Archive for November 13th, 2009

Last week, foreclosure Hall of Fame member and government stepchild Fannie Mae announced a stunning $18.9 billion loss.  Remember last year when we were told that bailing out the enormous Government Sponsored Entities that we would be turning a profit?  Well that didn’t exactly pan out and both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been […]

Last week, foreclosure Hall of Fame member and government stepchild Fannie Mae announced a stunning $18.9 billion loss.  Remember last year when we were told that bailing out the enormous Government Sponsored Entities that we would be turning a profit?  Well that didn’t exactly pan out and both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been a vortex for taxpayer money.  With that said, Fannie Mae announced a “lease for deed” program that will essentially convert struggling homeowners to that feared word, renters.  In the same week after Attorney General Jerry Brown sent his letter to the top option ARM wheelers and dealers in California, Wells Fargo came out with its ingenious solution.  Wells Fargo has decided, at least as it stands, to convert their Pick-A-Pay option ARMs into glorious interest only loans for periods of six to ten years.

The fascinating thing about the Fannie Mae initiative and the Wells Fargo program is that homeowners are converted to renters.  Think about it.  In the case of Fannie Mae, you explicitly sign over the deed to the organization and sign onto a yearly lease like 50 percent of California renters.  Not uncommon but will people be able to cover the monthly rental rate?  They are planning on going with a market rental rate but as we all know, rents are going lower in a financial limbo.  Any short fall is going to be covered by the taxpayer (yet again).  Why not take back the home, sell it for market value and allow the current borrowers to find a rental that is more affordable?  With the Fannie Mae plan, I’m not sure how many people will take this up.

Wells Fargo – From Option ARM to Interest Only

The Wells Fargo plan is another beast altogether:

“(WSJ) Wells Fargo & Co.’s strategy for modifying troubled Pick-A-Pay mortgages looks like a game of kick-the-can-down-the-road.

The fourth-largest U.S. bank by assets holds about $107 billion in debt tied to option adjustable-rate mortgages, a relic of the U.S. housing boom that allowed borrowers to make small monthly payments in return for increasing their mortgage balance. Many such borrowers now own homes worth far less than they owe in mortgage debt, and most can’t afford a full monthly payment that pays down the loan’s principal.

To solve that conundrum, Wells Fargo is taking a gamble: The San Francisco company is issuing thousands of interest-only loans that will defer borrowers’ balances for as long as six to 10 years.”

Now let us run a scenario on why this won’t work.  First we need to look at how the Pick-A-Pay mortgages acquired from World Savings are structured:

pick a payment

Source:  Mortgage-X

Wells Fargo didn’t make these loans.  These were acquired when genius Wachovia decided to purchase toxic lender Golden West at the height of the financial speculation orgy.  That doomed Wachovia.  But here we are nearing 2010 and the option ARMs are still sitting there exploding because of the above worst case scenarios.  Wells Fargo is jumping ahead of this because many of these loans are hitting negative recast ceilings.  That is, 80 to 90 percent of option ARM borrowers went with the minimum payment option that didn’t even cover interest.  Each month, additional principal was added to the overall balance.  That is why even when people talked about “well that is different for Wells Fargo, they have the Pick-a-Pay based on a 10 year model” it didn’t really matter because of the recast ceiling.  Like I have said with option ARMs, no one really cares about the time because the negative recast window was going to hit much quicker than the actual 10 year mark.  In fact, 45 percent of the option ARMs are now 30+ days late.

