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Posts Tagged ‘John Burns’

233-TNG Radio – John Burns 7-09-11

Friday, July 8th, 2011

 

John-Burns

John Burns

President, John Burns Real Estate Consulting


(Full Bio)

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

In today’s topic, Bruce started by asking what the common theme has been for a builder to survive between 2007 and now. In response, John states that first, regarding the privately held ones, the ones that were managing their balance sheets very carefully, trying to not become too overextended in debt, diversified into other businesses, and sold land at the top of the market were the ones who made it through. Some of the public builders, even after the market corrected, carried out some large bulk land sales, some being almost $.34 on the dollar while others were $.16 on the dollar. Not only did this get them some cash in the bank, but they were able to recognize some tax losses and get back millions of dollars that they had paid the IRS in prior years. The other thing that happened to the public builders was that the debt markets were wide open the last couple of years, so they have gone out to the debt markets and stuck out their debt maturities until 2016 or later. They have not had to make principle payments. So the two things previously mentioned have really helped them significantly.

As Bruce says, from a lender’s perspective this is a straight note. In 2016, they have a lot of bonds due, and at the time that they come due they either have to write another check or obtain another bond. They don’t have one big bond due in 2016; they have little chunks due in various years, which was really smart. However, at some point you will have to either refinance or pay off the debt. Most likely nothing spectacular will happen before 2016, but the bondholders who buy that are managing Bruce’s and John’s retirement funds, and right now a 10-year treasury is 3% while a lot of the debt trade is anywhere from 6-11%. Therefore, there is an appetite for the high-yield portion of the funds where they will take some risk. If things get really bad, they may have to refinance from an 8% interest rate into a 10 or 11% rate, but the person who owns 8% rate still gets paid off that way. The real risk is if the bondholder can’t refinance because someone thinks the bonds are not going to make it.

If you’re a public builder, the biggest advantage is the access to the capital markets. If you’re a private builder, you don’t have this kind of access, and all the debt is non-recourse. The public builder CEOs sleep better than private builders because they don’t have recourse debt. The ones with the best balance sheets have bought quite a bit of land, some of it with a really long-term perspective because none of them are worried about any cash crunch. Most of the builders have been buying enough land to assure that they have good revenue in 2012 and 2013. Much of the land they own is in tough areas where they can’t make money, so they’re trying to buy land in better locations. They will come back to the tougher land some day in the future when it makes sense again, usually in about 6-8 years. In the meantime, the twelve largest publicly trade builders are sitting on $13 billion in cash. So what do you do with that cash? Most of redeploying it into their own business, but also, if you look at their income you see that they’re breaking even and covering their overhead to stay alive for another day. Some of the more creative ones are now thinking about new businesses to get into. Toll Brothers is buying nonperforming loans from the FDIC and starting a golf course management business. Lennar is buying nonperforming loans, and Beazer is buying REO in Phoenix and renting it out. There have been local builders that have been involved in the trust deed sale business to buy, resell, and have houses to fix. Bruce does not think they’re used to the margins, and how big the margins are is usually a common misconception. For example, in the business The Norris Group does the margins shrunk. Beazer, for example, is hoping to make a 6-8% return on their REO purchases and are not looking for anything bigger than that. They’re keeping them as rentals and not reselling it until some point in the future. If you’re buying and reselling it the return is quite a bit better, but it’s also risky.

They went on to discuss shadow inventory. John’s definition of shadow inventory is a distressed sale that is not yet on the market. If somebody is 90 days delinquent or more, research has shown that very few of those delinquencies become current and the borrower gets saved. There are about 4.5 million of these in the country today, and our best estimate is about 1-2 million of them are on the market. Therefore, there is about 3.5 million shadow inventory with more coming. The report Bruce saw had 91,000 resolutions in the month the report came out, so being in the buying and selling business, The Norris Group is feeling pretty comfortable right now. In Riverside when you look at what’s for sale, you have a few REOs, some in disrepair, and a lot of short sales. However, this is not too exciting if you are an owner-occupant buyer because it may take 4 months to get a yes or a no answer. You don’t really have a lot of real inventory to sell against, but if you look at what is behind you at the churning shadow inventory, a lot of times the thought that lenders have already taken back the property and are not presenting it on the market just shows that what John Burns believes about shadow inventory is true. Shadow inventory is the properties they refuse foreclose on, and this is one of the things they talked about when they met with Fannie and Freddie. About 30% of all the foreclosures are over two years behind. Bruce wonders if next year they will be three years behind. At some point, we need to cut to the chase.

