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Why Case-Shiller Is A Bit F***ed

Oct 6, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

Paul, my friend, this is for you as it references Brentwood and is something to think about in your search.  Interesting but sound reasoning from a person with a more colorful venacular than myself, ok we are cut from the same rug.  Please note the title and the website contains profanity but the article is [...]

Paul, my friend, this is for you as it references Brentwood and is something to think about in your search.  Interesting but sound reasoning from a person with a more colorful venacular than myself, ok we are cut from the same rug.  Please note the title and the website contains profanity but the article is good nevertheless.-Sean

As the old Real Estate aphorism Buy Acomplia Online goes “Only 3 things matter – location, location, location”.  So the issue with relying on Case-Shiller (which has been “growing” for three months – yippity f-ing doodah!)  is that the “city” used for valuation is usually a multi-county location with each location being at a different stage in the price cycle.  The “San Francisco” area ranges from Pacific Heights to the Brentwood suburbs over 55 miles away.  Brentwood may have bottomed but it will take some time for the Silicon Valley and the “City by the Bay” to follow it into the abyss.  Oh and by-the-way Silicon Valley, typically considered Santa Clara county, is not actually in the index.

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REAL ESTATE: Apartment prices decline in Las Vegas, amenities don’t

Oct 6, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

No secret on this one if you have been to Las Vegas in the past year. -Sean
Budget-minded apartment tenants may be willing to sacrifice features such as walk-in closets and hardwood floors for cheaper rent, but they still want swimming pools, fitness centers and barbecue pits that make staying home more enjoyable.
Paid utilities and washers [...]

No secret on this one if you have been to Las Vegas in the past year. -Sean

Budget-minded apartment tenants may be willing to sacrifice features such as walk-in closets and hardwood floors for cheaper rent, but they still want swimming pools, fitness centers and barbecue pits that make staying home more enjoyable.

Paid utilities and washers and dryers in units topped the amenities list for renters from February to August on ApartmentGuide.com’s site.

Although amenities are important, renters consider multiple factors before choosing an apartment. More than 35 percent of respondents to a survey by Apartments.com said location and neighborhood have the biggest impact on their decision to pick one apartment over another if rent is not an issue, followed by 19 percent who said the size of the apartment matters most.

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Recession Rising Like Phoenix With Area Delinquencies Surging

Oct 2, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

This article is for my friends in Arizona who are right in the middle of this trying to make a living.  The only people who seem to be still believing the hype are the uninformed, the National Association of Realtors and government employees like Bernanke and Geithner.  Unfortunately, these groups seem to make up the [...]

This article is for my friends in Arizona who are right in the middle of this trying to make a living.  The only people who seem to be still believing the hype are the uninformed, the National Association of Realtors and government employees like Bernanke and Geithner.  Unfortunately, these groups seem to make up the populus of fools running the show.-Sean

Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — Drive up to the Peaks Corporate Park in north Scottsdale, Arizona, and the only person you’ll encounter at the luxury office complex is a security guard.

The development was planned to offer executive suites with views of the McDowell mountains, neighbors such as General Electric Co. and a location just minutes away from Jack Nicklaus’s Desert Mountain golf courses. Plans to lure tenants haven’t materialized and today the complex in this city next to Phoenix is empty, the entrance blocked by a traffic barricade.

Delinquencies in the Phoenix area on loans backed by office, industrial, retail and apartment properties have risen more than five-fold since March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Phoenix region has the second-worst U.S. delinquency rate, behind Detroit’s 10 percent. In Phoenix, the economic recovery looks a lot like a recession.

“A commercial recovery in markets that are heavily dependent on construction will be slow, which means the overall recovery will lag the nation as a whole,” said Susan Wachter, a real estate professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School in Philadelphia. “These are more volatile markets and getting back to normal could take years.”

Phoenix and other southern and western cities such as Atlanta, Houston and Dallas grew because they offered an affordable lifestyle to middle-class Americans, said Edward Glaeser, an economics professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That growth has slowed.

Slowing Growth

The Phoenix area’s population is forecast to increase 1.6 percent in 2009 from 2008 and 1.8 percent in 2010, according to a forecast by Scottsdale, Arizona-based real estate and economic consulting firm Elliott D. Pollack & Co. That’s the slowest growth since at least 1990. Employment may fall 6 percent in 2009 and another 1 percent in 2010, according to the firm.

