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California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Posts Tagged ‘Goldman Sachs’

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/26/11

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Commerce Department reports new home sales increased 11% in March. A study shows that short sales and foreclosures equally damage FICO scores. A survey from Pew shows 81% of adults believe purchasing a home is the best long-term investment a person can make. Morgan Stanley believes home prices will fall 6-11% this year.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“Study Examines the Impact of Homebuyer Education and Counseling on Mortgage Performance” (4-26-11)

“Potential homeowners who participate in prepurchase education and counseling programs may be more likely to pay their mortgages on time, although the evidence on this point is not consistent and compelling, according to a study released today by the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA). The study also finds that those who participate in default counseling are more likely to have their loans modified.”

MSNBC - “Housing reality trumps dogma for some in GOP” (4-26-11)

“leading proponents of doing away with Fannie and Freddie aren’t predicting victory. As a precaution, they’re advancing eight bills taking bite-sized swipes at the issue. In the Democratic-led Senate, a sister measure by 2008 presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., faces long odds, and the Banking Committee’s top Democrat and Republican are wary of quickly reshaping the market for financing home purchases.”

CNN - “Home prices in ‘double dip’” (4-26-11)

“Home prices in February sank 3.3% to just above the post-crisis lows reached in April 2009. It was the seventh straight month of declines. Home values are down 32% from their peak set in May of 2006, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of home prices in 20 cities.”

Housing Wire“Harvard finds dwindling housing supply abolishes affordable rentals” (4-26-11)

“The Harvard University Joint Center for Housing Studies released a report Tuesday, analyzing conditions in the housing market from 1999 to 2010. The study found the price to rent a home is trending inversely to renters’ annual income, just one of many factors hindering growth in the rental space.”

Housing Wire“FHFA: 30-year fixed-rate mortgage passes 5%” (4-26-11)

“The average interest rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage reached 5.06% in March, an increase of 9 basis points from the previous month, according the Federal Housing Finance Agency.”

Housing Wire“Study finds recent housing counseling cuts made in the dark” (4-26-11)

“Republicans and Democrats struck a late-hour deal in April on how to continue funding the U.S. government. But among the cuts, was $88 million used to fund nonprofit counseling groups approved by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.”

Housing Wire“Freddie Mac mortgage purchases plummet 31%” (4-26-11)

“The amount of monthly mortgages purchased for securitization by Freddie Mac fell nearly 31% in March to $26.9 billion. The government-sponsored enterprise reported its total mortgage portfolio decreased at an annualized rate of 4.7% during the month to $2.14 trillion.”

Los Angeles Times - “New home sales rose in March after weak winter” (4-25-11)

“New-home sales rose 11 percent last month from February to a seasonally adjusted rate of 300,000 homes, the Commerce Department said Monday. That follows three straight monthly declines. Still, the pace remains far below the 700,000 homes a year that economists view as healthy.”

New York Times“Stimulus by Fed Is Disappointing, Economists Say” (4-24-11)

“Mr. Bernanke and his supporters say that the purchases have improved economic conditions, all but erasing fears of deflation, a pattern of falling prices that can delay purchases and stall growth. Inflation, which is beneficial in moderation, has climbed closer to healthy levels since the Fed started buying bonds.”

Housing Wire“Short sales and foreclosures equally degrade FICO scores” (4-25-11)

“homeowners that entered short-sales found themselves with FICO scores in the 575-to-595 range — the same range reported for parties with foreclosures on their records.”

Housing Wire“Homeownership still considered best long-term investment: Pew” (4-25-11)

“The housing crash seems to have had little impact on consumer confidence, as 81% of adults believe buying a home is the best long-term investment a person can make”

Housing Wire“Distressed property index rises in March: Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance”
(4-25-11)

“A distressed property index rose to 48.6% in March – the second highest level in the past 12 months while owner-occupant home purchases slowed during the same time period according to another index.”

Housing Wire“Wells economist: Foreclosure supply points to ‘long, arduous’ recovery” (4-25-11)

“Despite better-than-expected new home sales in March, a Wells Fargo (WFC: 28.56 +0.07%) economist said builders will continue to struggle until the foreclosure wave begins to recede.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Home Prices May Decrease 6% to 11% This Year, Morgan Stanley Says” (4-25-11)

“U.S. home prices will fall 6 percent to 11 percent this year, more than previously forecast, as mortgages become harder to obtain and distressed sales drive down values, according to Morgan Stanley. ”

Bloomberg - “Fed Officials Count on Untested Tool to Hold Off Inflation” (4-25-11)

“Raising the rate, currently at 0.25 percent, is intended to entice banks to keep their money on deposit at the Fed instead of loaning it out and stoking inflation.”

Bloomberg - “Sales of New U.S. Homes Probably Rose From Record Low as Market Struggled” (4-25-11)

“New-home sales, tabulated when contracts are signed, climbed 12 percent to a 280,000 annual pace last month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 64 economists. Purchases slumped 17 percent in February to a 250,000 rate, the weakest in data going back to 1963.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the CIRB reported that permits were pulled for 3,714 total California housing units in March. Commercial mortgage delinquencies fell to 0.63% in Q1 of 2010. The MARI saw a 50 percent increase in appraisal fraud in 2009. Homeownership rates in Q1 of 2010 decreased to the lowest levels since 2000.

