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253-TNG Radio – I Survived Real Estate 2011 part 6 11-24-11

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011


(Full Bio)

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On October 14, 2011, The Norris Group returned with its award-winning event I Survived Real Estate. An expert line-up of industry specialists joined Bruce Norris to discuss current industry regulation, head-scratching legislation, and the opportunities emerging for savvy real estate professionals. 100% of the proceeds support the Orange County Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. This event would not have been possible without the generous help of the following platinum partners: ForeclosureRadar and Sean O’Toole, Housing Wire, the San Diego Creative Real Estate Investors Association and President Bill Tan, Investors Workshops with President Shawn Watkins and Angel Bronsgeest, Invest Club for Women and Iris Veneracion and Bobbie Alexander, San Jose Real Estate Investors Association and Geraldine Berry, Real Wealth Networks, Frye Wyles, MVT Productions, and White House Catering. The event video can be found on isurvived2011.com.

Bruce asked the panel if they see anything in Dodd-Frank or the changes in qualified mortgages that threaten a 30-year mortgage for some of the stratuses of loans. Debra said she does not really see anything in the QM or the QRM that would specifically attack the 30-year mortgage. For the most part this has been a product that housing in America has depended on. Debra does not worry about the 30-year mortgage going away as a result of the regulation. Bruce also wondered if there was any discussion on where Fannie and Freddie will end up. In response, Debra said our fragile housing market right now is delaying the government’s desire to shrink the footprint in housing. The white paper at the beginning of this year would launch the debate for the future of the government’s role in housing, the future of the GSEs, and how to rebuild the nation’s secondary mortgage markets. Debra does not believe the debate is really going to get going until most likely after the elections. The future of the GSEs is uncertain. There are a couple bills that have been introduced that would suggest all the way from completely privatizing what would now be Fannie and Freddie to maybe private companies with a government wrap for the securities that are issued. However, she reiterated to say debate would probably not start until the end of next year.

Sean O’Toole, Doug Duncan, and Eric Janszen returned to continue the discussion with Sara, Gary, and Debra. The first thing Bruce talked about with all six panelists was a recent Moody’s report he read that talked about the qualified residential mortgage in place, and it talked about FHA only being about 10% of the market. This really surprised Bruce because in California, even on the low side first-time buyers were 30% on the low side and 50% on the high side in the market right now. He wondered how FHA could only be 10% unless it was really being restricted. He wondered what would be the restriction that would prevent it from being a normal percentage as this would be the loan to which you would think those kinds of people would go. Debra said if you look at what the government is willing to do to get FHA from a 30% market share down to a target of 10-15%. They have already raised the mortgage insurance premiums, so an FHA loan is slightly more expensive than it was. We have just seen the stimulus loan limits expire, so that is another nudge toward a smaller market share. There has been talk about possibly looking at a median income restriction somewhere in our future. We will most likely not see anything like this anytime soon, but we will most likely see small moves to get the market share down from about 30%. Doug Duncan said part of the discussion will be getting the private market more involved. If you go back to some of the history of the FHA loans, the underlying theory for FHA was that there was part of their credit spectrum that would not get served by the private market. This was because the returns most likely did not reach private market returns, and therefore there were external benefits encouraging home-ownership by providing a subsidy through the FHA program to get credit to the households. In return for that, there was also a ceiling on the size of loans that was available in the market. We may see some discussion on this come up again, but Doug said it will all be done in context of what is done with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Bruce wondered what would happen if we lowered the loan balance. For instance, in California we had a median price of $600,000, and we now have a median price of under 3. Even though we reduced the loan limit, it has to serve more households with a new loan limit than it served with the big loan limit because there are a lot fewer expensive homes at least when it comes to going forward. At the same time, you might have a problem with refis. Bruce wondered if we are supposed to have government program that is over twice the median price of an area. Doug said if you looked in their book of business between the previous limit and the conforming limit to where it dropped; it was less than 5% of the book. The problem is it is regionally targeted, so you will see California, New Jersey, Maryland, Washington, and all your high-class markets hit more than the national. Debra said from modeling their business she could see the impact is very small, although you really have to question anything right now that would be negative to housing and if this is what we really want to be doing.

Sean O’Toole discussed how one of the things he has always found interesting about the federal programs is that it’s at the county level. One of the biggest drops we had in California was in Monterrey County where you have Watsonville, which is close to Carmel, Pebble Beach, and Monterrey. You have two completely different markets, even though they are 15 miles apart, so Monterrey and Carmel are going to take a $200,000 hit on the conforming loan limit; whereas in other areas such as San Jose and Contra Costa County that are not as desirable, they are not going to take as hard a hit. It does not make any sense, and it happens in any place where this kind of decision is made. This would not be a factor in Santa Ana, for example, but it would be a factor in Newport Beach. It goes back to applying a broad-based national policy to anything that overrides the local conditions and requires some of the expertise that was being talked about in the appraisal space and a whole host of other things that relate to real estate. Doug said for a long period his company looked at the national home price, and then they talked to their friends and neighbors about how all real estate is local.

Bruce mentioned a document that talks about saving $2-$4 trillion off of the budget going forward, and real estate would be an actual target for trying to get some of our chips. Bruce wondered if we have ever thought about what might be okay to take of if we cannot have anything. Bruce said he had a questionnaire, and one half of the people said it was not okay to take anything, but Bruce wondered if it will not happen one way or the other. For example, if an interest rate went down to $500,000, Bruce wondered if this would be that impactful to our market. Gary Thomas answered that the National Association of Realtors does believe it would be impactful. They do not think this should be touched at all because of the unintended consequences. One of the proposals is to take the interest rate down on second homes in resort markets. However, you have to ask what this will do to the resort market and what it will do to the communities where you cannot resell properties. The unintended consequences are it affects the grocery stores, the pharmacists, and everybody. It does not only affect the person who owns the property and cannot deduct it anymore.

Eric Janszen agreed with Bruce in that it is most likely a real target since it is a government subsidy, and subsidies in both of the ideological camps are obvious targets for cuts. It is always the other person’s subsidy that is the bad one. If it did happen, Eric was not sure if it would have as big an impact as everyone thinks it would. The real big problem we have right now is incomes and employment. We are not really going to fix the housing problem. All of these are marginal issues and marginal solutions until we start having job growth. Riverside County is 15% unemployed, and usually we really count on construction. However, we have a price per square foot on some inventory that is half of the construction cost. It is almost like the dominoes have to fall backwards before they can fall forward. We have to get rid of a lot of what we would consider shadow inventory. We first have to know what shadow inventory is and what to do about it. Until you end up with that disseminated into the marketplace to where no one fears it coming out later below replacement cost, you won’t be able to go forward. Sean O’Toole jokingly said the newest version of shadow inventory moves to help provide cover to whoever got it wrong the first time.

