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Posts Tagged ‘JP Morgan’

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/13/10

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

MDA DataQuick reports 20,476 new and resale homes sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. Schwarzenegger signed a bill allowing taxpayers to be exempt from paying for forgiven mortgage debt. In 2008 and 2009, the income needed to buy a median-priced home decreased in 93 percent of U.S. markets. According to IAS, national house prices fell 0.6% in February.

In The News:

DQNews - “More Incremental Gains for Southland Real Estate Market” (4-13-10)

“A total of 20,476 new and resale homes sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. That was up 33.3 percent from 15,359 in February, and up 5.0 percent from 19,506 in March 2009, according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego.”

Sacramento Bee“California won’t tax forgiven home debt” (4-13-10)

“Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed legislation Monday to spare thousands of Californians big tax bills on mortgage debt forgiven in 2009. The bill, signed days before Thursday’s tax filing deadline, will eliminate state taxes on forgiven mortgage debt from 2009 through the end of 2012. The U.S. government has already done the same.”

Los Angeles Times“Washington Mutual created ‘mortgage time bomb,’ Senate panel says” (4-13-10)

“Before Washington Mutual collapsed in the largest bank failure in U.S. history, its executives knowingly created a ‘mortgage time bomb’ by making subprime loans they knew were likely to go bad and then packaging them into risky securities, a congressional investigation has found. In some cases, the bank took loans in which it had discovered fraudulent activity — such as misstated income by borrowers — and rolled them into mortgage securities sold to investors without disclosing the fraud, according to the report released Monday by the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.”

Inman - “The workers homeownership left behind” (4-13-10)

“Between 2008 and 2009, the income needed to purchase a median-priced home fell in 93 percent of the markets studied, while the income needed fell a median of 9.1 percent, the study said.”

Housing Wire“Top Four Banks Ready to Write-Down Second Liens” (4-13-10)

“In a hearing today before the House Financial Services Committee, representatives from Bank of America (BAC: 18.67 +0.05%), Citi (C: 4.62 -0.43%), JP Morgan Chase (JPM: 45.87 -0.59%) and Wells Fargo (WFC: 32.15 -0.83%) report that they do not feel efforts to satisfy second lien obligations represent a conflict of interest between the desires of investors and the needs of distressed borrowers. As a result, they are willing to write-down second liens if first lien lenders are doing the same. All four lenders are participants in the Second Lien Modification Program, known as 2MP, which is struggling to gain traction.”

Housing Wire“Seven Months of House Price Declines Keep IAS Index Near 2004 Levels” (4-13-10)

“National house prices fell 0.6% in February, the seventh consecutive month of decline, keeping prices ‘only fractionally higher’ than levels seen in 2004, according to collateral valuation firm Integrated Asset Services (IAS). Although February’s decline is smaller than recent months — like 0.7% in December — the IAS house price index is now down 25% from its peak in July 2007.”

Housing Wire“New Inspection Report Helps REO Holders Market Homes to FHA Borrowers” (4-13-10)

“Altisource Portfolio Solutions (ASPS: 25.61 -0.70%), a real estate portfolio services provider, introduced a new inspection report with increased data and repair information on subject properties. According to the company, while a traditional property inspection report outlines the general condition of a property, the new report includes information on the existence and condition of appliances, carpets or other flooring, and whether electrical systems are functioning.”

Bloomberg - “Mortgage-Bond Yields That Guide Loan Rates Fall to 3-Week Low” (4-13-10)

“Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30-year fixed-rate mortgage bonds fell about 0.01 percentage point to 4.44 percent as of 3:02 p.m. in New York, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s down from an eight-month high of 4.67 percent on April 5.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, distressed properties represented 25 percent of U.S. home sales. Jeff Greene confessed to his 2006 investment estimation that money could be quickly made by buying credit default swaps on mortgage backed securities. Experts warned that FHA loans would be the next biggest risk in the U.S. housing market.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 3/25/10

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

New rules for the HAMP program may require servicers to screen borrowers for modification after only 31 days of delinquency. ForeclosureListings.com shows that California experienced an 11.9% increase in foreclosures. Freddie Mac reports the 30-year FRM rate is currently at 4.99 percent. According to the Comptroller of the Currency,  the re-default rate for modified loans is over 50 percent.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“Bank of America to reduce mortgage principal for some borrowers” (3-25-10)

“Amid increasing government pressure to stem foreclosures, Bank of America Corp. said Wednesday that it would offer to erase as much as $3 billion in principal owed by thousands of severely delinquent borrowers who owe more than their homes are worth.”