Take a look at a $500,000 option ARM example:

option arm example

Here is where it becomes obvious why these mortgages were going to fail.  Borrowers had four payment options:

-1.        30 year fixed payment (principal and interest)

-2.        15 year fixed payment (principal and interest)

-3.        Interest only payment (aka renting)

-4.        Minimum payment (negative amortization – 80 to 90 percent of borrowers went with this option)

So most of these loans are doomed.  But look at by how much the loan was growing each month with the minimum payment:

Interest only ($3,141) – Minimum Payment ($1,666) = $1,475 tacked on to the balance each month (at least)

That is why I wouldn’t jump on the bandwagon that this is a success already.  That minimum payment was so low, that it may be less than the current market rental rate.  And as you can see, the difference between the minimum payment and interest only payment is enormous.  And look at it this way.  Say you bought a home with an option ARM for $500,000.  You were making that minimum $1,666 payment each month.  Since you paid the minimum your balance might be at $550,000 to $575,000 depending on the index being used to calculate your loan.  Yet your home is now worth only $250,000 or $300,000.  What is the interest only portion of a $500,000 mortgage?

$500,000 30 year interest only portion @ 5.5% =         $2,291

$500,000 30 year interest only portion @ 4% =            $1,666

Now that is a familiar number.  Keep in mind Wells Fargo would have to write-down that additional balance growth because they have been calculating that into their revenue thus far.  Even with this move on these option ARMs, major losses will be taken in.  The question is, will people want to be renters for six to ten years in these homes?  I doubt this will be a major success for three primary reasons:

-1.  Strategic defaulters – many bought these places as step-up homes in California.  They never intended on living here for 5, 10, or 15 years.  It was merely a way to get equity to buy that other McMansion.  Since 58% of option ARMs are here in California, this is largely a bubble state phenomenon.  For someone to sign onto this, they will basically become renters since they are not building equity and the only real winner is Wells Fargo because they can still claim that the home is worth $500,000 even though the reality is much different.

-2.  Rents are dropping – Keep in mind that many of the minimum payments were lower than rents.  So even with the interest only loan, many will opt not to stay in their place because they can find a cheaper rental.  We know that 80+ percent of these mortgages were stated income.  Many are defaulting because people didn’t have the money to begin with.  Many won’t be able to prove that they can even afford the interest only payment without a writedown to market value.  But at that point, Wells Fargo can just foreclose and sell the home and be done with it.

-3.  High Unemployment – California now has an unemployment rate of 12.2. percent and an underemployment rate of 22 percent.  Many people will lose their home no matter what is done because of the economy.  In fact, we are hearing stories of people moving back home with parents, doubling up, or other novel ways to make ends meet.  It is much too optimistic that Wells Fargo believes a large portion of their Pick-a-Pay borrowers will stay just because they are now on an interest only schedule.

Fannie Mae Solution – Become a Renter

fannie mae

fannie mae

Fannie Mae is losing money like a drunken gambler in Vegas.  The best analogy I can think of for the current bailout structure is this.  You have a gambler that is told, if you win you get to keep all the winnings but if you lose, the house will cover you completely.  So if this gambler hits a losing streak, wouldn’t they just double down to recoup losses quicker to make up for the past?  After all, the house is assuring that they won’t lose.  Welcome to modern day Wall Street.

Fannie Mae after reporting a quarterly loss of $18.9 billion has the chutzpah to ask the government for $15 billion in additional funds.  We already own Fannie Mae, so this is like having a schizophrenic talk with yourself and answering your own question.  There is madness in the current government structure.

The new “idea” for Fannie Mae is a Lease-for-Deed program.  In other words, after two years of trillion dollar bailouts and failed plan after failed plan, Fannie Mae has come up with a wonderful plan.  “Hey, since these homeowners can’t afford to own these homes because our underwriting is less than Kosher, how about we do something that is completely unheard of in the modern era.  Let us do this thing called renting!”  This is basically the plan:

WASHINGTON – Can’t pay the mortgage? You still might be able to stay in your home. Government-controlled mortgage company Fannie Mae is going to give borrowers on the verge of foreclosure the option of renting their homes for a year.

The change announced Thursday could give a temporary break to thousands of homeowners, but critics question whether it will only add to the mushrooming losses at the company, which has received billions in taxpayer money.

The new “Deed for Lease” program will allow homeowners to transfer title to Fannie Mae and sign a one-year lease, with potential month-to-month extensions after that. It also helps save money because the lender does not need to complete the often lengthy and time-consuming foreclosure process.”