In 2008 when the subject of shadow inventory first came up you had foreclosures just on a tear, banks taking back lots of property, and we were not seeing the property back on the market. It occurred to them that the banks were really holding a lot of property that was not making it through the market. This is what Sean O’Toole originally talked about with shadow inventory and had a lot of statistics on it. A lot of people talking about the foreclosure way and other issues needed to change this over time, and it has grown to then include everyone in foreclosure and everyone who is delinquent. It also includes negative equity, and Sean said he has heard people say it also includes all those who would like to sell at the prices that are in 2006 but now cannot. This has been nicknamed the “delusional inventory.” However, if you start talking with people about it, you will see that there is a lot of “delusional inventory” and a lot of property that should be and would be on the market if people were not still holding out some hope that there is going to be some fix in Washington. This is as big a problem as anything else.

Bruce noted in some markets you have 3,000 square foot houses that cost a lot to build being bought for $140,000. There might be a pile of them, so the shadow inventory is not only what the lender owns, but what is being refused to be foreclosed on. Bruce said this is where he would go with shadow inventory. It’s a ball of two-year late people that for some reason are not being forced to the finish line. Whether credit for this goes to MERS or robo-signing, long before this became a front-line issue it looked like lenders made a decision to not foreclose on specific things. The question is what the reasoning is for waiting so long. The last time we had this problem was in the 90s, and lenders began to wait. People were getting close to a year behind, and then the FDIC came in and said this was not okay. Bruce remembered the chart and remembered how there were foreclosures declining in California back in ’95, yet delinquencies were increasing. There was a rule passed that said when you were 100 days late you had to file an NOD. This came basically from instruction. This time, however, it seemed not only was there nothing in the instructions, but it seemed like people were getting free passes and being told, “Whenever you want to or don’t want to, it is okay.” Eric said the thing that changed was there was just not a large enough pool of credit worthy buyers by the new definition of credit worthy. Bruce would say if you want to sell it to investors, you would have all that you can give to the market. However, Bruce does not believe that there is a fear of there not being enough cash because with everything that is bought at trustee sales a month, there is a lot of money spent.

Debra does not get the sense that lenders are purposely delaying foreclosure by design as much as working through the process, meeting regulations, meeting investor requirements, state requirements, and other requirements unless there are REOs that have not come back out on the market. She does not get the sense that lenders are purposely delaying the foreclosure process by the same token that lenders are going overboard right now to make sure they are doing the responsible loss mitigation activities that they need to do to help keep borrowers in their homes, structure short sales, or whatever the appropriate process is one buyer at a time. It’s possible they are also trying to figure out who owns the loan.

Sean mentioned how we had more than double the foreclosures that we have today in 2008. The idea and the notion that the lenders need more time to figure things out is ridiculous. They have had plenty of time to figure it out, and we are four years into this thing. This is not really the problem. Doug touched on earlier the notion that Fannie and Freddie don’t really want to talk about principle balance reductions. They are worried about foreclosures because ultimately these losses flow through to the taxpayer. The taxpayer is not in much of a position to take them right now, and neither are the banks. If you start looking at just the seconds that a bank has where maybe the first are held by Fannie and Freddie, but they have a portfolio of seconds that are on their portfolio that exceed the equity of the institution. When you really start clearing things through, you have a much different problem than simply processing the paperwork. You are talking about banking and government solvency.

Doug said it is a grand social experiment of the question, “Would the welfare of the economy and the populace be better served by a rapid and deep clearing of inventory, which would bring into question the solvency of the significant part of the financial system; or do you obtain a better result through a variety of policies to make a slow move to bring prices back into equilibrium?” Sean said the latter would be great, except now it is extend and pretend because you have to confess and say you have more losses than you can afford to bear. You have to tell the American people that this is really the situation and we’re going to on purpose drag this out so we have an orderly disillusion, like back in Grease, rather than a disorderly one. We cannot continue to extend and pretend and not have a conversation about how bad it really is. We created $4 trillion of excess debt; and we have worked through half a trillion of it. So far we have $3 ½ trillion to go, but we cannot afford it today. Therefore, we have to have a solution.

One of the things Bruce noticed was back in 2008, we really had a lot of price damage and when he was buying houses for $.18 on what the lender was owed. That was really the number because there were so many inventories. At that time our default was about 3.4%, and our foreclosures were 1.2%. About 9 months later, our defaults were 11%; and our foreclosures were .08%. They had just stopped foreclosing, and you had tripled the default. One of the disservices this does is there are gentlemen in the audience at the time of ’08 who had 800 REO listings. They had a business plan around that volume and were never told that the listings were going to turn into 200. One of the things that would have been helpful would have been to tell an industry that they will simply not do it at that pace anymore and could have had a better business plan. This was one thing that would have been frustrating for mortgage people and appraisers as well. This is all business that is turning in a red ball behind us that is not producing a fee, a commission, or a rental.

Bruce wondered if the losses that are in a second position behind the firsts that are a 200% loan-to-value are being booked at zero value or face-note value. Sean mentioned that back in 2008 when Paulson announced TARP, everyone thought it was about loans to banks. However, if you go back and read his statement, it was really about how we should not force banks to sell specific properties into a distressed market at certain distressed prices. This sounded good on paper except that the issue was not a distressed price but rather a reversion of the mean and the price at which things were supposed to be. The losses were real, and we need to figure out how we recognize them and deal with them. Four years later, we have not even started having honest discussion about recognizing and then dealing with them. Bruce wondered what would happen if we were to say, “Let’s foreclose on the red ball.” Do you absorb $4 trillion and survive? Sean reiterated saying Doug may have been right and that we need to think about a different social experiment. At the end of the day, what we need is a clear housing policy because what most people realize that extend and pretend is not working, and that is one of the reasons we are not seeing home sales take off in Riverside where it is now an incredible bargain. It is hard to take risks when you don’t know the rules of the game.

Debra said you have a lot of uncertainty in the lending community right now waiting for regulation and waiting to understand the government’s role. Doug said he had been surveying 1,000 people a month for 16 months and publishes the report on his website, so he asks what their expectation is on interest rates and prices. In the most recent quarter, Fannie Mae also asked them what they thought about stability when it came to unemployment. 26% of the people who were employed were worried about not being able to stay employed.

