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Nearly Two-Thirds of Delinquent Mortgages Untouched:

Oct 19, 2010 | No Comments

 A good friend of my sent me this from cfo-newsletter@emailblitz.com . -Sean

New Study – Three years into the foreclosure crisis, with just over a third of distressed homeowners working with their servicer’s loss mitigation departments, the State Working Group says it anticipates hundreds of thousands of foreclosures will occur later this year unless improvements are made in foreclosure prevention efforts.

 According to a new report from state attorneys general and bank supervisors from across the country, more than 60 percent of homeowners with seriously delinquent loans are still not involved in any form of loss mitigation with their servicer.

 The consortium of state regulators and chief attorneys also found that recent modifications that significantly reduce the principal balance of the loan have a lower rate of redefault compared to loan modifications overall, suggesting that servicers should strategically increase their use of principal reduction modifications to maximize prospects for success.

  Student Housing:

Focusing on financials:

 Currently Student Housing Developers see 65 percent loan to value as the norm in the student-housing market, and that most investors are looking for a 9 percent yield, although 8.5 percent is probably more reasonable.

 As for the structure of the new development deals, the personal guarantees have gone up,  he said. Seemingly the biggest hang-up with any of the groups, whether it’s a high net worth individual or a fund, is that the banks want real liquid order antibiotics online assets put against the loan.

 

A more recent investment trend in the student-housing market is: more people gravitating away from funds toward direct investing. People want more control, they want more influence. They want to move away from investing in closed-in vehicles where they lose all control of the money.

 Finance Execs Expect More Distressed Opportunities in 2011

What’s the word on the street? More distressed acquisition opportunities will come to the multifamily market next year, while the dearth of Class A assets trading hands will likely continue.

 

Forecasting Deals
While the wave of distressed auctions that many expected hasn’t yet materialized, investors are increasingly optimistic that next year will be different. Nearly 62 percent of those surveyed expect more distressed acquisition opportunities to be unearthed in 2011.

Table 1. Asset types expected to be available in 2011.  
Distressed properties

61.9%

Class B

39.2%

Value-add

34.5%

Class C

33.3%

Niche (student, seniors, etc.)

24.4%

Class A

22%

None of the above

4.7%

Many feel that it’s just a matter of time before all of those short-term, interest-only CMBS loans made at the peak of the market finally come due. And balance-sheet lenders can only extend-and-amend for so long—as banks slowly return to health, they’ll be able to take greater losses as they clear their balance sheets of distressed notes.

 

Throughout 2010, Class A assets in strong locations inspired bidding wars so heated that most players walked away shaking their heads at the size of the winning bid. That feeding fenzy will likely continue: More than three-quarters of respondents (78 percent) believe there will be fewer stabilized Class A assets hitting the market next year.

Market Upsides
Distressed Markets with the Most Upside.
 
South Florida

27%

Southern California

25%

Phoenix

11%

Atlanta

10%

Las Vegas

10%

Cost-Cutting Continues
Renegotiating vendor contracts and fighting tax judgments continue to be among the most popular cost-cutting strategies employed by firms. More multifamily firms also plan to pass utility costs on to residents and use software to automate business processes than they did last year.

  Linda Shea/ Managing Partner

CFO Capital Partners

“We Bring Experience to the Meeting”

 437 FoxTract Road, Bridgeport, NY 13030

O: 315.633.9653 * EFax: 775.248.6603

Linda@CFOCapitalPartners.com

GMAC Mortgage Statement on Independent Review and Foreclosure Sales

Oct 19, 2010 | No Comments

Funny no one is denying the homeowners were late, seriously late/delinquent, on their payments of the homes in question but somehow it is there god given rights to stay in the homes.  People always want the rules to apply when the rules benefit them.  How about this…you can’t pay the mortgage do the right thing move out with deed in lieu of foreclosure. -Sean

MINNEAPOLIS (Oct. 12, 2010) – GMAC Mortgage is committed to preserving the integrity of the foreclosure process and in that spirit has engaged several leading legal and accounting firms to conduct independent reviews of its foreclosure procedures in each of the 50 states.  In addition, foreclosure sale files nationwide receive an additional review by a specialized team to ensure that: home preservation procedures have been fully followed; the timing and substance of the foreclosure is appropriate; and the file itself is in good order and complies with all laws and requirements of the state of jurisdiction.

