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Foreclosure picture bleak, unemployment wreaking havok

Jan 19, 2010 | No Comments | Sean Mills

Does this surprise anyone?  Do you need to be a rocket scientist to figure this out?  I guess you do with all the mis-information floating around. -Sean
A record 3 million U.S. homes will be repossessed by lenders this year as high unemployment and depressed home values leave borrowers unable to make their house payment or [...]

Does this surprise anyone?  Do you need to be a rocket scientist to figure this out?  I guess you do with all the mis-information floating around. -Sean

A record 3 million U.S. homes will be repossessed by lenders this year as high unemployment and depressed home values leave borrowers unable to make their house payment or sell, according to a RealtyTrac Inc. forecast.

Last year there were 2.82 million foreclosures, the most since RealtyTrac began compiling data in 2005. More than 4.5 million filings are expected this year, including default or auction notices and bank seizures, said Rick Sharga, senior vice president for the seller of default data and forecasts based in Irvine, Calif. There were 3.96 million filings in 2009.

“This will be the peak year, and the main reasons are unemployment and house prices that have stabilized way below mortgage amounts,” Kenneth Rosen, chairman of the University of California’s Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics in Berkeley, said in an interview.

Government and lender efforts to keep people in their homes are failing to relieve the worst foreclosure crisis since the Great Depression. Unemployment was 10 percent in December, unchanged from the previous month, while the so-called underemployment rate that includes part-time workers and discouraged workers rose to 17.3 percent from 17.2 percent, the Labor Department said Jan. 8.

U.S. lenders permanently modified 31,382 mortgages, or 1 percent, of the 4 million loans targeted under the Obama administration’s foreclosure prevention plan through November, the U.S. Treasury Department said last month. Fewer than half of the 3.2 million homeowners estimated as eligible for mortgage relief by the Treasury actually qualify, according to Herb Allison, assistant secretary for financial stability.

“The government doesn’t have their act together on housing,” Rosen said. “They seem to be pussy-footing around. We need a much more robust effort.”

Obama’s loan-modification program is “destined to fail” because it doesn’t confront the problem of negative equity that is driving foreclosures, Laurie Goodman, senior managing director at Amherst Securities Group LP, told Congress Dec. 8. Homeowners with negative equity, where a property is worth less than the loan, have little incentive to keep paying the mortgage and will “strategically default,” Rosen said.

More than 728,000 borrowers have already received an average $550 reduction in monthly payments, giving them “a second chance to stay in their homes,” she said.

An $8,000 first-time homebuyer tax credit and a $200 billion lifeline to keep mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac solvent are among the administration’s efforts to date that have supported the housing market, she said.

“Modifications will not be the solution for all homeowners and will not solve the housing crisis alone,” Reilly said.

The number of homeowners with negative equity totaled 10.7 million, or 23 percent, at the end of the third quarter, according to a Nov. 24 report by First American CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif.-based real estate research firm.

Home prices probably fell 13 percent in 2009 to a median of $172,700, following a drop of 9.5 percent the previous year, Walt Molony, a spokesman for the National Association of Realtors, said in an interview. Prices are down 26 percent from the July 2006 peak.

Defaults among prime borrowers are likely to accelerate, adding to a “huge” inventory of properties that banks possess and haven’t yet put on the market, according to Robert Shiller and Karl Case, who created the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index. In September, Goodman estimated that 7 million homes were already in foreclosure or likely to be seized.

The housing market is weighed down by a “a massive supply of delinquent loans” that will end up in foreclosure this year, James Saccacio, RealtyTrac’s chief executive officer, said in a statement Friday.

The end of the government’s tax credit for first-time buyers, scheduled to expire in the spring, and the end of the Federal Reserve’s $1.25 trillion purchase of mortgage bonds, may add to housing woes, Rosen said.

A total of 2,824,674 U.S. properties got at least one foreclosure filing in 2009, a 21 percent jump from the prior year and more than double the number in 2007, RealtyTrac said.

About 2.2 percent of households received a filing last year, according to the company, which sells default data collected from more than 2,200 counties representing 90 percent of the U.S. population.

December filings increased 15 percent from a year earlier to 349,519, the 10th straight month the tally surpassed 300,000. Foreclosures in the fourth quarter jumped 18 percent from the same period in 2008 and fell 7 percent from the third quarter.

Nevada had the highest foreclosure rate for the third straight year in 2009, with more than 10 percent of households receiving at least one filing. December filings fell 22 percent from a year earlier and rose 27 percent from November.

