street Journal - “Related Switches Condos to Rentals” (12-15-11)

“For at least three years, Related Cos. had been planning for the 151 apartments on the highest floors of its new apartment tower in Midtown to be condominiums, sitting atop 663 rental units in the building’s first 50 stories.  Now, with construction finishing up on the final apartments in the bulky 63-story MiMA building on 42nd Street and 10th Avenue, the developer is changing course. Related is putting all of the formerly for-sale apartments up for rent, aiming at the high-end with rents of more than $20,000 a month for a three-bedroom unit.”

Housing Wire“Wells Fargo, Citi top Fannie list of mortgage servicers” (12-15-11)

“Wells Fargo (WFC: 25.86 0.00%) and Citigroup (C: 26.21 +0.61%) continue on pace to score high marks for foreclosure prevention in 2011, according to Fannie Mae.”

CNN Money - “Foreclosures fall, but outlook isn’t bright” (12-15-11)

“Foreclosure filings may have fallen in November but the number of homes scheduled for bank auctions grew significantly, indicating that a new wave of foreclosures are set to take place in the New Year.”

California Real Estate Investor Events:

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

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

Looking Back:

16,208 new and resale houses and condos sold in Southern California in November 2010. The NAR claimed 9 of the 10 most cost-effective home repair projects in terms of value recouped were exterior replacement projects. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods expected revenue from multifamily real estate investment trusts to grow at an annual rate of 4.6% in 2011. Investor confidence in U.S. commercial property is the highest since 2007, according to Bank of America.

For more information about The Norris Group’s California hard money loans or our California Trust Deed investments, visit the website or call our office at 951-780-5856 for more information. For upcoming California real estate investor training and events, visit The Norris Group website and our California investor event calendar. You’ll also find our award-winning real estate radio show on KTIE 590am at 6pm on Saturdays or you can listen to over 200 podcasts in our free investor radio archive.

255-TNGRadio – Carolina Reid 12-10-11

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Carolina Reid

Carolina Reid

Senior Researcher at the Center for Responsible Lending

(Full Bio)

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

One of Carolina’s reports stated, “For decades, owning a home has been the most accessible way to build wealth and gain a foothold in the middle class, especially for lower income and/or middle income borrowers of color. This crisis threatens to undo decades of social, economic, and educational progress.” Therefore, whoever thought of the title “Lost Ground” chose a very meaningful title. The title was also a play on a previous report the Center for Responsible Lending published called “Losing Ground,” where they predicted the scale of the foreclosure crisis was related to subprime lending. Five years into the crisis, they thought it would be interesting to revisit this and see what we know now. Right now, we know that we are only about halfway through the crisis, which was a surprise in terms of how many borrowers are still delinquent or in some stage of the foreclosure process. We know that although the majority of borrowers that have been affected have been white families as well as higher income or middle income families, a disproportionate share of the foreclosure crisis has fallen on communities of color. Bruce wondered if it was possible that the lending programs were an attempt to get the people that had not had a chance to own a home to own one. This probably would have naturally been a higher percentage of families of color.

In “The Lost Ground,” the latest report CRL put out, they looked carefully at what led to the differential foreclosure rates among communities of color, borrowers of color, and they found it was very closely tied to the loan products that they received. It’s not necessarily that people were lending to the wrong kinds of borrowers, but rather they were offering borrowers the wrong kinds of loan products. These loan products had risky features, such as teaser adjustable interest rates, prepayment penalties. Some of the option ARMs and amortization loans that were really common between the 2004 and 2007 lending period really have much higher foreclosure rates than loans that are proven to build equity and wealth for families, such as the 30-year fixed rate mortgages. These were the years that the subprime product and all the creative loans had their peak. Bruce said that they buy foreclosures at the courthouse steps, and he believes the majority are two years of loans from 2006 and 2007.

In the report CRL just released, they were looking at loans that only originated between 2004 and 2008 at the height of the subprime lending boom. They were working with a sample of 27 million loans, and they also took special attention to try and make sure the loans they were representing had a wide coverage of the mortgage market. They looked at subprime, prime, and Alt A loans. They therefore have broad market coverage in these results. In the 2009 report, “The Untold Cost of Subprime Lending,” a very important question was asked, which was, “How did borrowers decide on which loan product to accept, and how knowledgeable were they about the loan terms?” This was a question that was not answered in the 2009 report. Carolina said she did not have an answer for this, but she did know that brokers, with their incentives to steer borrowers into more expensive loans, had a big role in it. However, she is still not sure of the mechanisms by which certain borrowers went to brokers and others may not have gone to brokers. CRL knows the loans were complicated, and borrowers did not shop around for a mortgage the way others may shop around for other product and therefore cost-compare. This put them in a more vulnerable position to get a product that was not well-suited to their circumstances. The also were probably given a product that was much more expensive than the loan that they actually might have qualified for based on their credit score.

One of the things Bruce recalled during that timeframe was he could not get on the radio without hearing about a loan program. It seems you would have been exposed to at least the teaser program on radio, called on it, and found out you didn’t qualify. It would seem at the time you would have known there was a shift in what you were going to be able to receive. This confused Bruce in a way in that it seemed like there would have been a natural exposure to at least a competitive product, or people were dealing with other people they felt so comfortable with that they had blind trust. Bruce wondered if CRL ever did a study on this and from whom loans were obtained from as well as there being so much trust they did not realize that they were taking advantage of the spread premium. Carolina answered that when she was on the Federal Reserve, she did a study that interviewed borrowers to develop a better understanding of why different borrowers received different kinds of loan products. She expressed with her own views that she discovered people did have a lot of trust in both brokers and lenders as being the professionals and trusted advisors who would put them into a responsible loan product or a loan product that was well-suited to their financial circumstances. What the borrowers did not understand was that these brokers had a financial incentive to spear them into a more expensive loan. There was not much evidence of shopping around, and it was very different to hear a radio ad than to actually know, given your own financial circumstances and credit score, how you might qualify. Carolina believes it is also important to distinguish between lending programs that were run through non-profits and other affordable homeownership programs where we have seen extremely low foreclosure rates and the lending products that were being pushed by the private market over the specific time period.