Foreclosure is a very serious matter and only implemented when all other home preservation options have been fully exhausted.  We are taking these additional steps to restore confidence in the process, which is critical for the stability of the home and mortgage industry.  

In addition to the nationwide measures, the review and remediation activities related to cases involving judicial affidavits in the 23 states continues and has been underway for approximately two months.  As each of those files is reviewed, and remediated when needed, the foreclosure process resumes.  GMAC Mortgage has found no evidence to date of any inappropriate foreclosures.  

GMAC Mortgage is committed to working through this matter diligently and encourages borrowers with questions to contact a customer service representative at 866-304-4682 or loan.assist@gmacm.com.  Additional information Buy Amoxil can be found by visiting www.gmacmortgage.com.  

Source article

Fed’s Dudley: 3 million excess vacant housing units

Oct 19, 2010 | No Comments

Jist of the article is hard to miss, especially seeing what the title is. -Sean

From NY Fed President William Dudley: Regional Economy and Housing Update

[L]et’s consider the slow housing recovery. Housing market activity—both new construction and sales—remains depressed. On the construction side, total housing starts are running at just 600,000 units per year (seasonally-adjusted) in recent months. This is up from 530,000 units at the trough in the first quarter of 2009 but it is still extremely low by the standards of the last 50 years. In fact, the rate of new construction is so low that there is barely any net growth in the U.S. housing stock these days.

One reason why so little housing is being built is that many existing homes stand vacant. We estimate that there are roughly 3 million vacant housing units more than usual. And more vacancies are added daily as the foreclosure process moves homes from families to mortgage lenders. This stock of vacant homes will shrink when fewer are foreclosed upon and more of these homes are sold or rented out.

On the sales side, even though low mortgage interest rates and falling home prices have together boosted housing affordability to its highest level in 40 years, the current pace of sales is quite sluggish. Impediments to home sales include tight lending standards, a weak job market and continued uncertainty regarding the future path of home prices. The large decline in home prices that occurred between 2006 and 2008 is also important. This decline reduced the amount of equity that owners have in their homes, making it difficult for people to come up with the funds needed to “trade-up” and move into better homes.

In addition, the steep decline in home prices put many families at risk of mortgage delinquency and, ultimately, losing their homes to foreclosure. With lower home prices, many families now owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth. This means that they cannot refinance or sell their homes easily if they experience a financial crisis, such as a job loss or a serious illness. Recent developments on foreclosures have been mixed. While RealtyTrac reports that foreclosure completions in the United States exceeded 100,000 for the first time in September, it is important to remember that foreclosure is a lengthy process in most states. Our data indicate that, in recent quarters, borrowers are becoming less likely to fall behind on their mortgages, so fewer households are now entering the foreclosure process. At the same time, though, major lenders have acknowledged serious problems in the processes they have used to repossess homes and announced moratoria on new foreclosures. Taken together, these developments suggest that the situation in housing remains uncertain for the foreseeable future.

The Federal Reserve actively encourages efforts to find viable alternatives to foreclosure, like loan modifications, or deeds in lieu. We also support due process and access to legal counsel for homeowners facing foreclosure, for instance through legal aid programs. At the same time, it is important that foreclosures that properly comply with state and federal law can ultimately take place, as this is a necessary part of the adjustment that will eventually return us to more normal conditions in the housing market.

At present, the extent of the documentation problem and its wider ramifications are still uncertain. In conjunction with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve is therefore seeking to establish the facts through a review of the foreclosure practices, governance and documentation at the major bank mortgage servicers. We want to ensure that the housing finance business is supported by robust back-office operations—for processing of new mortgages as well as foreclosures— so that buyers of homes and investors in mortgage securities have full confidence in the process. We are monitoring developments closely in order to evaluate any potential impact on the housing market, financial institutions and the overall economy.For those in the New York / New Jersey area, much of Dudley speech is on the regional economy and housing market. 