To find out more, tune in next week for I Survived Real Estate 2011, part 7. The Norris Group would like to thank their gold sponsors for the event: Adrenaline Athletics, Coldwell Banker Pioneer Real Estate, Conaway and Conaway, Delmae Properties, Elite Auctions, Inland Empire Investors Forum, Inland Valley Association of Realtors, Keller Williams of Corona, Keystone CPA, Kucan & Clark Partners, LLC, Las Brisas Escrow, Leivas Associates, Mike Cantu, Northern California Real Estate Investors Association, Northern San Diego Real Estate Investors Association, Pacific Sunrise Mortgage, Personal Real Estate Magazine, Raven Paul and Company, Realty 411 Magazine, Rick and LeaAnne Rossiter, Southwest Riverside County Board of Realtors, Starz Photography, uDirect IRA, Wilson Investment Properties, Tony Alvarez, Tri-Emerald Financial Group, and Westin South Coast Plaza. Visit isurvived2011.com for more details.

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

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

Friday, November 4th, 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011

I Survived Real Estate 2011


(Full Bio)

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On October 14, 2011, The Norris Group returned with its award-winning event I Survived Real Estate. An expert line-up of industry specialists joined Bruce Norris to discuss current industry regulation, head-scratching legislation, and the opportunities emerging for savvy real estate professionals. 100% of the proceeds support the Orange County Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. This event would not have been possible without the generous help of the following platinum partners: ForeclosureRadar and Sean O’Toole, Housing Wire, the San Diego Creative Real Estate Investors Association and President Bill Tan, Investors Workshops with President Shawn Watkins and Angel Bronsgeest, Invest Club for Women and Iris Veneracion and Bobbie Alexander, San Jose Real Estate Investors Association and Geraldine Berry, Real Wealth Networks, Frye Wyles, MVT Productions, and White House Catering. The event video can be found on isurvived2011.com.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The losses we are trying to prevent are multiplying. You are also creating a whole group of people that feel very entitled to still stay. When The Norris Group buys foreclosures, they have met people at the door who had not made a payment for two years, and the first sentence out of their mouth was, “Cash for Keys.” That is now the expectation. The policy coming out of Washington is increasing that expectation that they should get to live in a home for free for the rest of their lives. Imagine when the government owns all the rentals. If you want to talk about rent control problems and having no future for real estate, that is the proposal that will kill real estate in the United States forever. One of the problems is uncertainty. If some gigantic company owns 10,000 rentals, then Bruce for example would not know what to do with his because he would not know if the playing field was legit and if they are going to put 10,000 houses for sale. However, as a builder Bruce certainly would not carve up dirt waiting because that risk is out there that others could be his competitor at the drop of a hat. We should give investors a shot at taking the inventory down because it is manageable if we do not put it on the market.

Eric mentioned how he had come out of the venture capital industry, and a lot of folks in his industry put a lot of money into bad companies back in the late 90s. When there was a crash, they lost their money from bad investments.

To find out more, tune in next week for I Survived Real Estate 2011, part 4. The Norris Group would like to thank their gold sponsors for the event: Adrenaline Athletics, Coldwell Banker Pioneer Real Estate, Conaway and Conaway, Delmae Properties, Elite Auctions, Inland Empire Investors Forum, Inland Valley Association of Realtors, Keller Williams of Corona, Keystone CPA, Kucan & Clark Partners, LLC, Las Brisas Escrow, Leivas Associates, Mike Cantu, Northern California Real Estate Investors Association, Northern San Diego Real Estate Investors Association, Pacific Sunrise Mortgage, Personal Real Estate Magazine, Raven Paul and Company, Realty 411 Magazine, Rick and LeaAnne Rossiter, Southwest Riverside County Board of Realtors, Starz Photography, uDirect IRA, Wilson Investment Properties, Tony Alvarez, Tri-Emerald Financial Group, and Westin South Coast Plaza. Visit isurvived2011.com for more details.

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 10/27/11

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

In today’s news, the pending sales for existing homes fell 4.6& in the U.S., according to Bloomberg.  Mortgage rates are holding steady at their lowest recorded in almost 60 years.  Last week the number of people filing for unemployment decreased to 402,000, although the number of unemployed is still high.

In The News:

Bloomberg - “Pending Sales of U.S. Existing Homes Fall 4.6%” (10-27-11)

“The number of contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes unexpectedly fell in September as lower prices and borrowing costs failed to support demand.”

Housing Wire“GDP growth 2.5% in third quarter” (10-27-11)

“Real gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of 2.5% in the third quarter when compared to the previous three months, the Commerce Department said Thursday.”

NAHB - “Remodeling Activity Remains Slow Under Current Economic Conditions” (10-27-11)

“The current state of the national economy continues to affect the remodeling industry, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) Remodeling Market Index (RMI). The index dropped to 41.7 in the third quarter from 43.9 in the second quarter, after having reached a four-year high of 46.5 in the first quarter. An RMI below 50 indicates that more remodelers report that market activity is declining than report that it is increasing.”

Los Angeles Times“Weekly jobless claims dip to 402,000 but still are high” (10-27-11)

“New jobless claims dipped last week to 402,000, another somewhat encouraging sign for the still-troubled economy — though still too high to make a dent in the unemployment rate.”

Housing Wire“Republican blueprints mortgage market without Fannie, Freddie” (10-27-11)

“Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.) proposed his idea of a future mortgage market Thursday, one with new underwriting standards and transparency but without Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or the upcoming risk-retention rule.”

DS News - “Fixed Mortgage Rates Show Little Movement” (10-27-11)

“Fixed mortgage rates showed little change for the second consecutive week amid mixed consumer confidence and housing data, and remain near their 60-year lows.”

CNN Money – “Small banks still stuck in federal bailout” (10-27-11)

“Hundreds of struggling small community banks could be stuck in the federal government’s much-maligned bank bailout program, a watchdog agency warned in a report released Thursday.”

DS News - “Delaware AG Sues MERS” (10-27-11)

“Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden filed suit Thursday against MERSCORP and its subsidiary, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (MERS). Biden charges MERSCORP with violating Delaware’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act.”

Inman - “Redfin raises $14.8M in new funding” (10-27-11)

“Technology-based real estate brokerage Redfin has raised $14.8 million in a new round of funding the company’s chief executive officer says will help it expand and weather seasonal ups and downs.”