What does the Fannie Mae and Wells Fargo plans have in common?  They are both methods to fluff the foreclosure numbers temporarily.  Think about this.  Each plan is temporary and both are betting on a quick housing recovery.  Let us use that $500,000 option ARM mortgage on a home valued at $250,000.  How long will it take to reach $500,000 assuming a 5% annual appreciation rate?

future value

future value

15 full years at 5 percent annual appreciation!  Keep in mind that since the recession started, the CPI is running at negative or close to zero.  So the borrower that elects to do this after 15 years, might be lucky enough to walk away from their home with no equity.  The only winner is really Wells Fargo.  There are plenty of rentals on the market right now for excellent prices.  It will be interesting to see what other lenders do here in California.

Yet the Fannie Mae plan converts homeowners to renters.  The deed is given over to Fannie Mae.  Will people want to do this?  Hard to say.  The data so far isn’t encouraging:

“In the first nine months of the year, Fannie Mae took ownership of nearly 2,000 properties through a process known as a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. That pales in comparison to the 90,000 foreclosed properties the company repossessed in the period.”

Now these are actual foreclosures.  That is a “deed-in-lieu” is essentially handing over your rights to the property to the lender.  If stats like this go with the lease for deed program, it will be another failure.

Glad our bailout money is being used for creative and innovative ideas.  After all the talk and trillions funneled into the abyss, the answer now looks to boil down to renting.

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Fannie Mae and Wells Fargo Announce Creative Mortgage Solutions: A New Thing Called Renting. Option ARM Scenarios, Lease for Deed, and Delaying the Financial Future.

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Loan Modifications are a very emotionally charged issue. If you are a homeowner in trouble and want information on your chances of getting a much needed loan modification it can be a nightmare to get the right information for your specific situation. You have probable heard about the many scam artists ready to take advantage of desperate homeowners that will do pretty much anything to save their home. This is why it is best to get expert advice from one of the many government appointed (FREE) institutions.

However it is a good idea to get a general idea of your situation in order to at least make the right questions.

Let’s present a hypothetical scenario:
You are the owner of a house worth $300,000 on which you owe $400,000 you also have debt racked up on a second home. Can you get a loan modification?
This scenario is rather common. In the past years many saw wisdom in investing in bricks and mortar and buying to rent. When they struggle to find someone interesting in renting they struggle to pay both mortgages, and that’s if they haven’t lost their job.
Unfortunately, even though the scenario is common it is not a good candidate for a loan modification. The reason for this is that homeowners with two homes are too financially committed to qualify. In order to qualify for a loan modification your mortgage payments must not be over 31% of your income. If your mortgage payments are over 31% you are considered a high risk homeowner that should never have spent such a high percentage of their income on a mortgage.

The best options in this case is to try to keep payments and keep your head above water (easier said than done)  and down size your mortgage payments as soon as possible in order to qualify for a loan modification.

The question is, if you are in that situation, can you carry on your primary home until the economy decides to come back?

That will depend a lot on how high your interest rates are and what type of interest (ARM or Fixed) you have. The good news is that interest rates are low right now so even the riskier ARM loans are not so bad, at least for now. The issues might come in 2011 when many experts are predicting interest rates are going to climb. For those that are already overburdened this could be what brakes the proverbial camel’s back.

The key is to plan for that very real possibility and downscale now you can plan for it. This might mean short selling your second home and putting your mortgage payments below 31% in order to qualify for a loan modification. However if it is a case of losing both homes or keeping one it is a bit of a no-brainer.

Whatever your circumstances your best option is to get help straight from the experts. The good news is that this information is free as the government is providing it as part of their loan modification program.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications, Story Of Struggle For Banks And Borrowers Alike
  2. Loan Modifications and FHA Refinance What Is The Deal
  3. Loan Modifications No Match For Rising US Foreclosures.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications, Story Of Struggle For Banks And Borrowers Alike
  2. Loan Modifications and FHA Refinance What Is The Deal
  3. Loan Modifications No Match For Rising US Foreclosures.

