May
22

Follow the Bouncing Home Price Statistics


I’m not exaggerating one bit when I say this… nary a month goes by that I don’t feel compelled to debunk the happy housing prices statistics that seem to get released immediately following the release of any bad news for the housing market.  As a matter of fact, I just did so a few days ago, HERE.

 

Each time I go through the pointless exercise I tell myself that it will be the last time, that from here on out if someone wants the housing market to have bottomed or being on its way up… or whatever, I’ll just respond b y saying, “Sounds great!,” and leave it at that.

 

The last time was entirely transparent … while absolutely nothing had changed all of a sudden everything was better… in the mainstream media, anyway.  So, once again I found myself sitting down at my keyboard to strip away the fabrication, manipulation and obfuscation so as to leave only the naked truth of the matter.

 

Basically, if you’ve been a Realtor out to have a parade over the last few years, then you’ve come to know me as the rain.

 

Well, today LPS (“Lender Processing Services”) published a report, based on analysis of 40 million loans, and to begin with, the foreclosure pre-sale inventory rate came out at 4.14 percent, which is UNCHANGED whether we’re comparing last month… or last year.  Pre-sale inventory exceeded two million properties.

 

Not only that, but the mortgage delinquency rate went UP in April by 0.4 percent to 7.12 percent, and the number of properties that are now 30 or more days late, but NOT in foreclosure, passed the three and a half million mark in April.

 

Florida, Mississippi, New Jersey, Nevada and Illinois were the states with the highest percentage of delinquent loans, which I found quite an interesting list because of the lack of “sand states” listed, Nevada notwithstanding.

 

Montana, Alaska, South Dakota, Wyoming and North Dakota made the list of states with the fewest delinquent loans, but since no one lives in those states anyway, who really cares?

Bang the Drum Slowly…

 

Starting last month, I heard from Realtors primarily in Phoenix, but also in Northern California, as they excitedly rambled on about the throngs of investors who had come from Canada and points unknown to bid up distressed property sales, which make up just under 50 percent of all sales for the last three months running.

 

However, a new study by Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance shows that even with “all that action,” home prices are not moving higher.  In fact, most homes sold in April, although two or three offers were received, ended up selling below list price.

 

According to IMF’s HousingPulse, as reported by CNBC’s Diana Olick:

 

“The average price for non-distressed properties declined 1.5 percent from March to April, while the average price for short sales dipped 1.7 percent. For damaged REO [bank-owned] the average price fell 1.4 percent and for move-in ready REO the average price slipped 0.3 percent.”

 

So, demand is rising while prices are falling… fascinating.  Perhaps it’s because of a combination of factors, such as incredibly tight credit markets, an ongoing avalanche of foreclosures coming onto the market, a worsening jobs market, higher unemployment, and a market made up of greedy bottom-fishers not out to buy, but rather to steal.

 

Think I might be onto something there, or no?

 

Other reports are saying that investors in and around Phoenix are bidding up home prices to such levels that after necessary repairs are completed, the new owner will be underwater once again.

 

Olick and her crowd on CNBC, who only a week or two ago seemed all but ready to declare a bottom and begin the march back to prosperity, but thid week her tone is decidedly different.  In fact, she’s sounding a bit more like me… you know, were I a ditzy blond who’s chief skill is reading from a teleprompter…

 

“… depending on monthly financing costs, and the upfront investment, (investors) may not see the kind of returns they originally expected, and they may not be able to sell in the time frame they originally planned.”

 

Wait a minute, there’s a word for that… darn it, what do they call someone who ends up in that situation in the midst of this larger picture… Oh, yeah… I’ve got it…

 

SUCKER!

 

Mandelman out.

Jan
13

Under the National Operations Center, Homeland Security Given Green Light to Monitor Journalists, Bloggers

Homeland Security monitors journalists Freedom of speech might allow journalists to get away with a lot in America, but the Department of Homeland Security is on the ready to make sure that the government is keeping dibs on who is saying what. Under the National Operations Center (NOC)’s Media Monitoring Initiative that came out of … Read more Related posts:
  1. U.S. Attorney General’s 5,000 DOJ Pending Indictments Targeting Financial Fraud, And National Security
  2. Action Alert | New Proposed Rule Attacks Rights of Citizen Journalists in Court Proceedings
  3. National Mortgage Delinquency Rate Skyrockets to 9.2% LPS Mortgage Monitor
Jun
18

Jumbo Mortgage Delinquencies Are 50% Above Average And Rising

Here’s Why Jumbo Mortgage Delinquencies Are 50% Above Average And Rising Today, June 18, 2010, 5 hours ago | Michael David White

A quiet revolution has hit wealthy neighborhoods: financial failure.