Looking Back:

The MBA’s weekly survey showed mortgage application volume increased 3.2% the week of October 27, 2010. Mortgage bankers estimated the housing market would not recover until 2012 at least. HUD reported only 24,000 houses sold in September 2010.

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 3/30/11

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Today’s News Synopsis:

The NAR said vacation home sales accounted for 10% of all transactions in 2010. A new proposal may force lenders to allow short sales for delinquent homeowners. The House voted 252 to 170 end funding for HAMP. CoreLogic estimates there are 1.8 million homes in the shadow inventory.

In The News:

NAR - “Vacation- and Investment-Home Shares Hold Even in 2010″ (3-30-11)

“vacation-home sales accounted for 10 percent of transactions last year while the portion of investment sales was 17 percent, both unchanged from 2009.”

Mortgage Bankers Association“Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey” (3-30-11)

“Mortgage applications decreased 7.5 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending March 25, 2011.”

Los Angeles Times“Proposed settlement would force banks to allow short sales for delinquent homeowners” (3-30-11)

“Major banks may be forced to let severely delinquent homeowners sell their houses for less than the loan amounts owed as part of a broad settlement of federal and state investigations into botched foreclosure paperwork, according to government officials involved in the negotiations.”

CNN - “House votes to kill Obama mortgage plan” (3-30-11)

“The House voted 252 to 170 to stop any new funding for the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). Eleven Democrats joined Republicans to defund the program.”

Housing Wire“Job gains barely beat estimates on the long road back to pre-recession levels” (3-30-11)

“While the economy gained 201,000 private sector jobs last month, those additions are not enough to set the pace for a rapid economic or housing recovery, analysts say.”

Bloomberg - “Lenders Could Get Exemptions Under New Risk-Retention Rule” (3-30-11)

“U.S. regulators proposed exempting banks and bond issuers who meet high underwriting standards from rules requiring them to keep a stake in loans they securitize, according to a draft proposal.”

Bloomberg - “U.S. Home ‘Shadow Inventory’ Totals Nine Months of Supply, CoreLogic Says” (3-30-11)

“About 1.8 million homes that are delinquent or in foreclosure loom as additional supply for the struggling U.S. housing market, according to CoreLogic Inc.”

Housing Wire“CBO drops estimate of TARP cost to $19 billion” (3-30-11)

“The Troubled Asset Relief Program will end up costing taxpayers $19 billion, according to the latest estimate Wednesday from the Congressional Budget Office.”

Housing Wire“‘Too big to fail’ legacy lives on: Rosner” (3-30-11)

“government intervention in 2008 forced bank mergers and acquisitions, leaving the financial market in the control of the nation’s largest financial firms.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, national home prices decreased by 0.7 percent from the previous year. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac estimated that mortgage rates would rise less than a quarter of a percentage point in the next three months. Interest rates on conventional 30-year FRMs increased to 5.13% in February 2010. The US Treasury Department announced it would allocate $600 million to HFA for foreclosure prevention programs in California, Florida, Arizona, Michigan and Nevada.

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

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

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

Multifamily lenders provided 40 less financing for apartment buildings in 2009, according to the MBA. RealtyTrac reports bank repossessions and foreclosure auctions hit record levels in the 3rd quarter. Jobless claims rose 2.8% last week, said the Labor Department. A survey shows that 93% of military homeowners have mortgages compared to just 64% of civilians.

In The News:

Mortgage Bankers Association“MBA Reports 40 Percent Decline in Multifamily Borrowing in 2009 Among Diverse Lenders and Loan Sizes” (10-14-10)

“In 2009, 2,725 different multifamily lenders provided a total of $52.5 billion in new financing for apartment buildings with five or more units, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Annual Report on Multifamily Lending for  2009.  The 2009 dollar volume represents a 40 percent decline from 2008 levels.  The most active 122 lenders represented just four percent of active lenders, but 77 percent of the dollar volume lent.  Three-quarters of the active lenders made five or fewer loans over the course of the year.”

Los Angeles Times – “Freddie Mac: Mortgage rates drop again, now at 1951 levels” (10-14-10)

“Mortgage interest rates continue their descent into record territory, with the 30-year fixed-rate loan dropping to an average of 4.19% this week from 4.27% a week earlier, according to the latest Freddie Mac survey of lender offering rates.”

CNN - “Foreclosure auctions hit record as document crisis unfolds” (10-14-10)

“Bank repossessions and foreclosure auctions hit record levels in the third quarter, RealtyTrac said on Thursday. 372,445 foreclosure auctions were scheduled in July, August and September, while 288,345 properties were repossessed by lenders over the same time period.”

Housing Wire“Jobless claims rise 2.8%; most analysts expected a decline” (10-14-10)

“Initial jobless claims rose 2.8% last week to 462,000, coming in well above most analysts’ estimates. The Labor Department said the seasonally adjusted figure of initial claims for the week ended Oct. 9 increased by 13,000 from the previous week’s revised figure of 449,000.”

Housing Wire“TARP oversight panel calls for more transparency after conflicts emerge” (10-14-10)

“In its October report, the Congressional Oversight Panel reviewing the program enacted by President Bush two years ago said private businesses operate 91 different contracts worth up to $434 million under the Troubled Asset Relief Program. The program ended a few weeks ago and the Treasury estimates the final cost to be about $50 billion.”

Housing Wire“Military members deeper in mortgage debt than average Americans” (10-14-10)

“More military members are paying a mortgage, and more tend to have larger amounts of credit card debt, when compared to the civilian population. The survey shows just more than half of military respondents (51%) report owning a home, compared with 57% of civilians. Nearly all military homeowners (93%) reported having a mortgage, far greater than the 64% among civilians.”

Housing Wire“Moody’s: CMBS delinquencies up to 8.24% in September” (10-14-10)

“Moody’s Investors Service said the number of delinquencies within commercial mortgage-backed securities rose 14 basis points last month to 8.24%. Analysts said the increase was the smallest since October 2008 and the represents fourth-straight month of modest growth in the national CMBS delinquency rate. Moody’s said there are now 3,971 delinquent mortgages with a total value of $52.07 billion.”

Housing Wire“Trepp analysts expect CMBS delinquencies to drop after highest month on record” (10-14-10)

“The percentage of delinquent commercial mortgage-backed securities increased in September to the highest rate ever recorded by CMBS data analytics firm Trepp, up 13 basis points to 9.05%. However, this is the smallest month-over-month increase recorded in 2010, and Trepp analysts expect the rate to dip much further in next month’s statistics.”

