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MBA Forecasts Foreclosures to Peak in 2011

Nov 19, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

On the MBA conference call concerning the “Q3 2009 National Delinquency Survey”, MBA Chief Economist Jay Brinkmann said this morning:
The problem is moving to prime loans, including fixed rate prime loans, and also FHA loans. “We are seeing the first hit on the weaker prime fixed borrowers.”
Remember the delinquency rate includes loans in modification (something [...]

On the MBA conference call concerning the “Q3 2009 National Delinquency Survey”, MBA Chief Economist Jay Brinkmann said this morning:

  • The problem is moving to prime loans, including fixed rate prime loans, and also FHA loans. “We are seeing the first hit on the weaker prime fixed borrowers.”
  • Remember the delinquency rate includes loans in modification (something to remember – especially for the 90 day delinquent loans).
  • MBA expects unemployment rate to peak in Q1 or Q2 2010, and delinquencies to peak sometime after the unemployment rate peaks.
  • Brinkmann expects foreclosures to possibly peak in 2011 (last quarter he said late 2010). He changed the forecast for two reasons: he expects unemployment to stay fairly high, and he thinks the prime borrowers will hang on before defaulting, and all the foreclosure moratoria will delay foreclosures – a longer trailing effect than usual.

    Note: Many more questions this time!

    A few graphs …

    Read More » »

  • According to Seeking Alpha the US Residential Home market could see 10% more decline in prices

    Oct 28, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    I love the source website for this article, Seeking no prescription online pharmacy Alpha, I suggest you spend some time looking at it from time to time. -Sean
    U.S. House Prices Could Fall Another 10%
    Guest Post by Oxford Analytica

    Over the past few months, there have been suggestions that the US housing market might finally be bottoming out. [...]

    I love the source website for this article, Seeking no prescription online pharmacy Alpha, I suggest you spend some time looking at it from time to time. -Sean

    U.S. House Prices Could Fall Another 10%

    Guest Post by Oxford Analytica

    Over the past few months, there have been suggestions that the US housing market might finally be bottoming out. Since July, the decline in sales of both new and existing homes has moderated. Moreover, over the past three months, there has been a very modest increase in home prices at the national level as measured by the 20-city S&P/Case-Shiller home price index. However, the high inventory of unsold homes, continuing foreclosures, and double-digit unemployment could mean that housing prices have further to fall.

     

    Reasons for cheer. A number of ‘green shoots’ suggest cause for some optimism:

    • Inventory reduction. Whereas housing starts are presently estimated to be running at a 600,000 annual rate, underlying US household formation is presently running at an annual rate of approximately 1.5 million units. Lower residential construction relative to household formation is allowing excessive home inventories to be gradually worked off.
    • Cheap mortgages. As a result of the Federal Reserve’s highly accommodative monetary policy, and the activity of the government sponsored home lending enterprises, mortgage rates have declined to more affordable levels. For example, 30-year fixed rate mortgages have fallen below 5% for the first time in many years.
    • Increased affordability. The slide in home values has brought prices more into line with their long-run fundamentals. Since September 2006, US home prices have fallen 27%, bringing prices back to the level prevailing in mid-2003. As a result, the ratios of home prices to rents and of home prices to incomes are now much more in line with historic levels. The index of housing affordability now stands at its most favourable level in the past 20 years.

    Reasons for doubt. Despite these ‘green shoots’ there remain a number of factors that suggest that US home prices have not quite hit bottom:

    • Inventories historically high. Despite small declines in recent months, the inventory of unsold homes at the national level remains at close to its historic high. A key indication of the degree of excess home inventory is that the number of vacant homes, in which neither an owner nor a renter presently dwells, exceeds its normal level by nearly 1 million units.
    • Foreclosure crisis. The United States is presently suffering from a foreclosure crisis that is further adding more homes to a market already characterised by excess inventories. Forward looking indicators, such as the number of mortgages that are more than 90 days delinquent (ie behind payment) suggest that the pace of foreclosures could increase in the months ahead.
    • High unemployment. A very weak labor market situation inhibits households from making the long-term financial commitments, such as buying a home. The Labor Department estimates that approximately 16.5% percent of the labour force is either unemployed or in involuntary part-time employment. At the same time, the huge slack presently affecting the labour market is exerting downward pressure on wage income growth. Most economists — including White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair Christina Romer — do not foresee much improvement in the labour market in 2010.
    • Mortgage resets. Next year, approximately 200 billion dollars in ‘Option ARM’ mortgages (adjustable rate mortgages) are due to reset to higher rates. This is likely to add to the foreclosure problem, since these resets will produce a sharp jump in debt service payments.
    • Default incentive. Finally, another factor adding to the foreclosure problem is that a growing number of US households now have ‘negative equity’ in their homes (ie their mortgage debt exceeds the value of their homes). Since mortgages in most US states are ‘non-recourse loans’ (the lender cannot pursue the borrowers’ other assets, beyond the home), negative equity gives homeowners a strong incentive to default on their mortgage loans.