Bruce said this was probably the only time in history where the lenders themselves did not care if the loan was ever repaid because they did not own it very long. This is an astonishing piece of history we will probably never get to relive. It’s clear that there was not much incentive to make responsible, safe loans over this time period; and it has had devastating consequences for borrowers. This is one of the things about people who are losing their homes. 2.3 million people have already lost their home in foreclosure, and Bruce wondered what percentage of these people put down a down payment as well as what percentage of the people did a refinance and pulled out money. Carolina did not know the percentages off the top of her head, but there have been studies done off of this. CRL did look at the same patterns within the data for lost ground, and they found that when they looked at the patterns for people who put down a down payment and people who did not put down a down payment, they found there was not much difference in terms of who had marketed the most risky loan products. This included the relationship between the loan products and their ultimate status at the end. This could include whether or not they were in foreclosure. However, they know now that it is quite important it is to document somebody’s income and assets, which is part of the loan underwriting process. There were different terms for the risky loans and higher interest, but this was because the lenders were not documenting certain things.

A lot of the people have lost their homes in foreclosure, and Bruce wondered how many of them have actually lost money. If we looked into it, we may find a great many people did not have a down payment, they have now been in the home for two years not making a payment, or they have extracted equity in the meantime. We are concentrating on a group of people that lost their property. As an example of what could happen in Riverside where home values have declined by 50%, you could have somebody who borrowed $600,000 on a $600,000 home without a down payment. This was very easy to do. If they still owe $600, but the house is worth $300, and a next door neighbor put down 50% but owes $300 on a $300 grand house and has literally $300,000 of after tax dollars disappear from his life, then these people who we don’t talk about have probably been more damaged than the people we do. The negative spillover effects of foreclosure on surrounding neighbors is huge and on the market as a whole. There are plenty of borrowers who are still in their homes and have seen their equity erode as well as their wealth in their homes. This is one of the reasons we are pushing so hard to try and stabilize the housing market through foreclosure prevention just to stop all this downward slide of house prices.

Bruce said the reason we are not halfway through the foreclosure process is because we have delayed on foreclosing. Somebody who was foreclosed on fairly quickly in 2008 is literally re-emerging as a buyer in 2011 and 2012 because the system allows them to re-buy in three years after a foreclosure and get an FHA loan. For this gigantic group of people who we have not even stopped the credit damage, they are not going to be buyers until around 2015-2016. One of the problems and unintended consequences is your market does not heal really fast when you prevent people from actually losing a property. Carolina believes one of the reasons it is important to stop foreclosures is because of the negative spillover effects on neighborhoods. The neighborhoods that have been hit by the most foreclosures tend to be lower income neighborhoods and tend to be neighborhoods with high concentrations of minority households. These were neighborhoods that were starting to improve and a lot were invested in in terms of community development, but now they have received a big shock. The community there has been really hard hit by this process. The other real reason is there may be a few borrowers who are coming out of the foreclosure process and doing just fine a few years down the road, but most of the research shows a financial shock like that can actually have devastating consequences, not only in terms of rebuilding their credit score and regaining financial stability, then more generally the lost accumulation of wealth potential over the time period.
Carolina said she is not as sanguine as Bruce is about doing a foreclosure quickly is going to be the best thing for borrowers or neighborhoods. She agreed we cannot prevent every foreclosure, but in a lot of cases improved servicer practices would help encourage loan modifications for borrowers who can and do want to stay in their homes. We have good evidence that effective loan modifications do reduce the risk of subsequent default, and this is probably in everybody’s interest. This includes not only the borrower but also the investor in the neighborhood.

Bruce went on to talk about loan modifications. These have a fail rate of about 50% depending on when they were done. If you created a loan product with a 50% failure rate, you would not be calling this a success. However, Carolina disagreed in that she said the failure rates are the re-default rates that were calculated on loan modifications that actually did not necessarily reduce the payment. It did not help the borrower, so it was not surprising that the loan re-defaulted. She found that loans that do actually reduce monthly payments, particularly loans that help reduce them such as principle burden, have an excellent record for not going back into default very easily.

Bruce read a recent document that said facing the foreclosure crisis requires servicers to make reasonable modification. Bruce wondered if the word “requires” can be translated to mean requiring principle loan reductions. However, Carolina does not believe this to be the case. We all believe that principle reduction would go a long way to help stabilize the housing market in general. There are still some conservative economists who are calling for principle reduction, which everybody sees as a necessary step. However, the word “require” here refers to making sure that servicers clean up their practices and pursue modifications more responsibly than they have in the past and eliminate abusive practices such as duel tracking and modification at the same time as a foreclosure.

Bruce agreed because he said it was very frustrating for them who bought properties at the courthouse steps. When you legitimately buy property here, but then you go to someone’s door and they are in shock because they were told that they had a loan mod in progress, then this is awkward for everyone. They are not trying to short-circuit the system, but they are trying to make a living buying and rehabbing properties. You have people who have been told one thing by one department, but you have another department not even knowing the conversation occurred. This is not right. If you know the history, then this is the Great Depression at least of real estate. We have never had anything like this since the Great Depression where prices have fallen not 5% a year but sometimes 5% a month in the worst hit areas until you could have a 50% equity cushion and have no cushion inside of 18 months. This is a ridiculous price dive.

One of the things that we have to be careful of is the unintended consequences of policies that a lender looks at and says he did not know they could do it; but now that he does know it, his lending policies going forward will be different. Your goal is not to make the foreclosure rate 0 in the future because that would probably eliminate a lot of people from potential ownership that would in fact make a payment. One of the things that CRL has been doing research on is to show that you do not have to return to an incredibly restrictive environment to be able to promote healthy lending and a healthy housing market. You can eliminate the most abusive products, then get down to an acceptable foreclosure rate without necessarily excluding borrowers who would otherwise be qualified from access to credit. We have used a term “unprecedented,” which really has a duel meaning. It means what we did before made sense when we did not have one of these events. We just have to go back and do whatever we did prior to 2000. If we look at the data, we actually find that, in terms of expansion of homeownership rates and expansion of homeownership rates for lower income and minority households, we saw homeownership rates for them expand more during the early 1990 periods than we did in 2003 and 2004 onwards. The sub-prime boom actually helped to reduce the homeownership rate among those groups, so the riskiest lending did nothing to expand access to opportunity in the way we would like it to expand.

In the ‘80s and ‘90s, there was a lot of attention paid to making sure that we do not restrict lending on purpose. This would have increased the ownership rate and the provision of affordable homeownership programs that offered borrowers with lower incomes and wealth the ability to access homeownership through a mortgage that was a 30-year fixed rate mortgage with reasonable monthly payments well within the borrowers’ ability to repay the loan over the long term. Bruce said the whole state of California is virtually an affordable program. However, in relationship to people’s incomes, house prices in California still remain high. It has definitely become more affordable in certain areas, the Inland Empire and the Central Valley being among some of the hardest hit in the country. We have to remember that over that late 1990 and early 2000 time period, house prices were so far above anybody’s annual growth in terms of their income that we’re not even at stable levels yet. Bruce said he would agree with this on price, but not on payment because if you combine a median price decline of $600 to below 3 and a decline to 4%, that monthly payment that emerges is very often less than rent.