Arizona had the second-highest rate for the year as more than 6 percent of households got a filing. Florida was third at 5.93 percent, followed by California at 4.75 percent and Utah at 2.93 percent, RealtyTrac said.

The other states among the 10 highest rates were Idaho at 2.72 percent, Georgia at 2.68 percent, Michigan at 2.61 percent, Illinois at 2.5 percent and Colorado at 2.37 percent.

source article

Bank of America to release homes

Jan 19, 2010 | No Comments | Sean Mills

Bank of America expects to release about 6,000 foreclosed properties into the Nevada housing market in 2010, or about 500 a month, an executive with the bank said Wednesday.
It’s part of the so-called “phantom inventory” of foreclosed homes being held by banks as they work out loan modifications and negotiate short sales, two of the [...]

Bank of America expects to release about 6,000 foreclosed properties into the Nevada housing market in 2010, or about 500 a month, an executive with the bank said Wednesday.

It’s part of the so-called “phantom inventory” of foreclosed homes being held by banks as they work out loan modifications and negotiate short sales, two of the more desirable alternatives to foreclosure.

Throughout the country, estimates of homes being taken back by Bank of America range from 11,000 to 14,000 a month in the early part of this year to 29,000 to 35,000 by November and December, said John Ciresi, vice president and portfolio manager for Bank of America in Towson, Md.

The system became “clogged” by a voluntary moratorium on foreclosures while banks met the requirements of President Obama’s Making Home Affordable mortgage plan program and by state legislation requiring mediation before banks can start the foreclosure process, Ciresi said at a panel discussion sponsored by the Nevada chapter of the National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals.

Some homes are being held back from closing escrow because of Bank of America’s fiduciary relationship with investors, he said.

“Let’s say you have a $120,000 property and you have a $110,000 offer from a cash buyer and a $120,000 offer on a VA loan,” Ciresi said. “Do I take the higher offer and hope financing is approved?”

Adam Fenn, president of Merit Asset Services in Henderson, said there’s talk on Wall Street about a “double-dip recession,” even as some data point to economic recovery. People are frustrated in their efforts to buy a home and there’s not enough capital out there to finance purchases, he said.

“It’s kind of scary,” Fenn said. “When you go for the highest and best offer, you get people bidding too high and the property ends up going back on the market. I think there’s going to be a double-dip in values. They’re going to go up and then come back down.”

Ciresi anticipates a rise in the foreclosure rate in 2010 because 60 percent of loan modifications failed and went into foreclosure. It’s a combination of property devaluation and people losing their jobs, he said.

Bank of America is getting 40,000 new offers a month on short sales, or homes offered for less than the mortgage balance, Ciresi said. It’s a difficult process, he said.

“Try to understand, we don’t have the title in a short sale. That makes it very difficult in a short sale versus an REO (real estate-owned) home,” he said.

Some banks are getting short sales done in as little as 30 days, said Steve Hawks, director of the National Association of Short Sale Professionals. They’re doing “cash for cooperation” deals, giving people $5,000 to leave the home in good condition.

“The average right now is four to six months, but I see an average of 90 days in 2010, except for a few institutions that have to answer to different investors,” Hawks said. “With half the country underwater (owing more than their home is worth), they’re going to make it easier for a short sale.”

He said 22 percent of mortgage defaults were “strategic defaults,” coming on homes that were underwater. Banks need to eliminate the hardship letter for short sales and consider anyone who falls behind on their payment, Hawks said.

ReMax Pros Realtor Tim Kelly Kiernan said the REO inventory in Las Vegas is dwindling, even though 200 homes a day are going into default.

“Where are these homes? Banks are trying to convert some of them to short sales, but they’re holding on to houses in lieu of the market stabilizing and it has,” Kiernan said. “But every trend says there’s a second tsunami coming. These houses are somewhere. They’re not disappearing.”

source article reviewjournal.com

Short Sale ‘Fraud’, SoCal Home Sales, FHA to Tighten Standards

Jan 19, 2010 | No Comments | Sean Mills

Well I have been off looking at investments again and so I have been neglecting my duties here at Real Estate Smart Talk.  I will try to be better in the future.  One prediction for the future we will not see significant levels of REO sales it appears the banks are diligent working on the loan [...]