The 90-day delinquency rate on home loans worth over a million dollars hit a high in February at 13.3 percent, much higher than the overall rate of 8.6 percent.

Financial failure on large-balance mortgages and high-end properties is 50 percent higher than the national average – and the national average delinquency-rate is at record highs (High-end Homeowners Falling Into Foreclosure Trap. 5/8/2010. CNBC). Given that cure rates are approximately zero percent at 90-days of delinquency (and I mean that literally), one of eight borrowers in expensive homes is dead-and-gone. This is not a trickle. This is a flood of “product” – houses that owners or banks must sell.

Current listings will not entirely reflect this dire payment-history picture. The higher the value of the property, the more likely it is to be sold off grid. So when the bank owns a house, or when the bank is near to taking the keys, you don’t end it all with a scene of furniture in the front yard.

“Lenders are far more likely to go the short sale route” for high-end properties, said Andrew LePage, an analyst at real estate research firm DataQuick. “There’s a lot more money at stake, and maintenance can be high if a foreclosure just sits there.”

Foreclosures of homes worth over $1 million reached a high in February 2010, the last month data is available, when 4,169 homes were somewhere in the foreclosure process. It’s greater than double the level of a year ago.

Twelve percent of million-dollar sales (37 sales of 295) in the Chicago-area were distressed sales between January and April of this year, and I am confident in saying that stress plays a significant role in expensive markets all across the country – based upon the pay history with 13.3 percent of million dollar loans at 90-days past due.

The same ratio-of-distress stood at only four percent in the beginning of 2009. The stress factor in sales has tripled this year.

While inventory for-sale may not yet fully reflect the delinquencies, foreclosures prove distress at the high-end. Thirty percent of foreclosures are homes in the top tier of local home values. They make up almost twice the proportion of foreclosures as they did three years ago, according to Stan Humphries, Chief Economist for Zillow.

Realtors and sellers of expensive homes are fighting a few new battles unique to our current time and place.

New appraisal companies, paid for production and speed, are churning out prices which make no distinction between a sale in distress and a normal sale. The bias in appraisal values has swung from high to low (Appraisers and Foreclosure Sales Bring Havoc to Housing Markets. Nov 2009. Foreclosure News Report.).

Before it was weird to have a distressed sale and that sale price wouldn’t be used as a comparable sale. Now it is normal to have a distressed sale and the appraiser will pre-judge the lower sale as better because he won’t be accused of high-balling the price. Today’s baksheesh is yesterday’s stale baklava.

The typically-priced homes (not high-end) also benefit from an encyclopedia of federal intervention in the conforming mortgage market (Conforming loans are less than $417,000.). Unlimited funds are available for smaller new mortgages. They are funded by the Treasury which is spending without restraint. The increased distress in expensive home prices and jumbo mortgages derives in part from the stricter standards required by private lenders for new mortgages in a higher-risk mortgage category.

Let’s not forget too that distress in expensive markets is part of a radical fall in property prices nationwide. Values have undergone a 120-year-severity bubble-and-bust. Thirty percent of high values have disappeared over the last four years. Does anybody still say a home will never lose its value? Only people whose thoughts have been recorded, but who are no longer speaking: The dead speak this way when they talk about Jack and the Bean Stalk and ever-higher property values.

The “normals” market has also stabilized more because delinquent-mortgage borrowers may turn to modification programs to catch up. Buyers in general are also less ambitious today and more frightened of taking on big debts. The new higher priority is to have a home and mortgage which you can afford.

“We’re in a ‘trade-down’ environment for the first time since the 1930s,” says Kenneth Rosen, chairman of the Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics at the University of California, Berkeley (High-End Homes Frozen Out of Budding Housing Rebound. 8/3/09. WSJ.).

High-salary white-collar workers are not immune to job loss.

Investment banking bonuses may have changed from cash to stock that must be held for several years. Wealthier homeowners may have a pay-option or interest-only loan which is underwater and whose liberal terms are not available in a refinance even if there was equity in the house (Jumbo Mortgage Delinquencies Soar as High-End Home Inventory Builds.  1/13/10. Daily Finance.)

JP Morgan reported rising inventory for-sale over $750,000 at the beginning of the year and projected recovery is not in the cards this year and not in the cards next year but only in the year after that (2012). They also predict peak-to-trough declines greater than 60% in the high end. They estimated damage in a market-wide assessment at 40%.