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/11/11

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Charles Schwab Corp. has been required to pay $119 million dollars to settle claims that they were deceptive in their YieldPlus fund.  Following the release of their earnings for 2010, Goldman Sachs will be making several changes to the divisions in their business, according to Housing Wire.  DSNews reported that four major banks have been asked by New York City Comptroller John C. Liu to evaluate their recent mortgage and foreclosure processes following the recent robo-signing scandal.

In The News:

Housing Wire - “MBA warns regulators not to rush mortgage servicing standard” (1-11-11)

“In response to calls for regulators to form a national mortgage servicing standard, the Mortgage Bankers Association said attempting to do so under current risk-retention rulemaking would be ‘short-sighted’.”

Bloomberg - “Schwab Agrees to Pay $119 million to settle SEC Claims” (1-11-11)

“The Charles Schwab Corp. will pay $119 million to settle U.S. regulatory claims that the San Francisco-based brokerage misled investors in its YieldPlus Fund and changed investment strategy without shareholder approval.”

Inman - “Intero Real Estate grows franchise network” (1-11-11)

“Cupertino, Calif.-based real estate brokerage and franchise company Intero Real Estate Services on Monday announced three new franchisees.”

DS News - “New York City Comptroller Issues 2nd Request for Audits from Banks” (1-11-11)

“In November after the robo-signing scandal broke, New York City Comptroller John C. Liu, on behalf of the New York City Pension Funds, called on the directors at four banks to conduct an independent audit of their mortgage and foreclosure practices.”

Housing Wire – “Analyst: Fannie, Freddie pain to taxpayers may be overblown” (1-11-11)

“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may not be costing taxpayers as much they think.  The Federal Reserve reported a record payout to the Treasury Department Monday, as its profits were boosted by government-sponsored entity securities it purchased during the financial crisis. Income from these investments totaled roughly one-half of the $148 billion cost of Fannie and Freddie while in conservatorship.”

Inman - “Trulia announces Facebook login integration” (1-11-11)

“Online real estate search and information company Trulia this week will allow its registered users to access the site using their Facebook login.”

Mercury News - “Home value declines surpasses those of Great Depression” (1-11-11)

“Along with the snow and cold, November brought continued declines in home values.”

Housing Wire – “Goldman Sachs to revamp operations after 4Q earnings” (1-11-11)

“Goldman Sachs (GS: 169.36 -0.24%) is making certain changes to its business segments, commencing with its earnings release for the fourth quarter of 2010.”

NAR“Realtor® Volunteer and Mentor Program Seeks Nominations” (1-11-11)

REALTOR® Magazine’s Good Neighbor Society is seeking entries for Volunteering Works, a program that matches Realtors® who would like to expand their community service outreach with a mentor who is already a successful volunteer leader.”

The Sacremento Bee - “Brown’s Forecast for California: A Long Slog for Recovery” (1-11-11)

“The economic forecast released Monday by Gov. Jerry Brown is as grim as the budget blueprint he delivered at the same time. It says a troubled housing market will continue to hold back consumer spending in California for the foreseeable future.”

Looking Back:

The national unemployment rate remained at 10 percent during December of 2010. LPS reported that 1 in every 7.5 fell into foreclosure or delinquency during November of 2010. According to Fitch Ratings, 2009 commercial delinquency rates ended at 4.71%.

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 12/01/10

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Freddie Mac announced it will suspend foreclosure evictions from Dec. 20 to Jan. 3, 2011. Automatic Data Processing reports the U.S. economy added 93,000 private-sector jobs during November. The Federal Reserve shared information about more than 21,000 individual transactions which provided $3 trillion in liquidity for market stabilization. According to the MBA, mortgage applications decreased 16.5% last week.

In The News:

NAR - “Realtors® Say Mortgage Interest Deduction Vital to Home Ownership, Economy” (12-1-10)

“The tax deductibility of interest paid on mortgages is a powerful incentive for home ownership and has been one of the simplest provisions in the federal tax code for more than 80 years. In a new survey commissioned by NAR and conducted online in October 2010 by Harris Interactive of nearly 3,000 homeowners and renters, nearly three-fourths of homeowners and two-thirds of renters said the mortgage interest deduction was extremely or very important to them.”

Wall Street Journal“Deficit-Panel Chiefs Urge Tax, Spending Changes” (12-1-10)

“A 59-page proposal from the co-chairmen of the White House’s deficit-reduction commission, which they labeled ‘The Moment of Truth,’ calls for sweeping changes in how the country spends money and collects taxes, the starting point for a long debate about how to tackle the U.S. debt.”