Bloomberg - “Mortgage Investors Urge State Attorneys General Not to Punish Bondholders” (10-14-10)

“A hasty and ill-formulated legal settlement may harm the investors of mortgage-backed securities, namely retirees, municipalities, government entities, state pension funds, retirement systems, universities, and charitable endowments. Chris Katopis, the Washington-based trade group’s executive director, said today in an e-mailed statement.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, Citigroup and other banks were held accountable for fraudulent loans which costed them more than $688 million. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that mortgage loan application volume had decreased by 1.8 percent from the previous week.  JP Morgan Chase approved of trial modifications for 90 percent of its borrowers.

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 8/23/10

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The CBIA reports 2,454 new homes and condominiums were closed statewide in June, compared to 3,848 a year earlier. A survey from Trulia shows that 68% of renters believe they will have to wait at least two years before even considering buying a home. According to HUD, 616,839 HAMP modifications have been canceled and 434,716 modifications have been made permanent since the program began. The Congressional Budget Office expects the Troubled Asset Relief Program to cost a total of $66bn.

In The News:

Daily Bulletin - “Uncertain times” (8-19-10)

“Norris said a larger number of expensive homes thrown into the mix of homes sold this year may be skewing the median price up, rather than an overall price increase in homes. Norris also said home affordability is ‘off the charts’ but it does not necessarily translate to a greater demand to buy homes. Because of the real estate crash, more people are afraid to go to the finish line with home purchases, he said.”

CBIA - “California New-Home Market Continues Struggle in June, CBIA Announces” (8-23-10)

“The monthly CBIA/Hanley Wood Market Intelligence (HWMI) New-Home Sales and Pricing Report showed that statewide new-home closings in June were off 36 percent from a year ago. During the month, 2,454 new homes and condominiums were closed across the state, compared to 3,848 a year earlier. Closings of single-family homes were down by 17 percent, while sales of townhomes were off by 57 percent and sales of condominiums were 67 percent lower than a year ago.”

Orange County Register“Landlords pray for jobs” (8-21-10)

“I’m still concerned about future job growth and global market conditions that we don’t have control over. Unfortunately, our improvement is a condition of the housing and credit markets and reduced multifamily inventory, not significant job growth. Would-be home buyers who are no longer able to qualify to purchase a home, former home owners who lost their homes and new wage earners are sustaining our improved fundamentals. We will need consistent and sustainable job growth going forward.”

Orange County Register“A good time to be a landlord?” (8-22-10)

“A new survey by Trulia.com shows that 1 in 4 renters say they’ll never purchase a home, and of those who will, 68% say it’ll take more than a couple of years to happen.”

Housing Wire“Housing’s Second Leg Down” (8-23-10)

“Home prices have fallen 34% from their peak in the middle of 2006, according to Standard & Poor’s HPI data — but is that enough? Or is there further to go? How much further could we fall?”

Housing Wire“HAMP Trial Cancelations Catching up to Permanent Modifications” (8-23-10)

“The Making Home Affordable Program (HAMP) initiated 1.3m trials as of July 2010, but is having difficulty retaining program participants through the process of making their modifications permanent. According to the July Servicer Performance Report released by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), 616,839 modifications have been canceled while 434,716 modifications have been made permanent throughout the program’s lifetime.”

Housing Wire“TARP Losses Recalculated to $66bn as GSE Outlook Improves” (8-23-10)

“The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected Friday the total cost of Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) over its lifetime would be $66bn. This is down from the $109bn lifetime cost projected in March. Outlays for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will fall from $96bn in 2009 to $41bn this year, the CBO estimates, mostly because the two entities are expected to recognize fewer losses on their mortgage investments and guarantees.”

Housing Wire“Econoday Reports Swings in Housing Starts Due To Multifamily Volatility” (8-23-10)

“July housing starts rose 1.7% to 546,000 from June’s revised figure of 537,000, which is the lowest level since October. The June revision and volatility in the multifamily component led to the monthly gain, according to Mark Rogers, senior economist at the Calif.-based research firm.”

Housing Wire“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee” (8-23-10)

“The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) released Friday a list of Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) performance evaluations for 39 national banks and insured federal branches of foreign banks. Of the banks, nine received an outstanding rating, 30 received a satisfactory rating and none needed to improve. None were of substantial noncompliance.”

Housing Wire“Strengthening CRE Market Pushes Defeasance Levels Up: Moody’s” (8-23-10)

“Moody’s said loans originally secured by multi-family properties saw the highest level of defeasance during the first six months, accounting for 46% of total defeasance. Retail properties represented 22% of all defeasance for the period with lodging properties at 17%. And 61% of all defeased loans during the period had two years or less remaining on the loan. Defeasance activity is when a borrower in a commercial real estate securitization substitutes some type of capital-generating collateral – often Treasury securities – in lieu of a hard payment.”

Bloomberg - “Bernanke Must Raise Benchmark Rate 2 Points, Rajan Says” (8-23-10)

“Raghuram Rajan accurately warned central bankers in 2005 of a potential financial crisis if banks lost confidence in each other. Now the International Monetary Fund’s former chief economist says the Federal Reserve should consider raising rates, even as almost 10 percent of the U.S. workforce remains unemployed.”

Bloomberg - “Housing Slide in U.S. Threatens to Drag Economy Into Recession” (8-23-10)

“‘If foreclosures continue to mount and depress home prices, that could send the economy back into a recession,’ said Celia Chen, an economist who tracks the industry for Moody’s Analytics Inc.”

Orange County Register – “‘How to torpedo your short sale’” (8-23-10)

“Many of the lenders won’t pay past due HOA dues, and the short sale can’t be closed without bringing the HOA dues current. If you can, keep your HOA dues current or plan to bring money to close to pay for them.  Sometimes the lender will pay them, sometimes the buyer will, and sometimes we need can succesfully negotiate the amount, but late HOA dues can torpedo a short sale on your Orange County home.”

