Thursday, August 21, 2008

Houses in subprime shape lead price charge down - Aug. 22, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Mold, maggots and piles of festering trash - no wonder home prices are in freefall.


It's not just the subprime mortgage crisis that's to blame for plummeting home prices. A flood of squalid properties on the market is helping to exaggerate the post-bubble price declines.


"Part of the reason home prices are declining is a fundamental deterioration in the housing stock," said Glenn Kelman, CEO of the online, discount broker Redfin. "During the boom, nine out of 10 houses for sale in many markets were in prime condition. Now, for every 10 houses, at least three are dogs."


Most of these mutts are foreclosed properties that have been permitted to fall into disrepair by lenders overwhelmed with thousands of vacant homes. If these houses sell at all, they're going for bargain basement prices that are hurting home values throughout the neighborhood.


"I've never seen so many houses in this condition before," said Ray Anderson of Buyer's Advantage Real Estate in Auburn Calif., near Sacramento. "And I've been in the business 20 years. I've seen bank-owned properties in the past. They were never like this."


Distressed properties usually sell for discounts of 10% to 40% below comparable, well-maintained homes, according to Tom Inserra, executive vice president for Zaio, an appraisal company that is creating a national database of home values.


Richard Smith, CEO of Realogy, the parent company for Coldwell Banker, Century 21 and Sotheby's International Realty, estimates that homes that are not bank-owned have actually only seen price declines in the low single digits over the past 12 months. That's compared with the 15% price drop recorded by the S&P/Case-Shiller Index for all homes over the same period.


'Crime scene'

Lori Mize has firsthand experience with horrible homes for sale. She waited for years for prices to come down in her Elk Grove, Calif. home area, just east of Sacramento. With the median home there now selling 30% below the market's peak, Mize thought it was time to buy. But nearly all the homes in her price range - $250,000 to $300,000 - are bank-owned properties, which tend to be in the most beat-up condition.


After looking at a few of them, she was almost ready to give up.


"The first one I saw was the worst home I had ever seen in my life," said the married mother of two young girls. "There were magic-marker messages on the front door saying, 'STAY OUT.' They had poured paint and other stuff on the carpets. There was a lot of trash. I felt like I was at the scene of a crime. I wouldn't let my daughters touch anything."


In Florida, another foreclosure hot spot, vacant homes deteriorate rapidly in the high heat and humidity.


Garbage and food that's left behind fester. "The properties smell," said Eve Alexander, an agent in Orlando. "You find maggots. The swimming pools are green. The lawns dry up. They're eyesores. Neighbors yell at us to water the lawn."


Often the homes have been stripped bare. "All the kitchen appliances, cabinets and countertops, bathroom fixtures, lights are [stolen]," she said.


Others trash the place before they leave, according to Adele Hrovat, a real estate agent with the Buyer's Realty of Las Vegas. "They punch holes in the walls, dump oil on the carpets. The banks are so overwhelmed, they haven't gotten to the point when they send in crews to fix them up," she said.


Indeed, soaring foreclosures have returned many houses to their lenders, who put them right back on the market - usually as is.


Nationally 18.6% of all homes sold during the three months ended June 30 were foreclosures, compared with just 7% during the same period a year earlier, and 3.1% in 2006, according to the real estate Web site Zillow.com. And that doesn't include short sales, which is when a home is sold for less than the mortgage balance and the bank forgives the unpaid balance and also account for a lot of sales in many areas.


Just a few years ago in Detroit, only one in a hundred listings were foreclosures or short sales, according to agent David Mills of Homebuyer's Realty. Now half of the listings are. Some have been badly damaged and suffered huge drops in value.


"A three-year old home that recently sold for $660,000 is listed for $350,000. There's no kitchen, no master bath. The toilet was taken, the tub, cabinets gone."


A growing problem

With the number of foreclosed properties projected to keep rising, there seems to be no end in sight to falling prices, according to Texas A&M real estate economist Mark Dotzour. Even though many of these dilapidated homes are actually pretty good bargains, Dotzour isn't surprised that more people aren't jumping in. Everyone is reluctant to buy in a declining market.


"Once buyers start to feel confident that prices in a given community have stabilized, they'll start buying again," he said.