There is a website called housingwire.com, which was founded by a man from the mortgage servicing business who is very well connected to the industry. They had a conference in North Carolina two weeks ago that John attended along with all the top foreclosure attorneys and the CEOs of Fannie and Freddie. Here, John became very convinced that virtually every judge in America hates the banks, does not trust them, and is going to make it very difficult for them to move and act and foreclose the way they want to. The Norris Group had interviewed the president of MERS right after he had testified in Congress, and simultaneously almost the same week Bruce interviewed the president of the Title Insurance industry. Bruce’s concern was that they’re buying REOs trying to resell them, and all of a sudden in the industry people are getting sued because somebody said they were foreclosed on wrongfully. The idea that you’re being hung out to dry is one of the reasons Bruce interviewed the president from title insurance. He’s asking himself, “Do we have title insurance?”, which is true if you have an REO. But if he buys at trustee sales, it’s not necessarily true. You’re stepping into lender liability issues and a whole bunch of other things. Sometimes he gets title insurance the day he wins the bid, and another time they were sued because there was not a reason to foreclose. Recently, there have been courts that have upheld that, when a commitment has been made verbally to a client that the lender is in fact going to pursue a loan modification and they foreclose on them anyway, the client does have recourse and rights to sue.

Another interesting twist with how the lenders conduct the sales is that the only way there is a deal, in Riverside for example, is if the lender lowers the bid. If they are owed $500 and start opening bids at $200, then Bruce said he will be interested at that point and will pursue checking out title and who is in the house. What he does not understand is when lenders let Bruce know at 8 a.m. about a 10 a.m. sale. He does have the infrastructure to be able to cope with this and get to a knowledgeable answer very quickly, so he might end up with some deals that he wouldn’t normally have. However, from a lender’s side it is absolutely ridiculous because you end up with far less qualified people being able to bid up the price. It’s rare that The Norris Group would do much interviewing of the person at the door because a lot of times they’re either not there or don’t answer or they will tell you stories. So it’s hard, but this is the business model. In the courts and politics there is definitely a leaning away from housing, and this is going to be so different than the 30 years we have just experienced for most of our careers.

Bruce stated that as we see the prices of homes go down in Riverside to where they are below replacement cost, then it’s a safe bet that we’re going to build a another house in Riverside. From the peak of housing construction to today, building costs are down about 30-35%. However, a portion of this reduced cost is that builders are putting fewer bells and whistles in the house. They have cut down on the amenities, and most of the savings have come from labor as well as all the materials. There are some cost increases with the commodity increases, but none on the labor side. They preferred not to go into depth on inflation and deflation; but Bruce said he reads everything he can on it and the practical side of him looks at the ability for labor to ask for more per hour, which he does not see happening anytime soon. Normally, printing more money causes inflation, but for some reason Japan has printed a lot of money and they don’t have inflation, so deflation and inflation are kind of a confusing situation. However, it does at the same time make it difficult as an investor to go forward and make the correct decisions, so you really have to be conservative, which most of the companies who have survived have done. As an interesting twist on costs, John has been receiving some early feedback from clients who think the cost of entitling lots is going to get more expensive. There are going to be environmental regulations along with storm water mitigation efforts moving about that could significantly increase the cost of new construction. The army corp. of engineers is making some changes. After Hurricane Katrina, they changed the definition of what a 100-year plane flood was and made an entire area of Sacramento that was under development just stop development in the middle because the workers had to go fix the levies in New Orleans before they could build any more. The environmental movement that is now taking a foot in the country is going to make construction more expensive. On the same note, when you’re fixing properties there are areas even in California where you now have to have a permit for every rental that you have. They will also most likely mandate more energy efficient homes, which will also be more expensive to build. There is one city that mandates repairs of the property to specific standards. It’s pretty scary. There is financing available for this type of work, and somehow it is equal to a tax lean, a superior lean to the first. So you can buy a property, borrow money to do the green rehab, and it becomes superior to the first trust deed in the case of a foreclosure and non-payment. On a related matter regarding CFD bonds and mello roos bonds, a lot of John’s construction lending clients suddenly woke up and realized that they didn’t make the first loan, but instead the second one. The mello roos one was superior, and now they’re the equity in the project instead of the debt.

In general, the construction business is down as well as commercial real estate. It’s unknown what the percentage of employment or GDP this represents, but it is possible that we are in the early stages of seeing a lot of apartment construction. This will be good for the economy, but only time will tell whether the apartment market will be overbuilt. If in the future the housing declines then about 4.5 million people won’t live in the apartments anymore, but at the same time it will create 4.5 million vacant residences. There could be a case for them building apartments that are more attractive if they have the amenities that people want, something about which builders ask a lot. They would not build an apartment complex that is bare bones, but instead they would build ones where people would rather be in the apartment than a house. They also would not build it in the Inland Empire, but rather San Diego, Orange County, and L.A in areas where people would traditionally rent anyway. The thought is that as we come out of this and create millions of jobs, for all the reasons discussed in this radio show people are going to be forced to rent. If you look at all the pro-government policies toward home ownership over the last twenty years reversing themselves, it’s going to create an opportunity to build some apartment complexes, even though there have not been a lot built over the last twenty years. Probably more importantly than anything else is that it’s not the fundamentals that matter, it’s the demand and supply of capital. The money is flowing in to build apartments.

When asked whether California’s employment situation has even been solved without construction being a major contributor, John responded that he has not sure it’s ever been solved. One interesting statistic is that there are 350,000 fewer documented employees in L.A. today than 1990. In Japan, it took them till about the year 2000 to get back to their 1990 levels of employment, while we have fallen since then.