Source [blownmortgage]


Mortgage foreclosures are increasing steadily as home values plummet and layoffs are becoming ever more common while homeowners crumble under the weight of mortgages they can no longer afford.
The administration is working hard to increase the number of loan modifications to help out struggling homeowners. However higher unemployment rates are making it hard for homeowners to afford even good prime mortgages loan modifications struggle to improve. Also, foreclosures often prove to be a cheaper alternative for mortgage providers when the real cost of loan modifications is calculated.
So what can be done to fix this situation? Although far from total solutions I will put forward five possible measures. Some would be unpopular, others hard to implement but the truth is that easy fixes are just not there to be found.
1)    Mandate Loan Modifications.
Up to now the government has tried to court mortgage providers into making loan modifications. Providing incentives and often footing the entire bill of loan modifications. This could be changed if the administration regulates foreclosures and makes it a legal requirement for banks to offer modifications before they can foreclose a loan or mortgage.
2)    Provide Principal Reductions on Existing Loans.

Unless you actually reduce the principal (amount borrowed) of a loan you are not really helping, just lengthening the loan and making it harder regain equity on the home. Equity is the best incentive for homeowners to pay their mortgage payments. If you feel your home is worth more than you owe on it you see it as an investment worth protecting that you can sell at a profit if things get real bad.

3)    Ease Accounting Rules for Loan Modifications.

Messy accounting procedures and bureaucracy’s red tape is responsible for much of the cost of loan modifications making them hard to enforce and expensive to make. Even the 500,000 plus loan trials the HAMP program has managed to make ahead of schedule will have to undergo further paperwork and potential bureaucracy pits once the three month trials are finished which will probably cause many of the loan trials to fall through.

4)    More Transparent and Uniform Loan Modifications Reports.

Every bank or mortgage provider seems to have their own system to measure eligible borrowers and how they report their loan modifications. This makes it difficult to set uniform procedures, require targets and regulate the efficiency of loan providers.

5)    Limit Fees For Borrowers.

Fees charged to borrowers are so high that even if a homeowner falls in difficult times for brief period he/she can fall into a spiral of debt due to the high fees and penalties he or she incurs. Also, loan modifications tend to include expensive fees for the homeowner just to apply for.

Related posts:

  1. U.S Loan Modifications Hit Obama’s target Early But Nobody’s Impressed
  2. Loan Modifications, Servicers and Who Is Profiting From the Credit Crisis
  3. Obamas Loan Modification Success Explained

Related posts:

  1. U.S Loan Modifications Hit Obama’s target Early But Nobody’s Impressed
  2. Loan Modifications, Servicers and Who Is Profiting From the Credit Crisis
  3. Obamas Loan Modification Success Explained

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: International markets, China, Japan, Recession, Financial Crisis

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Singapore Thursday, told Bloomberg News he sees “early signs” that the world is addressing imbalances in spending and saving that contributed to the global financial crisis. That’s likely to be interpreted as a bullish sign by institutional investors.

Equally important, meeting attendees, which include finance ministers from China, Japan, and Australia, also reiterated a pledge to maintain stimulus efforts “until a durable recovery in private demand is secured.”

Continue reading Geithner sees ‘early signs’ that global imbalances are being addressed

Geithner sees ‘early signs’ that global imbalances are being addressed originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: International markets, Recession, Financial Crisis

Confidence in the global economy dipped in November, amid concern that central bank withdrawal of some liquidity would weaken the economic recovery, a new survey of Bloomberg Terminal users indicated, Bloomberg News reported Wednesday.

The Bloomberg Professional Global Confidence Index fell to 60.3 in November from 61.7 in October. However, the index remained above 50 for the fourth straight month, which means there are more optimists than pessimists among those surveyed.

The survey of more than 1,500 Bloomberg users was conducted Nov. 2-6.