Mercury News“Citigroup agrees to modify some second mortgages” (3-25-10)

“Citigroup on Thursday became the latest lender to commit to the government’s program to modify second mortgages as a recovery in the housing market appears to be in jeopardy. With Citi on board, now four big owners of home mortgages in the U.S. have joined the program — part of the Obama administration’s $75 billion loan modification plan aimed at reducing monthly payments to help customers stay in their homes. Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase already participate.”

Inman - “Home values rise in Boston, San Diego” (3-25-10)

“Radar Logic’s monthly RPX report, based on 28 days of price-per-square-foot data, found that the price per square foot rose most in Boston (up 15.5 percent, to $187.84 per square foot) year-over-year in January, and dropped most in Las Vegas (down 21.4 percent, to $76.18 per square foot) during that period.”

Housing Wire - “Treasury to Require HAMP Servicers to Step Up Outreach Efforts” (3-25-10)

“Allison announced that servicers must pursue early intervention, pre-screening every borrower that misses two or more payments to determine eligibility for HAMP and soliciting those qualifying borrowers for HAMP participation. This change encourages servicers to reach out to the borrower as early as 31 days of delinquency when the chance for homeownership retention is best, according to a supplemental directive on the changes provided to HousingWire.”

Housing Wire“ForeclosureListings: Texas Leads Nation in Foreclosure Gains” (3-25-10)

“The 35% increase of Texas foreclosures in February was the highest monthly gain of any state in the country, according to data from ForeclosureListings.com, an online foreclosure marketplace. Michigan had the second highest increase at 17.5%, followed by California at 11.9% and Florida at 4.7%.”

Housing Wire“Mortgage Rates Increase as Fed MBS Purchase Program Nears End” (3-25-10)

“Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.29 +0.78%) said the average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) was 4.99% with an average 0.6 origination point for the week ending March 25, up from last week’s average of 4.96%. A year ago, the rate average was 4.85%. The Bankrate.com survey of large banks and thrifts put the average rate for a 30-year FRM at 5.11% with an average 0.41 origination point, up from last week’s average of 5.07%, but down from last year’s average of 5.19%.”

Bloomberg - “Half of U.S. Home Loan Modifications Default Again” (3-25-10)

“More than half of U.S. borrowers who received loan modifications on delinquent mortgages defaulted again after nine months, according to a federal report. The re-default rate of loans modified in the first quarter of 2009 was 51.5 percent by the end of the year, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision said in a joint report today. The figure, which measures payments at least 30 days late, climbed to 57.9 percent for changes made in the prior 12 months.”

Bloomberg - “Prepare to Pay 15% Less for New U.S. Homes: Chart of the Day” (3-25-10)

“New-home prices may have to tumble 15 percent in the U.S. before sales start to rebound, according to Michael Panzner, an author and financial blogger. ”

Looking Back:

One year ago, The MBA reported a 32 percent increase in mortgage applications from the previous season. One in five homeowners owed more on their mortgage than their house was worth. The Federal Reserve began purchasing long-term treasuries. New home sales in the U.S. increased by 4.7 percent within a month.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 1/15/10

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Statistics from 10 primary U.S. cities show that home prices declined by 1 percent. ABA expects economic growth to increase at 3.1 percent through 2010. The U.S. Treasury Department reports that 66,465 permanent modifications were made in December.  Chris Thornberg forecasts that home prices will dip again in 2011.

In The News:

Housing Wire“JP Morgan Says Sell Mortgage Bonds as Fed Snaps Up Record MBS” (1-15-10)

“The spread of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) bonds yields to Treasuries is tight and likely to remain tight in the near-term, but swap spreads are currently 5-10 bps too narrow to greatly entice private investors, according to a JP Morgan Securities conference call on MBS and asset-backed securities (ABS).While private investors largely hold on the buy side, the government continues to buy up agency MBS as part of its $1.25trn agency MBS-purchase program.”

Housing Wire“House List Prices Down 1% in December: Altos” (1-15-10)

“Altos Research’s listing price index declined 1% in December and 1.4% during Q409, but for the year, the 10-city composite price index was up 5.2%, the company said, adding it projects asking prices to continue to decline during the winter 2010 months.”