The Pure Affordability Index, which looks at housing costs in relation to income on John’s website, holds an A+ right now. However, when you look at some of the other factors that John and his company group into the Affordability Index, things are horrible. This is why affordability holds a D+ on his scale even though it’s at the highest it has been. If you’re a renter, today is the most affordable time to get into the market. If you’re a homeowner, it’s an F. This is because you lack equity. The strongest F is the loan to value on existing loans, which holds an 85%, which is a lot higher than it was earlier. They also look at income growth, which is also not very strong right now. Also, the debt-to-equity ratio does not include properties that are free and clear, but only the ones that have debt.

In regards to California’s commercial market, it is a lot like what the residential market was like 4-5 years ago where people are staring at a lot of maturities coming due. The interesting conundrum here is if interest rates stay low, you are most likely going to see a lot of extend and pretend. This is because the loan to values won’t come in, but the properties can cash flow given the interest rate being so low. If interest rates go up, then there is no hope of extending and pretending and therefore you will see a lot of distress including the properties that have a lot of vacancy.

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.

232-TNG Radio – John Burns 7-02-11

Friday, July 1st, 2011

 

John-Burns

John Burns

President, John Burns Real Estate Consulting


(Full Bio)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/13/11

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

Top News Stories: Several sources have reported that the number of foreclosures are expected to increase in 2011.  Bloomberg expected them to rise almost 20%.  In other news, a top story is that mortgage rates declined for the second week in a row according to Freddie Mac. Corelogic reported that home prices continued to decline.  On a positive note, however, John Burns said this has not stopped consumers from wanting to purchase homes.

In The News:

Housing Wire- “Foreclosures getting more erratic out West: ForeclosureRadar” (1-13-11)

“As mortgage servicers grapple with unique foreclosure issues from state to state, the amount of filings varied just as widely in December.”

Inman - “Steady growth foreseen, but no ‘housing revival’” (1-13-11)

“A recovering economy should translate into a spring home-selling season that’s better than last year’s, according to two economic forecasts presented jointly here at the annual meeting of the National Association of Home Builders.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Foreclosure Filings May Jump 20% in 2011 as Crisis Peaks” (1-13-11)

“The number of U.S. homes receiving a foreclosure filing will climb about 20 percent in 2011, reaching a peak for the housing crisis, as unemployment remains high and banks resume seizures after a slowdown, RealtyTrac Inc. said.”

RisMedia - “RealtyTrac Releases Year-End Foreclosure Report” (1-13-11)

“RealtyTrac, a leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties, released its Year-End 2010 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report, which shows a total of 3,825,637 foreclosure filings—default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions—were reported on a record 2,871,891 U.S. properties in 2010, an increase of nearly 2% from 2009 and an increase of 23% from 2008.”

Housing Wire – “Freddie Mac mortgage rates decline for second consecutive week” (1-13-11)

“After about a month and half of increases, Freddie Mac mortgage rates declined for a second consecutive week.”

CNN Money - “Regulators: Wake up and smell the loan risks” (1-13-11)

“Disputes related to failed mortgages are ballooning amid the fallout of loan securitizations and sales made by some of the biggest banks. But, for the time being, it doesn’t look like the primary bank regulators are doing much about it.”

DS News - “Pro Teck Valuation Services Partners with Collateral Analytics” (1-13-11)

Pro Teck Valuation Services, a Massachusetts-based national provider of residential real estate valuations, recently partnered with Collateral Analytics, a developerof real estate analytic products and tools headquartered in Hawaii, to offer a suite of real estate analytic products to Pro Teck customers.”

Realtor - “More Borrowers Face Expiring Lock-in Rates “ (1-13-11)

“Many borrowers opt to lock in mortgage rates when buying a home or refinancing to help protect themselves against any sudden increases in interest rates while the loan is being processed.”

The O.C. Register - “Calif. home prices decline again” (1-13-11)

“Whatever momentum the California housing market may have had early last year seems to have evaporated. California home prices were falling at a 2.03 percent annual rate in November, the second consecutive year-over-year drop, according to CoreLogic’s math.”

Housing Wire - “John Burns: Despite the housing struggle, people still want to buy” (1-13-11)

“While the overall economy is starting to head forward through recovery, housing continues to stumble behind, according to a recent report card from John Burns Real Estate.”

Looking Back:

CBIA reported that condominium sales were 39 percent higher from 2009. The MBA’s weekly survey showed that mortgage loan application volume increased by 14.3 percent from the prior week. Jumbo residential mortgage-backed securities increased to 9.2 percent from December 2008 to December 2009. All but two of the Federal Reserve districts reported increased activity or improved 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 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 11/19/10

