The Norris Group Blog

California Real Estate Headline Roundup

Posts Tagged ‘HUD’

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/23/12

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Today’s News Synopsis:

CNN Money reported the neighborhoods hit hardest by foreclosures are those in cul-de-sacs and tree lined streets as well as neighborhoods with modern homes.  Moody’s Investor Services reported a decrease in loan modifications.   Banks and other companies are beginning to move away from using FICO scores to determine a borrower’s credit worthiness and are instead moving toward using mathematical algorithms.

In The News:

Bloomberg“Programmers Size Up Bank Borrowers With Algorithms Rather Than FICO Scores” (1-22-12)

“For more than 40 years, banks have counted on FICO scores to determine the credit worthiness of American consumers. Now a handful of entrepreneurs in California say it’s time for a smarter way to size up borrowers.  Los Angeles-based ZestCash Inc., along with San Francisco startups BillFloat Inc. and LendingClub Corp., are hiring computer programmers to write software that can better identify candidates for loans — including people with low credit scores. The companies, backed by venture money, also aim to provide lower fees and interest rates than banks.”

Housing Wire - “FHFA: Principal reduction would cost Fannie, Freddie $100 billion” (1-23-12)

“A massive principal reduction program applied to underwater loans held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would cost the mortgage giants more than $100 billion, according to an analysis released by the Federal Housing Finance Agency Monday.”

DS News“Loan Modifications Are on the Decline: Moody’s” (1-23-12)

“As robo-signing reviews reach completion, servicers are beginning to work through some of their foreclosure backlogs, according to a third-quarter report from Moody’s Investors Service.”

Realty Times - “Real Estate Outlook: Housing at Forefront of Concerns” (1-23-12)

“As the race for the 2012 Presidential Election gets rolling, a new survey from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) shows what is on voters’ minds.  Topping the list of concerns for voters is the importance of homeownership and the ease of obtaining it.”

Housing Wire - “Investors buying with cash pressure home prices” (1-23-12)

“Investors are gobbling up residential real estate with cash, pushing national home prices lower, according to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey.”

FINS - “Wall Street Chiefs See Bonuses Lowered” (1-23-12)

“Wall Street’s pay crunch is squeezing some wallets harder than others.  J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. disclosed Friday that Chief Executive James Dimon received a 2011 stock bonus valued by the company at $17 million. That is the same as his 2010 award, despite a record profit last year at the New York financial-services company.”

Inman - “Open-house robbery puts focus on agent safety” (1-23-12)

“A recent gunpoint robbery of a homebuyer and a Realtor at an open house in Los Angeles County, Calif., compelled the Pacific West Association of Realtors (PWAR) to issue a warning to their members to be careful at open houses.”

Bloomberg“BofA Targets Up to $3 Billion in Additional Cuts” (1-23-12)

“Bank of America Corp., the second-biggest U.S. lender by assets, may reduce annual costs by as much as an additional $3 billion in the next stage of Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan’s efficiency plan.”

Housing Wire - “Chase, Wells slash foreclosure timelines but REO lingers” (1-23-12)

“JPMorgan Chase (JPM: 37.66 +0.80%) and Wells Fargo (WFC: 30.92 +1.24%) cut their foreclosure timelines by as much as 100 days for some of the worst mortgages handled in the third quarter, according to a report from Moody’s Investors Service.”

DS News - “State AGs Reviewing Settlement Draft” (1-23-12)

“After HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan last week announced that the state attorneys general settlement with the nation’s largest banks is just weeks away – with a spokesperson for Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller’s office corroborating the claim – news today is a settlement draft is now in the hands of the state attorneys general for review.”

CNN Money - “Foreclosures: America’s hardest hit neighborhoods” (1-23-12)

“The housing collapse has dramatically changed the nation’s foreclosure landscape.  Neighborhoods boasting modern homes, cul-de-sacs and tree-lined streets in and around Western cities now dominate the list of the top 100 U.S. zip codes hit hardest by foreclosures and claim and comprise all of the top 10 spots, according to data generated for CNNMoney by RealtyTrac.”

Hard Money Loan Closed

Wilmington, California hard money loan closed by The Norris Group private lending. Real estate investor received loan for $190,000 on a 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom home appraised for $315,000.

California Real Estate Investor Events:

Bruce Norris of The Norris Group will be at the Investors Workshops and will be interviewing Shawn Watkins on January 25, 2012.

Bruce Norris of The Norris Group will be at the Advanced Investing Skills and Strategies 2.5 on February 4, 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 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.

260-TNGRadio – Craig Hill 1-14-12

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Craig-Hill

Craig Hill

Hard Money Lender for The Norris Group


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined once again by Craig Hill of The Norris Group. Craig has worked with The Norris Group since the company opened in 1995. Craig has worked with the real estate investors, helping them access money for their deals and trust deed investors who want to get a very safe yield on their money. Prior to working with The Norris Group, Craig was in the hard money loan business for years prior to that; and the expertise he brought with him has proved him valuable to the success of the company.

Today’s radio show focuses on the borrower side of loans. Craig deals with calls all the time and goes through the terms of the loan, and there will be some callers who are connected to the advertisements of 4% and are completely shocked when Craig tells them it will be 12.5%. They do not understand this side of the world at all. However, Craig said these calls usually come from people who have never done it before, so usually whenever Craig gets into a situation like this he tries to ask them how they funded the last deal they did. You really have to establish that this is a different world, and if somebody has been a property buyer for a long period of time, they have a better understanding. Sometimes if you get that person who feels they can do it, it might be best for them to pursue a loan at their bank under a non-owner occupied program. Craig tells them they might be able to get it if they have perfect credit and other things. There are a lot of different ways to handle it, but Craig said The Norris Group usually deals with investors who do this for a living and have an understanding of what the costs are going to be.

The real education is to go ahead and try whatever you think is easier or less expensive because the lending world is really not working very well right now. Bruce worked with a major bank where the manager told him the frustration they have right now where they cannot fund owner-occupied loans inside of 75 days. In the investor world, if you do not have speed, you don’t find deals. They have to be able to close their loans quickly, and they have to rely on the fact that the deal will close. People are always asking how they can save money, so they either try to list the house themselves or find their own money source. People even hold seminars about how people can find their own money, but it is really not that easy. It is not that easy to get trusted with money. You always have to ask yourself whether it is really cheaper or not because there is always something attached to it, including a no answer when you thought you already had a yes. The Norris Group gets a lot of these kinds of calls where someone calls at the last minute and only has three or four days or less and they need to close it. Someone had told them something didn’t perform. It is so competitive out there now, so you have one loan that does not perform then you can forget about doing business with your agent again or anybody that agent knows. You have to see that this was really the cost of not getting a loan as it exceeded far the cost of getting one. It is not easy to watch over the years people going through a process of trust. As a person, to start from scratch is just not a reliable source.