There is a report produced by Cal Poly Pomona that is a really good report for people who do research because it is not median price or Case-Shiller. They actually have taken the time to appraise about 1,000 California properties every 6 months for decades. It is literally one house appraised in 1970 for one price and 2011 for another price. This is pretty neat because you can go backwards and see the price increase or decrease. What Bruce did was he took Lancaster, which is certainly one of the hardest hit areas. He took the compilation of properties and over the 20 year period from 1990 this group of properties lost 11% in real value. But interest rates in 1990 were 10%, so if you are a buyer in 2011 you get an 11% price discount, a 60% interest discount, and you’re making more money in the area. The payment that emerges for that buyer is $.29 on the dollar of the equivalent in 1990. This is the all-time monthly sale for ownership, and you have to consider interest rate because it is probably the biggest piece and one of the most economically beneficial for people that have lower income or are just beginning because it locks in their housing cost at fixed rate for a long time. This is one of the things in which we are missing the boat. One of the things Carolina intentionally did not point out was the need for a down payment, making a very big difference in the outcome of the loan. The best performing loan for probably the last 40 years is a VA, no down loan. This has the best payment history and the least damage for foreclosure. It would be a perfect time to have a nothing-down loan program right now, as this would help the people who don’t have a down payment but a payment they can afford. There would not be any harm in it, and it would be very successful. CRL has found that down payment matters somewhat, but it does not necessarily explain foreclosures to the extent that some people would say it does.

Tune in next week for part 2 of our interview with Carolina Reid.

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/08/11

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to Housing Wire, unemployment claims are at their lowest they have been since February.  Mortgage rates are down to 4%, leading to an increase in home-purchase loans, according to the Los Angeles Times.  The Realty Times reported a postponement in foreclosure evictions by the Feds until 2012.

In The News:

Housing Wire - “Jobless claims drop to lowest level since February” (12-8-11)

“The number of people filing initial jobless claims last week dropped to the lowest level since February.  The Labor Department said the seasonally adjusted figure of actual initial claims for the week ended Dec. 3 decreased by 23,000 to 381,000 from 404,000 the previous week, which was revised upward 2,000.”

Mortgage Bankers Association - “MBA: Third Quarter Mortgage Banker Production Profits Improved with Higher Origination Volumes and Favorable Secondary Gains” (12-8-11)

“Independent mortgage banks and subsidiaries made an average profit of $1,263 on each loan they originated in the third quarter of 2011, up from $575 per loan in the second quarter of 2011, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s
(MBA) Third Quarter 2011 Mortgage Bankers Performance Report released today.”

Realty Times - “Feds, Banks Postpone Foreclosure Evictions Until 2012″ (12-8-11)

“Government agencies and mortgage lenders have a little something to temporarily ease your  holiday blues if you are a homeowner facing foreclosure — the existing roof over your head until after the New Year.”

Los Angeles Times - “With mortgages at 4%, demand for home-purchase loans rises” (12-8-11)

“With 30-year mortgage rates still averaging a rock-bottom 4%, applications to purchase homes rose after Thanksgiving to the highest level in four months.  Freddie Mac’s weekly report on home lender offerings, released Thursday, showed the typical rate for a 30-year loan at 3.99%, the sixth straight week at or slightly below 4%.  Last year at this time, the 30-year fixed loan averaged 4.61%.”

San Francisco Chronicle - “Plummeting Income From Investments Shaves U.S. Household Cash” (12-8-11)

“The housing market collapse, historically low interest rates and corporations  stingy with dividends helped cut the median household income in two of every  three U.S. counties, the U.S. Census Bureau reported today.”

Housing Wire“MGIC says delinquent loan inventory declined in November” (12-8-11)

“Mortgage insurer MGIC Corp. (MTG: 3.43 -4.72%) saw its pool of delinquent insured loans drop from 179,824 mortgages at the beginning of November to 175,691 by the end of the month.”

NAHB - “Index Shows Continued Improvement for Apartment and Condominium Market” (12-8-11)

“The Multifamily Production Index (MPI), a leading indicator for the multifamily market, released by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) today showed continued improvement for the fifth consecutive quarter for the apartment and condominium housing market.”

DS News - “Cordray Fails to Win Approval from Senate for Top CFPB Post” (12-8-11)

“The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is still headless.  Senators had scheduled a confirmation vote Thursday morning for Richard Cordray – President Obama’s pick to lead the newly formed watchdog agency. Republicans, though, blocked the process before lawmakers could even get to a final vote.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, The MBA’s weekly survey showed mortgage applications decreased 22.8 percent. Morgan Stanley predicted U.S. home prices would decline as much as 11% by 2012, while Douglas Yearley of Toll Brother expected home sales to increase in 2012.

For more information about The Norris Group’s California hard money loans or our California Trust Deed investments, visit the website or call our office at 951-780-5856 for more information. For upcoming California real estate investor training and events, visit The Norris Group website and our California investor event calendar. You’ll also find our award-winning real estate radio show on KTIE 590am at 6pm on Saturdays or you can listen to over 200 podcasts in our free investor radio archive.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/02/11

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

Sources:

Young workers getting hired again
Jobless claims edge up to 402,000
Case-Shiller Puts Home Prices 3.9% Below Last Year
Pending Sales of Existing U.S. Hoems Exceed Forecasts With 10.4% Increase
NAR expects some commercial real estate growth next year
Construction Spending in U.S. Rose for Third Consecutive Month in October
30-Year Mortgage Rates Increase to 4%
Average time to foreclose sets new record of 631 days
Citigroup’s $285 million SEC settlement rejected
Central banks join forces to ease debt crisis
PMI Insurance

Today’s News Synopsis:

In this week’s video, Aaron Norris gives the news of the week in the world of real estate and other big events.  In a big news story, unemployment decreased to 8.6%, the lowest it has been since March 2009.  The number of homes in foreclosure also set a record at over 2 million.  In Massachusetts, Ally Financial has stopped buying home loans after the biggest mortgage lenders in the state were accused of conducting illegal foreclosure practices.

In The News:

Housing WireREO investors squeezing out owner-occupants” (12-02-11)

“Owner-occupancy rates of real estate owned sales are plummeting as investors who recognize their economic value are taking advantage of bulk transactions, a trend that nonprofits and trade groups are closely monitoring.