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

Resources:
Delinquencies and Loans in Foreclosure Decrease
Southland Home Sales Fall, Prices Flat
CoreLogic: Mortgage fraud up 20% from 2009
Freddie Mac survey shows mortgage rates at highest level since August
Freddie Mac survey shows mortgage rates at highest level since August
Home Buying Gets Tougher as Lenders Restrict FHA Loans
FHA Reserves Fall to Lowest on Record as Agency Boosts Capital
MERS to testify it forecloses only by mortgage servicer request
http://banking.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.LiveStream&Hearing_id=df8cb685-c1bf-4eea-941d-cf9d5173873a
Problems in Mortgage Servicing From Modification to Foreclosure
MERS CEO Defends Technology to Senate Committee
The Consequences of Mortgage Irregularities for Financial Stability… in Plain English
CAI Survey: Associations Hit Hard by Housing, Economic Slump
FTC Issues Final Rule to Protect Struggling Homeowners from Mortgage Relief Scams
Fiserv expects another big drop in home prices next year
S&P predicts more home price declines through 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

October home sales fell 9.8%, according to RE/MAX. The Federal Trade Commission released a new rule banning companies from accepting fees on mortgage mods before a homeowner’s loan servicer deems the services rendered acceptable. The Federal Housing Finance Administration announced that loan limits on jumbo conforming loans will stay the same for the first nine months of 2011. The Treasury reports borrowers aided by HAMP increased to nearly 520,000 last month.

In The News:

Inman - “Median housing value fell 5.8% in 2009″ (11-19-10)

“Median housing value fell 5.8 percent in 2009, to $185,200 from $196,700 in 2008, the U.S. Census Bureau reported, according to data obtained from the American Community Survey (ACS).”

Housing Wire“Fed chairman disappointed in slow economic recovery” (11-19-10)

“Disappointingly slow. That’s Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s latest assessment of the economic recovery in the U.S. But, he does believe the central bank’s policy changes are helping.”

Housing Wire“Tightening mortgage tax code limits housing recovery: John Burns” (11-19-10)

“John Burns Real Estate Consulting said in a report Friday that government intervention is hurting the housing market, and the firm is growing more concerned that lawmakers will reduce the cap on mortgage interest rates that qualify for tax deductions ‘significantly.’”

Housing Wire“Credit Suisse lists mortgage servicers with highest Ginnie Mae delinquencies” (11-19-10)

“Ally Financial’s (GJM: 22.39 +0.40%) GMAC Mortgage holds the highest serious delinquency rate of Ginnie Mae-backed mortgages for any servicer, according to a report from investment bank Credit Suisse.”

Housing Wire“New FTC rule aimed at mortgage-relief scams” (11-19-10)

“The Federal Trade Commission unveiled a new rule that bans companies from accepting fees for mortgage modifications before a homeowner’s bank or loan servicer deems the services rendered acceptable.”

Housing Wire“Failed HAMP mod short sales increase through September” (11-19-10)

“Top mortgage servicers have completed 91,827 short sales or deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure on canceled trial or declined modifications through the Home Affordable Modification Program as of September, up 27% from the previous month, according to data from the Treasury Department.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Homeowners Drop Out of Foreclosure Program Amid Record Defaults” (11-19-10)

“Borrowers aided by the Home Affordable Modification Program grew to nearly 520,000 in October, up 23,750 from a month earlier, the Treasury said in its monthly report. The increase was less than five percent. A total of 36,300 borrowers have dropped out of the plan for failing to make their payments, an increase of 24 percent from a month earlier.”

Housing Wire“RE/MAX: October home sales slide as seasonal slowdown hits market” (11-19-10)

“October home sales slid 9.8% from September and 30.2% compared to the year-ago period as seasonal slowdowns and the expired homebuyer’s tax credit took their toll, according to the RE/MAX National Housing Report released Friday.”

Housing Wire“Jumbo loan limits remain the same in 2011″ (11-19-10)

“The loan limits on jumbo conforming loans will remain unchanged for the first nine months of 2011 the Federal Housing Finance Administration said Friday. The agency recently enacted a congressional continuing resolution to maintain the limits.”

Housing Wire - “Failed HAMP mod short sales increase through September” (11-19-10)

“Top mortgage servicers have completed 91,827 short sales or deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure on canceled trial or declined modifications through the Home Affordable Modification Program as of September, up 27% from the previous month, according to data from the Treasury Department.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, an amendment was passed allowing federal regulators to dismantle financial firms considered to be “too big to fail”.  According to PMI Group, new home sales had decreased by 3.6 percent. The NAHB estimated that families earning the national median income could afford 70.1 percent of the new and existing homes sold in Q3 of 2009. First American CoreLogic reported that home prices declined by 9.8 percent in September from the previous year.

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 8/19/10

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Energy efficiency loans hit the skids as many banks see the risk outweighing the rewards. A White House-created commission look at possibly increasing the age for retirement benefits with the backing of AARP. California rates as one of the country’s hottest real estate markets for price increases while a PMI Mortgage Insurance Co. report lists 7 California areas (both northern and southern) that will most likely witness price declines in the next two years.

In The News:

C.A.R.“Bank of America Permanent HAMP Modifications Increase 5.9% in July” (8-19-10)

“The percentage of households that could afford to buy an entry-level home in California stood at 64 percent in the second quarter of 2010, compared with 67 percent for the same period a year ago, according to a report released today by the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.).”