Inman - “Move Inc. launches mortgage site” (12-1-10)

“Like other sites and services that enable consumers to shop for mortgages online, MortgageMatch.com employs an automated pricing engine that allows consumers to see the loan products and rates offered by multiple lenders.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Refinance Activity Continues to Decline as Rates Rise in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (12-1-10)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending November 26, 2010. The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 16.5 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. This week’s results include an adjustment to account for the Thanksgiving holiday. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 34.2 percent compared with the previous week.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“MBA: Commercial and Multifamily Mortgage Delinquency Rates Mixed in Third Quarter” (12-1-10)

“Delinquency rates for different commercial/multifamily mortgage investor groups were mixed in the third quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Commercial/Multifamily Delinquency Report. The delinquency rate for loans held in CMBS is the highest since the series began in 1997. Delinquency rates for other groups remain below levels seen in the early 1990′s, some by large margins.”

Housing Wire“Freddie Mac to suspend foreclosure evictions this holiday season” (12-1-10)

“Freddie Mac will suspend foreclosure evictions from Dec. 20 to Jan. 3, 2011, the company announced Wednesday. Freddie Mac’s mortgage portfolio stands at $39.6 billion as of October, according to its monthly summary report. Its serious delinquency rate stood at 3.82% in October as well.”

Housing Wire“November employment increase largest in three years” (12-1-10)

“The U.S. economy added 93,000 private-sector jobs in November from the previous month, the largest gain in three years and a sign of a ‘brightening’ employment situation, according to the Automatic Data Processing report Wednesday. However, the improvement will not be enough to lower the unemployment rate, which according to ADP will likely remain above 9% for all of 2011.”

Housing Wire“Bair says more regulation needed to restore integrity of mortgage servicing” (12-1-10)

“Bair said the robo-signing scandal spawned from misaligned incentives in the servicing industry, and called on the Financial Stability Oversight Council to fill in the regulatory gaps left by the Dodd-Frank Act. Regulation is needed to track the title of a loan and to properly document the foreclosure process, she said.”

Housing Wire“Secret’s out: Federal Reserve reveals who got help in midst of financial crisis” (12-1-10)

“The Federal Reserve Board on Wednesday posted detailed information about more than 21,000 individual transactions that provided $3 trillion in liquidity to stabilize markets during the nation’s financial crisis.An analysis of the data by The Wall Street Journal showed Goldman Sachs used an emergency overnight loan program from the Fed 84 times for a total of nearly $600 billion. The Primary Dealer Credit Facility, announced in March 2008, was used 212 times by Morgan Stanley”

Bloomberg - “Fannie, Freddie Spar With Regulators on Foreclosures” (12-1-10)

“Acting Comptroller of the Currency John Walsh said in testimony prepared for a congressional hearing today that his agency is directing national bank servicers to suspend foreclosures for borrowers actively seeking to qualify for loan modifications.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the NAR reported that pending home sales increased during October by 3.7 percent. The California Board of Equalization claimed that most homeowners would see a decline in property tax after a deflation of 0.237 percent.  According to Real Estate Econometrics LLC, the commercial mortgage default rate on loans held by U.S. banks increased to 3.4 percent in the third quarter of 09.

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 9/27/10

Monday, September 27th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

California air-quality regulators adopted 10- and 25-year targets for reducing greenhouse gases. Fannie Mae is developing a loan forbearance program for military families. Nearly 33% of Americans have credit scores below 620. John Burns predicts that sales of distressed properties will peak in 2011 at 2.3 million transactions.

In The News:

San Francisco Chronicle“Top 1% of earners get 20% of the money” (9-26-10)

“Former Clinton administration labor secretary Robert Reich, now a public policy professor at UC Berkeley, argues that working class incomes have stagnated for so long that ordinary consumers – who account for about 70 percent of all economic activity – have lost the buying power to pull the country out of recession.”

Los Angeles Times“Trashing the dollar to save the economy” (9-25-10)

“If something’s got to be sacrificed to put the domestic economy on the road to a sustainable recovery, the dollar’s value against other currencies seems a good candidate. That’s what the Federal Reserve signaled this week — and what Congress, in no uncertain terms, is telling the Chinese.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Study Examines the Variety of Alternative Mortgage Loan Products Around the World” (9-27-10)

“The study entitled, ‘International Comparison of Mortgage Product Offerings’, which was conducted by Dr. Michael Lea, Director of the Corky McMillin Center for Real Estate at San Diego State University and sponsored by MBA’s Research Institute for Housing America (RIHA), examines the predominant mortgage designs and characteristics that exist in different international markets and how they have performed prior to and during the crisis. The study examined 12 developed countries with distinctly different mortgage market and product configurations.”

North Bay Business Journal“Business groups object to greenhouse gas targets” (9-27-10)

“State air-quality regulators late last week adopted 10- and 25-year targets for reductions in greenhouse gases in the major metropolitan areas in the state over the objections of some business groups and certain policy planners that the targets for the Los Angeles and greater San Francisco Bay areas will result in high fuel and transportation costs and more environmental-impact lawsuits for real estate developers.”

Sacramento Bee“Fannie Mae offers housing aid to military families” (9-27-10)

“Mortgage giant Fannie Mae plans to give military families a break on their home loan payments if they are struggling because of the death or injury of a service member.”

Orange County Register“1 in 3 unlikely to qualify for mortgage” (9-27-10)

“Borrowers with credit scores under 620 who requested purchase loan quotes for 30-year fixed, conventional loans were unlikely to get even a single loan quote on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, even if they offered a relatively high down payment of 15 to 25%, Zillow says. According to myFICO.com, nearly one-third of Americans, or 29.3%, has a credit score that low.”