Well I have been off looking at investments again and so I have been neglecting my duties here at Real Estate Smart Talk.  I will try to be better in the future.  One prediction for the future we will not see significant levels of REO sales it appears the banks are diligent working on the loan mods for all the distressed owners but instead short sales will rule the next cycle.  Let me know what you think.  -Sean

A few articles of interest …

  • From Diana Olick at CNBC: Short Sale ‘Fraud’ Follow. This is a followup to her earlier article: Big Banks Accused of Short Sale FraudThis alleged activity by banks – paying 2nd lien holders without proper disclosure – appears outrageous. Based on Olick’s reporting, this practice appears to be widespread. Kudos to Olick and hopefully the regulators are reading.
  • From DataQuick: Southland home sales, median price up over last year. As DataQuick notes the median price increase was due to a change in mix – as always I recommend ignoring the median price.

    Southern California home sales in December remained above year-ago levels for the 18th consecutive month, bolstered by gains in many mid- to high-end communities. \

    The December sales tally was the highest for that month since 24,209 homes sold in December 2006, but it was still 11.2 percent below the average for a December – 25,143 sales – over the past 22 years.

    December’s foreclosure resales remained well below peak levels but were still a large force in the market, edging higher than the prior month for the first time since last February. Foreclosure resales – houses and condos sold in December that had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months – were 39.6 percent of resales, up from 39.0 percent in November but down from 53.5 percent in December 2008. They hit a high of 56.7 percent last February, then tapered or leveled off month-to-month until last month’s uptick.

    Government-insured FHA loans, a popular choice among first-time buyers, accounted for 39.6 percent of all home purchase mortgages in December.

    Absentee buyers – mostly investors and some second-home purchasers – bought 19.2 percent of the homes sold in December. Buyers who appeared to have paid all cash – meaning there was no indication that a corresponding purchase loan was recorded – accounted for 24.9 percent of December sales, based on an analysis of public records.

    The market is still mostly first time homebuyers and investors.

    And the high percentage of FHA buyers is a good lead into the third story …

  • From Nick Timiraos at the WSJ: Souring Mortgages, Weak Market Force FHA to Walk a Tightrope
  • Source Article Calculated Risk

    Souring FHA-insured mortgages are threatening the agency’s finances. Congress is pressuring [FHA commissioner, Mr. Stevens] to tighten the easy-money standards that once helped people like him, and he is expected to announce revisions as early as this week.

    Bad bets: The condo meltdown in Las Vegas mirrors Miami’s

    Dec 29, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    Though Las Vegas’ problems are on a much smaller scale, the boom and bust is fairly similar. Some blame South Florida developers, in part, for whipping up the frenzy.

    Photos

    BY MONICA HATCHER

    mhatcher@MiamiHerald.com

    LAS VEGAS — With foreclosures soaring and home prices in the tank, Miami and Las Vegas often compete for the dubious distinction of being [...]

    Though Las Vegas’ problems are on a much smaller scale, the boom and bust is fairly similar. Some blame South Florida developers, in part, for whipping up the frenzy.

    BY MONICA HATCHER

    mhatcher@MiamiHerald.com

    LAS VEGAS — With foreclosures soaring and home prices in the tank, Miami and Las Vegas often compete for the dubious distinction of being the nation’s hardest hit condo market.

    Just a few years ago the two cities shared a reputation as invincible boom towns. Now both real estate markets are climbing out of an abyss of stalled condo developments, spiraling foreclosures and stymied sales.

    Trying to figure out which is the biggest real estate loser isn’t so easy. But comparing the two markets puts into perspective just how unprecedented Miami’s condo explosion was.

    “They built less in Las Vegas than in Miami,” but there are fewer potential buyers, said Marty Burger, president and chief executive of Artisan Real Estate Ventures in Las Vegas.

    Vegas condo owners like Kathy Riggle, a retiree from Tucson, who bought a condo conversion sight unseen for $180,000 during the boom, have watched in disbelief as values have dropped by more than half.

    “Will Rogers once said, `Buy land because they ain’t making any more of it.’ We got caught up in it like a lot of people,” Riggle said.

    Her unit, now valued at $49,000, is in foreclosure because she can no longer rent it for enough to cover the mortgage.

    Las Vegas analysts and builders blame South Florida developers, as well as other out-of-market players, for helping whip up the condo mania in the nation’s gambling mecca.

    During the the boom, Miami development companies launched full-scale assaults on the Vegas market — complete with cocktail parties (hosted by gorgeous models) and million-dollar sales centers.

    The developers dreamed of expanding their empires on the new Vegas condo frontier.

    They figured frequent visitors to Las Vegas from Canada and the mega-population hubs of Southern California would buy second homes rather than continue paying for high-priced hotel rooms.

    Faulty assumption, said Richard Lee, a Las Vegas analyst and vice president with First American Title Company.