Bloomberg - “Ally Financial Halts Mortgage Purchases in Massachusetts After State Sues” (12-02-11)

“Ally Financial Inc.’s GMAC Mortgage unit stopped buying home loans in Massachusetts after the state accused the five biggest mortgage lenders of conducting illegal foreclosures.”

Inman - “Record number of homes in foreclosure” (12-02-11)

“The foreclosure pipeline has never been more crammed, with lenders attempting to push 2.2 million homes through the process as of the end of October, according to a monthly report issued today by Lender Processing Services Inc.”

DS News“OCC Investigates Foreclosures of 5,000 Military Members” (12-02-11)

“The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) launched an investigation into the possible wrongful foreclosures of about 5,000 military members by 10 of the nation’s largest banks.”

Los Angeles Times - “Jobless rate falls to 8.6%, sending mixed message on economy” (12-02-11)

“The U.S. jobless rate fell sharply last month to its lowest level since March 2009 as employers stepped up their hiring in the latest sign of a steadily improving economy.”

Housing Wire“California real estate execs arrested in alleged foreclosure scam” (12-02-11)

“Authorities arrested three top officers at Stockton, Calif., real estate company who allegedly took in steep fees without performing loan modifications.”

San Francisco Chronicle - “Property managers busy as rental market surges” (12-02-11)

“Just as the U.S. housing boom gave birth to such home buyer websites as Zillow and Redfin, services for rental properties are thriving following a surge in  foreclosures and stiffening of mortgage standards. Membership in the National  Association of Residential Property Managers has almost doubled in five years to  a record 3,400 members, according to the trade group.”

Realtor Magazine - “Mortgage Rates Continue to Hover at Record Lows” (12-02-11)

“Averages on fixed-mortgage rates continued to hover near historic lows for the week, while adjustable-rate mortgages inched down slightly to reach new record lows, Freddie Mac reports in its weekly mortgage market survey.”

Looking Back:

The NAR reported pending home sales increased 10.4% in October 2010. According to RealtyTrac, foreclosure sales decreased 25% in the 3rd quarter of 2010. Statistics from the Labor Department showed jobless claims rose 6.3% the previous week. Greg Lippmann of LibreMax Capital predicted national home prices would drop another 10%.

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 11/16/11

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

In a big story in the news, home-builder confidence rose to 20 points this month, the highest it has been since May 2010.  According to the latest Mortgage Application Survey, mortgage applications are down 10% from last week, although mortgage rates have remained relatively the same.  Rentals in Southern California increased for the 14th straight month.

In The News:

Bloomberg - “Southern California Home Prices Fall 4.8%” (11-15-11)

“Sales of high-end properties in Southern California dropped last month to the lowest level in more than two years after the size of mortgages backed by the government was reduced, according to DataQuick.”

NAHB - “Builder Confidence Rises Three Points in November” (11-16-11)

“Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes rose by three points to 20 on the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) for November, released today. The gain builds on a revised three-point increase in October, and brings the confidence gauge to its highest level since May of 2010.”

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

“Mortgage applications decreased 10.0 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending November 11, 2011.  This week’s results include an adjustment to account for the Veterans Day holiday.”

Housing Wire - “DePaul study warns of growing gap in affordable rental housing” (11-16-11)

“The need for affordable rental housing increased substantially over the past decade in Cook County, Ill., in what mirrors a national trend, according to a study from the Institute for Housing Studies at DePaul University in Chicago.”

Realty Times - “Mortgage Rates Remain Unchanged As Investors Eye Europe” (11-16-11)

“Low conforming mortgage rates have been the driving factor for the increase in mortgage applications. According to the Mortgage Banker’s Association, mortgage refinance applications increased 12.1% and purchase applications increased 4.8% for the week ending November 4th. Current 30 year fixed mortgage rates are at 3.750%, 15 year fixed mortgage rates are at 3.125% and 5/1 adjustable mortgage rates are at 2.500%.”

O.C. Register - “SoCal rents rise for 14th straight month” (11-16-11)

“Rents in Southern California rose on an annual basis for the 14th consecutive month, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports.  The rent slice of the regional Consumer Price Index shows “rent of primary residence” rising in October at 1.1% annual rate.”

Realtor Magazine - “Freddie Mac Launches Winter REO Sale” (11-16-11)

“HomeSteps, a Freddie Mac real estate sales unit, kicked off a sales promotion this week to unload some of its inventory of foreclosed homes in several cities.”

Wall Street Journal - “Zell Firm Leads Bids for Archstone” (11-16-11)

“Equity Residential, the apartment company headed by real-estate mogul  Sam Zell, has emerged as the lead bidder in the contest to buy roughly half of rival Archstone in what would be one of the largest real-estate transactions since the downturn, according to people familiar with the situation.”

Housing Wire“Architecture billings index up, overall demand still down” (11-16-11)

“The architecture billings index improved its score by nearly three points from September, though the 49.4 score still reflects low demand, according to the American Institute of Architects.”

Looking Back:

16,744 new and resale homes sold in Southern California during October of 2010. Builder confidence increased slightly this in November 2010, according to the NAHB. Sean O’Toole of ForeclosureRadar believed the foreclosure investigation would only have a brief effect on the market. FHA wrote $319 billion in new insurance in 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 event calendar. You’ll also find our award-winning real estate radio show on KTIE 590am at 6pm on Saturdays or you can listen to over 200 podcasts in our free investor radio archive.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/10/11

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Sources:

Past-Due Mortgages Up for First Time Since 2009: Report
Poll: 42% want less government in housing
Foreclosure Filings Rise 7%
Senate wants changes to Fannie, Freddie executive pay
Fannie Mae Requests $7.8B From Taxpayers to Cover Q3 Deficit
California Home Prices and Home Values: Zillow Home Value Index
Home Prices Decline in Almost Three-Fourths of U.S. Metro Areas
Mortgage rates dip slightly

Today’s News Synopsis:

In this week’s video, Aaron Norris gives the news of the week in the world of real estate and other big events.  Foreclosure filings increased 7% last month, the highest they have been in seven months.  Housing Wire reported a slight decrease in mortgage rates of slightly less than 4%.  Unemployment claims are at the lowest levels they have been since April, a good sign for the economy.

In The News:

Housing Wire - Mortgage rates dip slightly” (11-10-11)

“The nation’s average mortgage rates changed little from last week amid a mix of economic data reports, Freddie Mac said Thursday.  The results of Freddie’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey revealed that the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.99%, dropping below 4% for the second time this year.