Bruce came through the hard money business first as a borrower of considerable amount of money on a regular basis. He really did not consider the cost as onerous at all; he just needed access to it. With reliability comes the ability to grow. It’s the same way with The Norris Group business as a whole and just like how it is with an investor. If an investor has either his own money, such as a limited amount like $200, they really are working under constraints. Once they have access to somebody who might have, for example $1 million, they can start and tailor their business knowing they have access to $1 million. There is a cost to this, but you also have to look at the benefits of this. The benefits are you can up your marketing and do many more types of projects. It’s like being a construction lender without having a lender. A construction worker has to have some leverage, or he is only going to build ten homes. This has been the same way with The Norris Group; the borrower side has always grown along with the money side because the money side is there and the borrowers need the funds. This is what a hard money lender is.

When Bruce and Craig met, their meeting came about because Bruce was seeing more opportunities than he could personally handle. He had a fair amount of cash and a credit line, and all these were active on free and clear things. He had a chance to go to HUD auctions that were tossing out $.50 deals a half a dozen times per auction. He also had the chance to buy a track of homes at the same number. He looked around and saw how he could not take advantage of it, and this was the start of their meeting. When Bruce and Craig met, this was not the typical loan for a hard money loan business. It almost did not exist, and this was in about 1992 or 1993 when for hard money lenders the rule of thumb was a house was worth what you paid for it. If one next door sold for $100 that was fixed up, then you bought one that was exactly a model-match right next door for $50 or less, then you could borrow $30 or $40 on that one. At the same time, The Norris Group could lend somebody who had never made a payment $60 grand on the other one. When Bruce first came to Craig, he had to fight very hard to get the first few deals through because it was not done that way. Now, in a lot of ways hard money is synonymous with that exact function for investors. Back then, however, it did not even exist.

Bruce said he remembered for one of the properties he bought at a HUD auction that was appraised, they had not discussed what he had paid for it. He asked for it to go ahead and be appraised and would be able to borrow X-amount of percentage on the value. When Craig told Bruce the value, he asked Craig if it bothered him that he would be giving him money back more than he paid. The first thing Bruce thought of was they had a really unique opportunity there and Craig was probably dealing with his type of the world for the first time, and Bruce had access to a lot of dough for the first time. Bruce told Craig he could rest assured and made six payments on the first loans, and all of a sudden it dawned on the owner of the company that they had never had anybody do that prior, so they either understood that Bruce understood it or he was capable more than their other clients had been. This was an important transition for the hard money loan industry because it followed with Craig hoping there were more people like Bruce. Craig spent three or more years until he had all the other loan officers ask him when he thought it was going to be done. Some of them never transitioned into doing that and Craig strictly transitioned into doing only that because he got used to the facts from Bruce and others thinking the process was very efficient. They knew how to make the most happen with the least effort.

Bruce has always been surprised because he remembered thinking when 1995-97 passed and it was the end of the REO world, they were really thinking from where all the deals were going to come from, and they did. The private party purchasing and construction started, and all of a sudden The Norris Group was even busier. Craig said this has been the one important thing that there has always been a niche for good borrowers and private money. If good people are out there doing something and making a profit at it, whether it be buying off private parties or lots when the time is right, there is always an opportunity and a surprise that no matter what the real estate market is like, there is always a space for hard money loans. Bruce is so convinced about this now that he has had the chance to go back and rub shoulders with the people who make decisions in the normal world and see how they view investors. He came back with a self-assurance knowing there will always exist a need for a private loan business because we just make decisions that are common sense, yet the infrastructure prevents this. For example, The Norris Group is not afraid of a home that does not have a kitchen because they have dealt with 1,000 of them and have not been damaged by any of them because they know a kitchen can reemerge for a certain amount of money. In the loan process, they retain the money that would cause a kitchen to show up if the borrower stopped paying. You start putting the pieces of the safety together and think you can make the loan, but it does take private money to fund it quickly and accurately. Bruce does not think we are ever going to have a lot of competition from the other side.

Craig is amazed how much conventional lending will not do. There are so many hoops to go through, and the borrowers The Norris Group is loaning to have wealth and credit. They have everything where you think you can walk in and get any amount of loans you want, and they can’t even get loan #1. Craig received a call from a borrower not too long ago who owned about 4 houses free and clear for about $120-$140,000 each. This is his money he put into them, but the bank will not work with this because they consider it cash out. Craig wondered if he would be a stronger borrower if he leveraged at 100%. Here is somebody with perfect credit with four free and clear houses and the bank will not work with him because they see this as cash out. It does not make sense to him. Somehow this puts him in less of a safe position that he owes, for example, $200 grand at 50% and has $200 grand of liquidity to make sure it gets paid. This is a decision-maker you’re competing with and you think you will be okay. With The Norris Group on the other hand, their response is how quickly they can get their appraiser out there.

Some people are disappointed that there are more hoops than they thought. They attend a seminar and get told that hard money only looks at one thing, and then they go elsewhere like The Norris Group and see that this is not the case. They were not really told what was really going on. Because of the nature of loans and more recent history, Craig said one thing that is very difficult for people to understand is if you are brand new, it is very hard to delicate the whole process and think you are going to have a good result. You don’t even know how to protect yourself. This is the most frustrating thing Craig sees from some of the national seminars because it is almost like they are a part of a group and are dealing with a mentor, while The Norris Group takes a look at the deals and sees they are not deals. The number one thing The Norris Group wants is to make sure people have a deal, or they are going to talk them out of it. Bruce said this is an important thing for people to know that there are companies that are built that way and companies that are not. It has to go through some filters. If The Norris Group is going to make a loan on it, then there is probably a very high success rate for the investor.

There are several filters. For one, you might look at the sheer numbers and say it is not a deal, and then you have an appraiser who goes out with a lot of experience in investing and says that the numbers make sense but it is really a dangerous property for specific reasons. The filter The Norris Group has for people who borrow money from them is second to none. Bruce trusted himself and said he would actually have cause himself if he had found a deal. If someone like Rick Solis had gone out there and told him he really needed to take a second look, then he would. You really cannot put a value on this type of filter, and sometimes The Norris Group will get calls from people who are thinking of buying all cash, and Craig tells them to call him when they have their numbers. If they have something in escrow that they are thinking of doing, then they need to take a quick look at it because it is very easy to see where somebody can make a mistake.