Continue reading Confidence in global economy dips on monetary easing exit strategies

Confidence in global economy dips on monetary easing exit strategies originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 14:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Deals, General Electric (GE), United Technologies (UTX)

While General Electric’s (GE) fire alarm and security business is solid, it’s simply not big enough to keep the company’s interest. In such an industry, it’s critical to be the industry leader.

So this week, GE agreed to sell the unit to United Technologies (UTX) for $1.82 billion. Rumors of the deal have been buzzing since the summer.

Continue reading United Technologies fires up a deal with GE

United Technologies fires up a deal with GE originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 11:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Via [bloggingstocks]

Filed under: Newsletters, Stocks to Buy, Obama Picks

In his Ticker Tape Digest, technician Leo Fasciocco looks for “breakout” stocks; his latest feature is HMS Holdings (HMSY), which coordinates benefits for government healthcare programs.

“With annual revenues of $185 million, HMSY helps ensure that healthcare claims are paid correctly and by the responsible party.

“As a result of the company’s services, government healthcare programs recover over $1 billion annually and avoid billions of dollars more in erroneous payments.

Continue reading HMS Holdings (HSMY): Breakout in health care

HMS Holdings (HSMY): Breakout in health care originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 11:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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America has built a large part of its economy on homeownership.  Owning a home is part of the ever more elusive American Dream.  Yet over time, owning a home became a larger and larger burden as new buyers were required to take on bigger debt loads merely to buy a basic home.  Incomes weren’t […]

America has built a large part of its economy on homeownership.  Owning a home is part of the ever more elusive American Dream.  Yet over time, owning a home became a larger and larger burden as new buyers were required to take on bigger debt loads merely to buy a basic home.  Incomes weren’t rising so debt was the new subsidy.  The apex of the bubble was reached in 2005 although prices didn’t start falling in drastic fashion for a couple years later.  The U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve are largely to blame for inciting the biggest housing bubble the world has come to know.  Wall Street is equally to blame for creating the structure that allowed this to happen as they championed de-regulation and completely neglected any fiscal responsibility.

In today’s article, I will dissect the housing market from every angle.  It is easy to get caught up in the day to day data but the bigger picture is usually missed.  Let us first look at the total number of housing units in the U.S.:

us housing units

us housing units

In the United States we have approximately 129,000,000 housing units.  These are made up of owner-occupied, rented, and vacant units.  The largest of these three categories is the owner-occupied category and most of the media focuses on this number.  Yet the other categories carry as much weight in determining a housing recovery.  Let us look at the vacant housing units:

vacant housing units

The vacancy rate for both owner-occupied and rental properties is still near all time highs.  With so many sales, how can it be that this number is so high?  I’ll get into this later in the article.  But part of this has to do with demographics, the makeup of current housing inventory, and years of over building.  It is also the case that we are shifting a large number of would be renters into homes and causing the rental vacancy rate to spike.  Many of these apartment projects are financed with commercial real estate loans and the Federal Reserve is essentially shifting defaults from residential loans to commercial loans.  That is why we are seeing rents fall as owners compete to fill vacant units.

So now we have the universe of housing units including vacant units.  Let us drill down and examine the number of owner-occupied homes and renter-occupied units:

owner and renter occupied

75 million Americans own their home.  The homeownership rate is derived from only looking at occupied units.  That is why it is important to also keep in mind the vacant units sitting on the market.

You’ll notice that the ownership rate does not factor in the vacant units.  The vacancy rate is at historical highs and this is another factor that will drag on the housing market for years to come.  37 million Americans rent their housing.  This can be apartments or actual detached homes.  The number of renters has recently increased as homeownership has fallen:

us home onwership rate

The chart has a few patterns worth noting.  From 1985 to 1995 the homeownership rate in the U.S. hovered around 64 percent.  The only recession during this time was in the early 1990s yet the rate remained steady.  The first spike started after 1995.  This trend went from 1995 to 2000 and pushed the homeownership rate from 64 to above 67 percent.  Part of this had to do with the technology bubble and the growth in the economy.  But then we hit the early 2000s recession largely brought on by the burst of the technology bubble.  Instead of homeownership declining which is typical in recessions, the homeownership rate expanded upward.  Much of this was due to Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan dropping the Fed funds rate to record lows.  Wall Street looking for the new-new thing, went from tech IPOs to mortgage backed securities and the toxic mortgage party started.