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 7/9/10

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Sources:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/09/business/economy/09rich.html?_r=2
http://blogs.wsj.com/wealth/2010/06/29/mansion-foreclosures-surge/
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/07/30year-mortgage-rate-edges-down-to-new-record-low.html
http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2010/07/09/banks_fight_changes_to_accounting_rules/
http://www.aba.com/Industry+Issues/FASB_advocacy.htm
http://www.dsnews.com/articles/fannie-mae-adopts-new-rules-for-pre-mod-income-verification-2010-06-28
http://www.lpsvcs.com/NewsRoom/IndustryData/Documents/06-2010%20Mortgage%20Monitor/LPS_Mortgage_Monitor_May_2010_Final.pdf

Today’s News Synopsis:

According to Greg Paquin, Sacramento new home sales decreased by 21.3 percent in the second quarter. Foreign home buyers purchased $66 billion of US residential property during the year ending May 2010. The VP of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland believes that the high foreclosure rate is likely to continue for some time. Multiple economic statistics show that the tax credits may have simply hid an ongoing recession in real estate.

In The News:

Sacramento Bee“New-home sales plunge in Sacramento area” (7-9-10)

“Second-quarter new-home sales in the Sacramento area fell 21.3 percent from the first quarter and by 50.1 percent from the already dismal second quarter of 2009, said Greg Paquin, a Folsom consultant who issued the sales report.”

Housing Wire“REITs Raised $22bn for Real Estate Investments in 2010: NAREIT” (7-9-10)

“The US Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) raised $22bn in initial, debt and equity capital offerings in 2010, and as a whole the industry owns $500bn of commercial real estate assets, approximately 10% to 15% of total institutionally owned commercial real estate, according to a mid-year report by the National Association of REITs, NAREIT.”

Housing Wire“International Investment in US Housing Market Rises: NAR” (7-9-10)

“Foreign home buyers — those with residency outside the US as well as recent immigrants and temporary visa holders — purchased $66bn of US residential property, or 7.27% of the market, in the year ending March 2010, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Based on NAR’s existing home sales information, $907bn of residential sales occurred in the 12 months ending March 2010.”

Housing Wire“DebtX Sees Commercial Mortgage Values Recover Slightly in May” (7-9-10)

“The aggregate value of commercial real estate (CRE) loans that collateralize commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) rose to 76.6% of the original balance in May, from 76.4% in April, according to loan sale advisor DebtX. Values are up from 75.9% in March and 76.5% in February. CRE loan values are down from 77.6% in May 2009, according to DebtX.”

Housing Wire - “High Foreclosure Rate Likely to Persist, Cleveland Fed VP Says” (7-9-10)

“If past recessions are a guide, the nation’s high foreclosure rate is likely to persist, according to authors at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.”

Housing Wire“Bank Bailout May Turn a Profit for Treasury, KB&W Report Finds” (7-9-10)

“The Capital Purchase Program, $205bn in financial firm relief funds from the Treasury’s $700bn stimulus package, the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), is nearly repaid in full and likely to turn a profit, according to a report from broker/dealer investment bank Keefe, Bruyette and Woods.”

Housing Wire“Ginnie Guarantees $33.4bn of MBS in June” (7-9-10)

“The Government National Mortgage Association — or Ginnie Mae — guaranteed more than $33.4bn of mortgage backed securities (MBS) in June.”

Inman - “Tax credits hid ongoing real estate slide?” (7-9-10)

“The economic data that did arrive confirmed a slipping recovery, but not a double-dip. The Institute for Supply Management service-sector report for June followed last week’s pattern: softer than prior month, and well below forecast (May 55.4, forecast 55, actual 53.8). New claims for unemployment insurance came down 21,000 last week to 454,000, but have been stuck in that range all year long. Mortgage refi applications have begun to rise, but purchase ones fell again, by 2 percent last week, now 42 percent below the end of April.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, the government-insured (FHA and VA loans) share of mortgage applications was 35.9 percent. The average 30-year rate dropped to 5.2 percent. UCLA economists predicted that commercial real estate demand would not return to 2006 levels until 2014. The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network reported that suspicious mortgage activities were increasing significantly.

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.

181-TNG Radio – Nancy West 7-3-10

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Nancy-West

Nancy West

Marketing and Outreach Specialist, Housing and Urban Development (HUD)

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This week Bruce is joined by Nancy West. Nancy is a marketing and outreach specialist for the Department of Housing and Urban Development. She has been working in the mortgage industry since 1977. Nancy joined HUD in 2004, and in 2006 she accepted one of four nationwide marketing and outreach specialist positions.

Non-profit organizations have a special access to a specific list of REO properties. To be considered a non-profit organization, you must be a 501C3 classified company under the IRS. All the requirements for meeting this classification are listed at www.HUD.gov

There is also a special list of REO properties for police officers, firefighters, paramedics and school teacher. These people have the opportunity to buy a HUD REO for 50 percent of the sale value. They are required to occupy the property for 3 years. After those first 3 years, their home value is officially decreased by 50 percent. The difficulty with this program is that these people are restricted to buying in revitalization areas. Right now, there are not many revitalization areas.

Cities and Counties individually determine what they want to do with NSP money. Some cities are acquiring REOs, rehabbing them and reselling them, and others are acquiring REOs and turning them into rental opportunities.

The FBI released a report on Friday about the amount of fraud they are seeing. California, Nevada, Florida, New York and Michigan are experiencing the highest fraud rates, and those states are also experiencing the largest number of foreclosures. Nancy is not sure if these foreclosures are primarily due to consumers, loan officers or realtors. She believes that fraud was committed by many groups, and that no specific group is significantly more responsible than the other.

Loan modification programs are now open to be qualified for. To qualify for loan modification, people are now trying to commit fraud on their modification application. The problem with this strategy is that if they make their financial statement look too poor, they may not qualify for a modification. Bruce knows someone who was recently denied a loan modification due to the fact that they had the ability to make their payments, and then chose to strategically default.

The mission of HUD is to provide a decent, safe, and sanitary home, and a suitable living environment for every American. When Bruce read this, he realized that the word “ownership” was not included in HUD’s mission statement. This made him feel that HUD is now broadening their scope to include the chance that the number of renters may increase in the future. Nancy claims that HUD and FHA has not changed their mission statement. HUD’s mission is to strengthen and provide homeownership and rental properties to the under-served, first time buyers, minorities and elderly. HUD does this in a variety of ways, including Section 8 housing vouchers. FHA wants to specifically promote homeownership to those same people. FHA offers home retention opportunities through the reverse mortgage program. The mission has not changed, it has simply refocused.