For people who don’t have experience, they really don’t realize how expensive the journey will be, so there are surprises and repairs. All these things start taking away, whether it is a percentage here or there, and all of a sudden a deal at, for example, $.82 on the dollar that seems like it is going to make you a lot of money actually costs you a lot of money. If you get over 75% of what the house is worth in repairs and the purchase price, you are really starting to deal with a very thin margin. Craig will back out everything and start at 100%. He will ask them if they are going to sell it themselves or if they are going to have a commission, because now more people are paying incentives such as 2 or 3% of the closing cost. If you have something and then you have the cost of the loan, pretty soon they can see that what something is costing and being sold for is not leaving anything in the middle. You are going on a 6 month journey, and this is where the experience comes in. You are going to hire a construction crew you have never dealt with, and the odds of this not working out are higher than dealing with one you have dealt with twenty times. Everything that potentially goes wrong in the business is especially likely to occur to the first-time person. For that individual, having a deal is critical. The first step is the person needs to have a deal.

The second most frustrating thing for people is they really are told that they don’t need to have any money or need only a very little money. We are looking at things in terms of the borrower needs to have survivability and a successful outcome. Years ago Craig had a client who had a house and made payments like clockwork, then all of a sudden he stopped making payments. He called in and said he had a specific amount allocated for that, and Craig said it was quite a surprise. This was years ago; so more and more The Norris Group has had the philosophy that the really liquid cash is very important because it gives them survivability to only to protect The Norris Group and their investor, but it really protects their down payment and what they put into the property. It gives them the ability to get out of a situation instead of lose a situation. It is also really a benefit for them to make a monthly payment.

Craig has always been asked if the payments can be included in the loan, and he learned years ago from making an unwise transaction with his baseball cards that once the money was long gone he made payments on it every month. Every time he wrote the check it was a lesson to not do it again. In the same way, if you are making a payment on a property you realize that it is costing you money. Just because you might have payments for six months, you cannot just sit around and wait. You have to take action since the problem is not going to solve itself. The payments are either not a high priority or the borrower has a tendency to not think about making payments. The Norris Group used to do seconds for people so they would not have as much in, although this is something they do not do anymore. They realized that not everyone is disciplined. The Norris Group not only looks at the deals, but they also try to help people be disciplined so they have successful outcomes. You cannot try to do three if your limit really should be one. Stick with the one because you are really going to have a successful result on that one. One of Bruce’s favorite statements Craig has made is, “Lost another loan; made another client for life.” In this case, the client was told the truth they actually needed to hear to see that they now have confidence that they have a backup system they can trust and will not get hurt by their loan officer.

There is almost as many people out there who would thank The Norris Group for not doing deals, talking them out of a deal, or explaining how it works. It is very satisfying because what Craig tells people when he is talking to them is he can tell by their voice when they are a little disappointed, but he tells them he can deal with that. Being a little disappointed right now with Craig telling you no or what is the real deal is much better than the client having a deal three weeks from now where they are going to lose the deposit or having a deal nine months from now where you lost $20 grand. This is going to be a lot more disappointing. The philosophy at The Norris Group is to deal with it as it comes, and people are usually very appreciative of the fact that TNG tries to give them good advice.

Bruce mentioned the home shows and how one of the things he noticed was how frustrating they were because some of the reality was missing. On the show, you are shown a property in the beginning that needs a lot of repair. It’s a perfect opportunity for two investors, but then you come back four months later and they look like they want to get a divorce. Then, the realtor comes back in and tells them what they left out. Going from A to B is an expensive process, and it just shows there are deals that do not fit the level of experience of certain buyers. Craig always tells them when they get their first deal; he tells them they did not find the deal, it found them. There were several people who passed on that deal who were experienced investors, and the newer people need to stick with what they know and what is the simplest process. You have to leave the other things for the other people, and conversely in their group of clients they have a lot of clients who are experienced. They have one right now out in Orange County who is buying a property for $220,000 and are putting about $125 grand into it. This is a very experienced investor, but it is also a niche because not a lot of people are going to be able to accomplish what he is going to accomplish. You have two sides of the scale; one that can tackle these kinds of things, and the newer group that needs to stay away from this. Most often these are the deals that the new people find that other people had passed on originally.

Be sure to visit our website, www.thenorrisgroup.com, for more information on trust deed investing and our loan programs.

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.

257-TNGRadio – Robert England 12-24-11

Friday, December 23rd, 2011

Robert England

Robert Stowe England

Author and Financial Journalist

(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined by Robert England. Robert is a journalist and author who has written extensively on mortgage finance, banking, retirement policy, and the financial and economic impact of aging population. His most recent work is Black Box Casino: How Wall Street’s Risky Shadow Banking Crashed Global Finance. Previous works include Aging China: The Demographic Challenge to China’s Economic Prospects. Robert is also a senior writer for Mortgage Banker Magazine.

Bruce said he really appreciated his Black Box Casino book and was familiar with the overall story. There are a lot of insider terms where when you are in Wall Street and you watch Squawk Box, they use the terms as if the world knows what they mean when they don’t. One thing his book really did that was very helpful was every time he had one of these words to use, he took time to explain what it means. Robert said he did this after a copy editor was reviewing his work that had a general but no financial background, so she kept saying she did not know what something meant. Since she did not understand what words meant, then Robert decided that he needed to define the term. Bruce said it was really helpful because there are some things you hear and you just pretend you know, but then you realize when you have to explain it to somebody that you really don’t know what it means.

The book talks about events as they unfolded in 2007 and 2008, yet Robert had just written the book in 2011. The reason for the long gap of time was it took a while for him to find a publisher who was interested and also to obtain a book contract. This was part of the reason. Another reason was information came out later on that was more helpful than what was available immediately after the crisis. This included a lot of research that was dug up by the financial crisis. Bruce wondered if as time passed people were more apt to say what really went on because there was a safety of distance between the events. Robert said this was probably true for some sources in the book; but for other sources they clammed up because whatever they had been involved with was being embroiled in lawsuits, so they did not really want to talk.

The name Black Box Casino is a concept that describes the change that was occurring in the global financial system. First, there was the increasing prevalence of black boxes within the system, which are financial instruments and institutions that have no transparency; you can’t see what is going on inside and therefore they are black boxes. The casino part of the title comes from learning that much of the activity that went on in a number of the black boxes was in fact speculation, even wild speculation.

Bruce said when we used to think of Fannie and Freddie; we used to think of the safest possible loan pool with a mandate to keep safety as first priority. Bruce wondered how wrong this perception is, to which Robert said this is completely 180 degrees from the reality that was going on at Fannie and Freddie. The way the regulation was set up to govern Fannie and Freddie did not guarantee that they would be operated in a safe and sound manner, and it may in fact have encouraged them to do the opposite.