Bloomberg“Foreclosure Filings in U.S. Rise 7%” (11-10-11)

“U.S. foreclosure filings rose 7 percent in October to a seven-month high as lenders started to speed up action against delinquent borrowers after a yearlong review into documentation, according to RealtyTrac Inc.”

NAHB - “Builder Confidence Declines in Third Quarter for 55+ Housing Market” (11-10-11)

“Builder confidence in the 55+ housing market for single-family homes fell three points to 12 compared to the same period a year ago, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) 55+ Housing Market Index (HMI) released today.”

Los Angeles Times - “New unemployment claims fall again in positive sign for job growth” (11-10-11)

“The number of people who filed for unemployment benefits last week dropped again to 390,000, the lowest level since April, continuing a trend that bodes well for job growth.  The number of initial jobless claims was down 10,000 from the previous week’s revised figure of 400,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday. The initial figure for two weeks ago was 397,000, but was revised upward.”

Housing Wire - “New law pushes Vegas off top of foreclosure list” (11-10-11)

“Las Vegas is no longer the top foreclosure city in the country. A new Nevada law that went into effect in October caused many mortgage servicers to pause the foreclosure process, knocking Vegas off the spot it held held for 22 consecutive
months, RealtyTrac said in a report Thursday.”

DS News - “Shadow Inventory Lurks Behind Recent Price Gains” (11-10-11)

“Home prices rose 4 percent during the third quarter, according to the latest IAS360 House Price Index from Integrated Asset Services. The index also posted a 0.4 percent gain from the beginning of the year and a 0.6 percent gain from the third quarter of last year.”

Los Angeles Times - “Falling prices mean rising affordability, California Realtors say” (11-10-11)

“Call it the silver lining of falling home prices.  With low interest rates and cheaper housing throughout the Golden State, the percentage of homebuyers who could afford to purchase a home increased in the third quarter, a real estate group said Thursday.”

Housing Wire“Three more mortgage servicers change foreclosures” (11-10-11)

“Three mortgage servicers agreed with the New York Department of Financial Services to make procedural changes similar to those of the consent orders signed by much larger institutions earlier in the year.”

Looking Back:

A lack of cooperation between big banks and investors caused the California foreclosure program to be delayed. The FDIC approved a proposal that would base fees on banks’ liabilities rather than their domestic deposits. Zillow expected home values to continue to depreciate through the end of 2010. The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform suggested limiting mortgage interest rate deductions on taxes.

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 11/7/11

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to the Realty Times, pending home sales decreased 4.6% last September from the prior month.  CoreLogic reported home prices decreased  1.1% in September for the second month in a row.  Over the past 6 months, foreclosure starts have been increasing steadily for private-label residential mortgage-backed securities.

In The News:

Housing Wire - “CoreLogic home price index down 1.1% for September” (11-7-11)

“Housing prices dipped for the second straight month in September, falling 1.1% from the prior month, according to the CoreLogic (CLGX: 13.88 -1.28%) home price index.”

DS News - “Regulators Seize Lenders in Nebraska and Utah” (11-7-11)

“State and federal regulators have closed the doors on two more community-based lenders in Nebraska and Utah, bringing this year’s tally of failed banks to 87. Mid City Bank, Inc. in Omaha has been closed. It operated five branch locations, with $105.5 million in deposits and assets totaling $106.1 million ”

Realty Times - “Real Estate Outlook: Pending Sales Decline” (11-7-11)

“Pending homes sale declined in September, down 4.6 percent from the month prior. Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the housing market is being excessively constrained. “A combination of weak consumer confidence and continuing tight lending criteria held back home buyers, even though the private sector added nearly 2 million net new jobs in the past 12 months,” he said.”

NAHB - “Improving Markets Index Expands to 30 Metros in November” (11-7-11)

“The number of improving housing markets continued to expand for a third consecutive month in November, rising from 23 to 30 on the latest National Association of Home Builders/First American Improving Markets Index (IMI), released today.  The list dropped two metros and added nine new ones – Cheyenne, Wyo.; Corpus Christi, Tex.; Davenport, Iowa.; Fort Collins, Colo.; Hinesville, Ga.; Lima, Ohio; Monroe, La.; Tyler, Tex.; and Williamsport, Pa”

Housing Wire“October bank failures tied to CRE exposure, further risks remain” (11-7-11)

“The 11 U.S. banks that failed in October cratered under the weight of commercial real estate exposure, Trepp LLC said Monday.”

DS News - “Foreclosure Starts Rise as Servicers Process Backlog of Delinquent Loans” (11-7-11)

“Foreclosure starts among private-label residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) have been rising toward historic averages over the past six months, which will lead to an influx of distressed properties bringing downward pressure to the housing market, according to recent RMBS Performance Metrics from Fitch Ratings.”

Housing Wire“White House, agencies cut red-tape for some multifamily housing developers” (11-7-11)

“Government agencies are peeling back a few regulatory requirements in several states to make it easier for developers of federally subsidized multifamily housing to develop properties without having to pay for redundant inspections
and other repetitive guidelines.”

Realtor Magazine - “Hedge Funds Eye Troubled Home Loans” (11-7-11)

“As U.S. banks increase efforts to shed troubled residential mortgage assets, more hedge funds are considering opportunities to buy pools of whole home loans at discount prices.”

Los Angeles Times - “Use of ‘target-date’ funds grows in 401(k) plans” (11-7-11)

“According to a new study, Americans are increasing their use of so-called target-date mutual funds in 401(k) plans, and most people report being satisfied with them.  Among active and knowledgeable investors, use of target funds has nearly doubled to 41% today from 22% in 2005, according to the survey of more than 1,000 people by investment firm AllianceBernstein.”

The Washington Post - “Census data show wealt of older Americans is 47 times that of young adults, widest gap ever” (11-7-11)

“The wealth gap between younger and older Americans has stretched to the widest on record, worsened by a prolonged economic downturn that has wiped out job opportunities for young adults and saddled them with housing and college debt.”

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

250-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2011 part 3 11-05-11

Friday, November 4th, 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011


(Full Bio)

streamitunesdownloadrss

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 loans and the market. An $8,000 rebate was equivalent to a nothing-down loan most of the time on prices. It is not known how well this loan portfolio performed, but it would be interesting to know since it is in essence a nothing-down program without spending the $8 grand. It was pointed out to most of the bankers who had made loans under this program and held it in portfolio that the loan-to-value ratio they believed they had at the time they made the loan was higher after prices receded again, so they had more risk in their portfolio than they thought they did. Bruce and Doug still think it will come out very well. We’re close to the bottom, but we have probably already created a payment that was less than rent. Doug bought a house in Florida last September since they were on sale.