Housing Wire“ABA Expects Economic Recovery Will Fuel Job Growth in 2010″ (1-15-10)

“High unemployment and constrained consumer spending will keep the speed of recovery in check, but ABA economists indicated real gross domestic product (GDP) will grow at an annualized rate of 3.1% throughout 2010. It’s half the historic rate of GDP growth seen after previous deep recessions, leaving the unemployment rate fairly high – but below 10% – at year-end.”

Housing Wire“HAMP Servicers Permanently Modify More Than 66,000 Mortgages” (1-15-10)

“Servicers participating in the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) completed 66,465 permanent modifications through December, according to a report from the US Treasury Department. It’s more than double the 31,382 permanent modifications reported through the month of November. More than 40,000 more active modifications need only the borrowers signature to become permanent, totaling 112,521 permanent modifications approved by the servicers.”

Housing Wire“JP Morgan Posts Q4 Profit Despite Mortgage Losses” (1-15-10)

“JP Morgan said it made approximately 600,000 mortgage modification offers to homeowners and approved 120,000 modifications during 2009.”

Housing Wire“Treasury Raises Cap on HAMP to $35.5bn” (1-15-10)

“The US Treasury Department raised the total amount of potential capped incentive payments for the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) from $27.7bn to $35.5bn, according to the latest Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) report.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. REITs Poised to Boost Dividends After Raising $33 Billion” (1-15-10)

“A dozen U.S. real estate investment trusts, part of an industry that raised $33 billion last year, likely will increase their next quarterly dividends. Public Storage, Annaly Capital Management Inc., and Inland Real Estate Corp. are among those that may boost payouts, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Vornado Realty Trust said this week it would resume paying its dividend fully in cash after a year of issuing it partially in stock. ”

Inman - “RPR courting MLSs” (1-15-10)

“By promising not to compete with MLSs — and allowing them an opportunity to make a quick exit from RPR if they aren’t satisfied with the results — company executives say they are out to sign up half the nation’s roughly 900 MLSs by the end of the year.”

Orange County Register“Home sales, prices seen falling in 2011″ (1-15-10)

“Orange County-based homebuilders were told Thursday that the recession may be over, but the future for the economy and the housing industry remains uncertain. As if to underscore that point, economist Chris Thornberg released a forecast projecting that after modest gains this year, home sales and prices will dip again in 2011 because of rising foreclosures and interest rates.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the NAR announced that sales on homes priced above $750,000 had decreased by nearly 50 percent. The rate for 30-year fixed mortgages dropped below 5 percent. The CBIA claimed that new home sales in California were “glacially slow”. Statistics from the Federal Reserve showed that jobless claims were rising.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 11/30/09

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

Edward Pinto expects 20 percent of FHA’s mortgage loans to default. The Federal Reserve bought $16 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities last week. According to Michael Barr, Over 650,000 mortgage modifications are currently being processed, and over 375,000 borrowers will receive permanent modifications by the end of this year. A survey from Barclay’s shows that as a U.S. citizen’s net worth increases so does the proportion of their wealth invested in real estate.

In The News:

CNBC - “Fannie Mae to Tighten Lending Standards” (11-26-09)

“Fannie Mae plans to raise minimum credit score requirements next month and limit the amount of overall debt that borrowers can carry relative to their incomes”

The Daily Reckoning“Federal Housing Administration Encourages More Bad Mortgage Loans” (11-26-09)

“An astounding 20 percent of the Federal Housing Administration’s $725 billion portfolio of mortgage loans will go into default as the result of the agency’s recent campaign to subsidize first-time homebuyers with little cash and weak credit. That prediction comes from an industry insider who has seen it all happen before: former chief credit officer of Fannie Mae, Edward Pinto, who recently testified before a House committee on the gathering storm of FHA mortgage defaults.”

Orange County Register“Banks forced to buy back more loans” (11-26-09)

“Banks had to buy back $7.1 billion in defaulted single-family loans in the third quarter to reimburse mortgage investors, up from $1.9 billion in the previous quarter. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Call Report information shows that most of the buyback demands fell on JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America. Chase repurchased $2.7 billion in defaulted loans and BoA repurchased $2.3 billion to satisfy investor demands.”