Bruce wondered if the title of GSE (Government Sponsored Enterprises) came with benefits. Robert said it does because the government is sponsoring what you do, yet you are a private corporation that has shares that are publicly traded and that benefit the executives of the company if they can use the public mission of the corporation to increase revenues and profits for themselves. It is a hybrid form of a business that comes with a lot of problems and can reap a lot of damage if things get out of hand.

Bruce also wondered if the political club had considerable political clout. Robert said they did because both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had a considerable amount of clout in the beginning before the regulations were set up to govern them. Once the regulations were put in place, there were a number of provisions in the regulations and the statutes that gave them a lot of power. For one thing, they were allowed to lobby and also got involved with making campaign contributions. Even though they were government-sponsored enterprises, logically they should not have been allowed to lobby the government. What happened was by giving them the authority to lobby, or more specifically not prohibiting it, it allowed them to make contributions, influence Congress, and give politicians a way to provide benefits to constituents without having to go through the budgeting process since everything going on at Fannie and Freddie was not involving the budget. Even their regulator was given minimal powers to regulate them, keep them in line; and this in turn gave them more clout. The regulator did not have a source of income from fees, which is usually what the banking regulators have. Instead, they had to go to Congress every year and get funding for their activities; so they were hamstrung by the ways that the law was set up.

This law was the 1992 Federal Housing Enterprise Financial Safety and Soundness Act, which was a very important law but that unfortunately did not live up to its billing. It was supposed to have been set up for safety and soundness, but once Congress got a hold of the original idea and began devising a bill, it was really put together in a way that would benefit politicians the most as it would give them a way to constantly provide a benefit to a constituency, and that benefit would constantly rise over time. There was no way to restrain the lowering of lending standards, which would be required to increase the level of lending to designated populations.

The law contained federal affordable housing provisions, which was a kind of coup for the politicians. Bruce was shocked that they had a mandate they had to loan to low-to-moderate income people a certain percentage of their loans. When the GSE Act was being put together, at that point both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had informal goals in place where approximately 30% of their business would be acquiring loans that went to borrowers who were low or moderate income borrowers. That reflected on natural market share or an entity in their position that would not distort the market. The crafters of the legislation wanted to give HUD the right to raise the affordable housing goals that were put into law and to do them on a periodic basis along with constantly raising them without any consideration to whether or not it would impair the safety and soundness of Fannie and Freddie.

What is interesting about all of this is the legislation really came on just after the SNL crisis, so you would think that everyone would be in the mood to create something that was safe and sound. Robert believes everyone was in the mood, but no one was paying attention to what was being done. First of all, the concept that you would now securitize loans would be a predominant way to finance mortgages was thought to be the way they would reduce the potential fallout from a bad period of lending that occurred with the savings and loans, which held their mortgages on their book. When interest rates rose very high, there was a huge mismatch between their assets and liabilities, which did them in. Securitization was supposed to take that risk off the book, but starting with that people thought they had a magic solution. However, they did not put together a regulatory regime that would be capable of assuring the safety and soundness of Fannie and Freddie, from setting up capital standards to allowing them to have investments in portfolio, to not allowing the safety and soundness regulator to raise their capital standards if they deemed that they were inadequate at any point. In addition to having to go to Congress every year for money, the regulator was also not an independent regulator. They were a part of HUD, and they did not have any control over the Affordable Lending Goal and could do nothing about them. HUD did not have to consider safety and soundness when they were considering the goal. There were actually three goals at the time, and the main goal was raised to over 55% by the time of the crisis, so there was a subsequent goal to low income households, which is more narrowly targeted. This had not existed before and began at about 11% and rose to nearly 27% at the time of the crisis.

Bruce wondered how people qualified for the loans, whether they were really subprime or if they were good credit but low income. Robert said over time the lending standards at Fannie and Freddie declined in order to meet the affordable lending goals. As the goals were put in place gradually, they weakened their lending standards. They first lowered the down payment then gradually lowered the FICO score for borrowers to qualify to be part of the Fannie and Freddie program. They then increased the segment of the business that was funding subprime without identifying that publicly. They drastically increased the amount of business funding Alternative A or low to no documentation loans even more without publicly acknowledging it. The legislation that set up Fannie and Freddie did not require them to file quarterly audited statements to the Securities and Exchange Commission, so they could get away with not telling investors the truth about their portfolio. By the time of 2000, they were doing 100% loan-to-value mortgages and were greatly expanding their subprime lending, but it was never identified as that. This was how we ended up this past week with the SEC filing charges against former Fannie and Freddie executives for lying about the amount of subprime and Alt-A in their portfolios and in their investment holdings. They had a black box, and they were wildly at odds with the actual amount they had.

Bruce wondered if a lot of the fulfillment of the lower income goals happened because they were able to invest in mortgage-backed securities that had the loans in them. Robert said it was both through acquiring them and not calling them subprime, and also through buying private label mortgage-backed securities that had loans that met the qualifications and that would meet the goals. Jim Lockhart, the former head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, told Robert in a recent interview that they could not have met their goals if they had not bought up a lot of the private label mortgage-backed securities. They bought large amounts of it and were the major purchaser of private MBS. Another reason may have been they were able to leverage it more. Their capital standards were very low, so they could leverage the acquisitions and increase their earnings as well as buy extensions, which was the compensation of the top executives. As a lot of people may know, the former heads of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were involved in accounting scandals in 2003 and 2004 where they were found to have manipulated the earnings targets to maximize their compensation. Both Franklin Raines and Leeland Brendsel had to leave the two GSEs at the time. You can jut up the amount of securities you purchase to increase your overall compensation and profitability that was at first profitable but later was not. By creating a compensation system that rewarded the executives by increasing volumes, it really drove the GSEs’ top executives to greatly expand their business in order to make more money.

The leverage for a mortgage-backed security that was stated in the books was 222 to 1, and this was for the guarantee. There were two capital rules. The first was the 222 to 1 guarantee, and the second was Fannie and Freddie had to only hold 0.45% of that capital against the guarantee of paying the principle interest to the investors in their securities. If they held any of the securities that they purchased, they only had to hold 2.5% capital against it. By early 2008, the GSEs were leveraged about 100 to 1 overall when you blend the two on standard accounting rules. The accounting rules were another way that Fannie and Freddie were able to get away with what they did. They did not have to meet what were normally considered bank accounting rules but could use generally accepted accounting principles, which allowed them to use some types of securities and assets to count as their capital when other people did not. This included losses that could be claimed against future taxes. When you are losing money constantly, there is no gain to apply the losses against.