For that to happen, the natural population increase will have to absorb all the excess housing inventory, until supply and demand are in balance again.


In the meantime, Congress has allocated $4 billion for municipalities to rehab derelict foreclosures in an effort to prevent them from dragging down nearby neighborhoods.


But mostly hitting bottom is just waiting for market events to play out and the construction of new homes drops and remains below below the replacement rate for a while.


"Once that inventory is gone, we'll be at the market bottom, and the price trajectory will flatten out," said Dotzour.


Until then, dilapidated homes will continue to aggravate the steep price drops being recorded throughout the nation. 


See Also:


[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]


Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Mortgage rate fall to 6.47% - Aug. 21, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Rates on the 30-year fixed mortgage fell from last week, even as the housing market showed more signs of weakness.


Government-sponsored mortgage finance giant Freddie Mac (FRE, Fortune 500) reported Thursday that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.47% this week. That's just below the previous week, but still under the 6.52% average a year ago.


"Even with the current historically affordable mortgage rates, news continues to show signs of weakening in the housing sector," said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist.


More bad news

He noted that housing starts fell in July to their slowest pace in 17 years, and homebuilder confidence remains at record-low levels.


Other mortgage rates also slipped this week, according to the Freddie Mac survey.


Rates on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages fell to 6.0%, down from 6.07% last week. Last year, the 15-year mortgage averaged 6.18%


The five-year adjustable-rate mortgage declined to 5.99%, down from 6.02% last week. At this point last year, it averaged 6.34%.


The rate on one-year adjustable-rate mortgages increased to 5.29%, compared to 5.18% last week. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 5.60%.


Reports on new and existing home sales for July are due next week. Also on tap is the S&P Case-Shiller home price index for June.


Meanwhile, mortgage application volume fell last week to its lowest level in nearly eight years, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported Wednesday. The sharp drop in refinancing volume in recent weeks has been the leading driver of the declining application volume.  


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[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]


More Fannie, Fannie worries send share on roller coaster - Aug. 21, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Shares of mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac plunged and then rebounded in early trading on Thursday after new reports that the federal government may have to take over the troubled firms.


Fannie fell as much as 87 cents or 20%, to $3.53, but then rebounded to a small gain in morning trade. Freddie shares tumbled as much as 99 cents, or 30%, to a record low before rebounding. The lows of the day represented a 20-year low for Fannie (FNM, Fortune 500) when adjusted for splits, and a record low on that basis for Freddie (FRE, Fortune 500), which started trading in 1989.


The Wall Street Journal Thursday said that the firms needed to refinance $225 billion in mostly short-term debt by the end on September. Concerns about the firms' ability to refinance the debt had prompted Treasury Department officials to begin developing a series of options to shore up the companies, if necessary.


The two shareholder-owned firms were originally set up by the federal government to provide financing to the mortgage market. Today they are the primary source of funding for banks and other home lenders, and they own or guarantee more than $5 trillion in mortgages. But both have reported large losses due to rising foreclosures and declining home prices on the loans they own or back.


Earlier this summer, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson secured congressional authority to lend the firms an unlimited amount of money if necessary, as well as the ability to have the government buy shares in the two firms. It is widely expected that such a move would wipe out the holdings of current shareholders.


Paulson and executives of the firms have continued to insist that they don't expect such moves to be necessary, as they have stated that both firms have capital in excess of levels required by regulators to cover their expected future losses. But the investors have not been convinced, sending shares down more than 60% in the first three trading days of this week alone. Shares have now lost nearly 90% year-to-date. 


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[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]


Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Distressed IndyMac borrowers to get relief - Aug. 20, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The FDIC, six weeks after taking over mortgage lender IndyMac Bank, said Wednesday that it will start automatically modifying some of the bank's most troubled loans to keep borrowers in their homes.


The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said it has started to send out the first of what will be an estimated 25,000 letters to borrowers most seriously delinquent on their loans.


The goal of the modifications: to provide borrowers with affordable payments so they can stay in their homes while minimizing the risk of foreclosure and loss to investors in securities backed by the loans.


"Foreclosure is often a lengthy, costly and destructive process. Avoiding foreclosure not only strengthens local neighborhoods where foreclosures are already driving down property values, it makes good business sense," FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said in a statement. "This is a 'win-win' program all around."