The real estate crisis has brought economic growth to an end. Arizona had the highest unemployment rate since 1983 in July at 9.2 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The rate fell to 9.1 percent in August. Single- family building permits in metropolitan Phoenix may fall to 5,973 this year, down 81 percent from 2007, according to a consensus forecast of real estate and consulting firms and universities compiled by Arizona State University’s W.P. Carey School of Business.

“The economy in Phoenix is in tatters right now,” said Matthew Anderson, a partner at Foresight Analytics LLC in Oakland, California. “It’s now really hit the skids.”

The decline demonstrates that it may take even longer for states with slower growth to emerge from the recession.

Rising Unemployment

In August, 19 states had higher unemployment rates than Arizona’s, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show.

Worse, more real estate is at risk of defaulting throughout the U.S. Investors in commercial mortgage-backed securities are holding assets with a delinquent unpaid balance of $28.9 billion, up more than five fold since June 2008, according to a report issued by the Congressional Oversight Panel. Under a worst-case scenario, the panel estimates that commercial real estate and construction loan losses through 2010 may total $81.1 billion at 701 banks with assets of $600 million to $80 billion.

“The problems in commercial real estate are just getting started and they will dampen what is already going to be a weak economic recovery,” said Jim Rounds, senior vice president and senior economist at Elliott D. Pollack. “In Arizona, the recession is probably going to last to the middle of the next calendar year.”

Growth Fallout

Wachter, who has been studying housing markets for more than two decades, predicts that Phoenix won’t see a recovery until at least 2012.

The city of Phoenix is suffering the fallout from growth that boosted its population from 983,403 in 1990 to 1.6 million in 2008, according to the Census Bureau. Single-family building permits in Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, rose more than five-fold from 1975 to the peak earlier this decade.

Delinquencies for loans backed by office, industrial, retail and apartment properties that were bundled into securities in Phoenix increased five-fold buying drugs since March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The Phoenix office vacancy rate probably exceeds 30 percent, including space that’s leased yet vacant because the tenants have pulled out, Rounds said.

More offices are becoming available. Los Angeles-based commercial broker CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. said in a second quarter report 2.2 million square feet will be ready for occupancy this year and in early 2010.

Late Payments Rise

As tenants abandon space, landlords are struggling to meet their obligations. Commercial properties with mortgage payments 60 days late or more rose to 8.5 percent as of August in the Phoenix, up from 1.6 percent in March, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“The commercial markets are the second shoe to drop,” said Marshall Vest, the director of the Economic and Business Research Center at the University of Arizona’s Eller College of Management in Tucson. Vest has lived in Tucson since 1970 and worked at the business school studying and forecasting the Arizona economy for 30 years.

For the last three decades, Arizona’s population growth has exceeded most of the nation’s. From 1970 to 2007, the state’s population more than tripled to 6.3 million. Its population growth ranked second or third in the U.S. from 1970 through 2008, according to Pollack data.

Onetime Growth Engine

The state was also an engine for job growth. Arizona was fourth in the U.S. in employment growth from 2000 to 2008 and second from 1990 to 2000. Arizona’s gross state product, a measure of overall economic activity, jumped to $249 billion last year from $30.3 billion in 1980.

Residential construction soared from 1980 to 2005, the peak of the new-home market boom in the state. Single-family building permits rose from 22,919 in 1980 to 87,415 in 2005, according to data on Texas A&M University’s Real Estate Center Web site.

The fallout can be seen throughout the Phoenix. Completed and empty office buildings and retail developments dot the desert landscape of the region, the 12th-largest metro region in the U.S. Vacant retail shops are hard to ignore.

‘Going Under’

“It’s kind of going under locally,” said Chris Dellrie, who was working at Axis Sports, a sporting goods and clothing store, one of at least two businesses open in a Gilbert shopping center that’s mostly empty.

The slump forced Opus West Corp., one of the region’s biggest real estate developers, to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this year, listing debts of $1.46 billion and $1.28 billion in assets, according to bankruptcy records. Opus West is part of the Opus Group, a real estate developer based in Minneapolis.

“It’s really nothing out of the ordinary,” said Craig Henig, senior managing director at CB Richard Ellis in Phoenix. “They believed like everyone that the market would expand.”