From NY Fed President William Dudley: Regional Economy and Housing Update

[L]et’s consider the slow housing recovery. Housing market activity—both new construction and sales—remains depressed. On the construction side, total housing starts are running at just 600,000 units per year (seasonally-adjusted) in recent months. This is up from 530,000 units at the trough in the first quarter of 2009 but it is still extremely low by the standards of the last 50 years. In fact, the rate of new construction is so low that there is barely any net growth in the U.S. housing stock these days.

One reason why so little housing is being built is that many existing homes stand vacant. We estimate that there are roughly 3 million vacant housing units more than usual. And more vacancies are added daily as the foreclosure process moves homes from families to mortgage lenders. This stock of vacant homes will shrink when fewer are foreclosed upon and more of these homes are sold or rented out.

On the sales side, even though low mortgage interest rates and falling home prices have together boosted housing affordability to its highest level in 40 years, the current pace of sales is quite sluggish. Impediments to home sales include tight lending standards, a weak job market and continued uncertainty regarding the future path of home prices. The large decline in home prices that occurred between 2006 and 2008 is also important. This decline reduced the amount of equity that owners have in their homes, making it difficult for people to come up with the funds needed to “trade-up” and move into better homes.

In addition, the steep decline in home prices put many families at risk of mortgage delinquency and, ultimately, losing their homes to foreclosure. With lower home prices, many families now owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth. This means that they cannot refinance or sell their homes easily if they experience a financial crisis, such as a job loss or a serious illness. Recent developments on foreclosures have been mixed. While RealtyTrac reports that foreclosure completions in the United States exceeded 100,000 for the first time in September, it is important to remember that foreclosure is a lengthy process in most states. Our data indicate that, in recent quarters, borrowers are becoming less likely to fall behind on their mortgages, so fewer households are now entering the foreclosure process. At the same time, though, major lenders have acknowledged serious problems in the processes they have used to repossess homes and announced moratoria on new foreclosures. Taken together, these developments suggest that the situation in housing remains uncertain for the foreseeable future.

The Federal Reserve actively encourages efforts to find viable alternatives to foreclosure, like loan modifications, or deeds in lieu. We also support due process and access to legal counsel for homeowners buy drugs online facing foreclosure, for instance through legal aid programs. At the same time, it is important that foreclosures that properly comply with state and federal law can ultimately take place, as this is a necessary part of the adjustment that will eventually return us to more normal conditions in the housing market.

At present, the extent of the documentation problem and its wider ramifications are still uncertain. In conjunction with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve is therefore seeking to establish the facts through a review of the foreclosure practices, governance and documentation at the major bank mortgage servicers. We want to ensure that the housing finance business is supported by robust back-office operations—for processing of new mortgages as well as foreclosures— so that buyers of homes and investors in mortgage securities have full confidence in the process. We are monitoring developments closely in order to evaluate any potential impact on the housing market, financial institutions and the overall economy.For those in the New York / New Jersey area, much of Dudley speech is on the regional economy and housing market.

Source Article

Freddie Mac: 30 Year Mortgages Rates fall to series record low

Aug 12, 2010 | No Comments

After sitting on the sidelines for the past years with regards to homeownership I decided to take the plunge again.  Interest rates are as low as anyone can remember seeing in the past 50 plus years.  Homes, in certain areas, are selling for 30 to 50 cents on the dollar Buy Amoxil Online without prescription as opposed to the market highs on the past 5 years.  Fannie, Freddie and even HUD have record levels of inventory of SFRs sitting on their books.  As all the media coverage has highlighted we are not dashing forward on the recovery the way the federal government had hoped.  Stocks fell several hundred points yesterday due to the coverage of these statements from the Fed chairman Mr. Ben Bernake.  Sit back put your feet up people we are going to be here for a while.  A jobless recovery with massive federal government incentives is not the answer.  You can’t eat healthcare and you can’t tuck your kids in at night to this poorly crafted cleverly cloaked insurance company bailout.  Sure this is a rant but what the hell I have been gone a while, enjoy the read and beware I am back posting.-Sean

Freddie Mac said Thursday the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage average fell to record low of 4.44% with an average 0.7 point for the week ending Aug. 12. In the previous period, the average was 4.49% …

This calls for a long term graph …

30 year mortgage rates Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the 30 year fixed rate mortgage interest rate based on the Freddie Mac survey since 1971.