Finance My Money“FDIC too broke to Takeover Banks? No Bank Failure Friday on Black Friday. Can 5,300 Employees Deal with $5.3 Trillion in Deposits?” (11-30-09)

“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was hammered this week when a third quarter report demonstrated that the FDIC was running in the red to the sum of $8.2 billion. This is troubling since the FDIC protects deposits in member banks up to $250,000 and funds covered by the deposit insurance fund (DIF) are over $5.3 trillion, this amount is over one-third of our nationwide GDP. The FDIC as of Q1 of 2009 has 5,381 employees.”

San Francisco Chronicle“Gov’t increases pressure on mortgage industry” (11-30-09)

“The Treasury Department said Monday it will withhold payments from mortgage companies that aren’t doing enough to make the changes permanent. Officials will monitor the largest of the 71 participating mortgage companies via daily progress reports. The goal is to increase the rate at which troubled home loans are converted into new loans with lower monthly payments. At the end of October, more than 650,000 borrowers, or 20 percent of those eligible, had signed up for trials lasting up to five months.”

Inman“Non-investors get Fannie REOs first” (11-27-09)

“Fannie Mae has launched a new program that’s intended to give public entities and buyers looking for a home to live in, rather a property to flip, a first crack at homes Fannie has foreclosed on. Under Fannie Mae’s ‘First Look’ initiative, only offers from buyers who intend to be owner occupants and buyers using public funds will be considered during the first 15 days a property is on the market. Offers from investors will be considered only after the first 15 days have passed.”

Housing Wire“Fed Continues Slower Agency MBS Purchases” (11-30-09)

“The Federal Reserve continued its slower mortgage bond purchases, buying up $16bn of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) from government-sponsored entities in the week ending November 25. The Fed’s purchases shifted more toward Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.03 -6.36%), with $6.5bn of Freddie MBS purchased this week, from $5.9bn last week. The Fed bought $6bn from Fannie Mae (FNM: 0.88 -6.38%), compared with $4.55bn last week. The Fed also bought $3.5bn from Ginnie Mae this week, according to details released by the New York Fed.”

Housing Wire“FHA Proposes Lenders Maintain $2.5m Net Worth” (11-30-09)

“Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-approved lenders could be required to hold increased net worth, meet stronger approval criteria and be held responsible for the actions of the mortgage brokers they do business with, if a recently proposed FHA rule is enacted. The rule is designed to reduce risks to the single-family insurance fund, which finances the FHA guarantees of mortgages in case of default. The FHA reported to Congress recently the insurance fund dipped below the Congressional-mandated 2% capital reserve threshold.”

Housing Wire“375,000 HAMP Trials to Go Permanent, Treasury Says” (11-30-09)

“Under HAMP, the Treasury allocates capped incentives to participating servicers for the modification of loans on the verge of foreclosure. According to the latest report, more than 650,000 trials modifications are underway. Saxon Mortgage Services leads all servicers by providing trials to 44% of its eligible portfolio, according to the report. More than 375,000 borrowers are on track for a permanent modification by the end of the year, according to Michael Barr, assistant secretary for financial institutions at the Treasury.”

Bloomberg“Wealthy Investors Plan to Buy More Real Estate, Barclays Says” (11-30-09)

“Twice as many people plan to raise their investment in commercial and residential property as intend to reduce it, the Barclays Wealth unit said in an e-mailed statement today. The richer the individual, the greater the proportion of wealth is placed in real estate, the survey found.”

Orange County Register“Irvine home listings drop along with temps” (11-30-09)

“As of last Wednesday, there were 461 active homes for sale in Irvine, with an expected market time of 2.06 months, according to a biweekly report done by Steven Thomas of Altera Real Estate. That’s a benchmark tracking how many months it theoretically takes to sell all the inventory in the local MLS for-sale listings at the current pace of pending deals being made.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the CIRB reported that the value of non-residential building in 2008 had reached a total of $1.3 billion. Evan Gentry of G8 Capital predicted that Orange County would need another five years before real estate began to appreciate again. New home sales decreased by 18 percent in the West during October of 2008.

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 10/14/09

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

Citigroup and other banks are being accountable for fraudulent loans which will cost them more than $688 million. The Mortgage Bankers Association reports that mortgage loan application volume has decreased by 1.8 percent from last week.  JP Morgan Chase has approved of trial modifications for 90 percent of its borrowers.