Los Angeles Times “Loan program for green home upgrades stalls” (8-19-10)

“Funds dry up, and many projects are left in limbo, after regulators and lenders raise alarms over terms of the Property Assessed Clean Energy program.”  This is better known as PACE in most green circles.

Wall Street Jounral -“Cuts in Social Security Weighed by Fiscal Panel” (8-19-10)

“A White House-created commission is considering proposals to raise the retirement age and make other changes to shore up the finances of Social Security, prompting key players to prepare for a major battle over the program’s future. The commission is looking into ways to address the country’s long-term fiscal problems, but even before it settles on proposals many liberals are vowing to block cuts in retirement benefits. Some key players appear open to a deal, however, including the White House and the powerful senior group AARP.”

Housing Wire - “MBA Convinces Florida to Drop Certain Mortgage Underwriter Requirements” (8-19-10)

“In the first part of 2010, the Florida Office of Financial Regulation (OFR) passed a mandate that mortgage processors and underwriters must become licensed as loan originators. According to an email sent today from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), the trade group successfully convinced the OFR to reverse this requirement.”

Wall Street Jounral “Mortgage Delinquency Runs Slightly Higher in Dems’ Districts” (8-19-10)

“On average, districts represented by Democrats have an average serious delinquency rate of 9.9%, while the Republicans, which represent 77 fewer districts, have an average rate of 8.7%.”

OC Register“Calif. ranks as third-hottest home market” (8-19-10)

“California slipped from first place to third in home price gains in CoreLogic’s latest home-price report.”

Inman “Top 20 metros at risk of price declines” (8-19-10)

“The risk of price declines in the next two years declined during the first quarter in 75 percent of 384 markets tracked by PMI Mortgage Insurance Co., including 40 of the 50 nation’s most populous metro areas.” 7 of of 10 for California isn’t that bad. Right?

Wall Street JournalEconomists React: Jobless Claims Cast Doubt on Recovery (8-19-10)

Housing Wire - “John Burns: GSE Renting Options Will Increase Demand and Limit Supply” (8-19-10)

“The government should create an apartment real estate investment trust (REIT) to rent out foreclosed properties — a method that would avoid flooding the housing market with foreclosed properties, a real estate consultant said as President Obama’s “Future of Housing Finance Conference” kicked off Tuesday.”

Mortgage Orb - “Realogy CEO Takes Part in U.S. Government Conference on the Future of Housing Finance” (8-19-10)

“In assuming an “extremely adverse scenario,” it is conceivable that Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and Citi could be on the hook for as much as $180 billion in loan repurchase requests from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Fitch Ratings says.”

Mortgage Daily News“Fed Report Shows Decrease in Household Debt and Delinquencies” (8-19-10)

“The study distinguishes debt across the following types of accounts: mortgage accounts (including home equity installment loans (HEL)), home equity revolving accounts (HELOCs), auto loans, credit cards, student loans, and other loan accounts including consumer finance, retail stores and gas station accounts. As of June 30, American consumers owed $11.7 trillion, down 1.5 percent from the previous quarter and 6.5 percent below the peak level for consumer debt ($12.5 trillion) at the end of the third quarter of 2008. This downward trend has now continued for seven quarters.”

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 8/17/10

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Statistics from MDA DataQuick show 18,946 new and resale homes were sold in Southern California in July. Frank Nothaft of Freddie Mac announced that refinancing activity has accounted for over 80% of conventional loan activity. National housing starts increased by 7.1 percent last month, according to the NAHB. The MBA expressed concerns that recent policy changes restricting seller concessions went too far and may damage the industry.

In The News:

DQNews - “Southern California Home Sales and Median Price Dip in July” (8-17-10)

“A total of 18,946 new and resale homes were sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties in July. That was down 20.6 percent from 23,871 in June, and down 21.4 percent from 24,104 for July 2009, according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego.”

NAHB - “Housing Starts Rise 1.7 Percent in July” (8-17-10)

“Nationwide housing starts inched up 1.7 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 546,000 units in July from a downwardly revised figure in the previous month, according to U.S. Commerce Department figures released today. The gain occurred entirely on the multifamily side, with single-family housing production falling 4.2 percent to 432,000 units.”

Housing Wire“MBA Prefers FHA Seller Concessions Lowered to 4%” (8-17-10)

“In a letter to the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the MBA said its members urge the federal agency ‘to ensure policies do not reach too far and needlessly discourage home buying at a time when the housing market is still fragile.’ Last month, HUD announced possible policy changes within the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) aimed at boosting capital reserves. The changes include reducing the limit on seller concessions to 3% from 6%; using a FICO credit score of 500 as a minimum for consideration in FHA programs; and lowering the maximum loan-to-value to 90% for all borrowers with credit scores less than 580.”

Housing Wire“Fannie Mae Sees Housing Activity Flat in 2H” (8-17-10)

“The GSE also said continued uncertainty and a slower-than-normal recovery points to overall GDP growth of 2.5% for the rest of the year. In July, analysts at Fannie Mae’s economics and mortgage market analysis group projected growth of 2.8%, which was down from a June estimate of 3.2%. The agency expects the low, 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages to boost refinance activity but not result in any sort of refinance boom. The current average rate of 4.5% is expected to remain throughout 2010.”