    Outlook. The present high level of unsold housing inventories, the poor state of the labour market and the current wave of foreclosures suggest that home prices may have a further 10% to fall (in real terms). This will add to the financial distress facing the banking sector, inhibiting a return to above trend GDP growth in 2010.

    This will add to the financial distress facing the banking sector, inhibiting a return to above trend GDP growth in 2010.

    Housing bottom? Analysts wary

    Oct 28, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    If intervention continues by the feds we are just going to put off the inevitable correction until….?  I know this is for the east coast and most people will say this does not pertain to me or where we are but the biggest foreclosures and pain in real estate are concentrated in the coastal states or [...]

    If intervention continues by the feds we are just going to put off the inevitable correction until….?  I know this is for the east coast and most people will say this does not pertain to me or where we are but the biggest foreclosures and pain in real estate are concentrated in the coastal states or west coast.  (i.e. Florida, Nevada, Arizona and California)  Over 50 % of the loan origination for the distressed housing is in major cities in the west or in coastal states.  Do a little leg work check out www.lpsasap.com and run the  numbers for the auctions in your area for today, one week and for the last 30 days then you tell me if you this we have seen the end of this. -Sean

    Housing bottom? Analysts wary

    For months now, it appeared that Southwest Florida real estate prices had bottomed out.

    But two analyses commissioned by the Herald-Tribune suggest that a second wave of home foreclosures looms and will likely cause a new flood of homes for sale — and even lower prices, possibly lasting through 2011.

    Zillow.com analyzed monthly median home values in Southwest Florida since the start of the decade.

    The online home valuation service found that the rate of decline in markets from Bradenton to Punta Gorda has slowed to the point where it is statistically flat, meaning it rose or fell by about 1 percent or less from July to August.

    That would seem to imply the bottom many real estate experts have noted, but Zillow’s chief economist thinks that the results only point to a respite before the new wave of foreclosures pushes prices down again.

    “In Sarasota metro, there is a fair bit of supply of for-sale homes, and since we suspect that there is a high number of foreclosures ready to stream in, that will continue to keep the inventory of for-sale homes high and thus prices low,” Zillow’s Stan Humphries said. “I expect prices will dip down in the coming months.”

    “This is what a bottom would look like,” Humphries noted. “You should take some comfort in the fact that these numbers look good, but I would not say it is completely behind us in Florida by any means.”

    The second analysis — this one by California-based RealtyTrac Inc. — looked at foreclosures within various ZIP codes in the region.

    It found that despite banks’ growing ability to both forestall and to more quickly process distressed properties, the rate of foreclosures is still growing. Foreclosures also are rising in traditionally strong segments of the Southwest Florida real estate market.

    Foreclosures in downtown Sarasota and on Lido Key, for example, were up 51 percent in the third quarter from a year ago.

    That could be an indication that it is no longer just investors or buyers with marginal financial strength who are suffering. Prime borrowers — those with good credit scores and traditionally strong finances — are being hit, many the victims of the region’s 12.5 percent unemployment rate.

    “Rational, reasonable, intelligent people that normally take great pride in paying all of their bills on time are deciding to turn in their keys and walk away from their homes,” said Jack McCabe, a Deerfield Beach-based housing analyst who correctly predicted the housing downturn.

    But many regional real estate experts do not buy this gloomy scenario.

    They argue that the growing interest of buyers — demonstrated by a 30 percent increase in sales during July, a 23 percent rise in August and a 42 percent jump in September in the Sarasota-Bradenton market — will help ameliorate the effects of rising foreclosures.

    Budge Huskey, the Southeast region executive vice president for Coldwell Banker’s parent NRT LLC, also has data that suggest the growth in foreclosures could dampen or lower prices in Southwest Florida.

    But Huskey argues that the market’s future is unwritten because historically low interest rates will continue to govern buyers. He also notes lenders’ growing sophistication in handling distressed properties.