The decline in mortgage rates is related to the weak economy and falling Treasury yields. Rates will probably fall again this week with the Ten Year Treasury yield down to 2.7%.

Note: this series only goes back to 1971. Mortgage rates were at or below 5% back in the 1950s.

Source Article

Home Tax Credit a Costly Failure

Apr 28, 2010 | No Comments

From David Kocieniewski at the NY Times: Home Tax Credit Called Successful, but Costly

Though the Treasury Department and the real estate industry have termed the program a success, helping 1.8 million people buy homes, many tax policy experts say it has been singularly cost-ineffective: most of the $12.6 billion in credits through end of February was collected by people who would have bought homes anyway or who in some cases were not even eligible.

There is no question this program was very costly. And why is the Treasury confusing activity with accomplishment? Sure sales briefly surged, but were new households formed? How many new jobs were created?

“We were happy in our apartment, but $8,000 was just too much to pass up,” said [Mr. James Green, a student at Purdue University], 29, who shopped furiously with his wife for two months before signing a contract in March to buy a three-bedroom ranch.

“We bid on a couple places that didn’t work out,” he said, “but we always made sure we had a backup plan because we didn’t want to miss the deadline for the credit. And when we finally agreed to a contract, it was this huge relief.”

For every home buyer like the Greens, real estate agents say there are at least three others who collected the credit even purchase antibiotics online though they would have bought without it. That means for each new buyer who was truly lured into the market by the credit, the federal government paid more than $30,000.

This is very optimistic – the ratio was probably 5-to-1 for the initial credit and even higher for the extension. But this shows two failures of the tax credit: 1) the high cost, and 2) it was just moving people from apartments to homes and didn’t reduce the excess housing inventory (yes, rentals count as housing inventory too).

“The tax credit helped to stanch the price declines, which had substantial benefit for the entire economy,” said Mark Zandi at Moody’s Economy.com.

And this has been the policy – support asset prices by limiting the supply (all the foreclosure delays), and pushing demand (low mortgage rates and the tax credit). This has helped the banks significantly, and Zandi argues this has boosted confidence. Maybe … but I’m not convinced that supporting house prices above the market clearing level to help the banks and boost consumer confidence makes sense. I think targeting jobs – and therefore household formation – would have been a far more cost effective program.

Source Article

Prices Fell .64 Percent in February, But Gained 1.43 Percent In Last Year

Apr 28, 2010 | No Comments

I come across so much information in my research and as i have been so busy as of lately I have not posted much of anything.  I will just keep doing it regardless of the feedback.-Sean

Prices fell .64% in February, but increased 1.43% compared to a year earlier, according to new Case Shiller data, with the gain representing a significant positive change.

The Case Shiller 10-City Index would fall 7.68% over 12 months if the February fall continued, but the data on the direction of values point in many different directions. Prices for all of 2009 were flat, but have fallen 30% since values peaked in June 2006. The year-over-year increase is a new and positive pattern, but there are many negative trends to consider.

Most analysts for property values (and all assets including stocks) are naturally positive, which calls into question a positive zeitgeist now attached to property values. It is however unambiguously positive that both the 10-City and 20-City index registered a simultaneous annual gain in February — which was last seen in DECEMBER 2006 (more than THREE years ago).

Prices Fell .64 Percent in February, But Gained 1.43 Percent In Last Year

April 27, 2010

by Michael David White

Prices fell .64% in February, but increased 1.43% compared to a year earlier, according to new Case Shiller data, with the gain representing a significant positive change.

The Case Shiller 10-City Index would fall 7.68% over 12 months if the February fall continued, but the data on the direction of values point in many different directions. Prices for all of 2009 were flat, but have fallen 30% since values peaked in June 2006. The year-over-year increase is a new and positive pattern, but there are many negative trends to consider.

Most analysts for property values (and all assets including stocks) are naturally positive, which calls into question a positive zeitgeist now attached to property values. It is however unambiguously positive that both the 10-City and 20-City index registered a simultaneous annual gain in February — which was last seen in DECEMBER 2006 (more than THREE years ago).