Housing Wire“John Burns: GSE Renting Options Will Increase Demand and Limit Supply” (8-17-10)

“The government should create an apartment real estate investment trust (REIT) to rent out foreclosed properties — a method that would avoid flooding the housing market with foreclosed properties, a real estate consultant said as President Obama’s ‘Future of Housing Finance Conference’ kicked off Tuesday. John Burns, CEO of John Burns Real Estate Consulting, said the government-created REIT would be self-sustaining via rental fees. The government-sponsored enterprises, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, would hire outside property-management firms to manage the rental properties, Burns said.”

Housing Wire“Refinancing Accounts for 80% of Loan Activity over Last 2 Months: Nothaft” (8-17-10)

“Over the last two months, refinancing activity has accounted for more than 80% of all conventional loan activity, said Frank Nothaft, chief economist at Freddie Mac. In a Featured Perspectives report out Monday, Nothaft said Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have purchased 1.4m refinance loans, including nearly 200,000 loans that have gone through the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP).”

Housing Wire“Bank of America Merrill Lynch: Bearish Sentiment Eases” (8-17-10)

“BofAML, a unit of Bank of America, said the bearish sentiment for the global economic outlook and corporate earnings has eased. The most recent data show 5% of survey respondents expect the global economy will improve in the next year. In July, 12% percent of respondents predicted the world economy would deteriorate, BofAML said. But recession fears seem to have subsided, as 78% of fund managers surveyed last week don’t expect a double-dip recession. Still, 73% continue to see ‘below-trend growth and inflation.’”

Housing Wire“TransUnion: Housing Begins to Stabilize as Delinquent Loans Fall in Q210″ (8-17-10)

“National mortgage loan delinquency rates for loans delinquent 60 days or more fell for the second quarter in a row to 6.67%, according to TransUnion’s quarterly trend analysis released Tuesday; a sign the housing sector is beginning to stabilize. The 1.48% drop in Q210 follows an 18.52% drop in Q110 for loans delinquent 60 days or more. Delinquent loans accounted for 6.77% of the all loans in Q110. The current delinquency rate is still up 14.8% from the same quarter last year when the rate was 5.81%.”

Housing Wire“Private Sector Modifications Increase 10% in June” (8-17-10)

“The housing industry conducted 123,000 permanent modifications through private programs in June, a 10% increase from the 112,000 done in May, according to Hope Now, a private sector alliance of mortgage servicers, investors, insurers and nonprofit counselors.”

Housing Wire“Bankrate: Loan Closing Costs Jump 36.6% Year-Over-Year” (8-17-10)

“The average origination and third-party fees on a $200,000 mortgage increased 36.6% to $3,741 from last year’s average of $2,739, according to Bankrate’s annual mortgage fee survey. Lender origination fees increased to $1,463, or 22.8%, in 2010 from $1,192 in 2009, while the average total third-party fees rose 47.2%, to $2,277 from the year-ago average of $1,547.”

Housing Wire“Homebuyer Demand All But a ‘Standstill’: Altos Research” (8-17-10)

“The average national house price was $474,946 in July, according to the Altos 10-city composite price index. The index fell ‘significantly’ from its high in the summer of last year, when buyers were taking advantage of the homebuyer tax credit. It has declined for the past 11 months. The tax credit expired in April.”

Bloomberg - “Home Depot Profit Tops Analysts’ Estimates as Sales Increase” (8-17-10)

“Net income increased 6.8 percent to $1.19 billion, or 72 cents a share, in the quarter ended Aug. 1, from $1.12 billion, or 66 cents, a year earlier, Atlanta-based Home Depot said today in a statement. Analysts projected 71 cents, the average of 23 estimates in a Bloomberg survey.”

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 8/16/10

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to the NAHB, builder confidence fell for the 3rd straight month. The California Homebuilding Foundation reports the housing industry’s economic output has decreased by nearly 80% since 2005. New rules were released which restrict an originator from receiving compensation based on the interest rate or other loan terms of the mortgage. Michael Carliner of Harvard University believes that the decrease in mortgage rates will not offset the effect of decreasing home values on home buyer pessimism.

In The News:

The Hill“Banks to benefit most from White House program to help fight foreclosures” (8-15-10)

“‘Giving money to the banks isn’t what the government should be doing right now,’ said Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.”

Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis“Former Bank Regulator William Black: U.S. Using ‘Really Stupid Strategy’ to Hide Bank Losses – Will Produce Japanese Style Lost Decade” (8-15-10)

“we should be upset there are not more bank failures. The industry has used its political muscle to get Congress to extort the financial accounting standards board to gimmick the accounting rules so that banks do not have to recognize their losses.”

USA Money“Thoughts of real estate double dip deter investors” (8-14-10)

“‘Housing is entering a double dip in prices,’ says Paul Dales, chief economist at the research group, Capital Economics. ‘They are headed down even more over the next 18 months by as much as 5%. Anyone looking for a short term gain by selling a property is heading for trouble.’”