    And here’s another false perception the Vegas condo boom was built on: Locals, tired of traffic and long commutes, would seek a more urban lifestyle closer to the action on the Vegas Strip.

    “There was no real demand that you could point to,” said Jack Winston, a consultant with Goodkin Consulting who cautioned several South Florida developers about their ambitious Las Vegas plans. “The people in Las Vegas, if they want to gamble, they have their own casinos in the suburbs. Permanent residents rarely go down to the strip.”

    Just as in South Florida — hemmed in by the Everglades and the ocean — the vertical push out West was propelled by the belief that developable land was running out. Although Las Vegas is surrounded by empty desert, much of it is federally owned and off limits to development.

    “Outside developers came here and really misjudged this market,” said Irwin Molasky, a veteran Las Vegas real estate developer, who also built the 84-unit Park Place condominium that sold out in 2001. “It is not a Miami market. We don’t have the South American trade, the New York trade, and they just thought, if you build it, it will come.

    “And, unfortunately, they turned out to be wrong.” he said.

    Aventura-based Turnberry Associates was one of the first to go vertical in Las Vegas with the four-tower Turnberry Place project. It rapidly closed out 770 units and made tremendous profits.

    Others tried to mimic them.

    “It was like the gold rush after that,” said Bruce Weiner, president of Turnberry Ltd., the residential division of Turnberry Associates.

    But condos weren’t the only buildings sprouting on the Vegas skyline. There was also a casino building spree that pushed construction and labor prices through the roof, forcing dozens of developers to shelve plans. In the end, a fraction of what had been proposed actually made it out of the ground.

    PROJECTS STALLEDIn Las Vegas, only 8,300 condominiums of 29,000 residential condo units planned since 1999 were built, most of them around the Strip. Only 13 high-rise projects, comprising 21 towers, went up. Six were Turnberry’s.

     

    Another 4,800 units are stalled in their tracks or otherwise yet to be completed, including almost 900 residential units in the vaunted CityCenter development, a $9 billion mixed-use project of shimmering hotels, condominiums and retail space that sits on 68 acres adjacent to the strip. The units are scheduled to begin closings in the first quarter of the new year.

    As in South Florida, several developers were caught mid-construction when the market froze. Others, like Turnberry, which finished the two-tower Turnberry Towers in 2007, were stuck with unsold units.

    “We were about 50 percent sold out in the second tower when Armageddon set in,” Weiner said. Turnberry’s partner in the venture, Prudential Real Estate Investors, ended up paying off the banks and taking ownership of the project, which still has about 250 of 636 units unsold, he said.

    Another Turnberry project, the $3 billion Fountainebleau Las Vegas, with its 1,000 condo/hotel units, filed for bankruptcy in June.

    PERFECT TIMINGJorge Perez of Miami’s Related Group, sensing an impending market implosion, pulled out at the last minute. He said his decision to cancel plans for a $3 billion mixed-use project called Las Ramblas was one of the smartest he ever made.

     

    “The market was clearly showing signs of decline and the demand for construction services was so great that construction prices had been inflated to the point of making our project unfeasible,” Perez said in an e-mail. “Instead of taking the immense risk, I decided to sell the land at a huge profit.”

    Perez also nixed ICON Las Vegas, a separate two-tower project in which three-quarters of the 502 units were pre-sold.

    His timing was not as good with ICON Brickell, his $1 billion mega-condo in the 400 block of Miami’s Brickell Avenue. Although the project was completed in 2009, only about 100 sales in the 1,800-unit towers have closed. Perez has recently suggested that he may soon turn the project over to lenders in a “friendly foreclosure.”

    Unlike the bulk of Miami’s new condominiums, which are clustered around the downtown area in stunning high-rise towers, most of the new Las Vegas projects are mid-rise buildings and condo/hotels perched on top of casino hotels.

    In that sense, the problems plaguing the Las Vegas market have been less visible than the darkened condo towers of Miami and are obscured by massive LCD screens and the glitz of surrounding buildings.

    Several real estate watchers estimated at least 1,000 Las Vegas units remain unsold, excluding apartments in CityCenter and other condo hotels. About 4,800 additional existing townhomes and condos also were for sale in November, according to the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors.

    Since the condo model was relatively untested in Las Vegas, the volume of building was huge. But Miami’s building boom was far, far more expansive.

    During the boom, developers had filed plans to build 85,000 new units throughout Miami-Dade County. The final count, according to Bal Harbor-based research firm Condo Vultures, has been about 23,000 units since 2003, more than double the amount built in the previous 40 years.