In The News:

DSNews“Feds to Offer Easier Aid, Incentives for Modifications and Short Sales” (10-13-09)

“concerns have grown over whether HAMP reaches enough borrowers to make a difference in the wider housing-based economy. The MBA in particular, as well as the servicers’ advocacy group HOPE NOW, has argued that too many homeowners are – or ought to be – ineligible for HAMP modifications, and so far the government has done very little to assist that population.”

Bloomberg“Citigroup Loans Ruled Fraudulent; Tousa Bonds Surge” (10-14-09)

“Citigroup Inc. and other lenders made fraudulent transfers when they gave Tousa Inc. secured loans six months before its bankruptcy filing, a judge ruled in a decision that may cost the banks more than $688 million. Tousa notes more than tripled.”

Housing Wire“California Laws Get Tough on Mortgage Finance” (10-14-09)

“Senate Bill (SB) 36 regulates the licensing requirements for residential loan originators in compliance with the federal Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing (SAFE) Act. SB 237 requires appraisal management companies (AMCs) and appraisers register with the Office of Real Estate Appraisers and subjects appraisers to the provisions of the Real Estate Appraisers’ Licensing and Certification Law.”

Housing Wire“JP Morgan Beats the Street, Earns $3.6bn” (10-14-09)

“JP Morgan Chase approved 262,000 new trial modifications between the Making Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) and its own modification program, resulting in lowered payments for 90% of borrowers with modified mortgages. In the bank’s retail financial services (RFS) division, net income was $7m, down from $57m in Q208 and $15m from Q209, due to a decrease in mortgage origination revenue, an increase in the provision for credit losses, higher non interest expense and lower loan balances, JP Morgan said.”

Housing Wire“First American CoreLogic Creates National Fraud Database” (10-14-09)

“The National Fraud Database includes application and transaction data of more than 80m loan applications, representing 65% of all loan annual applications, aggregate fraud reports from 35 lenders and investors, with performance data history dating back to 2005.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“MBA Releases Model Whole Loan Sale and Servicing Agreement” (10-14-09)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today adopted a model sale and servicing agreement it anticipates will become the standard form for industry participants to use voluntarily for whole loan purchases and sales made with an eye toward potential securitization. The Agreement was adopted yesterday by MBA’s Residential Board of Governors (RESBOG) as an MBA supported best practice.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (10-14-09)

“The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending October 9, 2009. The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 1.8 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 1.7 percent compared with the previous week.”

CNN“Push on to expand $8,000 tax credit” (10-14-09)

“Congress is considering proposals to greatly expand a soon-to-expire $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers — potentially applying it to all but the wealthiest homebuyers. Supporters say doing so would further boost home sales, stabilize housing prices and generate jobs. Opponents say extending and expanding the credit would be a waste of money and only temporarily stave off further price declines”

Bloomberg“Bank of America to Target More Mortgage Share, Desoer Says” (10-14-09)

“Bank of America Corp., seeking to avoid a plunge in mortgage-lending profits in coming years as the business shrinks, will strive to expand its more than 20 percent market share, the head of the company’s home-loan unit said.”

Bloomberg“GMAC’s Ally Bank Builds Deposits by Needling Rivals” (10-14-09)

“GMAC Inc., the lender that received two U.S. bailouts, has attracted $2.9 billion of new deposits and riled its rivals by offering the highest interest rates and running advertisements that portray bankers as deceptive.”

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

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

CBIA reports that sales in new-home communities are down 13 percent from August 2008. Governor Schwarzenegger of California signed a new law today, which will give regulatory relief to mortgage insurers. A survey from the National Association for Business Economics shows that 80 percent of economists believe that the recession is over.

In The News:

CBIA“New-Home Sales Continue Their Sluggish Pace In August, CBIA Announces” (10-12-09)

“New home sales in California remained at historic low levels in August signaling that the state’s housing sector may be slow to recover from a stubborn recession. The California Building Industry Association reported today that sales in new-home communities of 10 units or more, though better than July’s steep decline, were 13 percent below August 2008.”

Housing Wire“California Law Gives Insurance Regulators Greater Discretion” (10-12-09)

“A new law signed Monday by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger — SB 291 — will give regulatory relief to mortgage insurers and greater discretion to regulators in the state. Existing laws require a mortgage guaranty insurer to cease new business if it cannot maintain the required amount of policyholders surplus. The new law excludes the outstanding principal balance of any loan in default for which the insurer has established a loss reserve.”