This easy access to credit and excessive risk pushed the homeownership rate to nearly 70 percent in 2005.  But that was it.  The bubble burst and the homeownership rate is now on a steady decline.  While the above chart is moving lower, one chart is moving higher.  The U.S. home vacancy rate:

home owner and rental vacancy rates

Rental properties always have higher vacancy rates merely by the nature of their use.  Someone renting a home is more likely to move than say someone who buys a home and plans to stay in their home for many years.  Yet the above chart shows an unmistakable pattern.  The rental vacancy rate from 1968 to 1984 hovered between 5 and 6 percent.  From 1985 to 1999, it was in a range of 6 to 8 percent.  And finally, from 2000 to our present situation it went from 8 percent to 10 percent.  This is historically as high as it has gone.  You will notice that the rental vacancy rate dipped after the peak in 2005 since many people opted for rental units instead of buying a home.  Yet the pattern is still holding steady.

Now looking at the homeowner vacancy rate shows another story.  Too much building.  From 1968 to 2004, the rate never crossed the 2 percent mark.  Now, we are closing in on 3 percent.  That rate may not be reached now that the market is shifting gears.  But if we do have another foreclosure wave, 3 percent is possible.  What happened here?  Too much building and ignoring demographic trends:

housing starts

From 2001 to 2006 home building was off the charts.  Single-family housing starts were up to a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.8 million a year even though population growth did not warrant this amount of new inventory.  From 1999 to 2001 the rate was hovering around 1.2 million.  So 600,000 properties were being added each year above the normal trend and this lasted for 6 years.  Of course, this number has collapsed at a pace not seen since the Great Depression but why did it occur?  People ignored the trend and demographics:

home demographic trends

The above data exemplifies the housing bubble.  Each year roughly 500,000 homes are destroyed for a variety of reasons.  This of course isn’t discussed in the mainstream media but it helps to figure out a more accurate figure of what is going on.  Most households will buy their first home in the 25 to 34 years age group creating a demand of 1.9 million homes.  We also have homes hitting the market because of the other side of the age equation.  We have 11.6 million households in the 65 to 74 age range and 9 million in the 75 to 84 age range.  Life trend dynamics (i.e,. death and downsizing) add 1.1 million units per year to the market.  In other words, here is the breakdown:

housing math

Now this data is using trends up to the end of 2008.  We were burning through 350,000 excess units per year at the end of 2008.  Of course, housing starts have now collapsed and are adding new units at an annual rate of 500,000 homes.  So a significant indicator of returning to a healthy market is more linked to the actual vacancy rate.  In fact, adding up the units we have about 3 million too many units on the market over historical trends.  Depending on our current burn rate, we have:

3 million / 350,000 = 8.5 years

3 million / 850,000 = 3.5 years

And this is the time it will take at current rates to get to a more normal market if there is such a thing.  Yet the 850,000 figure is too optimistic because we now have a new factor in the mix in the sales data.  Foreclosures:

nationwide-foreclosures

For the past year, each month over 300,000 homes enter some stage of foreclosure.  This is either a notice of default, a scheduled auction, or a home going back to the bank as an REO.  This number actually increases the length of time before we reach a stable housing market.  As you can see from the chart above, the rate is still at a record.  Now why is this the case?  Think of the dynamics of a healthy market.  Those in the household formation age, sell a home and in many cases will buy a move up home.  This can be a new home or an existing home.  Either way, they are clearing some of the vacant inventory off the market with typically two transactions taking place (buy and sell).  With foreclosures, it is normally a one and done deal.  Someone loses their home, and the person buying that home is merely taking over inventory that has already been accounted for.  This is why looking at foreclosure figures is so important.  Even in 2006 foreclosures were elevated.  If you consider that year as normal, foreclosure starts should range around 100,000 per month.  We are solidly over 300,000.