John Burns“U.S. Housing Market Statistics” (7-31-10)

This article contains a list of economic statistics which influence the housing market.

NAHB - “Builder Confidence Declines In August” (8-16-10)

“Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes edged down for a third consecutive month in August, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today. The HMI declined one point to 13, its lowest level since March of 2009.”

CBIA - “Study Shows Housing Industry’s Economic Output Down 80 Percent Since 2005″ (8-16-10)

“An updated version of The Economic Benefits of Housing report released today by the California Homebuilding Foundation (CHF) in conjunction with the Center for Strategic Economic Research (CSER), confirms that the housing industry’s economic output has fallen approximately 80 percent since 2005, representing a loss of tens of billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs to the state’s economy.”

Wall Street Journal“Redfin: Less Than Half of All Home-Sale Attempts Successful in ‘09″ (8-16-10)

“A survey of seven major housing markets found that less than half of all attempts to sell a home in 2009 had, as of last Wednesday, resulted in a sale. The survey looked at how the 500,000 homes that were listed for sale last year in seven of the nation’s biggest counties had fared. Around 47% of those listings had sold by last week, while just 4% of those listings were still active.”

CNBC - “US Banks Get Securities Buy-Back Window” (8-16-10)

“The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill has opened a 90-day window for banks to buy back $118 billion in high-cost securities, a move that would enable them to replace the instruments with cheaper capital but is likely to cause tensions with regulators and investors.”

Housing Wire - “House Price Appreciation Slows in June: CoreLogic” (8-16-10)

“National prices, including distressed sales, rose by 1.4% in June from a year earlier. The yearly appreciation slowed from the 3.7% increase in May from one year earlier. The May increase was revised up from the initial 2.9% estimate.”

Housing Wire“Fed Publishes Wave of Rules for Mortgage Origination Transparency” (8-16-10)

“The Fed released final rules restricting an originator from receiving compensation based on the interest rate or other loan terms of the mortgage. The new rules apply to mortgage brokers and the companies that employ them, as well as loan officers employed by depository institutions and other lenders.”

Bloomberg - “Your House Might Be Underwater for Years: Michael Carliner” (8-16-10)

“Now we’re seeing the opposite mindset. If a potential buyer believes that housing prices may fall more, then mortgage rates of 4.5 percent won’t attract home buyers. Rates could even drop to zero and it might not outweigh consumers’ negative perceptions. Household expectations of future U.S. home price appreciation aren’t directly measured, and are probably based on recent experience. If expectations reflect changes in home prices over the last three years, for example, consumers seem to anticipate annual house price declines of 3.7 percent to 10.4 percent, depending on which of the various house price indexes is used.”

Orange County Register – “Home closing costs are on the rise” (8-16-10)

“A new survey by Bankrate.com shows closing costs are climbing around the country. The average Good Faith Estimate on a $200,000 mortgage this year is $3,741, up from $2,732 in 2009.”

Orange County Register – “5 O.C. hot spots for home price cuts” (8-16-10)

“According to online home tracker Trulia.com, 32.5% of homes on the O.C. market have seen at least one price reduction as of Aug. 1. That compares to 30% in July. Nationwide, 25% of listings had at least one price trim, with the average reduction 10% off the original asking price.”

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 7/8/10

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to Freddie Mac, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate dropped to 4.57 percent. International Monetary Fund warns a double dip recession is still possible, despite its prediction that GDP will increase over the next year. Fitch Ratings predicts home improvement spending will increase 3.5% this year. Clear Capital reports national housing prices rose 5.2% during the last quarter.

In The News:

Associated Press - “Mortgage rates drop to new low of 4.57 pct.” (7-8-10)

“The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage dropped to 4.57 percent this week, mortgage company Freddie Mac reported Thursday. That’s down from the previous record low of 4.58 percent set last week.”

Housing Wire“International Monetary Fund Warns of Housing Double-Dip Risk” (7-8-10)

“Signs of recovery in the US economy and housing market are stronger than expected, due to policy response from the federal government, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). While IMF expects US gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 3.25% in 2010 and 3% in 2011, unemployment is projected to remain above 9%.”

Housing Wire“Fitch: Homebuyer Tax Credit Will Boost Home Improvement Spending” (7-8-10)

“Fitch Ratings expects home improvement spending to increase 3.5% in 2010 over 2009 levels, partly due to an influx of home sales incentivized by the first-time homebuyer tax credit”

Housing Wire“Wells Fargo to Lay Off 3,800 Employees, Leave Non-Prime Space” (7-8-10)

“In a restructuring of its financial division, Wells Fargo (WFC: 26.64 -0.08%) said it will eliminate 2,800 positions in the next two months and another 1,000 people by the end of the year. The bank will close 638 financial stores in the US as it will stop originating non-prime portfolio mortgage loans.”

Housing Wire“Fannie, Freddie Dropped from New York Stock Exchange” (7-8-10)

“The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) directed the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) in June to de-list from the NYSE and any other national securities exchange. The direction came after the price of their common stock hovered near the minimum average closing price of $1 for more than 30 days for most months since the conservatorship took effect in September 2008.”