    Rising markets

     

    In real dollars Zillow’s analysis of the Southwest Florida real estate market found median home values actually rose in three local markets from July to August:

    • By $500 to $221,700 in Punta Gorda.

    • By $1,000 to $91,100 in Port Charlotte.

    • By $1,200 to $120,700 in Bradenton.

    The biggest decline was just $700 in Englewood.

    But Zillow’s median home values — derived from a formula that includes both homes that have sold and those not on the market — have been greatly influenced by historically low interest rates and the $8,000 first-time home buyers credit set to expire at the end of November, said Humphries, the company’s chief economist.

    At the same time, the list of foreclosures continues to grow in Florida.

    There are more than 200,000 mortgages in the state that are substantially delinquent, but in its most pessimistic view of the potential for the Sunshine State, a California lender processing services company predicts that number could rise to 900,000.

    Applied Analytics — which tracks more than 40 million mortgages nationwide — predicted that those high levels of foreclosures could persist throughout 2010.

    The company expects the total to then fall slowly through 2013 to roughly 500,000.

    Huskey has data that suggest a similar track for foreclosures in Southwest Florida.

    “We are at delinquency and default rates that are higher than anything we’ve seen in years,” said Huskey, who works out of Sarasota. “Many buy prozac of the models suggest that defaults will peak in the second half of 2010 and into 2011.”

    Huskey’s models show that there will be more loan defaults this year than in 2008.

    But “the ultimate impact will be largely influenced by the direction of interest rates,” Huskey said. “Fortunately, interest rates are at historic lows, but there is a general belief that rates will begin to escalate as we move through next year.”

    Although the increasing trend of delinquencies and defaults is unmistakable, Huskey believes that the final impact is uncertain.

    Lenders are becoming much more effective at loan modifications and short sales, transactions where the lender agrees to accept less for a property than what is owed to avoid a foreclosure.

    Banks also are better capitalized now and will control the release of foreclosures over time to minimize the losses on their balance sheets, Huskey said.

    Foreclosures in some of the region’s neighborhoods have been snapped up to the point where there are more buyers than homes for sale, Huskey noted.

    That may help keep inventory levels low at some price points even when the new wave of foreclosures hits, he said.

    The prime problem

     

    During the second quarter, delinquency rates on conventional prime mortgages were up in every category when compared with a year before, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported.

    During the second quarter, a majority of loan delinquencies were represented by prime mortgage products.

    Prime mortgages that are past due have increased from 3.73 percent in 2008 to 6.01 percent this year. Prime mortgages in foreclosure have risen from 0.61 percent of all such loans to 1.01 percent.

    Prime mortgage foreclosure inventory more than doubled during the last year — from 1.42 percent to 3 percent.

    RealtyTrac’s analysis for the Herald-Tribune found delinquencies and defaults rising by double-digits in most areas of the region.

    Foreclosures rose by 38 percent along western Cortez Road in Manatee County and by 17 percent in Charlotte County’s Rotonda community.

    That supports the case that McCabe — the Deerfield Beach housing analyst — has been making for months: that the first wave of foreclosures may be slowing, but that the new wave of foreclosures will push in, driven by a fresh crop of adjusting subprime mortgages written during the boom and by rising unemployment.

    The recent “bottom” in pricing is a “short-term thing,” McCabe said.

    “We are three-and-a-half years into this unfolding case and you can say there were five years of the build-up, so we’re looking at at least two more years before we work through all of this,” he said.

    Foreclosures in the last 24 to 36 months were laden with subprime and investor-owned mortgages — the most risky. Nationwide, there are as many as 8 million adjustable-rate mortgages poised to reach their first-term adjustment within the next two years, and as many as 12 million during the next five years, McCabe said.

    “There are a lot of foreclosures in limbo and a lot of lenders are allowing people to live in them so they do not have to assume the risk,” he said. “These are the next big shoes to drop.”

    Source Article

    Mountain of modifications

    Oct 19, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    Mountain of modifications
    Industry tries to keep up with avalanche of troubled mortgages
    SAN DIEGO (MarketWatch) — Millions of homeowners are struggling to make their monthly mortgage payments and the continued deterioration in the job market guarantees millions more will be at risk in the coming months.
    That is putting a huge burden on mortgage-modification programs, both those [...]