Equally important, by turning what are currently non-perfoming loans into performing loans, the FDIC hopes to maximize the value of IndyMac assets to potential buyers, which would be good news for IndyMac customers who had uninsured deposits at the bank when it was taken over. A higher purchase price would also mean fewer costs for the FDIC and its insurance fund.


"By turning troubled loans into performing ones, we enhance their overall value," Bair said in a press call Wednesday afternoon.


Bair, who has long pressed lenders to help struggling homeowners by systematically modifying their mortgages to more affordable terms, inherited $200 billion in mortgages owned or serviced by IndyMac when the bank was taken over by regulators in July.


She said she hopes this new FDIC program will serve as a model for other loan servicers.


"It's my hope that it will provide further catalyst to provide more loan modifications for borrowers across the country," Bair said.


How the program will work

The FDIC is defining "affordable" loans as those in which the mortgage payment (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance) does not exceed 38% of a borrower's income.


That debt-to-income ratio may be achieved in a number of ways, according to the FDIC: by reducing the interest owed on the loan, by stretching out the number of years over which the loan may be paid back or by principal forbearance, which defers payment on a portion of the original principal until the home is sold or the loan is refinanced.


For IndyMac borrowers to qualify for an FDIC modification, they would have to show verification of income - most IndyMac loans are so-called Alt-A loans, which were given to borrowers with good credit but no proof of income. Borrowers would also have to verify that the home at issue is their principal residence. And they would need to sign the letter sent to them by the FDIC and send it back with the first payment due on the modified loan.


The FDIC said borrowers may call (800) 781-7399 to talk with an IndyMac Federal representative to see if they qualify. 


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[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]


Monday, August 18, 2008

New York becomes least affordable housing market in U.S. - Aug. 19, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Home prices continue to tumble across the country, making homes more affordable in most U.S. cities, according to a new report released Tuesday.


Nationally, 55% of homes sold from April through June were affordable to families earning the U.S. median income of $61,500, according to a quarterly report released Tuesday by the National Association of Home Builders.


That's up from 53.8% in the first quarter of 2008, and the most affordable home prices have been since the second quarter of 2004.


"Several factors combined to increase housing affordability nationwide. There was a marginal rise in mortgage rates, which still remain near the historically low levels of a few years ago, family income nationwide held steady, and lower house prices," said NAHB President Sandy Dunn in a press release.


Indianapolis led the the nation's major metro areas in home affordability for the 12th straight quarter. The median price of homes sold during the second quarter was $108,000, down from $122,000 last year. And 91.6% of the households there earning the median income of $65,100 could afford to buy a median priced home. That's up from 86.8% last year.


New York was the least affordable major housing market in the country, according to the report. It was the first time that a major metropolitan area outside of California was the least affordable home market in the 17-year history of the report.


In New York, the median home price fell slightly year over year to $481,000 from $510,00. That led to an increase in affordability; 11.4% of households earning the median income of $63,000 could afford to buy a median priced home, up from 6.3% in the second quarter of 2007.


Despite that change, New York still fell to the least affordable area from second-least affordable last year, according to this survey. 


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[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]


Home building plunges to 17-year low in July - Aug. 19, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Housing building fell sharply in July to a 17-year low, a government report issued Tuesday showed.


Starts plunged 11% to an annual rate of 965,000 from a revised 1.084 million pace in June, according to the Census Bureau report. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast starts would fall to a rate of 960,000.


Permits - often seen as a sign of builders' confidence in the housing market - tumbled 17% to an annual rate of 937,000 from a revised 1.138 million in June. Economists had forecast that permits would come in at 959,000.


The sharp percentage drop from June was due partly to a jump in multi-family home starts and permits during that month. Single-family home starts and permits slipped only slightly from the June level. But the single-family starts were also at a 17-year low in July, while single-family permits fell to a level not seen since the 1982 recession, reaching a rate of only 584,000 homes in July.


The sharp fall in building activity suggests that home building will continue to be a drag on the economy in the second half of the year. Earlier this year, many economists hoped that building activity would bottom out this summer and start to show signs of improvement.


In the second quarter, the drop in home building took 0.6 percentage points off of gross domestic product, the broad measure of the nation's economic activity. It marked the 10th straight quarter that home building has been a drag on GDP.