At 24th at Camelback II, an 11-story, 300,000-square-foot office building going up in Phoenix near the Arizona Biltmore Country Club, developer Hines hasn’t preleased any of the space. The building will be finished in the first quarter of 2010, said Kim Jagger, a spokeswoman for the Houston-based real estate company. Jagger said there are at least half a dozen potential tenants.

‘Horrible Economy’

People who’ve moved to Phoenix and adjacent suburbs have found life difficult as the economy has slumped.

Ambre Mauro moved to Gilbert, a suburb of Phoenix, in March after struggling in Oregon.

“The economy was horrible there,” said Mauro, 25, who graduated from Brigham Young University-Hawaii with a degree in exercise sports science. “Eventually I decided to come here.”

Things aren’t much better in Arizona. Mauro now holds two jobs. She’s a personal trainer and front desk clerk at a local gym and a waitress at a Japanese restaurant, where she makes about $10 an hour, including tips.

“I have a four-year degree and I never expected to be a waitress,” Mauro said.

About 25 miles northeast of downtown Phoenix, the Peaks Corporate Park stands as a reminder of just how optimistic developers were about the region’s growth prospects.

Prestigious Neighbors

The office complex was built in one of the most prestigious and wealthy parts of the state, where the median price for a new home was $920,000 in the second quarter.

A Web site for the development boasts that it’s near several resort hotels including the Boulders, a Waldorf Astoria property, and “neighbors such as General Electric, Pacesetter, DHL, Taser, USF Bestways, Toll Brothers, Pulte Homes.” Dale Dowers, a principal with the developer, didn’t return calls or e-mails for comment.

With no tenants, the development’s courtyard is barren but for a sculpture featuring wildlife.

Voros: Homeowners in limbo real `hidden’ inventory

Oct 1, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

When a bank forecloses on a home, you probably think that sticking a “Bank Owned For Sale” sign in front of the property soon follows.
Or when a homeowner misses three, four or even nine months of payments, you probably think the bank’s next step is sticking an eviction notice on the door.
Generally speaking, you would [...]

When a bank forecloses on a home, you probably think that sticking a “Bank Owned For Sale” sign in front of the property soon follows.

Or when a homeowner misses three, four or even nine months of payments, you probably think the bank’s next step is sticking an eviction notice on the door.

Generally speaking, you would be correct. Every day banks are placing foreclosed properties on the market, and every day homeowners who default on home loans are receiving eviction notices. That just has to happen when some 350,000 homes a month, or more than 4 million a year, are being foreclosed on across the country.

But presuming that all those properties will hit the market in a timely fashion or that there’s a defined period for a foreclosure-related eviction, though, would be incorrect.

Fact is there are no prescribed time periods for either scenario. Because of this arbitrary manner in which homes become official statistics, there’s a chunk of homes that miss the radar screen of economists.

This “hidden inventory,” as it is known, is the subject of much debate.

Are banks holding back properties to keep prices stabilized in order to minimize loss on bank-owned sales?

Is incompetence coupled with an overwhelming number of foreclosures causing delays in homes hitting the market, skewering the actual real estate picture?

Sean O’Toole, founder and CEO of ForeclosureRadar, a Discovery Bay-based 

tracking firm, is one of the few voices who believes there is no grand conspiracy by banks when it comes to the housing market. In California, he believes this hidden inventory represents about a month of backlogged homes that normally would be on the market.

 

On a recent post on the ForeclosureRadar.com, O’Toole wrote, “At the current rate of REO sales, that means that even if banks are purposefully withholding properties, the truth is that it can’t be very many — a month at most.”

While O’Toole’s math uses actual figures to extrapolate the hidden inventory number, the real wild card lives and breaths in those homes that are in limbo, here payments have stopped, the homeowners remain and the bank is doing nothing but waiting for who knows what. There is no official figure for those.

With the country looking at 4 million foreclosures this year, conspiracy theorists can look at these homeowners in limbo and use it as fuel for their argument that banks are manipulating the housing market by keeping them out of that statistical world by doing nothing.

My take: The housing market is at a critical junction, and there is a real potential for a flood of new foreclosures.

Along with the unknown number of properties in purgatory, there are some 1 million pay-option mortgages originated at the height of the real estate bubble that are due to reset throughout the next year. Some will see their payments double.

These prescription drugs online without prescription two unknown factors — homeowners in limbo and pay-option resets — do not appear to be taken as a serious threat in the real estate industry, but you can be sure they will certainly feed the foreclosure fire well into next year.