Housing Wire“Fed’s Agency MBS Purchases Hold Steady as Prepays Slow” (10-12-09)

“The Fed’s net purchases of MBS from mortgage giants Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.69 -1.17%), Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.41 -1.40%) and Ginnie Mae remained at $20bn in the week ending October 7, unchanged from a week earlier but lower than recent weekly transactions. The Fed is on track to buy $1.25trn in agency MBS, and intends to wind down the purchasing program before its anticipated conclusion at the end of Q110.”

Housing Wire“Software Verifies FHA Borrower’s Ability to Repay” (10-12-09)

“Kroll Factual Data released a new software product that provides an additional layer of verification for correspondent lenders of Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured loans. Under new FHA guidelines, brokers won’t be required to receive independent FHA approval for origination eligibility. Brokers will instead be required to originate through an FHA-approved lender, leaving the liability of underwriting quality control and borrower’s ability to repay a broker-originated loan in the hands of the lender.”

Reuters“Housing risks still lurk even as buyers return” (10-12-09)

“On the surface, a glimmer of confidence is returning to the battered U.S. housing market, after more than three years of gut-wrenching defaults, price slumps and foreclosures. But investors and homeowners in California, the most populous U.S. state and a benchmark for housing across the country, are bracing for another fall as emergency government support measures fall short or expire.”

Los Angeles Times“Survey: Economists say recession is over, predict moderate, slow-paced recovery” (10-12-09)

“More than 80 percent of economists believe the recession is over and an expansion has begun, but they expect the recovery will be slow as worries over unemployment and high federal debt persist. That consensus comes from leading forecasters in a survey by the National Association for Business Economics released Monday.”

Bloomberg“Writedowns on Mortgage Servicing Make Even JPMorgan Vulnerable” (10-12-09)

“The four biggest U.S. banks by assets may have to take writedowns on $55 billion of mortgage- collection contracts after marking them up by $11 billion in the second quarter, casting a shadow over earnings.”

Bloomberg“Commercial-Mortgage Defaults Jump Sevenfold, Credit Suisse Says” (10-12-09)

“In September, installments on $22.4 billion of mortgages were at least 60 days late, up from $3.2 billion a year earlier, Credit Suisse analysts wrote in a report. The delinquency rate rose 33 basis points to 3.34 percent, according to the New York- based analysts led by Gail Lee. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.”

128-TNG Radio – John Mauldin 6-27-09

Friday, June 26th, 2009

John-Mauldin

John Mauldin

Millennium Wave Investments

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This week Bruce is joined once again by John Mauldin from Millennium Wave Investments. John is a New York Times Best Seller and is writer of the highly acclaimed “Thought from the Frontline” e-newsletter.

There was a time when we thought that making loans to anyone that can buy a property was the wisest thing. Bruce asks John if we have discovered this to be untrue. John says that the answer is clearly yes, but making loans to people who can pay them back is still not a bad investment. What we began to do was use a model to predict who could pay off a loan and who could not. These models made us think that we did not need to be as careful about how we lent money. These models assume what is known as a bell curve, but in the real world there is no such thing as a bell curve. In the real world, there is a thing that we call “fat tail.” This means that when you get down to approaching zero, the curve starts going back up at the end. Mathematicians say that this should only happen every 10,000 years, but this seems to happen once every 4 years. You cannot model this sort of phenomenon and it is arrogant to think that you can. Yet we trained two generations of economists and MBAs in such things. Then we unleashed them on investment advisory firms and brokers, and these economists created these models saying, “If we start here, and save this much money, then your stock market investment will grow over time.” People believed them because they were smart people, but they were smart people using bad theories. Some of these theories won Nobel prizes.

One of the books that John recommends reading is “The Black Swan”, which claims that it is arrogant to think that anyone could figure out these models so easily. In the book he says that “A black swan event is retrospectively obvious.” Looking back, we could have seen that loaning money to people who did not have to prove much would have a bad ending. When John first started looking at collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) during the middle of 2006, he discovered that people were taking the worst part of a mortgage backed security (the bottom five percent) and grouping them together, which created a brand new security. They would then create models for rating companies who would then take that bottom five percent and call 70 percent of it AAA. When John discovered this he thought, “All you need to have is a five to ten percent drop in prices to make everything go down to zero.” You would think that if people from different areas of the United States could figure this out then the people actively investing and lending would be able to figure this out even quicker. Not only did they not figure out the problem they were creating, but they actually bought some of the garbage they were creating and they put it into their banks. This is why companies like Merrill Lynch, JP Morgan, and Citi with really bad paper. `