The intended consequences of lowering lending standards was to increase homeownership rates among lower-income and moderate-income households. The homeownership rate was around 64-65% at the time that the GSE Act was passed, and they were hoping to raise it dramatically so that particularly minorities would have homeownership rates similar to those of whites. There was a disparity between both African-Americans and whites and Hispanics and whites in terms of the percentage of the population that owned a home. Although the homeownership rates were about 45%-50% range, they were better than a lot of people might have thought. However, they were not in the mid to high 60s. There was legislation in the 70s that tried to correct those things. This included the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 that required the banks to collect data on which the person was that was the borrower as far as race. There was also the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 against Red Lining.

When you are a lender, there are areas where you are not trying to be prejudice but you realize that an appraiser could literally get shot. Bruce is in the hard money business, and they get asked to go to certain areas to do loans; and all those things come into play that you are actually in danger. With Red Lining, the intent was not to have a prejudice outcome, which is just and fair; but you have to ask if it also takes away the ability to say no because you know it is not going to have a good outcome. The effect of all the various laws, provisions, and actions by regulators led banks and lenders to increasingly divorce the decision on whether or not to get the mortgage from hard realities of what lending is all about. At some point, in order to meet their Community Reinvestment Act targets, banks made loans they knew were going to be bad because they thought they had to do it to stay in business. The CRE Act originally required banks to make efforts to reach targeted populations but did not require that specific results be achieved. The Clinton Administration reinterpreted that law and rewrote the regulation regarding it in the mid-1990s and said that they actually had to show results. The Federal Reserve began to reject applications for mergers and opening branches to banks that did not have the Homeowner Disclosure Act data that was collected on lending by race, gender, and income. These steps taken by regulators had the effect of forcing banks to make bad loans. A common criticism against people who make claims that the CRE Act has an impact on lending is that it was passed in 1997 and the crisis was in the 2000s. The whole process was very gradual, and the idea of forcing banks to do lending against solid lending principles came into play in the mid 1990s. As each merger was made and came about in the years following 1995, the banks had to make a commitment to do a certain amount of CRE lending. By 2007, they had made commitments of over $4 trillion. If you go back to the mid 1990s, the CRE lending might be $50 billion inconsequential. In the end, it was trillions of dollars that the commitment had to be made.

There is a quote that states, “The GSE Act became the vehicle for putting forth the philosophical view that housing is the civil right,” which basically states that people are entitled to own a house. Major provisions of the act was written by a group of housing advocates and activists under an informal deputization by Henry Gonzales, who was the Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee in the early 1990s. These housing activists’ attorneys got together and crafted this language to achieve the goals and make housing more of a right and to impose that idea on lending. These are the same groups that are pointing out the loan programs and saying they were unfairly skewed to people of color and lesser income. They are now rewriting history and saying that lenders deliberately went out of the way to make bad loans, and therefore they are to blame instead of the rules, regulations, and laws. Because they were seemingly able to hide in the black box, not many people really understood the mandate underneath the covers that it was something Fannie and Freddie had to do. There was not much exposure to what was being proposed and put into law in the early 1990s. A lot of people thought it was just guaranteeing everyone equal access to credit and not steering it.

Tune in next week as Bruce and Robert England continue their discussion on the black box and real estate market

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

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

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

The FHA is looking at a possible bailout in the next twelve months after reserves decrease below the legal limit.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have already received a $100 million bailout, the biggest of the financial crisis.  The San Francisco Chronicle reported a pick up in bank loans after a slow month in September.

In The News:

CNN Money“Fannie, Freddie execs score $100 million payday” (11-15-11)

“Mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac received the biggest federal bailout of the financial crisis. And nearly $100 million of those tax dollars went to lucrative pay packages for top executives, filings show.”

Housing Wire - “Hope Now servicers complete 5 million loan modifications since 2007″ (11-15-11)

Hope Now, a voluntary alliance of mortgage servicers, investors, counselors and insurers, said members completed 5 million loan modifications since 2007, supporting the idea that nonprofit and private-sector players can resolve mortgage issues through collaboration.”

DS News - “FHA Reserves Sink Further Below Legal Limit Amid Talk of Bailout” (11-15-11)

“An annual audit of the Federal Housing Administration’s (FHA) books has concluded there is a 50-50 chance the government mortgage insurer will need a bailout from taxpayers within the next 12 months.”

Bloomberg - “AIG Resists Concessions to Banks for Obama Refinancing Plan” (11-15-11)

“American International Group Inc. (AIG) is holding out as rival mortgage insurers accept policy changes that support the U.S. government push to stoke refinancing among borrowers with little or no home equity.”

Realty Times - “U.S. Won’t be Nation of Renters” (11-15-11)

“According to the National Association of Realtors®, (NAR) the U.S. will not become a nation of renters.  Currently, over 65 percent of Americans are homeowners, a rate that has held since the 1960′s. It’s no wonder why most Americans seek out a home of their own.”

San Francisco Chronicle - “Bank Loans Pick Up in U.S. as Fisher Sees Growth: Credit Markets” (11-15-11)

“Bank loans to companies in the U.S. are accelerating after slowing in September,  underscoring the improved outlook for growth following concern that the global  economy was headed for another recession.”

Housing Wire - “Freddie Mac tells mortgage servicers not to use Baum law firm” (11-15-11)

“Freddie Mac told mortgage servicers they may no longer refer New York foreclosure or bankruptcy cases to the Steven J. Baum PC law firm.”

CNN Money - “Retail sales: Consumers still spending” (11-15-11)

“Consumers kept hitting the stores in October, despite economic headwinds and uncertainty that many economists had feared would keep them from spending.”

Wall Street Journal - “Lawmakers Near Deal on Raising FHA Loan Limits” (11-15-11)

“U.S. lawmakers are near a deal to increase the maximum size of mortgage loans that can be insured by the Federal Housing Administration, a crucial source of mortgages for first-time home buyers, congressional aides said Monday.”

Looking Back:

Fed Governor Sarah Raskin expected 2.25 million foreclosures to occur in 2010 and 2011. Fiserv believed home prices would drop 7.1% over the in 2011. According to the CAR, 66% of first time home buyers were able to afford an entry-level home in California. Josh Levin of Citigroup predicted housing demand may not catch up to supply until 2014.

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 11/4/11

Friday, November 4th, 2011

Sources:

Freddie Mac Seeks $6 Billion From U.S. Treasury as Quarterly Loss Widens
Weekly jobless claims drop below 400,000
Homeownership Near 13-Year Low as Mortgage Rules Crimp Sales
Mortgage Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey
Foreclosure reviews of largest servicers begin
Pending Home Sales Decline
Construction spending and manufacturing–slightly
US files $834 million lawsuit against Allied Home Mortgage
Real Estate Outlook: Changes to HARP
CoreLogic expects HARP 2.0 to help hardest-hit housing markets
Home prices heading for triple-dip

Today’s News Synopsis:

This week’s video is a slideshow of the news of the week in the world of real estate and other big events. The San Francisco Chronicle reported the number of impoverished neighborhoods increased 33% in the last ten years, with the suburb areas being hit harder than the cities.  According to Bloomberg, in October the jobless rate decreased after employers hired less workers than was originally predicted.