Source Article

WSJ Online Article on Delayed Foreclosures

Sep 23, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

Anyone who knows me personally has heard me speak about the shadow inventory of defaulted but NOT foreclosed homes awaiting some type of action from the bank.  Just last week I posted numbers for homes going to auction in Orange County which detailed a relatively high number, 91% plus postponed, yet to be absorbed by [...]

Anyone who knows me personally has heard me speak about the shadow inventory of defaulted but NOT foreclosed homes awaiting some type of action from the bank.  Just last week I posted numbers for homes going to auction in Orange County which detailed a relatively high number, 91% plus postponed, yet to be absorbed by the market either via purchased at auction or sold as an REO by the bank once foreclosed.  I know of a few people who have seen their home go to foreclosure only to sit out in the twilight zone or sold immediately with no rhyme or reason on either to the average Joe.    This article does a pretty good job of summarizing my conerns with this inventory. -Sean

Debra and Arthur Scriven were served notice in June 2008 that their mortgage lender, a unit of Citigroup Inc., was preparing to foreclose on their home. Fifteen months later, the Scrivens are still in their home near Columbia, S.C., and battling to stay there, even though a dispute with the lender over how much they owe prompted them to stop making regular payments last year.

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Home prices’ big role as crisis hit state hard

Sep 22, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

As always there are a few things that hit me a little funnier than others…First, the implications are California was THE truly contributing factor to the demise of Lehmans forget the naked shorts driving the stock price down, fyi the naked shorts totaled 67 times the amount of stock issued, and forget the rest of the country’s [...]

As always there are a few things that hit me a little funnier than others…First, the implications are California was THE truly contributing factor to the demise of Lehmans forget the naked shorts driving the stock price down, fyi the naked shorts totaled 67 times the amount of stock issued, and forget the rest of the country’s bad buy amoxicillin without prescription debt in relation to loan origination.  I guess the Hedge fund boys had nothing to do with this how about the SEC does their job and go after the big boys.  Secondly, California just doesn’t get it as all government doesn’t get it balance the budget and quit spending what you don’t have.  As a business owner if I spend more than my budget/income dictates I go broke and I go out of business.  Time for the free ride to end California. -Sean

Please see the link as the source article cannot be pasted on the page.   Source Article San Francisco Chronicle

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/15/MNBC19MVAP.DTL&type=realestate&ref=patrick.net#ixzz0RrI7GnTt

Investors flip foreclosures

Sep 2, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

I am seeing a lot of this going on from the foreclosures in Arizona and California.  The source article is from the OC Register. -Sean

Investors flip foreclosures
August 17th, 2009, 1:27 pm · 29 Comments · posted by Mathew Padilla

(Update: Foreclosure auction prices added.)
Three of eight properties sold at a July 16 foreclosure auction, known as [...]

I am seeing a lot of this going on from the foreclosures in Arizona and California.  The source article is from the OC Register. -Sean

Investors flip foreclosures

August 17th, 2009, 1:27 pm · 29 Comments · posted by Mathew Padilla

(Update: Foreclosure auction prices added.)

Three of eight properties sold at a July 16 foreclosure auction, known as a trustee’s sale, that I visited are now listed for resale. I have been visiting auctions and tracking Drugs Without Prescription the houses and condos to see if investors plan to hold and rent out what they buy, or simply flip them.

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IMN Distressed Residential

Aug 5, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

IMN is pleased to announce that the 2nd Western Symposium On Distressed Residential & Multifamily Real Estate will be held on September 15-16, 2009, at The Millennium Biltmore in Los Angeles.IMN’s 2nd Western Symposium On Distressed Residential & Multifamily Real Estate is part of our series of Distressed Real Estate forums. Covering distinct asset classes [...]

IMN Distressed Residential & Multifamily Real Estate

IMN Distressed Residential & Multifamily Real Estate

IMN is pleased to announce that the 2nd Western Symposium On Distressed Residential & Multifamily Real Estate will be held on September 15-16, 2009, at The Millennium Biltmore in Los Angeles.IMN’s 2nd Western Symposium On Distressed Residential & Multifamily Real Estate is part of our series of Distressed Real Estate forums. Covering distinct asset classes (hotels, commercial, residential, retail) and hosted in various local markets (Chicago, Las Vegas, London, New York, South Florida), this series uncovers the latest real estate opportunities throughout the US.

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