    In the greater downtown area, where most new construction is located, developers still had almost 8,500 units to sell at the end of September. There are an additional 16,700 existing condo and town homes listed around Miami-Dade County as well.

    Miami is burning off its excess supply of condos nearly twice as quickly as Las Vegas. The median price for an existing condo in Las Vegas stood at $72,500 in November and $149,000 in Miami-Dade.

    Thousands of foreign investors, many from Latin America and with long-held ties to South Florida, have helped jump-start new condo sales. Although its just as hard to get a condo loan here as in Las Vegas, Las Vegas does not have hordes of foreign buyers willing to pay cash.

    Also, lenders have begun allowing South Florida developers to sell units for less than the amount needed to repay their loans. That lowers prices for buyers.

    Bulk buys, or the purchase of large blocks of condos for deep discounts by investors, have also taken off in Miami but not in Las Vegas.

    “They haven’t gotten to the point of capitulation yet in Las Vegas,” said Peter Zalewski, a consultant with Condo Vultures. Burger, of Nevada-based Artisan Real Estate Ventures and also the leader of Related’s ICON Las Vegas project, said prices are all over the lot in Las Vegas — from more than $1,000 a square foot at CityCenter to $80 a square foot. Not even Miami, where new construction maxes out at about $500 per square foot, matches the lofty prices of CityCenter.

    “There is a lot of cash out there ready to buy bulk, but they are ready to buy bulk at much cheaper price than developers and banks are willing to sell for right now,” Lee said.

    Burger and partner John Tippins, a broker with NorthCap Commercial property, are among them. Caught in the stare-down, they decided to use their expertise in managing, selling and leasing Las Vegas condos still held by developers.

    “We said, since we can’t buy the units at the moment, let’s keep our foot in the door,” Tippins said. “We think we can do a better job operating these buildings than some outside company.”

    As for which market will mend more quickly, most analysts said it’s hard to tell.

    For Weiner, so many unsold condos in South Florida will be tough to sell off.

    But “as bad as it is,” he said, “I think South Florida will absorb its condos probably as fast, if not faster, than Las Vegas.”

    Source Article

    Southern California and the MLS myth

    Dec 21, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    Many of you that search or browse housing listings know what the MLS is.  This is the Multiple Listing Service provided to realtors and those affiliated with real estate branches.  In the past, the MLS might have been an excellent snapshot of market inventory.  Many sites like Redfin and ZipRealty provide consumers excellent data for [...]

    Many of you that search or browse housing listings know what the MLS is.  This is the Multiple Listing Service provided to realtors and those affiliated with real estate branches.  In the past, the MLS might have been an excellent snapshot of market inventory.  Many sites like Redfin and ZipRealty provide consumers excellent data for browsing inventory but they do not cover every city in the country.  For the most part, home buyers and sellers have never been so educated on market dynamics.  Then how in the world did this housing bubble happen with so much information?  How was it possible to inflate the California market with Alt-A and option ARM products when so much data was available?

    Read More » »

    More homes are poised to hit the market

    Dec 21, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    A ’shadow’ inventory of properties close to foreclosure or seized but not yet for sale has been growing.
    A supply of 1.7 million homes headed for sale because of foreclosure or delinquency looms over the nation’s housing market, which could dampen progress toward recovery should the Obama administration fail in its efforts to aid struggling homeowners, [...]

    A ’shadow’ inventory of properties close to foreclosure or seized but not yet for sale has been growing.

    A supply of 1.7 million homes headed for sale because of foreclosure or delinquency looms over the nation’s housing market, which could dampen progress toward recovery should the Obama administration fail in its efforts to aid struggling homeowners, researchers said.

    A variety of measures to keep discounted bank-owned properties off the market — including moratoriums on foreclosures by major lenders and federal initiatives aimed at keeping people in their homes with mortgage payments they can afford — has helped increase a backlog of so-called shadow inventory 55% in the year ended Sept. 30, according to a report released Thursday by First American CoreLogic, a Santa Ana-based real estate research firm.

    Read More » »

    Las Vegs – More foreclosures on horizon, say analysts

    Dec 17, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    A cloud of foreclosures will hang over Las Vegas for at least a couple of more years and median prices will continue to fall in 2010, most likely by double digits, executives from two California-based real estate tracking firms said Tuesday.
    About $2.5 trillion in adjustable-rate mortgages are due to reset from July through August 2011, [...]