In The News:

DS NewsHudson & Marshall to Auction Over 100 HUD REOs This Saturday” (11-04-11)

“Hudson & Marshall has once again been selected to partner with HUD to auction over 100 foreclosed homes located in Nevada and Arizona. The auction will take place this Saturday, November 5th at the JW Marriott in Las Vegas.

Bloomberg“U.S. Jobs Gains Show ‘Frustratingly Slow’ Growth” (11-04-11)

“The U.S. jobless rate unexpectedly fell in October while employers added fewer workers than forecast, illustrating the “frustratingly slow” progress cited by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke this week.”

Realty Times - “30-Year Fixed-Rate Mortgage Averages 4.00 Percent” (11-04-11)

“Freddie Mac today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing average mortgage rates declining sharply as investors rushed to U.S. Treasury bonds amid concerns over the European debt market.  The 30-year fixed at 4.00 percent marks the second lowest reading since it hit a record 3.94 percent in the October 6, 2011 PMMS, the lowest in history.”

Housing Wire“First-time defaults in private-label MBS edge up in October” (11-04-11)

“First-time defaults on private mortgages edged up to a rate of 0.89% in October, a slight increase from this segment’s default rate of 0.86% in September, a new report from Amherst Securities Group said Friday.”

Wall Street Journal“How Appraisals Are Derailing Home Sales” (11-04-11)

“In the past, appraisals rarely disrupted a home sale.  But realtors and housing experts say new requirements and a difficult housing market are doing just that.  Year-to-date through September, one third of realtors have said appraisals resulted in buyers and sellers delaying or cancelling contracts or renegotiating to a lower sales price, according to the National Association of Realtors.”

San Francisco Chronicle“Neighborhood poverty surges in past decade, up 33%” (11-04-11)

“The number of Americans living in neighborhoods beset by extreme poverty surged in the past decade, erasing the progress of the 1990s, with the poorest areas growing more than twice as fast in suburbs as in cities.”

DS News“Home Price Growth Has Dissipated With the Summer Heat: Clear Capital” (11-04-11)

“Temperatures are falling, and so are home prices in most local markets. Clear Capital says it’s expecting another long winter as the housing industry tries to cope with the downward forces of weak demand, record-low consumer confidence, and distressed inventory.”

Housing Wire“BofA to raise up to $3 billion in stock issuance, reduce debt” (11-04-11)

“Bank of America (BAC: 6.49 -6.08%) intends to explore the issuance of common stock and senior notes in exchange for shares of preferred stock.”

Looking Back:

The MBA reported 3rd quarter commercial and multifamily mortgage loan originations increased 15% from the 2nd quarter of 2010. Jobless claims rose 4.5% the previous week. JPMorgan’s CEO claimed recent affidavit problems affected approximately 127,000 mortgage loans. Bruce Mosler of Cushman & Wakefield Inc. believed commercial real estate rents would rise in 2011.

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 10/24/11

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

A big story in the news is changes are being made to the refinancing program to help more homeowners who are underwater.  Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance reported the time it takes to approve a mortgage could now take up to 60 days as opposed to 30 originally.  Realty Times reported an increase in builder confidence this month.  In select states, foreclosed homes currently owned by HUD can be purchased at only a $100 down payment.

In The News:

MSNBC.com - “US announcs help for underwater homeowners” (10-24-11)

“A leading housing regulator on Monday announced changes to a government refinancing program that could help up to one million homeowners of the estimated 11 million whose homes are worth less than their mortgage.”

Housing Wire“Clogged application process extends mortgage approval timelines” (10-24-11)

“The time it takes to approve a mortgage in the United States grew from an average of 30 days to between 45 and 60 days over the past month, according to the latest survey from Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance.”

Bloomberg - “CMBS Underwriting Standards ‘Worrisome’ as Sales Surged, Moody’s” (10-24-11)

“Lenders loosened terms on commercial mortgages originated to be packaged into bonds during the third quarter as sales of the securities surged, according to Moody’s Investors Service.”

Realty Times - “Real Estate Outlook: Builder Confidence Rises” (10-24-11)

“Builder confidence is up for the month of October thanks to renewed buyer interest in select markets. This is the largest one-month gain since April 2010 when renewed confidence from the home buyer tax credit was in full swing.”

DS News - “HUD Offers REO Homes for $100 Down in Select States” (10-24-11)

“HUD has approved a program aimed at putting foreclosed homes back into the hands of owner-occupant buyers.  In select states, from now into October of next year, buyers need a down payment of only $100 to purchase a HUD-owned REO home.”

San Francisco Chronicle - “Fed Wants to Ensure U.S. Housing Affordability, Dudley Says” (10-24-11)

“Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William C. Dudley said the central  bank wants to keep mortgage interest rates from rising too much and may do more  to hold down borrowing costs.”

O.C. Register“Homebuying rises in 40 ZIPs!  Yours?” (10-24-11)

“For the 22 business days ending October 6 — DataQuick’s freshest stats — the Orange County real estate market had homebuying patterns showing: 24 of O.C.’s 83 ZIP codes with gains in their respective median selling price. Overall, buyers’ prices were -3.8% vs. a year ago.”

Housing Wire - “Stephens analyst expects LPS to top 3Q earnings estimates” (10-24-11)

“Lender Processing Services (LPS: 16.55 +7.47%) should easily beat third-quarter earnings forecasts after benefiting from improved foreclosure and mortgage metrics, according to one analyst at Stephens Inc.”

Los Angeles Times - “California housing agency forcing foreclosures” (10-24-11)

“A state agency that provides low-interest mortgages is foreclosing on a small number of clients even though they are making their monthly payments, a state Senate watchdog group reported.  The California Housing Finance Agency is foreclosing on homes because their financially strapped owners temporarily rent them out and move into cheaper rental properties, the Senate Office of Oversight and Outcomes said Monday.”

Inman - “Home Affordable Refinancing Program revamped to boost refis” (10-24-11)

“In an attempt to boost participation in the Obama administration’s  mortgage refinance program, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will release  lenders who sign off on a refinanced loan from some legal liabilities  associated with the original loan.”