Eric Janszen wrote a book called The Post-Catastrophe Economy, and one of the main things Bruce underlined in the book stated, “The United States will rebuild on its ethics of hard work, education, fairness and honesty, its culture of entrepreneurial vs. risk-taking, of competition of savings and of avoidance of debts, it core competencies in technology development and original invention, its strong institution of property rights and rule of law.” It was Eric’s hope that we would have spent the last two years going forward and hopefully building infrastructure to a new set of tools, transportation, energy, communication, and infrastructure that you call Techi. However, this was not something we did. The policy we took instead was characterized by Eric as “print and pray.” There was no consorted effort or consensus on what to do beyond the emergency measures that were taken to halt the deflationary process in the recession. This is why Bruce asked the question about fiscal policy because a long-term fiscal policy would not be short-term relief or pleasing. If we really did something long-term, the results would be out there a ways. If we approached it as a return on investment and followed the idea that there is certain infrastructure that if you invest in it in a country, it increases your capacity for economic growth and not as an expense but a multiplier effect, then you would have to think very carefully about how you would do that. This takes some planning and execution. In order to pull this off, you have to have enough of a consensus within government to not get into a dysfunctional argument about whether it’s going to result in the short-term and increase in deficits.

As Doug mentioned, the American public was pretty aghast at the quality of the debate that was going on about the debt ceiling. It was not a particular constructive discussion, so most Americans are frustrated by this. There is a document that has a joint effort from Republicans and Democrats regarding the budget deficit and reducing it. You have a few people from each side pour their hearts into a year or two’s worth of work and come to a legitimate conclusion, so Bruce wondered how each of the parties have reacted to the document, whether they knew it was not everything they wanted but had to sacrifice; or did they get beaten from both sides. It’s very difficult to put anything forward since all their discussions are so ideologically charged. It’s a simple constructive plan based on a simple factual argument. You very quickly obtain a dialogue that devolves into some argument about whether we are going bankrupt tomorrow, which is not going to happen. Doug agreed with this; he thought the roots were there for a good discussion. If you take Paul Ryan’s plan and the president’s deficit commission plan, the two of those elements together could lead to a very constructive debate about how to make some long-term adjustments. You’re not going to fix it in two years; it’s something that is going to take some time. Washington did not engage with those elements as prep-starting reference points.

Eric mentioned an output gap in his book. The concept of an output gap is every year the Congressional budget office puts out what they project is what the growth rate of the economy would be if everybody who wanted to have a job had a job. All the producers and consumers are efficient actors in the market. What happens is in a recession you are operating below a theoretical growth rate, so the difference between your theoretical growth rate and where you actually are is the output gap. It’s really a measure of unemployment. In the 1970s, the policy was to try to close the upper gap by any means necessary, which is the wrong approach as we will end up with a lot of inflation. The challenge is that usual reflation measures, monetary policy, and fiscal policy for the last 30 years has been very effective at closing output gaps quickly after recessions. The problem is if we do not close the output gap before the next recession, we would have a mid-gap recession. This is another recession that opens the gap further with what was left over from the previous recession. We have not had this since 1938. Mid-gap recessions cause very significant add-on problems. It’s feasible that we could have one of these, but as Doug said it would probably be caused by an external event, probably in Europe.

The next ten years of investing will not be like the last ten. In 2001 a portfolio was created that was composed of treasury bonds and gold, which outperformed everything if you did not do anything with it. It beat the S&P, both in terms of volatility, draw-down, and batting average, everything you could think of. This is not good. Hopefully over the next ten years we get back on track where we are growing the economy by growing it in a more organic fashion, not to refinance. One of Eric’s investments happens to be connected to apartments, and one particular investment is in a company that sells into B markets of multifamily residential real estate. The theory behind it was the cost of capital was going to remain low, but the rents were going to start to rise. Cap rates were going to improve, and they were going to be profitable investments.

Eric also talks about in his book the concept of having public/private partnerships create an infrastructure. We have not done that much in this country to create this type of infrastructure successfully. Back in the early days a lot of our highways were built with European money funding private enterprises to build our highways. Most people forget that, but we took the public route after World War II, and our infrastructures were rebuilt through public finance. In Europe when they did not have any money, they used public and private partnerships to build infrastructure roads, highways, and bridges. Typically that model is adopted in times when governments are very constrained fiscally. It becomes more efficient to combine private enterprise and the risk management of government to combine together to build new infrastructure.

One of the things Eric warns about in his book is the right and wrong ways to do public and private partnerships. The wrong way is getting public money and giving it to your buddies to go build things. The right way to do it is to create a real competitive market where the partnerships actually have to compete with each other and perform to metrics, and they can’t get another job unless the last one worked really well. One of the hardest things is that there seems to be a lack of credibility to say the least when you want to tax people more or you want to have partnerships, and then you find out that the basis for that partnership was other than for a good reason. You get very suspicious about someone writing the next check or asking you to contribute more. Bruce did not understand how we get away from that. It’s no secret that most Americans are frustrated with American finance, and that is one of the first things we have to fix in this country.

In the past, there were common reasons for foreclosures. Sean O’Toole started investing in foreclosures in 2002, and one of the things he had the hardest time with was none of them made any sense. Everything had equity, so all of the folks could sell. Sean really struggled with this, especially as a son of a logic professor. It finally dawned on him, with the help of his business partner, that it was the five D’s: drugs, debt, disease, divorce, and denial. When you knocked on people’s doors, it was one of those five things. This was back in 2002-2006, so there was equity everywhere. Those five things were what he called the base rate of foreclosure, and this will always be there. If Sean had them in 2002 and 2006, he would have had them every time. The problem was not job loss because you could sell your house. It wasn’t negative equity because it just did not exist at the time. Today, your average property in California right now is $150,000 upside down by the time it hits foreclosure. It sold for $400,000, and it is now worth $250,000. It’s really an insurmountable debt, and if you look at the cost of repaying that debt over 30 years, it’s really not practical or smart for anyone trying to pay it. There are moral issues around that and what a lot of people have, but a lot of it does not make sense.