Housing Wire“DebtX August CRE loan value up to 81%” (9-27-10)

“The value of commercial loans priced in August by The Debt Exchange that collateralize commercial mortgage-backed securities rose to 81% of the original balance, the loan sale advisor said. DebtX priced 57,586 commercial real estate loans last month worth a combined $679.1 billion that collateralize 626 CMBS trusts. The aggregate August value is up from 79.4% in July and higher than the 77% a year earlier.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Mae EarlyCheck looks to reduce future repurchase risk” (9-27-10)

“Between 2005 and 2007, many of the loans originated did not meet crucial standards set by the GSEs. Banks are now being forced to repurchase those loans. But director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Edward DeMarco, said in his congressional speech two weeks ago that the GSEs had more than $11 billion in outstanding repurchase requests at the end of the second quarter. Fitch Ratings predicted in August that the buyback amount for just the big four banks could reach $180 billion.”

Housing Wire“Rating agencies disregarded mortgage quality risks, former Clayton exec says” (9-27-10)

“Between the first quarter of 2006 and the second quarter of 2007, Clayton reviewed more than 911,000 mortgages for its clients, such as Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs, that sold them as security pools. Johnson told the FCIC only half of them, 54%, met the kinds of standards these Wall Street firms were advertising to investors. The other 46% were “bad loans” written on unchecked information such as borrower stated income.”

Housing Wire“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (9-27-10)

“Sales of distressed properties will peak in 2011 at 2.3 million transactions before falling to more normal levels at 850,000 in 2016, according to a report from John Burns Real Estate Consulting.”

Press Enterprise - “2010 real estate survivors celebrate and look at market” (9-27-10)

“Bruce Norris, who hosted the Sept. 17 reception, dinner and panel discussion, took a minute to inform the panelists, including representatives from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, that the audience would love the chance to buy and fix up foreclosed houses in bulk. Several times the panelists, who also included outspoken economist Christopher Thornberg and experts in the appraisal, mortgage banking and auctioning sectors, pointed to the discrepancy between high mortgage delinquency rates and a limited number of bank-owned homes available for purchase.”

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.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 7/19/10

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The NAHB reports that builder confidence in the singe-family home market decreased to the lowest point in a year. Builders began work on 580,000 houses last month, according to the Commerce Department. A survey from REMAX shows that existing home sales increased in June by 5.6% in comparison to the same month a year ago. The Bay Area lost more than 10,000 jobs in June.

In The News:

Sign On San Diego“Economists say recovery continues, but pace slows” (7-18-10)

“The National Association for Business Economics said its latest survey, released Monday, found 31 percent of businesses added workers between April and June, the highest level in three years. And 39 percent of those surveyed say they expect to hire more workers over the next six months – the most since January 2008. Manufacturers reported the strongest increase in demand and profitability. Finance, insurance and real estate sectors saw the slowest growth.”

NAHB - “Builder Confidence Declines in July” (7-19-10)

“Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes declined for a second consecutive month in July to its lowest level since April of 2009, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) released today. The HMI fell two points from a downwardly revised number in the previous month to 14 for July.”

Housing Wire“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (7-19-10)

“According to a Sunday story in the Wall Street Journal, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was split on its decision to accept the $550m settlement in its case against Goldman Sachs (GS: 145.68 -0.34%). The investment bank agreed to pay the biggest fine in SEC history without having to admit fraud in a case that alleged it misguided clients when selling mortgage-backed securities.”

Housing Wire“Annual Home Sales, Prices ‘Holding its Own’: ReMax Survey” (7-19-10)

“Buyers looking to close on home sales in time to collect the homebuyer tax credit pushed existing home sales up in June 5.6% compared to the same month a year ago, according to a monthly survey of 54 metro areas conducted by the national brokerage chain ReMax. In addition, Denver-based ReMax said home sales prices were up 3.5% year-over-year. Compared to May, transaction volume was up 7.2%. The increases were attributed on the tax credit and said despite the increases, the heightened volume will not be sustained. The chart below tracks transaction volume.”

Contra Costa Times“10,300 jobs gone in June” (7-19-10)

“The Bay Area lost more than 10,000 jobs in June, crushing hopes that the private sector could spur a quick recovery for the region’s wobbly economy, a state labor report showed. The loss of 10,300 payroll jobs in the Bay Area marked the nine-county region’s worst one-month performance since September, according to the report by the state’s Employment Development Department.”

Bloomberg - “Housing, Leading Index in U.S. Probably Slumped in Sign Recovery Slowing” (7-19-10)

“Builders began work on 580,000 houses last month at an annual rate, down 2.2 percent from May and the slowest pace this year, according to the median estimate of 61 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News before Commerce Department data due July 20. Other reports may show sales of existing homes decreased for a second month and the index of leading indicators declined for the first time in more than a year.”