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 10/12/11

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to Housing Wire, mortgage applications went up over 1% with the incease of purchase activity and refinancing.  DS News reported the Supreme Court will not be reviewing its case to reconsider the ruling in its recent court case.  According to Zillow’s latest data report, home values continue to remain the same as foreclosures begin to slow.

In The News:

Housing Wire - “Mortgage applications increase 1.3%” (10-12-11)

“Mortgage application filings increased 1.3% this past week as refinance and purchase activity picked up, an industry trade group said Wednesday.  The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that the market
composite index – a measure of loan application volume – jumped 1.3% on a seasonally adjusted basis from last week.”

Realty Times - “Mixed News Keeps Low Mortgage Rates Stable” (10-12-11)

“For the past week, mixed economic news that continues to lead the headlines has helped to keep low mortgage rates stable. Financial troubles in Europe has left investors busy each day waiting to see if Greece will default or a rescue plan will be implemented. Here in the U.S., even a negative report that is not considered terribly bad is spreading optimism to the markets making any predictions unreliable.”

DS News - “Supreme Court Declines to Review MERS Challenge” (10-12-11)

“The United States Supreme Court has denied a writ of certiorari in a case involving MERS, refusing to reconsider a California court ruling, which upheld MERS’ right to initiate foreclosures.”

Los Angeles Times“Weak demand at Treasury note sale drives rates up” (10-12-11)

“The U.S. Treasury saw weak demand at its auction of new 10-year notes, a sign that investors’ hunger for government bonds as a haven continues to ebb — at least at current low interest rates.”

Inman - “Company offers real estate agent directory app on Facebook” (10-12-11)

“N-Play, a company that offers a suite of real estate-related applications on Facebook, has rolled out a real estate agent directory app, the company announced last week.”

Realtor Magazine - “Zillow: Home Values Hold Steady, Foreclosures Slow” (10-12-11)

“Home prices mostly held flat in August, increasing a modest 0.1 percent from July to August, according to Zillow’s latest Home Value Index.”

DS News - “Fitch: Special Servicers Mitigate CMBS Losses” (10-12-11)

“The number of commercial mortgage backed securities (CMBS) resolved by special servicers in 2010 was more than four times the amount in 2009, according to Fitch’s CMBS loss study released Wednesday.”

Housing Wire“Senators press for mass mortgage refi plan” (10-12-11)

“A group of 16 senators sent a letter to regulators Tuesday, pressing for a plan to boost mortgage refinancing for more homeowners as soon as possible. Such a plan is being widely discussed admittedly, and now the lawmakers are ready to
see some action.”

Looking Back:

Multiple states were cooperating in an investigation to determine whether or not lenders violated foreclosure laws when seizing houses from delinquent borrowers. The U.S. was the second largest holder of U.S. debt. A survey from the National Association for Business Economics showed that economists expected gross domestic product would increase 2.6% in 2010 and 2011. According to a Thomson Reuters survey, 63% of potential home buyers were discouraged from buying a home because of the the current economic conditions.

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 9/2/11

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

Sources:

Foreclosures Now Take 20 months

Mortgage rates hover around all-time lows

Home prices decline in 40 states

Employment Situation Summary

Working Together for Strong Communities

New GSE appraisal database to tighten scrutiny on mortgage lenders

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. Realty Times reported again that mortgage rates are at their lowest on record.  Housing Wire reported that 17 banks that sold bad mortgage-backed securities to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are being sued by the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

In The News:

Housing WireU.S. sues 17 banks over MBS sold to Fannie, Freddie” (9-2-11)

“The Federal Housing Finance Agency sued 17 banks Friday, seeking damages from the sale of soured mortgage-backed securities to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”

Inman - “10 metros with greatest 5-year gain in real estate values” (9-2-11)

“Online real estate valuation and search company Zillow has  calculated the 10 U.S.  metro areas that have experienced the largest gains in home values over the  past five years, based on the company’s home-value estimates and its Zillow Home Value Index, which is generated from those  value estimates.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Employment Stagnated in August” (9-2-11)

“Employment in the U.S. unexpectedly stagnated in August, increasing pressure on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and President Barack Obama to spur an economy that’s barely growing two years into the recovery.”

Realty Times - “Making Home Affordable Program” (9-2-11)

“It made headlines when it emerged on the market in early 2009, but here’s a refresher on President Obama’s Making Home Affordable Program.  This program was designed to help up to 9 million families restructure or refinance their mortgages in an attempt to stave off foreclosure.”

DS News - “HUD Awards $10M to Housing Counseling Agencies” (9-2-11)

“HUD announced Friday that it will distribute more than $10 million to housing counseling agencies throughout the country.”

Housing Wire - “Hurricane Irene could cause home refinancing, purchasing issues” (9-2-11)

“Damage from Hurricane Irene could make it difficult for homeowners in the Northeast to close on pending home refinancing and mortgage purchase applications.

Los Angeles Times - “Long-term interest rates plunge on hopes for new Fed stimulus” (9-2-11)

“Long-term Treasury bond yields tumbled Friday as investors bet that the grim employment picture will force the Federal Reserve to launch a new bond-buying economic stimulus program.”

Realty Times - “Mortgage Rates Remain at or Near Historic Lows” (9-2-11)

“Freddie Mac (OTC: FMCC) today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing mortgage rates declining amid continued weak economic and housing data. While the 30-year fixed held steady, the 5-year ARM set a new all-time record low having fallen for the eighth consecutive week and now standing at 2.96 percent.”

O.C. Register - “Home prices up in 24 ZIPs! Yours?” (9-2-11)

“For the 22 business days ending August 16 – DataQuick’s freshest stats — the Orange County real estate market had homebuying patterns showing: 24 of O.C.’s 83 ZIP codes with gains in their respective median selling price. Overall, buyers’ prices were -2.8% vs. a year ago.”

Looking Back:

Servicers made over 120,000 proprietary loan modifications in July 2010, and 36,695 HAMP modifications. Pending home sales increased 5.2 percent in July 2010, according to the NAR. MBA reported 30+ day commercial delinquencies increased to 8.22 percent in the second quarter of 2010. Freddie Mac’s weekly survey showed mortgage rates dropped again to a rate of 4.32%.

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 8/29/11

Monday, August 29th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Despite pending sales of homes decreasing in July, a report by the National Association of Realtors showed they have actually increased significantly from last year.  New home sales, however, are continuing to decline for the third month in a row, leading some to fear this will be the worst year for home sales.  Property insurance companies are also facing their worst year with the recent hurricane Irene and the increase in natural disasters in the United States this year.

In The News:

Bloomberg - Pending Sales fo Owned Homes Fell in July” (8-29-11)

“The number of contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes fell in July for the first time in three months, a sign that lower prices and borrowing costs aren’t luring in buyers.