    Mountain of modifications

    Industry tries to keep up with avalanche of troubled mortgages

    SAN DIEGO (MarketWatch) — Millions of homeowners are struggling to make their monthly mortgage payments and the continued deterioration in the job market guarantees millions more will be at risk in the coming months.

    That is putting a huge burden on mortgage-modification programs, both those run by the government and an increasing number operated by private industry, which are in a struggle of their own to stay ahead of the tide of potential foreclosures.

     

    A housing counselor helps a homeowner facing foreclosure assess payment options, at a Housing Rescue Fair in Dallas, Texas. (Reuters)

     

    “The subprime problem, by and large, has been dealt with,” said John Courson, chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association. “It’s a different kind of borrower now that we are trying to assist. And a lot of programs we have won’t work now. You can’t modify someone’s mortgage to 31% of income if they have no income.”

    A good portion of the MBA’s annual convention held here this week was devoted to loan-modification issues. And with good reason.

    As of Aug. 31, there were 3.3 million homeowners 60 days or more late on mortgage payments, said Faith Schwartz, who runs the Hope Now Alliance, a mortgage-industry trade group working on foreclosure prevention. A hotline for troubled homeowners run by the alliance fields 5,000 calls a day, she said, although that is only half of the number being handled earlier this year.

    “There’s a lot more competition out there,” Schwartz said. “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have their own hotlines, and government and nonprofits. There is a lot hitting borrowers right now.”

    Read More » »

    A Case Study of Distress California Housing: Sacramento County.

    Oct 13, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    The Sacramento Association of Realtors provides excellent data on real estate market trends for Sacramento County.  It is unfortunate that we don’t have comprehensive data like this for the state of California housing.  Yet this data is helpful because it reflects similar outcomes of other California counties like Riverside or San Bernardino.  When we examine [...]

    The Sacramento Association of Realtors provides excellent data on real estate market trends for Sacramento County.  It is unfortunate that we don’t have comprehensive data like this for the state of California housing.  Yet this data is helpful because it reflects similar outcomes of other California counties like Riverside or San Bernardino.  When we examine the data, what we find is a market dominated by distress sales and lower priced conventional sales:

    sacramento home sales

    This is excellent information.  The number of closed escrows fell in the last data order prescription drugs online report but not by much.  The big trend is with REO and Short Sale information.  Short sales in more mid to upper tier markets in California have been largely absent.  But in this data set they make up a good portion of sales.  However, the big market mover is the REO subset making up nearly 45 percent of sales.  Months of inventory is low at 3.2 months and the median price of sales is $183,000.  Last year at this point when prices were already depressed the median price was $194,950.

    The mean is at $207,199 so the bulk of home sales are falling within this range and if we look at the mode, this is confirmed with the $200k to $249k range.  So what is happening is we have a market that does have brisk sales but only because of lower prices and a glut of REO inventory.  If we look at the overall sales count for the year, sales have increased:

    year sales

    Now compare this to last year:

    last year sales

    It is a simple equation.  Home sales have jumped up 12.2 percent while the median price has fallen 22.2 percent.  Cheaper homes move inventory.  If we dig into the financing data what we find is indicative of many distressed California markets:

    financing details

    The majority of sales are FHA insured loans and cash buyers.  That is, we have a large number of first time home buyers most likely lured by the $8,000 tax credit and many cash investors probably looking to buy cash flow properties.

    It is great to have information like this because it really tells us a lot about a housing market.  It is unfortunate we don’t have data like this for the state of California.

    Source Article.

    Foreclosures Grow in Housing Market’s Top Tiers

    Oct 13, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    New data suggest that foreclosures are rising in more expensive housing markets.
    About 30% of foreclosures in June involved homes in the top third of local housing values, up from 16% when the foreclosure crisis began three years ago, according to new data from real-estate Web site Zillow.com. The bottom one-third of housing markets, by home [...]

    New data suggest that foreclosures are rising in more expensive housing markets.

    About 30% of foreclosures in June involved homes in the top third of local housing values, up from 16% when the foreclosure crisis began three years ago, according to new data from real-estate Web site Zillow.com. The bottom one-third of housing markets, by home value, now account for 35% of foreclosures, down from 55% in 2006.

    The report shows that foreclosures, after declining earlier this year, began to accelerate in the late spring and that more expensive homes have more recently accounted for a growing share of all foreclosures. “The slope of that curve in recent months is much sharper than it was recently,” said Stan Humphries, chief economist for Zillow. Rising foreclosures among more-expensive homes could create added pressure for a housing market that has shown signs of stabilizing in recent months as sales of lower-priced homes pick up.