Realty Times“Real Estate Outlook: Market Report” (7-19-10)

“The findings: Despite nervousness about the stock market and employment, 66 percent of all consumers ‘believe the economy will hold steady or improve over the next six months.’ Eighty three percent believe their own personal finances will get better or at least hold their own.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 6/29/10

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Standard & Poor claims U.S. home prices rose 0.8 percent in April. According to the MBA, independent mortgage bankers and subsidiaries made an average profit of $1,135 on each loan they originated in 2009.  Congress is still debating over legislation that would eliminate the HVCC in 90 days if passed. The House voted 409-5 to extend the closing deadline for the tax credit to Sept. 30.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“Home prices rise in 20 major cities as buyers rush to obtain tax credit” (6-29-10)

“Prices rose 3.8% in April compared with April 2009 and were up 0.8% from March, when the data aren’t adjusted for seasonal fluctuations, according to the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index of 20 metropolitan areas. California cities continued to appreciate, according to the nonseasonally adjusted index, with Los Angeles and San Diego up 0.7% in April and San Francisco up 2.2%.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationProduction Profits Rebounded in 2009, According to MBA Study of Independent Mortgage Bankers and Subsidiaries” (6-29-10)

Independent mortgage bankers and subsidiaries made an average profit of $1,135 on each loan they originated in 2009, compared to $305 per loan in 2008, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA)’s Annual 2009 Mortgage Bankers Production Survey released today.”

Housing WireSenator Yanks Financial Reform Support Due to Last Minute Bank Tax Change” (6-29-10)

“Senator Brown sent a letter to sponsors Sen Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Rep Barney Frank (D-MA) citing the addition of a $19bn bank tax included in the House, but not the Senate versions, as the reason for pulling support. The bill reconciled late last week.”

Housing Wire“Amendment to Eliminate HVCC Still Alive in Financial Reform Bill” (6-29-10)

“An amendment to the Wall Street Reform Bill that would eliminate the Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC) survived congressional debates last week, according to one representative’s office. A congressional conference last week took place to reconcile both versions of the House and Senate financial reform bills. As it stands now, the HVCC would be eliminated 90 days after the bill is signed.”

Bloomberg - “Volcker Rule May Give Goldman, Citigroup Until 2022 to Comply” (6-29-10)

“Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc. are among U.S. banks that may have as long as a dozen years to cut stakes in in-house hedge funds and private- equity units under a regulatory revamp agreed to last week. Rules curbing banks’ investments in their own funds would take effect 15 months to two years after a law is passed, according to the bill. Banks would have two years to comply, with the potential for three one-year extensions after that.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. House Extends Closing Deadline for Homebuyer Tax Credit” (6-29-10)

“The U.S. House of Representatives voted to give homebuyers who qualified for a federal tax credit more time to settle on their pending purchases. The House voted 409-5 to extend the deadline for closing home purchases to Sept. 30. The program initially required borrowers who signed contracts before April 30 to complete paperwork by July 1 to get a tax credit of as much as $8,000.”

Orange County Register“O.C. brokers raking in more cash” (6-29-10)

“Dollars earned by brokers from Orange County home sales jumped 27.3% in May over broker revenues generated the same month a year ago. It was the first May in five years in which broker revenues increased from year-earlier levels, according to new data from the Southern California Multiple Listing Service.”

Orange County Register“1 in 4 transactions a short sale” (6-29-10)

“Of the 2,778 homes sold through the MLS, 672 or 24.2% of them were so-called ‘short sales.’ By comparison, homes seized by lenders through foreclosure accounted for 13% of all May sales, or one out of every eight. Altogether, ‘distressed sales’ accounted for almost 40% of all homes sold through the MLS in May.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the House of Representatives passed legislation that required new homes to be built 30 percent more energy efficient than mandated in the 2006 International Energy Conservation Code. The federal regulator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac claimed that home prices were bottoming.

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 5/12/10

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The NAHB reports that builder confidence increased from Q1 2009, but is still low. The MBA’s weekly survey shows that mortgage application volume increased by 3.4 percent. According to Freddie Mac, of all borrowers who had 30-year FRMs, 75% refinanced into a new 30-year FRM. Barclays estimates that foreclosure shadow inventory should peak during the summer of 2010.

In The News:

NAHB - “Active Adult Home Builder Activity, Confidence Remain Low” (5-12-10)

“The 55+ single-family HMI measures builder sentiments based on current sales, prospective buyer traffic and anticipated six-month sales for the 55+ single-family market.  A number greater than 50 indicates that more builders view conditions as good than poor. Although the index recorded a slight rise in the first quarter of 2010 – moving up two points to 19 from its 2009 Q1 level of 17 – the level of confidence remains low.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationRefinance Applications Surge, Purchase Applications Drop in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (5-12-10)

“The Refinance Index increased 14.8 percent from the previous week and the seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 9.5 percent from one week earlier.  The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 8.9 percent compared with the previous week and was 0.6 percent lower than the same week one year ago. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending May 7, 2010.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 3.9 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 3.4 percent compared with the previous week.”