We still have many more foreclosures coming down the pipeline with Alt-A and option ARMs hitting significant recast dates.  This will only make it harder for us to clear that massive amount of excess inventory just sitting on the market.  With nearly one-third of homes sold nationwide as foreclosure re-sales, the excess inventory is sure to linger for a very long time.  Take a look at existing home sale data:

existing home sales

I’m taking the non-seasonally adjusted rate because with historical foreclosure rates, looking at typical data really does little in answering the real question of where we are going.  In September 472,000 existing homes sold.  Add in about 40,000 new homes sold and you are looking at 512,000 total home sales.  However, in the same month 343,000 homes entered into some stage of foreclosure.  Forget the data on HAMP for the moment since the 650,000 or so pre-trial loan mods means very little, the actual cure rates are extremely low:

cure-rates

We’ll be optimistic and use the 6.6% figure.  That means, of those 343,000 foreclosure starts 321,000 units are going to be additional inventory.  So even with 512,000 homes minus the 321,000 added units, we are not burning off excess inventory in any significant number.  And that is why the vacancy rate is still jumping and homeownership rates are falling.

It also doesn’t help that mortgages are delinquent at a rate never before seen (aside from the Great Depression):

percent-of-single-family-loans-delinquent

Over 9 percent of all mortgage holders are now delinquent on their mortgages.  Of the 75 million homeowners 51 million have mortgages.  So that means as things stand today, close to 5 million mortgage holders are delinquent on their loans.  Since we are not seeing this in the REO data, this must mean the following:

(a)  30+ days late and no notice of default

(b)  90+ days late and a notice of default (reflects in monthly foreclosure data) – or 90+ days late and no action at all

(c)  Auction scheduled

(d)  HAMP – 650,000 in pre-trial

Yet the cure rate is at 6 percent and this is for prime loans.  We know that we have Alt-A and option ARMs coming due in the next few months and none of these qualify for HAMP.  Wells Fargo announced that they are converting over $100 billion in Pick-A-Pay option ARMs to interest only loans but who really knows if this will even help.  Already for the option ARM universe, some 45% of option ARM borrowers are 30+ days late.

Conclusion

What can we gather from the above data?  Home prices are falling even though data in the short-term might state otherwise.  This is due to artificial inventory figures because of mortgage moratoriums and banks not moving on distressed homes in a typical fashion.  There is an enormous amount of overhang in the market.  Using typical measures the data doesn’t show up but does show up in shadow inventory data.  The reason home sales have increased recently is because prices have collapsed:

home prices

Why are we to assume that if prices go up, people will keep on buying?  The driving force right now is affordability brought on by:

-Large number of foreclosure re-sales (nationwide about one-third of all sales, in California it was up to 50 percent of all sales)

-Government programs including the $8,000 tax credit

-Federal Reserve buying GSE MBS – no one else is buying them

-Artificially lowering mortgage rates (hovering around 5% while 40 year average is closer to 9%)

With all the above, we are merely treading water.  What we can gather from the above is we have years to work through this.  Also, the growing number of baby boomers shifting into retirement will also add to the additional housing units at a higher pace since those in the 25 to 34 years of age group are no longer having families in large size.  Many may opt to rent for much longer since some are delaying having kids until later in life.  In other words, the trend is not conducive to the McMansion world.

There are many factors to consider in the current housing market and it is my hope that this article helps to show the bigger picture of what is going on.  This is how I learned to stop worrying and love the housing bubble.

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Post from: Dr. Housing Bubble Blog

The Comprehensive State of the U.S. Housing Market: Learning to Love the Housing Data and Forgetting the Economic Facts. Everything you wanted to know about U.S. Housing Trends.

Via [DrHousingBubble]

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