    The Zillow research compared homes against the median values for their local market and broke each market into three tiers by value.

    Read More » »

    House Rules from RealtyTrac

    Oct 7, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    House Rules
    Thinking of buying a distressed property? It’s very different than a standard real-estate transaction. Here are some pointers:

    Distressed-property listings can be obtained from local real-estate agents, classified ads and Web sites such as RealtyTrac.com, Foreclosure.com, Trulia.com and Zillow.com, as well as bank Web sites.
    Work with experienced real-estate agents and brokers with special training in [...]

    House Rules

    Thinking of buying a distressed property? It’s very different than a standard real-estate transaction. Here are some pointers:

    • Distressed-property listings can be obtained from local real-estate agents, classified ads and Web sites such as RealtyTrac.com, Foreclosure.com, Trulia.com and Zillow.com, as well as bank Web sites.
    • Work with experienced real-estate agents and brokers with special training in foreclosures and short sales.
    • Get pre-approved by a lender, or certify that you have sufficient cash available, before bidding on properties. Auction buyers must be prepared to put down a cash deposit of 5 to 10% cash and pay the balance within 30 days in many states—and in some states, on the same day.
    • Get a thorough inspection by a qualified professional inspector or home-inspection engineer prior to auction or sale.
    • Arrange for a thorough title search and title insurance.
    • Be prepared for a long wait to hear back from the bank on a short sale, but be prepared to how to get prescription drugs without a prescription move quickly on a foreclosure; banks often set strict timetables on foreclosures.
    • First-time buyers with minimal cash and little time or aptitude for repairs probably should avoid foreclosures, and inexperienced purchasers should avoid auctions.

    Sources: RealtyTrac.com; Distressed Property Institute; HUD; WSJ research

    “It was nerve-racking,” says Mr. Shearn, 41, a university research scientist. There was a long delay hearing back from the seller’s bank, and the last-minute discovery of a lien from an unpaid water bill—the water was about to be shut off.

    But in the end, Mr. Shearn, says he and his wife, 42, a co-owner of a software company, were happy. “We really lucked out to find this house.”

    Short sales like the Shearns’ are particularly complicated. Lenders require detailed information about both buyers’ and sellers’ finances, and homeowners generally have to prove hardship. The entire package of documents is scrutinized not just by lenders but by the mortgage investors. Second- and third-lien holders frequently hold up transactions demanding a larger share of the settlement. The average transaction takes four to six months or more, agents say.

    Lenders say they are stepping up their efforts to handle short sales. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. has doubled the number of employees handling

    Are Distressed Homes Worth It?

    Oct 7, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    Home buyers are finding that the battered real-estate market offers just as many opportunities for headaches as for bargains.
    Seth and Crystal Grotzke, both 25 years old, recently bought a bank-owned two-bedroom, two-bathroom townhouse in Edina, Minn., for $110,000—when similar homes in the same development were selling for as much as $131,000. But exactly one day [...]

    Home buyers are finding that the battered real-estate market offers just as many opportunities for headaches as for bargains.

    Seth and Crystal Grotzke, both 25 years old, recently bought a bank-owned two-bedroom, two-bathroom townhouse in Edina, Minn., for $110,000—when similar homes in the same development were selling for as much as $131,000. But exactly one day before the scheduled July closing, the Grotzkes learned there was a second, unpaid mortgage. Because of the foul-up, the couple was forced to live in Mr. Grotzke’s boss’s basement for more than a month. They finally closed on Aug. 31.

    “We knew there would be title issues, but none that would last for that long,” says Mr. Grotzke, an assistant pastor. He adds that buying a foreclosed property is a way for God to “teach you patience.”

    Alisabeth and Colin Shearn bought this seven-bedroom house outside of Denver in a short sale.

    Lots of home buyers are learning about patience these days. In August, nearly a third of overall housing sales were distress sales, according to the National Association of Realtors, up from 18% in March 2008, when it began tracking such sales. The figure includes both foreclosures and so-called short sales, in which the lender agrees to accept less than the full balance of a mortgage in order to unload the property.

    In some parts of the country, such as Bakersfield, Calif., Las Vegas and Lakeland, Fla., distressed properties constitute half or more of all sales. So far this year, there have been nearly 411,000 sales of U.S. properties in some stage of foreclosure, according to RealtyTrac, which publishes a national database of homes in default, auctions and bank-owned homes.