Bruce recently read an article about Fannie and Freddie not wanting to do principle reductions, and to Bruce this makes sense because you have ramifications to that that are negative. One idea Bruce had was to give somebody a principle-only payment until they break even with an appraisal. There are a lot of people who are not current, but you have more people who are current in that situation. Bruce does not want to reward the group that has not made a payment in two years and get in an article saying that it’s wonderful. However, for the people who are making the payment, there might be an eventuality where it gets to them too, especially if the people that aren’t making the payment get the goodies. However, if you just willingly said for whatever it takes, 5% a year you are going to pay principle-down, so at 25% in five years you are back to square. You would probably have a lot of people sign up for this, but Bruce did not know if this was an acceptable suggestion to lenders. Doug, the lender in the group, said there were lots of things that are going to be explored, including principle write-down. There is a lot of momentum building in Washington toward that in particular. The difficulty has always been in the foreclosure space in that there is a run rate of 1 million to 1.5 million given the level of homeownership and the number of households there are. However, the solutions have typically been one on one treatment.

When Doug was in the mortgage-servicing business at the Mortgage Bankers Association, they did a study where they took apart the servicing operation in which there were 17 elements, 14 of them having very clear economies of scale. Three of them have diseconomies of scale, and economies of scale are more expensive as they get larger. One of these is taxes of insurance, so it’s everybody else versus that because of all the local knowledge that you need about the jurisdictions. The other two are default and foreclosure. The question was if the diseconomies of scale were sufficient to override all the other efficiencies in the servicing business. Now that the experiment has been run and we know that are sufficient. The problem in solving it and why the diseconomies exist is that the treatments are a one on one kind of treatment, and you have to have quite a bit of experience in understanding the households’ situation to determine whether or not you have all the information. This could include whether or not the other people fully understand the obligation, whether they are telling you about their willingness to pay, all of the resources that they have available to pay, and their other commitments. It is very intensive.

With a program like this, you should sit down and find some households that would be very effective under that kind of household because you can determine they are willing to meet the commitment over a period of time, they have the resources that are available, and they are willing to have everything documented and make a commitment to that type of program. There are others who you could put in this type of program who would not succeed because they don’t have the criteria. The difficulty is in putting up broad based policy and applying it to everyone because this is where you find problems with the adverse selection. You would also have a bigger problem because not only would you not be selecting some, but you will also be not selecting completely the people that are current. Doug told a funny story about when TARP was voted on for the first time, his mother called him to ask him what he was doing with their money. They paid their mortgage, so when you do debt forgiveness there is a whole bunch of people who have met all their obligations, and there are going to be losses. While they were not involved in the transaction, on the tax side of things they’re going to be involved in repairing the losses. For those who own free and clear houses, they can just get a check.

Sean O’Toole said the idea that the foreclosure process is tough from servicing standpoint is a self-inflicted one. In California, there is a brilliant piece of policy which is on a purchase-money mortgage, there is no recourse. This creates a really fair balance that resolves the issue and makes it very quick and easy to deal with somebody who is not paying. Bruce and Sean jokingly said this is why it only takes 600 days to foreclose in California even though it used to only take 150 days. 150 days is a lot of time to give somebody to try to work through their problems, sell the property, and do whatever else they need to do. If they can’t, they lose the home. This is okay given that it’s no recourse. If you compare it to the rest of the world where you have significant recourse, it can pass on to your children. It’s also a fair balance of risk with the lender because the lender should take that loss. Sean does not think it is fair to let the person stay in the house when they had made a bad decision by buying their house at a certain price. They had plenty of folks giving them bad advice, a lot in the Federal government, but they were part of it. They should lose their house, and we should move forward.

The losses we are trying to prevent are multiplying. You are also creating a whole group of people that feel very entitled to still stay. When The Norris Group buys foreclosures, they have met people at the door who had not made a payment for two years, and the first sentence out of their mouth was, “Cash for Keys.” That is now the expectation. The policy coming out of Washington is increasing that expectation that they should get to live in a home for free for the rest of their lives. Imagine when the government owns all the rentals. If you want to talk about rent control problems and having no future for real estate, that is the proposal that will kill real estate in the United States forever. One of the problems is uncertainty. 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.

Eric 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.

To find out more, tune in next week for I Survived Real Estate 2011, part 4. 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.

248-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2011 10-22-11

Friday, October 21st, 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 sponsors: 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.

I Survived Real Estate started just four years ago. For those who had been there for a long time, it has gone by fast. It started with a simple formula, a conversation, and a cause. The last four years in real estate have been particularly difficult. Many who attended the live event would be considered survivors. Long gone are the days of condo hotel investing in Las Vegas, a realtor in every household, stated income loans, and 10% price increases every month. True professionals working in the environment today stay on top of trends, challenges, and all different facets that makes up the market. The event featured six special guests from all over the nation. Some have or soon will be representing their national organizations in Congress trying to influence change. The conversations on stage covered what we should expect in 2012 and how our businesses might change. 100% of the proceeds went to Susan G. Komen for the Cure, and this year alone they raised close to $80,000. The walkers alone raised $15,000. On September 30 several people walked in a breast cancer walk, and some joined the walk to earn a seat at I Survived Real Estate 2011. Over 50 people participated in the walk.

Rebecca Hultquist thanked the Norris family and everyone at the event for their support over the past three years. Over all the years they have raised over $250,000 for women in need in the Orange County area and other surrounding areas. Rebecca recently had a friend who was diagnosed, and because she was under the age of 40 was able to have a mammogram through the funds that Komen offered her. In turn, these funds came from the supporters of I Survived Real Estate, and with their donations they became advocates, volunteering and becoming a part of the movement. Rebecca herself is breast cancer survivor, which she first had when she was 33. She was a wife and a mom with three daughters, and if it wasn’t for a life-saving mammogram that she had that year, she would not be here today. It was stage 2 invasive breast cancer, through which she endured chemotherapy radiation and surgery. Through this, she became involved with Susan G. Komen for the cure. 75% of the funds raised stay in the area to help women in need through treatment and clinical mammograms. Women can get the treatment they need. Early detection was what saved Rebecca’s life and what will save the lives of the future women. Through the science being funded, we look forward to a day when our daughters, children, and granddaughters live in a world without breast cancer.

Aaron talked about his mother, Marsha Norris, who passed away last January after a 17 year brave fight against cancer. The first three years of I Survived Real Estate were launched with a radio show between Marsha and Bruce, and each of the past events really showed her spirit, her stubbornness, her unwillingness to give up, and her faith.