HUD has a few programs that most people are not aware of. Individuals who rent in Section 8 single-family dwellings are typically very successful. Many of them eventually leave the program and become home owners. Also, FHA has the Disaster Relief Mortgage Program which many people are not aware of. This program allows people to obtain a mortgage with no down payment if their home was destroyed in a natural disaster. As soon as a disaster area is declared, FHA issues a notice to lenders that a moratorium has been placed on foreclosure action. Also, HUD sends staff to assist homeowners in disaster areas.

If a consumer wants to qualify for a Section 8 rental subsidy, they must apply at their local housing authority. The housing authority will go over the qualifications with them, and see what properties are available.

Right now, the government has helped make the housing industry more fluid. When the problem first developed, lenders were still interested in lending, not collecting. They did not have the correct staff to deal with the problem. Many people who could not get a modification 3 months ago can get it now. This is because of new programs through Making Homes Affordable program and TARP programs.

FHA has always had a modification program. FHA requires lenders to provide loss mitigation help when borrowers fall 30 days delinquent. FHA also has a forbearance option and a partial claim. HAMP is also a tool that FHA can use. FHA can perform short sales with incentives, and deeds in lieu of foreclosure. There is currently no time benefit for people who take the deed-in-lieu path rather than foreclosure. However, their credit score will not be affected in the same way.

Individuals who simply cannot afford a mortgage will not be eligible for a loan modification. For example, some borrowers would require an 80 percent reduction in their loan balance to be able to afford the mortgage. This is not possible.

Non-owner occupants are currently not eligible for loan modification.

TARP’s funds are currently being used for modifications, not HUD’s. HUD is not currently able to make loans to solve lender problems. However, this kind of loan may be considered in the future.

There was once a program which allowed lenders to get 90 percent of the value of a property from a HUD loan to keep a homeowner in their property. That was either the Hope for Homeowners Program or the FHA Secure Program. When this program first developed, lenders were too optimistic about how many of the deals they would be able to fix with it. It took a lot of time before they realized that this program would not be as successful as they had hoped.

TARP funds can be used to modify principle loan balances, but FHA does not have a program for this yet.

There are some 100 dollar down payment programs for HUD REOs. These programs cannot be used in all areas. Currently all areas have a 100 dollar down payment program for owner occupants. If someone is acquiring a property using FHA financing, they have to pay for the difference between the list price and what they bid, and then another $100. The highest offer will not always win on a HUD property. What ultimately determines whether or not you will win a HUD bid is whether or not your offer will net the most profit.

HUD once had a program for veterans which included no down payment, but when the Housing and Economic Recovery Act was passed in 2008, veterans were required to put down 3.5 percent.

HUD is also in the development business. There are HUD projects that win awards. The mission of Secretary Donovan is to build these residences in an environmentally friendly way.

A new HUD plan has been formulated for 2015 which will make HUD less bureaucratic and more fluid. This will allow them to pay more attention to people in charge of departments. The first goal is to stem the foreclosure crisis. HUD needs to meet the need for quality, affordable rental homes. HUD wants to utilize housing as a platform for improving the quality of life. Home ownership is still a good opportunity. Housing provides wealth in the future by building equity. HUD wants to build inclusive and sustainable communities free of discrimination.

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 6/15/10

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

MDA DataQuick reports A total of 22,270 new and resale houses and condos closed escrow in Southern California last month. According to the NAHB, builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family decreased this month. Having a home with a view is on the top 10 list of preferences for 44.5 percent of men. Morgan Stanley’s research has lead the company to conclude that low mortgage rates will prevent a double dip in prices.

In The News:

DQNews - “Southland median sale price back over $300K; sales at 4-year high” (6-15-10)

“A total of 22,270 new and resale houses and condos closed escrow in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. That was up 9.7 percent from 20,299 in April, and up 7.2 percent from 20,775 in May 2009, according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego.”

NAHB - “Builder Confidence Declines in June” (6-15-10)

“Snapping a string of two consecutive monthly gains, builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes fell back to February levels, before the beginning of the home buyer tax credit-related surge, according to results of the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today. The HMI dropped five points to 17 in June.”

Los Angeles Times“California’s economy to see sluggish recovery this year, UCLA economists say” (6-15-10)

“California stands to gain some jobs this year but recovery will be sluggish, and the state’s inland areas will bear the brunt of the continuing economic pain, according to a forecast scheduled to be released Tuesday by UCLA’s Anderson School of Business.”

Inman - “Top 10 sought-after home features” (6-15-10)

“Men and women’s top 10 preferences were largely the same with two exceptions: having a view made it onto the men’s list (and not the women’s list), with 44.5 percent of men saying it was a high priority; and wood floors made it onto the women’s list (and not the men’s), with 40.9 percent of women ranking them highly.”

Housing Wire“Low Mortgage Rates Help Block Double-Dip Threat: Morgan Stanley” (6-15-10)

“The US economics team at financial firm Morgan Stanley (MS: 25.96 +2.49%) says in their latest research report that recent gains in the nation’s economy point to a remote chance of a so-called double dip — where recent upticks in economic activity are only temporary — citing low mortgage rates as a key driver in drawing this conclusion.”

Housing Wire“Shadow Inventory to Take 3 Years to Clear: Standard & Poor’s” (6-15-10)

“The shadow inventory of distressed properties that back residential mortgage-backed securities will take nearly three years to clear at the current sales rate, according to the credit rating agency, Standard & Poor’s (S&P). S&P puts the total principal balance of the shadow inventory at $480bn or 30% of the entire non-agency market.”

Housing Wire“BofA Permanent HAMP Modifications Passes 70,000 in May” (6-15-10)

“Bank of America (BAC: 15.76 +2.27%) pushed its total number of permanent modifications under the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) to roughly 70,000 in May, up from 56,400 in April.”

Housing Wire“MGIC Writes $800m in Monthly Mortgage Insurance, Denies Hundreds of Claims” (6-15-10)

“Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp. (MGIC), the principal subsidiary of MGIC Investment Corp. (MTG: 9.12 +8.19%), wrote $800m of primary new mortgage insurance in May, according to monthly operations data. The company denied or rescinded — or canceled the policy relating to — almost 1,000 mortgage insurance claims in the month, helping to further reduce the number of delinquencies on its books, according to a press release.”

Housing Wire“More Funds Repaid to TARP than Outstanding in May: Treasury” (6-15-10)

“Treasury noted in the April update on TARP that it expects to spend less than $550bn of the $700bn authorized for the program, and expects to recover all but $117bn — an estimate that was subsequently revised to $105.4bn. Of $384bn in total TARP disbursements, more than half — or $194bn — was repaid through May, leaving only $190bn outstanding. The sale of 1.5bn shares of Citigroup (C: 3.975 +2.45%) pushed the repayments past outstandings for the first time in TARP’s history.”