But the continued drop in building could be just what the battered real estate market needs. One of the biggest problem for sellers is a glut of unsold homes on the market. Since demand for homes remains weak, the glut will only ease if fewer new homes are built.


In June, builders faced a median wait of 8.4 months to sell a completed home, the longest delay in selling time in 25 years, according to a separate Census Bureau report issued recently.


The government report on housing starts and permits comes the day after a survey of builder confidence by the National Association of Home Builders remained at a record low in August. Only 5% of builders said the current market is good, 8% said they expected a favorable market in the next six months and fewer than 2% said they were seeing strong traffic from potential buyers.


The downturn in housing and building has hammered the results of most of the nation's major builders. Late last month Centex (CTX, Fortune 500), which is the No. 2 builder by revenue, reported a larger-than-expected loss and warned it was seeing no improvement in the home building market.


Most builders have reported larger than expected losses, although Pulte Home (PHM, Fortune 500), the largest builder by revenue, did slightly better than forecasts. Only one major builder, NVR (NVR, Fortune 500), has reported a profit through the current downturn, although its earnings have plunged.


As a group, the revenue of the nation's eight largest home builders has plunged 37% over the last year. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters are forecasting another 36% drop in revenue over the course of the next 12 months. 


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[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]


Sunday, August 17, 2008

Builders' sentiment survey matches all-time low - Aug. 18, 2008


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Homebuilders' confidence in the housing market remained at record low levels, a trade group said Monday.


The NAHB/Wells Fargo housing market index for August held at a seasonally adjusted reading of 16, matching July's reading. Economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR also expected the index to remain at 16.


A reading below 50 indicates that more builders think home sales conditions are poor than those who think the environment is positive for sales. August's reading ties the record low level reached in July, which fell below the previous record low set in June.


Builders were asked for their view of the current market, the number of buyers looking at homes and expectations for six months from now.


Only 5% of the builders surveyed believe the current market is favorable, up from 4% in July. Of the more than 300 homebuilders surveyed, 73% view the market as poor. Still the bleak numbers were an uptick from July, sending the August present sales component index up to a level of 16 from 15 in July.


The future sales index also got a slight boost in August, rising to a level of 25, up 2 points from the previous month. Just 8% of builders said housing market will be favorable by the end of the year, though that's up from 6% in the previous month. Poor conditions are expected to continue six months from now by 60% of the builders surveyed.


Builders said the number of prospective buyers is still low, and the component traffic of buyers index held steady at 12. Only 1.2% of builders said they received a high number of prospects, while 77% said the number of potential buyers was low.


Light at the end of the tunnel

Although overall builders' confidence remains at an all-time low, Seiders believes the market is due for a turnaround soon.


"Our current forecast shows stabilization of sales during the second half of this year, followed by solid recovery in 2009 and beyond," he said in a statement. "It is a good sign that two out of three of the ... component indexes rose in August, and this may be an indication that we are nearing the bottom of the long downswing in new-home sales."


Though there is some stabilization of national existing home sales already, Seiders noted much of that has been driven by an upswing on foreclosure sales at cut-rate prices.


As a result of a battered market, President Bush signed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act late last month. The bill includes a temporary home buyer tax credit of up to $7,500 for first-time home buyers or haven't purchased a home in three years.


Qualified buyers must earn less than $75,000 - or $150,000 for a couple - after which point the tax credit begins to phase out. The Senate Finance Committee estimates that about 1.6 million people will use the credit.


"Builders are counting on some support from this new first-time homebuyer tax credit," Seiders said. "Though first-time home buyers generally buy more in the existing home market than in the new home market, new homes get a ladder effect from the existing home market."


Monday's report came a day ahead of the government's report on housing starts and building permits for July, which economists forecast will fall close to 17-year lows after unexpected gains in those measures in the June report.


Shares of homebuilders were mostly lower Monday. Lennar Corp. (LEN, Fortune 500), Centex Corp. (CTX, Fortune 500) D.R. Horton Inc. (DHI, Fortune 500) and Hovnanian (HOV, Fortune 500) all lost about 1%, though Radian Group (RDN) traded in slightly positive territory. 


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[Via Home Mortgage Rates and Real Estate News]