Bruce took a moment to talk about his wife Marsha. She started every day by doing two things. She said prayers for everyone in her family every day, and she took time to think of all the things that were blessings in her life. The one thing you could not mistake about her was that she was thankful for the smallest things. If you took her out for coffee, you never failed to hear her say thank you. Marsha was an amazing blend of stubborn determination and kindness. She had an iron will when it came to some things, and one of those things was dealing with breast cancer. She decided early on that breast cancer was not going to rule her life and that she was going to put it in a little corner and tell it to stay there. There were times she was afraid and was hurting, but that was dominated by her wanting to go on cruises and live a life. If you know somebody who has cancer, it’s a choice on how to handle it. Marsha handled it with such grace and dignity that it was amazing. The people in the audience put a smile on her face constantly during her 17-year journey with cancer. She received cards, calls, flowers, and she felt everyone’s love when she came to meetings.

This year’s I Survived Real Estate was the most important meeting they had, as there is a lot at stake for not only investors but collectively as well. Sometimes as investors we think of ourselves as the lone Mohican, but all of a sudden there is legislation that really deals with the entire industry, how it affects how people buy property, and how much down payment they have to have. We have a common enemy with everyone in the industry. On the other side of things, there is a lot going on in the world that Bruce never thought he would have to think about as a real estate investor. All of a sudden, Bruce found himself staying up late at night watching Europe to see if Greek is going to default. The goal at the event was to bat it around with people at the top of the industry. We had to have a lot of respect for the journey it took to have the positions the speakers had. It’s a lifetime commitment to get to where they are in the industry. They have dedicated themselves and therefore we have a lot more in common than not.

During the presentation, Bruce showed a property that The Norris Group had bought that sold at the peak of the market for $436,000 in Moreno Valley earlier. About two and a half years later, The Norris Group bought it for $64,000. They put $35,000 into it, and they rented it out for $1,400 a month. The property was much nicer when they fixed it up, and Bruce said this was exactly how they fixed their rentals. One of the things Bruce wanted people to realize is sometimes there is just an assumption that when you have rentals, then you are a slumlord. Not true. The reason The Norris Group does what they do with rentals is because they do not have any competition because no one is going to put granite into rentals unless they think like The Norris Group. The way they think is they are going to get the best tenant, the most applicants, the least amount of people to move out, and fix everything nice right now since labor is on sale right now.

Sometimes cities are worried about there being too big a percentage of rentals, but there were most likely a lot of people at the event who fix the houses the same way. One of the problems is someone bought the house across the street for $436,000, and they still owe this same amount. This house may be worth $150,000 or $170,000, but where the problem lies is we have a very large percentage of people who are upside down. In California, we have about 30% of the people who are upside down with another 4-5% who are very close. This is a big problem, and some of the cities are a lot worse. In one particular city, Hesperia, people owed twice as much as the house was worth on 9,000+ households; while 5,793 owe 120%-200%. If you add the entire negative up, you have 76.9% of the people in Hesperia who are not going anywhere; they cannot move up or out. This is a problem when 76% of your city is stationary and cannot go anywhere. This is an extreme example, but the whole state has problems.

One of the things that is occurring is we are having a decent volume in sales in California. This is a historic look at volume in the brown line. In 2010 there were about 500,000 sales, and in 2011 there were similar sales. The difference is the mix of sales. You look at the mix of sales released by the California Association of Realtors for August of 2011, and you see that you have about 43-44% of all sales either being short sales or REOs. If you think about a short sale or REO, the person that leaves that closing has damaged credit. They are not buying another house, so you have just lost 43% of your former owners to non-ownership status, which has never happened in the past. This is the average for the state of California. If you go to areas such as Riverside, it’s 65% combination of short sales and REOs. For every 1,000 sales, 650 buyers no longer emerge as an owner-occupant. They have to be sold to an investor, or you have to have new people migrate into the area.

In Riverside, we have about 15% unemployment, so the likelihood of them showing up is not as good as it once was. This is the dilemma because we have some dominoes to solve, so one of the things we have to ask is how we fix unemployment. In our area, you don’t fix unemployment without fixing construction; and you can’t fix construction until you have a price per square foot that makes a builder a profit. Unfortunately, we are a tad away from this. We have to figure out how to move a lot of properties to another group of people. CAR also released data showing a portion of sellers planning to repurchase, and it showed about 37% of people when they close escrow are saying they will buy another property right away. You have the damage group, but you also have the people who are mentally beat up. This could include people who just closed escrow who used to have a $400,000 house that closed for $190,000. These are the people who do not want to participate in another one right away. You have this lag effect that goes on when you are not too excited about real estate. Consequently, what is going on is the cash sales have exploded. You have people buying properties, but the problem is when we buy properties for cash we eventually run out of the cash. Therefore, we have to shove the same property in a better condition on the market. Instead of it being able to back up the truck with the REOs and unloading a lot of them, you are constantly competing with very nice inventory that is coming back around. If we can get financing, we would not have to do this.

33% of loans in foreclosure have not made a payment in over two years. 41% of the people have not made their payments in a year or more. People stay in foreclosure for a long time. There was a news article in the Riverside Press where a family being interviewed said they were actually pretty delighted about how their lifestyle had changed since they stopped making their house payments. They believed life was so much better: they had extra money for the business, went on a vacation, and bought a barbeque. The problem is eventually this inventory might show up, and this is the ball of inventory that is turning behind the scenes; 90 days late all the way through properties already foreclosed is 4 million properties. This is about 8% of the entire inventory in the country. If you think this is over with, it’s not. The question is why we are letting this happen and why this is the best strategy that is going on right now.

One of the things that is happening right now, and this is important for everyone in the industry, is there is trying to be a retooling of our minds toward ownership of homes. On the recent cover of Time Magazine, the title was “Rethinking Home Ownership: Why Owning a Home May No Longer Make Economic Sense.” They could have said anything else but that. You have half-priced real estate and interest rates at 4%. This is economically a bad idea. People need to call up their landlords and see if they can get a 30-year fixed rental rate. This is not going to happen. It’s not economically infeasible; it’s actually the smartest thing you could possibly do. However, what is interesting is we have decided that, media-wise, we are going to say that we have had it wrong the whole time about owning a home since it has damaged so many people recently.

Bruce was married when he was 17, and he did not catch on to work very well at the time. He was fired 5 times very quickly because he did not know how to disagree with an owner. The first time he came home with cash, Marsha was really happy, but after that she knew it was severance pay. When they were 21, they had a chance to buy a home in Mira Loma, and he had rectified his problems with working. They bought a house, and they did not know what they were doing at the time. The toilets flushed the wrong way, the windows did not work. The Sunday morning they fixed Sunday dinner, they had a swamp cooler that coughed dirt all over their dinner when they started it up, so they had to eat out. However, the next day Bruce got to mow his own grass for the first time. This was the first day he felt like a man.

To find out more, tune in next week for I Survived Real Estate 2011, part 2. 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.