Many wealthy property owners operated under the assumption that high-end properties do better at holding their value or never lose value, but there’s good reason to believe the opposite is true, and I will tackle that subject in a later post.

To summarize, serious jumbo mortgage delinquencies are 50 percent higher than the overall market. The number of distressed sales in that category has tripled in the last year in the Chicago area; and that trend toward distress is probably true far and wide. It has to be given what we know of the mortgage-delinquency trend. Thirty percent of all foreclosures are top-tier properties and that is a doubling of the rate when compared to three years ago. Our current zeitgeist is a trade-down environment with low-ball appraisals. Government subsidies do not cover most mortgages in expensive-property markets. And values are projected to fall 60 percent for expensive properties from peak to broken-bubble bottom.

One other thing Mrs. Lincoln: Do you think you will come and see this play again?


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
20

Mortgage Delinquencies Still Rising says MBA – More Americans Underwater

I have a lot of conversations with people about our economy, foreclosures and such… from clients to friends in business to attorneys. Everyone who’s asked me what I foresee coming I’ve told them that 2010 will be a very tough year and they better prepare now. We aren’t done yet folks… and the policies of the Obama Administration and our collective disaster we call Congress, are going to make things even worse – and very well will extend the recession quite painfully. I have told people to expect another wave of foreclosures. As long as you have no job creation and more job loss happening every day, this cycle won’t stop. It’s as simple as that.

And with that, I bring you fresh news…

Delinquencies Are Still Climbing and Threatening More Foreclosures on the Horizon, MBA Says

08/20/2009 By: Carrie Bay

More than nine percent of all mortgages in the United States are now delinquent, according to figures released Thursday by the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).

The delinquency rate for mortgage loans on one-to-four-unit residential properties rose to 9.24 percent of all loans outstanding at the end of the second quarter, MBA reported. The new number breaks the record set in the first quarter of this year, when 9.12 percent of the nation’s homeowners were behind on their mortgage payments.

Important to note is that the biggest jump in delinquencies last quarter came from prime fixed-rate mortgages. These seemingly low-risk loans also accounted for one in three of the nation’s foreclosure starts in Q2. A year ago they were only one in five.

Like prime, Federal Housing Administration loans are generally thought to be “safe,” but foreclosure starts among government-insured mortgages jumped to 9.1 percent last quarter – a record-high for the agency.

The states of California, Florida, Arizona, and Nevada continue to drag down the national numbers. These four had 44 percent of all the nation’s new foreclosures in Q2. Rhode Island, Georgia, and Michigan also posted foreclosure start rates above the national average. All

other states in the country fell below the national benchmark, and roughly half even saw their new foreclosure numbers decline.

But then, there’s the not-so-sunny Sunshine State. Florida has cemented itself as the worst state in the union for mortgage performance. Twelve percent of all mortgages there were somewhere in the process of foreclosure at the end of June, and another 5 percent were more than 90 days past due and about to cross that threshold. Based on MBA’s numbers, Florida has the highest foreclosure and delinquency rates in the country, and MBA’s chief economist, Jay Brinkmann, says he doesn’t expect to see a turnaround in Florida’s housing market for a long, long time.

Some fortunate regional markets are faring better and offsetting Florida’s bad numbers because the nation’s total foreclosure starts during the second quarter actually dropped slightly. Foreclosure actions were initiated on 1.36 percent of the nation’s outstanding mortgages, compared to 1.35 percent during the first three months of the year, MBA reported.

Despite the leveling off of foreclosure starts, the fact that loans 90 or more days past due continues to climb in all categories suggests an overhang of foreclosure activity and engorged inventories of repossessed homes may be looming in the coming months.

So, when is the foreclosure problem going to crest? Brinkmann, points out that unemployment is currently the primary driver behind missed mortgage payments.

The number of jobless Americans is forecast to peak in mid-2010, and Brinkmann says he expects delinquencies to top out at about the same time. But because of the lag time associated with foreclosure proceedings, he doesn’t see a break in the upward trend of foreclosures until six months later, at the close of next year.

Aug
17

Mortgage delinquency rate hits an all-time high

The delinquency rate on mortgages hit an all-time high in the second quarter, but the pace of growth slowed, a possible sign the mortgage crisis may be beginning to turn the corner.




Aug
04

Portuguese RMBS Default Rate Doubles, Says Moody’s

“Default rates among Portuguese residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) increased to 1% in Q209, from 0.5% just one year earlier. The weighted-average 60-plus-day delinquency rate was up to 2.1%, from 1.9% in Q109, according to an index report by Moody’s Investors Service. At the same time, prepayment rates declined to 4.6%.”

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