Housing Wire“In These Thin Times, House Sizes Also Begin to Shrink” (6-15-10)

“In 2007, the average single-family home in the United States peaked at 2,521 square feet. That number did not vary greatly into 2008. However, according to a 2009 report from the Census Bureau, it’s now at an average of 2,438 square feet.”

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

The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 5/21/10

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Today’s News Synopsis:

The Employment Development Department reports California unemployment remained at 12.6 percent from March. According to MDA DataQuick, 37,481 new and resale houses and condos were sold statewide last month. Nearly 75 percent of the 1.2 million homeowners who started the loan modification program in March 2009 have dropped out. The Senate voted 59-39 to pass the financial services bill formerly known as S. 3217, the Restoring American Financial Stability Act.

In The News:

Los Angeles Times“California employers keep adding jobs” (5-21-10)

“California’s unemployment rate remained unchanged from March, at 12.6%, although that’s because more workers – about 68,000 — rejoined the labor force to look for work in April. The Employment Development Department said Friday that the state has added jobs for four straight months, although February’s job figures were revised from a 20,400 job loss to a 2,800 job gain.”

DQNews - “California Statewide April Home Sales” (5-21-10)

“An estimated 37,481 new and resale houses and condos were sold statewide last month. That was up 0.5 percent from 37,295 in March, and down 1.3 percent from 37,967 for April 2009. California sales for the month of April have varied from a low of 27,625 in 1995 to a peak of 71,638 in 2004, while the average is 44,758. MDA DataQuick’s statistics go back to 1988.”

CAR - “C.A.R. calls for swift passage of SB 1178″ (5-20-10)

“The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) is calling on California state senators to vote ‘yes’ and approve SB 1178 (D-Corbett), which will extend anti-deficiency protection for consumers who have refinanced their original mortgage loans and now are facing foreclosure. C.A.R. is the sponsor of the legislation.”

The Press Enterprise“Loan-modification dropouts rise” (5-20-10)

“The Treasury Department’s report Monday was the latest evidence of problems in the administration’s $75 billion program. While officials insist the program is helping the housing market turn around, critics say it is merely delaying an inevitable surge in foreclosures. More than 299,000 homeowners had received permanent loan modifications as of last month, Treasury said. That’s about 25 percent of the 1.2 million who started the program since its March 2009 launch. They are paying, on average, $516 less each month.”

Mortgage Bankers AssociationMBA Reacts to Passage of Financial Regulatory Reform” (5-21-10)

MBA has long supported a more efficient regulatory regime for the financial services industry, and passage of the bill is another important milestone.   However, the bill, as we view it, still has flaws that will negatively impact borrowers and the real estate markets. The next step will be to reconcile the differences between the House bill and the Senate bill.  While there are a couple of ways this could happen, MBA believes the American people would be best served by Congress convening a formal conference committee. Of particular importance to us is ensuring that the final language on risk retention does not discourage prudent, responsible lending.  If not, we risk doing long-term damage to our single-family, multifamily and commercial real estate markets.”

Associated PressFitch finds Calif. at both extremes in mortgages” (5-12-10)

“California has the best-performing U.S. region in mortgage performance as well as some of the worst, according to a study by Fitch Ratings. Results of the ratings agency’s study of all securitized non-agency California mortgage loans were released Wednesday. Among the findings, it said the Bay Area region of San Francisco, San Mateo and Redwood City has a 60-day mortgage delinquency rate of just 4 percent. That was No. 1 among the 382 metropolitan statistical areas tracked by Fitch.”

National Underwriter“S. 3217 Becomes H.R. 4173, Passes In Senate” (5-21-10)

“Members of the Senate have voted 59-39 to pass the financial services bill formerly known as S. 3217, the Restoring American Financial Stability Act. The bill, now known as H.R. 4173, the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act — the same name and bill number given to the financial services bill that the House passed in December 2009 — needed to attract a majority of the votes cast to pass.”

Housing Wire“Treasury Reduces TARP Cost by $11.4bn” (5-21-10)

“The Treasury Department cut the projected cost of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) by $11.4bn to a total of $105.4bn. Congress authorized TARP under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 to provide some stability to the ailing financial industry. Last August, the Obama Administration estimated the cost of TARP to be $341bn. The Making Home Affordable (MHA) program, which includes the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) and the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) program operates under TARP. In March 2010, the Treasury told Congress the cost of HAMP would be $22bn compared to the $75bn initially planned.”

Housing Wire“Increase in Architectural Billings Sets Stage for Increased Construction” (5-21-10)

“The American Institute of Architects (AIA) reported that its April Architectural Billings Index (ABI) rating increased 5.2% to 48.5, up from 46.1 in March. While the results means more firms saw billings decrease than increase, the rate of firms that saw decreases lessened in April.”

Housing Wire“Shadow Inventory Could Reach 5.5m by 2011: Report” (5-21-10)

“There are 2.5m households going through the foreclosure process right now and the number of homes with at least one missed mortgage payment sits at 5.4m, according to Capital Economics. And even though the economic recovery is gaining momentum, more households are still falling behind on their mortgage. By the end of 2011, an additional 3m homes will be in the foreclosure process, making the shadow inventory of potential REO properties at 5.5m. Some of these homes will inevitably avoid a foreclosure. But for many, the foreclosure process may be the only option and, eventually, those homes will get sold in the REO process.”

Housing Wire“Special Servicers Take On $82bn in CMBS Loans through Q110: Fitch” (5-21-10)

“The amount of loans in commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) in need of special servicing totaled $81.7bn in Q110, up from $74bn at the end of 2009, according to Fitch Ratings. Special servicers have unique processes in place for unusual loans, usually ones on the verge of default. According to Fitch, these companies are still adding staff to meet the increasing demand. The analytics firm, Trepp, found the delinquency rate in CMBS reached 8% in April – a new record.”

Looking Back:

One year ago, Bay Area home sales posted a year-over-year gain for the eighth consecutive months. Freddie Mac reported the average rate for a 30-year loan fell to 4.82 percent. MDA DataQuick reported 2.5% of Orange County home purchases financed in April had variable-rate mortgages of some sort. Forty percent of potential homeowners said they would expect to pay at least 50 percent less for a foreclosed home.

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.