    A cloud of foreclosures will hang over Las Vegas for at least a couple of more years and median prices will continue to fall in 2010, most likely by double digits, executives from two California-based real estate tracking firms said Tuesday.

    About $2.5 trillion in adjustable-rate mortgages are due to reset from July through August 2011, a substantial amount of it in places already reeling from the foreclosure crisis, said Rick Sharga, senior vice president of Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac.

    Read More » »

    House Flipping Makes a Comeback

    Dec 9, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Four years after the collapse of the U.S. housing bubble, flipping homes is back in fashion.
    Jon Mirmelli, a Phoenix real-estate investor, learned late in the morning of Sept. 28 that a never-occupied custom house on the northern fringes of this Phoenix suburb was going up for auction around noon the same day. [...]

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Four years after the collapse of the U.S. housing bubble, flipping homes is back in fashion.

    Jon Mirmelli, a Phoenix real-estate investor, learned late in the morning of Sept. 28 that a never-occupied custom house on the northern fringes of this Phoenix suburb was going up for auction around noon the same day. The six-bedroom home, built on a three-acre desert plot, has a kitchen with two dishwashers, four ovens, “antibacterial” copper sinks, and a master “spa” bathroom with space for a flat-screen TV visible from the tub.

    The minimum bid, as set by a unit of Citigroup Inc., which had a $1.3 million mortgage on the home, was $379,900. After several minutes of bidding among investors and their representatives, some wearing shorts and flip-flops, Mr. Mirmelli won the home for $486,300. A week later, he agreed to sell it for $690,000 to a woman who moved in this month.

    During the housing boom, millions of Americans tried to make money by buying and then quickly reselling new houses and condominiums. That kind of flipping stopped several years ago as home sales stalled amid a surge in foreclosures and curtailed lending.

    Now, a different breed of flipper is proliferating: one who seeks bargains at foreclosure auctions. Unlike the boom-time flippers, the latest generation needs cold cash, lots of local-market knowledge and strong nerves.

    Investors compete mostly with other full-time professionals who monitor foreclosure auctions at county courthouses across the country. The bidders often haven’t had a chance to inspect the property or determine whether it’s occupied by tenants, who may be hard to evict.

    Sometimes “you have half an hour to make a half-million-dollar decision,” says Damon Lines, an executive at PostedProperties.com, a Phoenix firm that provides information to foreclosure investors and bids on their behalf. “That’s something most people can’t or aren’t willing to do.”

    In the states where home prices have fallen the most, many local real-estate markets are dominated by foreclosed property, dragging down the value of neighboring homes. Barclays Capital estimates that banks and mortgage investors have 639,000 foreclosed homes for sale across the U.S., largely concentrated in Florida, California, Arizona and Nevada. That’s equivalent to more than 10% of expected U.S. home sales this year.

    Flippers swoop in at public auctions of foreclosed homes, known as trustee or sheriff sales. In many states, the lender sets the minimum bid, and takes possession of the property only if no one bids more. In the past, the minimum generally was about equal to the mortgage balance due. But in today’s market, in which many home values have dropped far below the loan balance, lenders wouldn’t attract investors if they set the minimum at that level.

    So lenders, or the loan-servicing firms that represent banks and investors, are increasingly likely to set the minimum much lower. Their goal is to tempt others to buy the house and spare banks the headaches and costs that come with taking possession.

    Sean O’Toole, chief executive officer of ForeclosureRadar.com, a research firm, estimates that in November about 21% of homes sold in trustee sales in California went to investors rather than to a foreclosing lender, up from 6% a year earlier. The trend is similar in some other areas with high foreclosure rates, including Phoenix and Miami.

    The advantage of such an outcome for the bank is that it gets money for the property right away, even if it isn’t enough to cover the loan balance due. The bank doesn’t need to make repairs to the home, cover the taxes and insurance, or pay real-estate-agent commissions.

    [Letting Go]

    The risk for banks is that if they set the minimum bid too low, the home might end up selling for much less than they could reap if they took ownership of it and sold it themselves. But with some 7.5 million U.S. households behind on their mortgage payments or in foreclosure, many lenders are overwhelmed. They’re negotiating with distressed borrowers and figuring out how to sell the growing supply of foreclosed homes.

    “The banks are so screwed up,” says Mr. Mirmelli, the Phoenix investor, that they don’t always have a clear idea of the value of the property they are foreclosing on.

    To help them set the minimum bid, banks often consult with local real-estate agents and use software that estimates housing values. American Home Mortgage Servicing Inc., which collects payments and handles foreclosures on behalf of banks and loan investors, uses a formula designed to “achieve a fair value for the property and induce third-party bidders,” says Christine Sullivan, a spokeswoman for the Coppell, Texas-based firm.