Bruce asks John what the current mood is towards the U.S. and capitalism in general. John thinks that it is more skeptical, and rightly so. A lot of the third world thought of America as this shining city on a hill, but they also thought we were rather arrogant because we told them how they should run their banks. We were not doing the things that we told other people to do. The epicenters for bonds sales were located in California, Nevada, and Florida but we sold all our bonds to Europe and Asia. This is going to come out within the next 6 months to a year. They are going to have write down far more money than they currently are. European banks are in far worse shape than American banks.

Bruce asks if this is because they have lent to emerging countries, or because they have invested in mortgage backed securities. John thinks that both of these options have created problems and other things as well. Western European banks took a huge chunk of Eastern European debt. Austrian banks lent more than the entire Austrian GDP, so the Austrian government could not rescue the Austrian banks if they wanted to. A lot of European banks also lent money to Asia. The UK is in better shape because they have their own currency. Businesses are not making as much money. Ireland is deflating by about four percent every year. There are some serious problems going around the world.

Bruce asks if there is any other time comparable to this downturn. John says we’ve never gone through anything like this worldwide. John says that world trade is down 10 percent and equipment orders in Japan are down 80 percent. Japan is doing their best to destroy their currency, but they are having trouble doing it, because if their currency rises then their products will be more expensive.

In California, there are currently about 240,000 properties in some stage of foreclosure. Today, there is a new moratorium. Bruce asks John how he feels about moratoriums. John thinks that moratoriums are just delaying the inevitable. It is not unusual for lenders to have a loan balance worth $200,000 dollars more than what a house is worth. Fitch recently said that 50 percent of people who bought their home after 2005 are under water on their mortgage payments. They are also estimating that home values will go down another 12.5 percent. This is a very difficult environment. Bruce says this says something about American character.

The problem is that if prices continue to decline and unemployment continues to go up, then you are going to have a much bigger problem. John estimates that unemployment will rise another one percent. It is going to be difficult to entice businesses in Southern California to hire people. If you compare taxes between California and Texas, it makes sense that people would want to move out of California. It is hard to attract people to your state when you are raising taxes. The states that have the highest taxes are losing the most population. John says that Florida was hit harder than California but Florida will come back faster than California because they have a low tax environment and people want to go there to retire.

In one of John’s news articles, he discussed Gary Schilling’s thoughts on solving housing problems. Gary’s idea revolved around creating demand. Gary said that about 800,000 people come into America every year. For the next two years, if these immigrants can buy a home and maintain their lives, then they could get a green card. Within a year, all the vacant homes on the market would be taken. They would also have to live in the home they are buying in order to receive the green card. There are countries such as Canada and Australia who do this. They are searching for immigrants with education and money to come into their country. One of the biggest competitions in the world is to attract young, educated workers. There are only two ways that you can make an economy grow: you can either increase the number of workers or you can increase their productivity. We’ve got a boomer generation who is trying to retire, so we need to be bringing in more educated middle class entrepreneurs. John thinks that we need to have a more welcoming immigration policy.

Bruce says that investors, who are having difficulty getting financing, are having trouble right now. There are a lot of properties in bad condition that investors could fix and make valuable but they cannot get the money to do the job. We have destroyed 40 to 50 percent of the financers for housing construction and development. We destroyed the shadow banking system which helped special investments. They are gone and they are never coming back, so now we need to make new structured security vehicles that investors will feel confident in. This is something that is going to take some time to develop, but John thinks that in 10 years we will be much happier.

For more information on John, you can visit JohnMauldin.com.

John Mauldin is a prolific author, recognized financial expert, and editor of the popular Thoughts from the Frontline e-letter which goes to over 1,500,000 readers weekly. His critically acclaimed new book, Just One Thing and previous Best Seller Bull’s Eye Investing, Targeting Real Returns in a Smoke and Mirrors Market cuts though the fog of information and gives concrete advice for structuring absolute return portfolios. John is primarily involved in private money management, financial services, and investments and research. His next series of books involves the largest millionaire study done in over 15 years with personal interviews with hundreds of affluent individuals. Investors can visit his website at www.johnmauldin.com or get his free weekly e-letter by sending a request to john@2000wave.com.

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