    Those numbers aren’t making it any easier to buy distressed property. Bidding wars are erupting for the lowest-priced foreclosures. Experienced investors with cash are elbowing aside first-time buyers who need mortgages. And banks generally sell property “as is,” without the defect disclosures required of other owners. Short-sale buyers, for their part, often face delays of weeks or cheap Acomplia months as they wait to hear back from lenders—and from the institutional investors who bought securities based on the mortgages.

    Vandalized Properties

    Distressed-property buyers also often have to cope with the fallout from the ruined lives of previous owners, such as vandalized properties and liens from second mortgages, taxes, unpaid water bills, homeowner-association dues and court judgments. For all that, final sale prices often aren’t significantly lower than average in some areas, because the foreclosure glut has also driven down prices for sellers who aren’t in default.

    Buyers have to be thoroughly prepared by securing financing in advance and making sure they have a strong stomach, experts say. They should seek out agents with extensive experience and training in distressed property because the transactions are often complicated and time-consuming. Pushing and prodding bank officials, loan servicers and others is a big part of the job.

    Colin and Alisabeth Shearn of Cherry Hills Village, Colo., a Denver suburb, managed to snag a seven-bedroom Mediterranean-style house in a short sale for $1,272,000, more than $900,000 below its original listing price in 2007. By the time they bid on the house last February, it had gone unsold for nearly two years and the price had been reduced to $1.5 million from $2.2 million. The couple closed on the purchase at the end of May, and moved in with their two preschool-age children.

    “It was nerve-racking,” says Mr. Shearn, 41, a university research scientist. There was a long delay hearing back from the seller’s bank, and the last-minute discovery of a lien from an unpaid water bill—the water was about to be shut off.

    But in the end, Mr. Shearn, says he and his wife, 42, a co-owner of a software company, were happy. “We really lucked out to find this house.”

    Short sales like the Shearns’ are particularly complicated. Lenders require detailed information about both buyers’ and sellers’ finances, and homeowners generally have to prove hardship. The entire package of documents is scrutinized not just by lenders but by the mortgage investors. Second- and third-lien holders frequently hold up transactions demanding a larger share of the settlement. The average transaction takes four to six months or more, agents say.

    Lenders say they are stepping up their efforts to handle short sales. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. has doubled the number of employees handling such sales, while Bank of America Corp. recently began allowing real-estate agents to submit short-sale documents online, reducing the chance a sale will be stalled. At Wells Fargo & Co., efforts to speed up short sales helped produce a 145% increase in these transactions in August compared with the same month a year earlier, the bank says. Meanwhile, the National Association of Realtors and other groups have recently launched short-sale and foreclosure certification programs for agents.

    New Guidelines

    The U.S. Treasury Department is expected to issue streamlined guidelines to lenders on short sales soon. Housing-industry leaders say complicated procedures are hindering them from clearing the large inventory of distressed property necessary to return the housing market to normal. Now, only about 20% or so of short sales are successful, according to real-estate brokerage Re/Max International Inc.

    Buying a foreclosure is usually speedier than a short sale because lenders already possess the property. But there are other drawbacks. State laws vary considerably with respect to legal procedures surrounding foreclosures. Many states require judicial proceedings for foreclosing on a home that can take more than 12 months, a period during which the home may be vacant or occupied by tenants or squatters. Homes may have appliances, pipes and even electrical wiring ripped out.

    Read More » »

    A Plan for Forbearance

    Oct 6, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    People have asked me why we are not seeing more of the trustee sales properties go back to the bank, REOs, or being sold?  This is an example of why the pain is being spread out so much.-Sean
    Source Article NY Times
    Mortgages
    A Plan for Forbearance
     

    WITH the nation’s unemployment rate still high, federal regulators are intensifying efforts [...]

    People have asked me why we are not seeing more of the trustee sales properties go back to the bank, REOs, or being sold?  This is an example of why the pain is being spread out so much.-Sean

    Source Article buy without a prescription target=”_blank”>NY Times

    Mortgages

    A Plan for Forbearance

     

    WITH the nation’s unemployment rate still high, federal regulators are intensifying efforts to curb the effects of job losses or underemployment before they fuel another wave of home foreclosures.

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which protects consumer deposits when banks fail, recently recommended that lenders provide certain borrowers with a temporary respite from mortgage payments, or a forbearance. That relief would last up to six months, and sometimes longer, as the lenders work on long-term loan modifications.