    American Home starts with a broker’s estimate and subtracts the expected costs of taking ownership of the house and selling it. The minimum bid is above the net proceeds American Homes believes it could get by acquiring and selling the property itself, she says.

    Outside the Maricopa County court building in downtown Phoenix, trustees, companies that are hired to handle foreclosure auctions, offer as many as 600 or 700 houses every weekday. A typical auction lasts only a few minutes. On a recent afternoon, a few dozen bidders and onlookers were clustered around a trustee employee seated on a lawn chair conducting auctions. He kept track of the bids on a laptop computer perched on one knee.

    Many of the bidders are regulars at the sale, bidding for themselves or on behalf of investor clients. “We’re all kind of like a little dysfunctional family,” says Steve Mutsaers, a representative of PostedProperties, who was wearing black sunglasses, a white polo shirt and gray plaid shorts. During the summer, Mr. Mutsaers says, he wears a sombrero to cope with temperatures well above 100 degrees.

    People who attend trustee sales here and in other foreclosure hot spots around the nation say the auctions have recently been attracting more bidders. “Properties are getting bid up,” says Hal Feinberg, a Phoenix property investor. “You can still get good deals, but you’ve got to be more patient than you were a year ago.” He and other investors in the Phoenix area say they have been flipping a lot of the homes they buy to Canadians taking advantage of a weak U.S. dollar.

    Buying at these auctions is perilous. There are no public viewings, so bidders often can’t know how much damage may have been done inside a house by occupants facing foreclosure. “We’ve seen everything,” says Doug Hopkins, chief executive of PostedProperties. “We’ve seen people pour concrete down the toilets.” Unless they’ve done their homework, bidders also don’t always know whether they’re buying a home subject to a lien from another lender, which can happen in cases where the borrower took out more than one home loan.

    Joshua Lott for The Wall Street JournalInvestors in Phoenix gather at one of the 700 auctions that take place here each weekday.

    Because of such complexities, many of the bidders are people with experience in the property business. Jon Goodman, a real-estate lawyer in Boulder, Colo., for example, has bought 19 properties so far this year with other investors and sold 11 of them.

    In February, the group won an auction for a home in Commerce City, Colo., near Denver, by bidding $142,000. Only afterwards did they discover that the previous owners had stripped the house of a toilet, much of the carpeting and a kitchen range. They replaced the missing items and made other minor improvements, eventually selling the house in May for $209,000. (The loan balance on the house had been $265,663.)

    Mr. Goodman says their expenses came to about $24,000, including about $8,000 for real-estate commissions. That left a pretax profit of about $43,000.

    The foreclosure auction was handled by American Home Mortgage Servicing. Ms. Sullivan, the spokeswoman for American Home, says the firm believes it didn’t underprice the home and it received “a fair, market-value price for the property.”

    In Miami, a group of investors led by Oded M. Kaiser recently bought a condo at auction for $170,000. Two weeks later, they flipped it for $330,000. The loan balance was about $466,000. A spokeswoman for Litton Loan Servicing, which handled the sale on behalf of mortgage investors, declined to comment.

    Not all flippers come out on top. Mr. Goodman says one of his legal clients, bidding on his own, unwittingly bought a house that was still subject to a first-lien mortgage. To gain control of the property, the client had to pay off the first mortgage. As a result, says Mr. Goodman, the client, who declined to be named, is likely to have at least a small loss on the deal.

    Last summer, Phoenix investor Greg Thielen bought a home at an auction and later found that the former owner had stripped out air-conditioning units, granite countertops and kitchen cabinets, and uprooted palm trees from the lawn. Repair costs came to about $30,000, leaving Mr. Thielen with a small loss on the purchase. “It’s not as easy as people think,” says Mr. Thielen.

    James R. Hagerty/The Wall Street JournalInvestor Jon Mirmelli in the kitchen of the Scottsdale home he flipped.

    The Scottsdale property bought by Mr. Mirmelli was supposed to be the dream home for Brad and Michelle McCaughey and their three children. Mr. McCaughey, who grew up in Ann Arbor, Mich., was a minor-league hockey player and coach after graduating from the University of Michigan. About nine years ago, having moved to Phoenix, he says he discovered “a passion for real estate.” He became a real-estate agent and began investing with his father and brothers-in-law in rental properties. Soon they had a dozen homes.