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Clouding any and every forecast on property values should be record delinquencies of 15% of all mortgages outstanding, unemployment at just under 10%, and a mortgage market of exceptionally high risk which has been abandoned by all private money sources. About 13.6 million homeowners have no equity or negative equity and therefore have no current wealth to protect by making their mortgage payment. Real estate prices would fall flat on their face without government mortgage money which represents nine of ten new mortgage dollars.

New Observations has previously forecast a fall in values in 2010 of 13 percent based on an average of four major property price indexes. In a separate analysis of a 120-year time series, we forecast a total fall still ahead in the national market of 22% and a total fall from peak-to-trend of 49 percent. Radical government intervention may stop these forecasted falls.

The Case Shiller monthly changes and annual changes for individual cities and for the composite indexes are listed above.

Check Calculated Risk for a good chart of rising and falling property prices and unemployment. Cool charts here on many of the cities covered by Case Shiller. Wall Street Journal on Case Shiller update.

***

PRINT — Prices fell .64% in February, but increased 1.43% compared to a year earlier

Please forward questions, corrections, and reactions to comments below or send me an email. Please send an email if you would like to take out a new mortgage.

Source Article

CoreLogic: 24% of residential properties upside down

Feb 24, 2010 | No Comments

From FirstAmerican Core Logic:

…more than 11.3 million, or 24 percent, of all residential properties with mortgages were in negative equity at the end of the fourth quarter of 2009, up from 10.7 million and 23 percent at the end of the third quarter of 2009. An additional 2.3 million mortgages were approaching negative equity at the end of last year, meaning they had less than five percent equity. Together, negative equity and near-negative equity mortgages accounted for nearly 29 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage nationwide.

Negative equity means the mortgage balance is higher than the value of the home.

The bulk of underwater properties are concentrated in five states: California, Florida, Nevada, Arizona and Michigan. Nevada leads the way in terms of most homes with negative equity at a whopping 70 percent.

“Home-ownership” is badly defined by, for instance, the Census Bureau, which considers all “owner-occupied housing units” in its calculation of the home-ownership rate.

But the rate would be far lower if one simply calculated the amount of equity that Americans have in their homes. Since this is the portion of real estate for which they don’t pay anything, it is the only portion that is truly “owned.”

Subtract folks who owe more on their homes than they are worth and the home-ownership rate drops from 67% to 43%.

Update: Reader Dan Hess offers a better calculation in the comments. He correctly notes that underwater homes are 24% of homes with mortgages, not 24% of all homes as I implied in the math above. Backing out these homes would reduce the homeownership rate to 57%. Though backing out ALL mortgage debt, even on homes with owner equity, would lower the ownership rate even more.

This buy amoxicillin online isn’t merely academic. Having equity in their homes is a big reason homeowners keep paying their mortgage, which is necessary for banks to stay solvent.

Source Article

Freddie Mac: “Potential Large Wave of Foreclosures”

Feb 24, 2010 | No Comments

Another fine calculated risk article.-Sean

“We start 2010 with some early signs of stabilization in the housing Buy Cipro market, with house prices and home sales likely nearing the bottom sometime in 2010. We expect that low mortgage rates, relatively high affordability and the homebuyer tax credit will help continue to fuel the recovery. Still, the housing recovery remains fragile, with significant downside risk posed by high unemployment and a potential large wave of foreclosures.”
Freddie Mac Chief Executive Officer Charles E. Haldeman, Jr.

The quote is from the Freddie Mac Q4 earnings release:

Read More » »

Housing: The Best Leading Indicator for the Economy

Feb 24, 2010 | No Comments

Of course this is contrary to what the National Association of Realtors is saying, but you make the decision.-Sean

Historically the best leading indicator for the economy (and employment) has been housing. I’ve been writing about this for years. For a great summary paper, see Professor Leamer’s presentation from the 2007 Jackson Hole Symposium: Housing and the Business Cycle

For housing as a leading indicator, I use Residential Investment (quarterly from the BEA’s GDP report), and monthly data on Housing Starts and New Home sales from the Census Bureau, and builder confidence from the NAHB.

Read More » »

California Housing Losses by County and City

Feb 11, 2010 | No Comments

I came across this on Patrick.net and could not pass it up. -Sean

California Housing Losses By County and City

Read More » »

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