    “We want to make sure lenders do this as a strategy to mitigate losses to the F.D.I.C., but also because it’s the right thing to do,” said Michael H. Krimminger, the special adviser on policy to the F.D.I.C. chairwoman, Sheila C. Bair.

    Under the agency’s plan, lenders would reduce loan payments to “affordable levels” for those borrowers who defaulted on their mortgages as a result of job losses or salary reductions. The new payments, the agency said, would be low enough to allow for “reasonable living expenses” in addition to the mortgage.

    The plan, announced in September, applies only to the 53 financial institutions that relied on the F.D.I.C.’s insurance fund while acquiring failed banks. It does not include the four major mortgage lenders: Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase. These banks already have unemployment forbearance programs, though they differ from the F.D.I.C. plan.

    In March, Citigroup introduced its Homeowner Unemployment Assist program, which lowers the monthly payment for many unemployed borrowers to $500 for three months. To qualify, a homeowner must have a loan owned and serviced by CitiMortgage, and be 60 days or more delinquent, among other things. Mark C. Rodgers, a spokesman, said it was too soon to say whether Citi would adopt the F.D.I.C.’s six-month forbearance policy. “It remains to be seen what changes we might make to the program, which has been in a test mode, going forward,” he said.

    Wells Fargo has for years offered forbearance for unemployed borrowers who cannot pay their mortgages, according to Debora K. Blume, a spokeswoman. The nature of the forbearance terms, she said, is “highly dependent on the customer’s full financial and personal circumstances.”

    At JPMorgan Chase, “if the borrower’s income is too low or not certain, but there are prospects for future employment, we may offer a loan forbearance program that allows a borrower to pay a reduced amount, or even zero, for a limited length of time, often three months,” said Thomas A. Kelly, a spokesman.

    Bank of America offers up to six months of forbearance, according to Jack Schakett, the bank’s credit loss mitigation strategies executive.

    Lenders maintain that they have been working together, and with the federal government, to create more consistent strategies for unemployed borrowers.

    Mr. Schakett says borrowers generally receive better forbearance packages if they have “reasonable prospects for employment,” though his bank also examines their financial management skills. Bank of America looks at mortgage-payment habits and overall debt payment success, among other things.

    “People who were already struggling with their mortgage payments would be less likely to end up with a job that would help them be successful in the future,” Mr. Schakett said.

    Unemployment rates have not risen as sharply as some economists feared last year, but they remain higher than at any point in more than a decade.

    Last month, the Department of Labor reported that the national unemployment rate rose to 9.7 percent in August, slightly more than it was in July and 3.5 percentage points higher than August 2008.

    New York City’s unemployment rate, meanwhile, jumped to 10.3 percent in August, up from 9.5 percent in July.

    Banks hold record delinquent mortgages

    Sep 29, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

    I have been saying this for months that the banks are holding high numbers of non-performing loans.  The research confirms it, high NODs and postponed auction properties. -Sean
    The ratio of first mortgages 90-days late in Orange County rose for the seventh straight month in July, hitting 6.7% of all loans outstanding. That’s the highest percentage [...]

    I have been saying this for months that the banks are holding high numbers of non-performing loans.  The research confirms it, high NODs and postponed auction properties. -Sean

    The ratio of first mortgages 90-days late in Orange County rose for the seventh straight month in July, hitting 6.7% of all loans outstanding. That’s the highest percentage since at least January 2007, when it was a mere 0.7%, and is up slightly from 6.6% in June, reports First American CoreLogic.

    The percentage of mortgages here with some type of foreclosure filing rose to 2.4% in July from 2.3% in June and 1.6% in July’08.

    However, the ratio of bank-owned properties (REOs) held steady for the fourth month at 0.4%.

    I am guessing banks are delaying foreclosures as they try loan workouts and see who qualifies for the Obama administration’s loan modification plan. Most folks 60-days late nationwide are not getting trial modifications under the plan, data have shown.

    Loan mods outside the Obama buying prescription drugs online without a prescription plan have a re-default rate in the range of 50% to 60%.

    Note: First American released July’s delinquency figures earlier this month, but I just received their revised historical data. So here’s an updated chart showing 90-day lates, loans with a foreclosure filing (FF) and REOs going back to January 2007:

    The chart tells a similar story to the one I published Sunday on outstanding foreclosure auction notices hitting a record.

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