    In 2005, Mr. McCaughey and his wife paid about $500,000 for three acres of desert land and began building a home. By the time the house was nearing completion in 2008, the family rental-property business was in trouble because financing and other costs were exceeding their income.

    The McCaugheys started selling their rental properties and put their own house on the market. They hoped to avert a foreclosure by getting Citigroup to accept a short sale, in which a home is sold for less than the loan balance due. Before they could find a buyer, though, Citigroup foreclosed on the home, and it went up for auction at the Maricopa County Courthouse this past September.

    Citigroup initially set the minimum bid at auction at $1.3 million, far more than the market value, given comparable sales in the neighborhood. Then, on the morning of the sale, Citigroup lowered that minimum to $379,900. PostedProperties, which monitors Web sites for such price changes, sent out an email on the opportunity to Mr. Mirmelli.

    Mr. Mirmelli has his iPhone set up so he can call up the address of a home due to be auctioned, see a map of the neighborhood with a tap of his finger and then see panoramic photos of the street with another tap. While he researched the home, one of his partners drove out to see the exterior and make sure there were no occupants. A PostedProperties employee bid on their behalf and won the house for $486,300, a sum that then went through the trustee to Citigroup.

    After expenses of about $54,000, including real-estate commissions and minor repairs, Mr. Mirmelli and his partners expect a profit of about $150,000 on the flip. “It turned out to be a very good return,” he says.

    A spokesman for Citigroup declined to comment on the transaction.

    The McCaugheys, who formerly owned the house, are now renting a smaller home. Mr. McCaughey now works for a telecommunications service and is thinking about going back into hockey-related work.

    Over a bowl of soup at a Paradise Bakery & Café in Glendale, a suburb of Phoenix, Mr. McCaughey says he sees a lot of real-estate bargains now and may jump back into the market at some point. As for the losses he’s taken on his former holdings, he says: “It is what it is. You deal with it.”

    Source article www.wsjonline.com

    Las Vegas Home Prices Fall 34% on Foreclosure Sales (Update1)

    Dec 2, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    The droves of investors and speculators have descended on Las Vegas because, according to the National Association of Realtors, now is the perfect time to buy.  You first…-Sean
    Source Article Bloomberg.
    Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) — Las Vegas home prices fell 34 percent in October from a year-earlier as foreclosed properties accounted for two-thirds of sales, reducing the [...]

    The droves of investors and speculators have descended on Las Vegas because, according to the National Association of Realtors, now is the perfect time to buy.  You first…-Sean

    Source Article Bloomberg.

    Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) — Las Vegas home prices fell 34 percent in October from a year-earlier as foreclosed properties accounted for two-thirds of sales, reducing the value of single- family houses and condominiums, MDA DataQuick said today.

    The median price paid for all new and re-sold houses and condos in the Las Vegas metropolitan area fell to $130,000 in October from $196,000 a year earlier, the San Diego-based real estate research company said today in a statement. The price has been at or close to $130,000 since July and hasn’t fallen below that level since April 1999, when it was $129,000.

    Homes that had been foreclosed on in the previous 12 months rose to 67 percent of resales in October, from 65 percent a year earlier, MDA DataQuick said. It was the highest foreclosure rate that month among metropolitan areas with populations of 200,000 or more, according to RealtyTrac Inc.

    A total of 5,068 new and resale houses and condominiums were sold in the Las Vegas-Paradise metropolitan, an increase of 1.1 percent from September and 22 percent from a year earlier, MDA DataQuick said. Of those, 485 were newly built, down 34 percent from a year earlier.

    “Builders can’t compete with discounted foreclosure resales,” MDA DataQuick said.

    The research company is a unit of Richmond, British Columbia-based MacDonald, Dettwiler & Associates Ltd. It compiles surveys using county records and supplies real estate information to customers including public agencies, lenders and title companies.

    With F.H.A. Help, Easy Loans in Expensive Areas

    Nov 20, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    SAN FRANCISCO — In January, Mike Rowland was so broke that he had to raid his retirement savings to move here from Boston.

    Policy changes in insurance, while introduced on a temporary basis, are becoming so popular that they could prove difficult to undo.

    Back to Business
    Risky IncentivesThis series examines the battles taking place to reshape [...]

    SAN FRANCISCO — In January, Mike Rowland was so broke that he had to raid his retirement savings to move here from Boston.

    Policy changes in insurance, while introduced on a temporary basis, are becoming so popular that they could prove difficult to undo.

    Back to Business

    Risky IncentivesThis series examines the battles taking place to reshape the financial industry.

    Read More » »

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