Housing Wire“House Prices Soar 8.8% from 2009: Clear Capital” (7-8-10)

“House prices rose in June across the US in both the rolling quarter and the previous-year data, according to real estate asset valuation data provider Clear Capital. National prices rose 5.2% over the previous three-month period and 8.8% since June 2009. The quarterly and yearly growth seen in June builds on already positive data, after prices climbed 6.8% in May from the year before.”

Housing Wire“John Burns Sees Housing Market Hit Bottom with Little Downside to Investing” (7-8-10)

“The housing market has improved in the last two years to the extent that John Burns Real Estate Consulting sees the market as possibly approaching the beginning of its next up cycle.”

Bloomberg“Apartment Vacancies in U.S. Drop From 30-Year High, Reis Says” (7-8-10)

“The vacancy rate for apartment properties was 7.8 percent, down from a 30-year high of 8 percent in the first quarter and up from 7.7 percent a year earlier, according to a report today by the real estate research firm. First-quarter vacancies were the highest since 1980, when Reis began tracking the data.”

Orange County Register“O.C. builders rank among U.S. top 40″ (7-8-10)

“Seven homebuilding companies based in Orange County or having a strong presence here ranked in Builder Magazine’s newest list of the nation’s Top 100 Builders. Five of them were among the nation’s top 40 builders.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, 68 percent of recent home buyers said price decreases encouraged them to buy a house. PMI forecasted that home prices would decrease through 2011. Default rates doubled for commercial properties valued at more than $108 billion.

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 6/16/10

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Commerce Department reports housing starts fell 10% from April. According to the MBA, mortgage application volume increased 17.7 percent from last week. Fitch Ratings Ltd. forecasts that most borrowers who get lower mortgage payments under a federal government program will default within 12 months. New home sales were down 27% in May, according to a John Burns Real Estate Consulting builder survey.

In The News:

CNN - “New home construction sinks 10%” (6-16-10)

“Housing starts fell 10% from April to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 593,000 last month, the Commerce Department said. Economists were expecting housing starts to fall to only 655,000. On a year-over-year basis, starts rose 7.8% from May 2009.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationMBA Report Shows Economic Weakness Continues to Weigh on Commercial Mortgage Performance” (6-16-10)

“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. Delinquency rates continued to increase in the first quarter for all commercial/multifamily mortgage investor groups, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Commercial/Multifamily Delinquency Report.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationMortgage Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (6-16-10)

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending June 11, 2010.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 17.7 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 29.7 percent compared with the previous week, which was a shortened week due to the Memorial Day holiday.”

Wall Street JournalHigh Default Rate Seen for Modified Mortgages” (6-16-10)

“Fitch Ratings Ltd. forecasts that most borrowers who get lower mortgage payments under a federal government program will default within 12 months. Among those with loans that aren’t backed by any federal agency, the redefault rate within a year is likely to be 65% to 75% under the Obama administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP, according to a report to be released Wednesday by Fitch, a New York-based credit-rating firm. Almost all of those who got loan modifications have already defaulted once.”

Housing Wire“Builder Survey Reports New Home Sales Down 27% in May” (6-16-10)

“New home sales were down 27% in May, according to a John Burns Real Estate Consulting (JBREC) survey of builders. According to the monthly report, net sales per community were 1.35 units per community, down from last month’s 1.84 units per community. Builders also reported a decline in new housing starts in eight of 10 regions, as builders felt little hurry to start more homes. This echoes the results of a government report that showed the seasonally adjusted annual rate of housing starts declined 10% in May.”

Housing Wire“Mortgage Defaults, Foreclosures Drop Across California: ForeclosureRadar” (6-16-10)

“Mortgage defaults and foreclosure activity decreased in California from April to May, according to ForeclosureRadar, which tracks filings across the state. Notices of default fell 17% from April to May, and 43% from May 2009. Notices of trustee sale dropped 11% in May and decreased 35% from last year. Past foreclosures, the amount of properties banks repossessed, dropped 5% in May and 13% from a year ago.”

Housing Wire“Reid Urges 3-Month Extension of Homebuyer Tax Credit” (6-16-10)

“Under the tax credit’s current deadline, qualifying purchases that were under contract by April 30 must close by June 30. Under the proposed amendment introduced by Reid, Isakson and Dodd, that closing deadline would be pushed to Sept. 30, 2010 in an effort to ensure the qualifying sales can close.”

Realty Times“Should I Buy Older Construction?” (6-16-10)

“Without a full renovation, older homes usually come with a certain level of necessary repair. The electrical wiring may be dated, ungrounded, or made of undesirable material no longer in use. The telephone wiring may not accommodate highspeed data demands. Underground materials used for plumbing may have eroded, compromising the safety of water, or the structural integrity of the foundation. The foundation itself may not be as thick or rigid as newer structures. After all, the specifications for tension, and cement composition have advanced in the last several decades. Although many older homes have had their roofs repaired or replaced, some have gone decades without any care or maintenance. Air Conditioning units, water heaters, air ducts, and household appliances can all be dated and in need of substantial repair or replacement.”

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.