Inman - More U.S. residents on the move” (5-12-10)

“The percentage of U.S. residents who moved between 2008 and 2009 jumped to 12.5 percent (37.1 million people), according to a report by the U.S. Census Bureau. That increase comes after a record-low move rate between 2007 and 2008: 11.9 percent, or 35.2 million people. The bureau’s data comes from the 2009 Current Population Survey conducted between February and April every year at about 100,000 U.S. addresses. It includes residents who are at least 1 year old.”

Housing Wire“Freddie Mortgage Refinancing Dominated by Fixed-Rate Products” (5-12-10)

“Of borrowers who had 30-year FRMs, 75% refinanced into a new 30-year FRM, while 15% opted for a 15-year FRM and the remaining 10% chose a 20-year FRM. Freddie said the combined 25% of 30-year borrowers that refinanced into a shorter-term loan is the most since Q304, when 30% of 30-year borrowers refinanced into a balloon mortgage or shorter-term FRM.”

Housing Wire“Shadow Inventory To Peak in Summer of 2010: Barclays” (5-12-10)

“The shadow inventory of foreclosures should peak in the summer of 2010 before falling gradually in the later months, according to a new report from Barclays Capital. Barclays defines the shadow inventory of foreclosures as loans in 90-plus day delinquency or already in the foreclosure process. According to the report, there are currently 2.4m loans in 90-plus day delinquency and another 2.1m in foreclosure, totaling 4.5m in the shadow inventory.”

Housing Wire“End in Sight for General Growth Bankruptcy” (5-12-10)

“The end is in sight, as a plan is in place for General Growth Properties (GGP: 14.96 +0.20%) to emerge from bankruptcy as early as this summer. The judge overseeing the case approved bidding procedures and the issuance of warrants to a group of investors led by Brookfield Asset Management (BAM: 25.49 +1.03%).”

Bloomberg - “‘Perfect Quarter’ at Four U.S. Banks Shows Fed-Fueled Revival” (5-12-10)

“Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the first, second and fifth-biggest U.S. banks by assets, all said in regulatory filings that they had zero days of trading losses in the first quarter. Citigroup Inc., the third-largest, doesn’t break out its daily trading revenue by quarter. It recorded a profit on each trading day, two people with knowledge of the results said.”

Bloomberg - “Morgan Stanley’s Gorman Denies Bank Misled CDO Buyers” (5-12-10)

“Morgan Stanley Chief Executive Officer James Gorman denied allegations the U.S. bank misled investors about mortgage derivatives it sold them. The firm is being probed by U.S. prosecutors over whether the bank misled clients when it sold them collateralized debt obligations as its own traders bet that the value of the securities would drop, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The New York-based firm hasn’t been contacted by the Justice Department, Gorman told reporters in Tokyo today.”

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/27/10

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The S&P Index shows home prices increased in February. Speculators believe the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates at the current low. The LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute reports that fraud increased by 7 percent last year. According to the FHFA, the average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) of $417,000 or less was 5.09% this month.

In The News:

Business Week“Home price index shows 1st annual gain in 3 years” (4-27-10)

“Home prices in February posted their first annual increase since the end of 2006, pumped up by a temporary tax credits for homebuyers. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index released Tuesday eked out a 0.6 percent gain, half the increase analysts had expected. And on a more cautionary note, 11 of the 20 cities tracked by the index showed declines from February last year.”

The Press EnterpriseFed expected to keep rates at record lows” (4-27-10)

“Confidence is growing that the economic rebound will strengthen. And to make sure it does, the Federal Reserve is considered certain to hold interest rates at record lows when it meets this week. ”

San Francisco Chronicle“Mortgage fraud incidents rise 7 pct last year” (4-27-10)

“Incidents of residential mortgage fraud increased last year, a sign that scammers are still targeting the industry despite more diligent efforts to find and report such activity. The number of mortgage fraud reports among loans made in 2009 grew 7 percent, a smaller increase than the 26 percent jump seen the previous year, according to a study released Monday by the LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute.”

Housing Wire“State HFAs Submit Proposals to Spend $1.5bn Hardest Hit Fund” (4-27-10)

“Three of the five state Housing Finance Agencies (HFAs) receiving $1.5bn from the Treasury Department through the Hardest Hit Fund released proposals on how they would spend the money. In March, the Treasury cleared the HFAs of states where house prices dropped 20% from the peak to submit proposals to use the funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).”

Housing Wire“FHFA Sees Interest Rates Dip, Hover Around 5% in March” (4-27-10)

“The average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) of $417,000 or less was 5.09%, down from 5.13% one month ago. The average rate for a 15-year FRM of $417,000 or less was 4.57%, down from 4.65%. The FHFA measured interest rates on loans that closed between March 25 and 31. Since the rate is typically determined 30 to 45 days prior to closing, the report depicts market conditions prevailing in mid- to late-February, the FHFA said.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Extends REO Discount Deadline” (4-27-10)

“Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.21 -3.20%) extended its seller assistance incentive on all of its HomePath properties this week. In February, Fannie began providing a 3.5% discount to buyers of its REO properties listed as part of its HomePath division. The discount can be used for closing cost assistance or the buyer’s choice of appliances.”