Housing Wire - “HUD extends deadline for unemployed mortgage assistance” (8-29-11)

“The Department of Housing and Urban Development will begin taking applications again for a new program providing interest-free loans to unemployed borrowers struggling with their mortgage payments..”

Realty Times - “Real Estate Outlook: Affordability Remains High” (8-29-11)

“When it comes to home affordability, levels are at near record generational highs.  The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI) indicates that in today’s market ’72.6 percent of all new and existing homes sold in the second quarter of the year were affordable to families earning the national median income of $64,200′.”

DS News - “On Mortgage Defaults, UFA Says Industry Headed for Recovery” (8-29-11)

“The default risk associated with newly originated mortgages continues to improve, according to the analysts at University Financial Associates (UFA) in Ann Arbor, Michigan.”

Rismedia - “Facebook Apps for Real Estate Professionals” (8-29-11)

“Social Stage LLC has just released the first suite of Facebook Applications specifically for the real estate industry and created a landing page for it at www.SocialStage.com/real-estate. Utilizing Social Stage’s complete suite of apps, they have created suite packages designed for real estate professionals.”

Housing Wire - “FDIC: Mortgage delinquency rate drops to lowest level since 2009″ (8-29-11)

“The combined delinquency rate on mortgages held by major banks dropped to 6.68% in the second quarter, the lowest level since the third quarter of 2009, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. data.”

Inman - “Worst year on record for new home sales” (8-29-11)

“Sales of new homes fell for the third straight month in July, and estimates for April, May, and June were revised down, fueling fears that this year will be the worst on record. Sales declined 0.7 percent from June, registering an annual rate of 298,000, according to data released by the U.S. Census and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.”

Los Angeles Times - “How big is your bank? Chase, Bank of America duel for No. 1 slot” (8-29-11)

“SNL Financial has compiled a list of the 50 biggest U.S. banks at the end of the second quarter, which shows Bank of America Corp. barely edging out JPMorgan Chase & Co. as the No. 1 U.S. financial institution as measured by assets.”

Realtor Magazine - “Property Insurance Industry Gets Battered by Irene” (8-29-11)

“Blizzards in the Midwest, fires in the Southwest, deadly tornadoes in the Southeast, flooding along the Mississippi, and now hurricanes — it’s been a tough year for the insurance industry. In fact, the rise in natural disasters this year has led the insurance industry to face one of its worst years on record, with Hurricane Irene damage over the weekend likely topping $7 billion alone — that would make it among the 10 costliest catastrophes in the country’s history, according to
estimates given to The New York Times by the Kinetic Analysis Corp.”

Inman - “Pending real estate sales rise in July” (8-29-11)

“Pending homes sales in July fell month-to-month for the first-time since April, but rose substantially compared to the same month a year ago, according to a report by the National Association of Realtors.”

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 8/26/11

Friday, August 26th, 2011

Sources:
Freddie delinquencies tick up for first time in 10 months
Increased mortgage delinquencies could adversely affect RMBS: S&P
July Pending Home Sales
Ben Bernanke Provides No Relief
C.A.R sends letters to top lenders re: short sales
Gov. Jerry Brown proposes job creation plan for California

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. Bloomberg reported Ben Bernanke has still not provided any good news for the economy.  Zillow recenlty estimated that the prices of homes declined over 4% last June.  Delinquencies are still on the rise, however, foreclosures and distressed sales are decreasing.  Banks are expeted to do more short sales with houses as these are expected to sell more quickly.

In The News:

Housing WireGDP growth revised down to 1% for 2Q” (8-26-11)

“Gross domestic product — or output of all goods and services — grew at an annual rate of 1% in the second quarter, compared to growth of 0.4% in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said Friday.”

Realty Times - “Foreclosures Slow but Delinquencies Rise” (8-26-11)

“A new report indicates that the number of delinquent mortgage borrowers climbed in the second quarter. That’s people who have missed at least one payment, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).”

DS News - “California Distressed Sales Decline, Realtors Push for Streamlined Shorts” (8-26-11)

“California’s pending home sales dipped in July, as did the share of distressed property sales, according to a report released by the state’s Realtor group this week.”

Bloomberg - “New York Buildings Face Storm Damage as Property Managers Plan for Irene” (8-26-11)

“Hurricane Irene may cause seriousdamage to some New York City buildings as it threatens to bring surging floodwaters and strong winds that may spur flying debris, property managers said as they prepared for the storm.”

Housing Wire“August consumer sentiment drops to 3-year low” (8-26-11)

“Consumer sentiment in the U.S. plunged to the lowest level in three years and to one of the lowest level recorded by the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan survey.”

Realty Times - “Mortgage Rates Follow Bond Yields Higher for the Week” (8-26-11)

“Freddie Mac today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing mortgage rates moving higher from the previous week’s record lows as Treasury bond yields moved higher and other housing data showed improvement. However, the 5-year ARM did decline to 3.07 percent thereby setting a new all-time record low.

Realtor Magazine“Banks Agree to More Short Sales” (8-26-11)

“Banks are agreeing to more short sale transactions, and short sales are taking less time to sell, which is helping to clear large inventories of distressed properties more efficiently, says James J. Saccacio, RealtyTrac CEO, in releasing new housing data this week.”

Housing Wire - “Zillow estimates 4.3% decline in home prices” (8-26-11)

“Standard & Poor’s is likely to report a 4.3% decline in June home prices year-over-year and a 1.2% increase from the previous month when it releases its June Case-Shiller Home Price Indices study next Tuesday, Zillow said Friday.”

Los Angeles Times - “Corporate profits increase as GDP remains sluggish” (8-26-11)

“The nation’s gross domestic product may be growing at just a crawl, but corporations aren’t doing so badly in this economy, according to data released from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.  Corporate profits increased in the second quarter, as did the amount of cash businesses had available for investments, as taxes decreased.”

DS News - “Radar Logic to Propose Plan to Address Government REOs” (8-26-11)

“Radar Logic plans to publish a response to the government’s proposal to sell pools of foreclosed homes to investors to rent.”

Bloomberg“Bernanke Doesn’t Signal More Stimulus” (8-26-11)

“Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the central bank still has tools to stimulate a recovery that has been weaker than forecast while sticking to his view that growth will pick up.”

Looking Back:

The MBA’s second quarter survey showed the delinquency rate for mortgage loans on residential properties dropped to 9.85 percent. Freddie Mac reported that interest rates dropped AGAIN to 4.36%. According to CoreLogic, 23 percent of residential homes with mortgages were in negative equity at the end of the 2nd quarter of 2010. Barclays Capital claims existing home sales decreased 30% in July 2010.

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