Housing Wire“Goldman’s Tourre Denies Misleading Investors in Subprime RMBS CDO” (4-27-10)

“An executive at embattled Goldman Sachs (GS: 153.04 +0.66%) denied before a Senate panel today that he misled investors in a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO) tied to the performance of subprime residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is charging investment bank Goldman and the executive director of its structured products group trading, Fabrice Tourre, for allegedly making misleading statements about the CDO transaction, ABACUS 2007-AC1.”

Bloomberg - “‘Tourists’ May Leave Real Estate as Rates Rise, Sternlicht Says” (4-27-10)

“If interest rates head higher, ‘you will see a pause that will take a lot of capital out,’ he said. Corporate bonds may benefit, according to Sternlicht. A rebound in the real estate market is being hampered by weak demand and commercial-mortgage-backed financing that declined 95 percent last year from its record level in 2007. Vacancies in the first quarter rose to the highest level since at least 2000 at the nation’s biggest malls, and climbed to a 16-year peak at office buildings, research firm Reis Inc. said earlier this month. “

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/26/10

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The CIRB reports that permits were pulled for 3,714 total California housing units in March. Commercial mortgage delinquencies fell to 0.63% in Q1 of 2010. The MARI saw a 50 percent increase in appraisal fraud in 2009. Homeownership rates in Q1 of 2010 decreased to the lowest levels since 2000.

Looking Back:

CBIA - “Housing Starts Climb for Third Straight Month in March, CBIA Announces” (4-26-10)

“According to statistics compiled by the Construction Industry Research Board (CIRB), permits were pulled for 3,714 total housing units in March, up 4 percent from the same month a year ago and up 7 percent from February. Permits for single-family homes totaled 2,231, up 17 percent from March 2009 and up 24 percent from the previous month, while multifamily permits totaled 1,483, down 11 percent from a year ago and down 12 percent from February.”

Bloomberg“Fed May Keep Rates Low as Tight Credit Impedes Small Businesses” (4-26-10)

“Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in an April 7 speech that while a U.S. economic recovery is under way, ‘we are far from being out of the woods,’ in part because of tight credit.”

Bloomberg - “Bankers Said ‘Anything’ to Get High Rating, S&P Ex-Analyst Says” (4-26-10)

“Just past midnight on May 3, 2005, Standard & Poor’s analyst Chui Ng e-mailed co-workers to broker a solution to demands by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. bankers that he said violated two or more of the ratings company’s internal guidelines. Goldman Sachs was adding $200 million in debt at the ‘last minute’ to a $1.5 billion bond pool called Adirondack Ltd., Ng wrote. That meant the New York investment bank would originate 13 percent of the pool itself, two-and-a-half times the 5 percent limit set by S&P.”

Housing Wire - “Xerox Aims to Lead Originators into Paperless Mortgage World” (4-26-10)

“The latest venture in mortgages for Xerox Corp. (XRX: 11.35 +0.27%) is a move to make the name synonymous with paperless electronic mortgage origination, according to the company. The company is now focusing efforts on its eVault, an off-site digital storage repository for electronic loan documents, as a way to try to grab more market share in paperless origination. Currently the company holds more than 35,000 mortgages in the vault. The software-as-a-service (SaaS) is offered on a per-loan basis, which the company said makes it more affordable for originators with varying levels of loan volume.”

Housing Wire“California Commercial Mortgage Delinquencies Drop in Q110″ (4-26-10)

“In California, the delinquency rate of commercial mortgages fell to 0.63% in Q110, a 34-basis point (bp) drop from 0.97% at the end of 2009, according to the California Mortgage Bankers Association (CMBA). On a dollar basis, the delinquent rate reached 0.63%, which translates to a 0.29% delinquent rate on a loan-volume basis. Of the more than 6,400 commercial loans surveyed by the CMBA, 19 loans totaling $344.6m were more than 90 days delinquent. The survey included 16 mortgage banking firms and $54.7bn in commercial and multi-family loans.”

Housing Wire“Appraisal Fraud Jumps 50% in 2009: MARI” (4-26-10)

“The Mortgage Asset Research Institute (MARI), whose subscribers represent 70% of the mortgage finance space, reports today appraisal fraud is taking a larger proportion of trickery alleged in suspicious activity reports (SARs) filed with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). In 2008, suspected appraisal/valuation fraud stood at 22% of mortgage fraud reports. In 2009, that jumped to 33%, said MARI in a conference call on its yearly results.”

Housing Wire“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (4-26-10)

“Regulators closed seven banks Friday — all based in the state of Illinois — at a total cost to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) of nearly $974m.”

Housing Wire - “Homeownership Hits Lowest Rates Since 2000″ (4-26-10)

“Fewer Americans own homes in Q110 than in any quarter since the beginning of 2000, according to data from the Census Bureau. The seasonally adjusted homeownership rate fell to an average of 67.2% percent of qualifying Americans who own homes in Q110, dropping 1bp from 67.3% in Q409. It was the lowest rate since the 67.1% mark in the first quarter of 2000. The rate reached its height in Q105 at 69.2%, according to the Census.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, Existing, single-family home sales increased 63.8 percent in one month. 19.1 million homes stood unoccupied in the first quarter of 2009. Simon Property Group attempted to buy General Growth prior to its bankruptcy. Rent rates decreased in 19 of the 23 O.C. cities.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/19/10

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Irvine Co. is reentering the home construction business for the first time in over 20 years. Fannie Mae statistics show that the economy decelerated in the first quarter of 2010, but will likely increase in the near future. Real estate executive Anthony Ghio pled guilty to bid rigging in a scheme to profit off sheriff sale foreclosure auctions. The U.K. and Germany are interested in taking legal action against Goldman Sachs.

In  The News:

Orange County Register - “Irvine Co. to build its own homes” (4-19-10)

“The Irvine Co., sensing a shortage of financially strong homebuilders, is constructing homes on its own for the first time in over two decades. Using its Irvine Pacific brand that built parts of Irvine in the 1970s and 1980s, the giant land developer is making a twist in its unusual bet on a homebuilding rebound by re-entering the construction game.”

Inman - “A shorter wait to buy after deliquency” (4-19-10)

“To encourage distressed borrowers to agree to deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure, Fannie Mae is reducing the waiting period — from four years to two years — for them to become eligible for a new mortgage. The new policy, which will apply to loan applications submitted after June 30, requires a minimum downpayment of 20 percent from borrowers who have agreed to a deed-in-lieu within the past two years. Borrowers with a deed-in-lieu in the past two to four years will be required to put 10 percent down to be considered for a Fannie Mae-backed loan.”

Los Angeles Times“Builders likely to offer incentives after federal tax credits expire” (4-19-10)

“With the April 30 deadline looming, home buyers need to get a move on if they hope to qualify for the federal tax credits of $8,000 for first-timers or $6,500 for owners wishing to move up. But even if you don’t have a binding contract in place by the end of the month, there’s a good chance that plenty of incentives will be available after the federal stimuli expire.”

Housing Wire“Excess, Shadow Inventory Threaten Fragile Housing Recovery: Fannie” (4-19-10)

“Despite ‘encouraging’ recent growth in consumer spending, Fannie said economic growth likely decelerated from an annualized 5.6% in Q409 to 2.7% in Q110. Economists project a 3.1% rate of economic growth for all of 2010, according to the April outlook report by the Fannie Mae economics and mortgage market analysis group”

Housing Wire“Real Estate Exec Pleads Guilty to Foreclosure Auction Bid Rigging” (4-19-10)

“A real estate executive in Stockton, Calif. pled guilty to bid rigging in a scheme to profit off sheriff sale foreclosure auctions. As HousingWire reported over the weekend, Anthony Ghio admitted in his guilty plea that he conspired with a group of real estate speculators who agreed not to bid against each other at certain public real estate foreclosure auctions in San Joaquin County, Calif. in order to suppress and restrain competition and to purchase distressed real estate at non-competitive prices, according to an announcement by the US Attorney for the Eastern District of California and the Department of Justice’s antitrust division.”

Housing Wire“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (4-19-10)

“The piling on has already begun, and it’s probably just getting started. After the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Goldman Sachs (GS: 163.32 +1.63%) with fraud for subprime investments, the U.K. and Germany could be set to take legal steps of their own against the investment bank, according to Reuters. Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who is in the middle of an election campaign, told BBC News Sunday he wants Britain’s own investigation into the dealings.”

Bloomberg - “Commercial-Property-Backed Debt Has ‘Violent Rally’” (4-19-10)

“Bonds backed by commercial real estate loans are gaining as investors flush with cash seek higher returns and the economic recovery gains steam. Yields on senior top-rated securities backed by mortgage payments for skyscrapers, hotels and shopping malls fell 0.11 percentage point to 2.19 percentage points more than Treasuries in the week ended April 16, according to a Barclays Plc index. The debt yielded 2.66 percentage points more than Treasuries a month ago, and 3.96 percentage points on Dec. 31, the data show.”

Bloomberg - “Simon’s General Growth Plan ‘Crazy,’ Berkowitz Says” (4-19-10)

“Simon Property Group Inc.’s bid to invest in General Growth Properties Inc. would give the largest U.S. mall owner too much control over its biggest competitor, said fund manager Bruce Berkowitz, who’s backing a rival plan.”

Bloomberg - “Lehman to Recover $12 Billion From Real Estate” (4-19-10)

“Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the investment bank liquidating in bankruptcy, said it aims to recover $12 billion from real estate assets in the next five years, and another $17 billion from private equity and loans. Lehman, which filed the biggest U.S. bankruptcy in September 2008, disclosed the updated figures in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today. A bankruptcy judge on April 15 approved Lehman’s plan to retain illiquid assets in a unit called Lamco for as long as five years before selling them.”

Inman - “Skeptics don’t expect REO flood” (4-19-10)

“If you consider nearly all of those homes to be ‘shadow inventory’ — as analysts who track the performance of mortgage-backed securities did in one report last year — it’s difficult to imagine that there’s not more turmoil ahead in some housing markets. But estimates of the size of the shadow inventory overhang vary widely, ranging from as few as 770,000 homes to nearly 7 million. The wide range is due largely to differences in the way the term is defined, and on the assumptions made when calculating how many distressed borrowers are likely to lose their homes in coming years”