Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Home Prices: Steepest Drop in 20 Years

Courtesy of AP
Tuesday August 28, 9:58 am ET
By Vinnee Tong, AP Business Writer

S&P Says Housing Prices Fell in 2Q by Steepest Rate Since Its Index Was Started in 1987

NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. home prices fell 3.2 percent in the second quarter, the steepest rate of decline since Standard & Poor's began its nationwide housing index in 1987, the research group said Tuesday.

The decline in home prices around the nation shows no evidence of a market recovery anytime soon, one of the architects of the index said.

MacroMarkets LLC Chief Economist Robert Shiller said the declining residential real estate market "shows no signs of slowing down."

The report came a day after the National Association of Realtors said sales of existing homes dropped for a fifth straight month in July while the number of unsold homes shot up to a record level.

The S&P/Case-Schiller quarterly index tracks price trends among existing single-family homes across the nation compared with a year earlier .

A separate index that covers 20 U.S. cities fell 3.5 percent in June from a year earlier. A 10-city index fell 4.1 percent from a year earlier.

Housing is among the economic indicators closely watched by Federal Reserve policymakers.

After five years of rapidly rising home prices, the market stalled last year, with prices holding steady or falling as sales slowed. Since then, lenders have made it more difficult for some people to get mortgages by tightening standards just as foreclosures rise and some who borrowed at adjustable rates facing higher payments they can't meet.

Problems have spread from those with poor credit repayment histories to more creditworthy borrowers.

The Fed has taken a number of steps aimed at stabilizing the situation, and market watchers look further for a possible cut in the federal funds rate, which is the rate commercial banks charge each other for short-term loans. That rate has been kept steady at 5.25 percent for more than a year.

The Fed has its next regularly scheduled meeting on Sept. 18.

Fifteen of the cities surveyed for S&P's 20-city index showed a year-over-year decline in prices in June.

Prices in Boston dropped in June at a slower rate than they did in May, continuing a trend that started at the beginning of the year. In April 2006, Boston was the first metropolitan area to show a year-over-year decline, so any turnaround there could be an early sign of recovery.

S&P said it needed more data to determine whether Boston would be the first area to improve.

Detroit led the cities with the biggest price declines, with an 11 percent drop from June of last year. Other cities with falling prices included Tampa, Fla., San Diego and Washington, D.C., which all recorded drops of at least 7 percent.

Seattle and Charlotte, N.C., were on the small list of cities that saw prices rise in the same period. Seattle prices rose 8 percent in June while Charlotte saw a 6.8 percent increase.

In Monday's report, the National Association of Realtors said sales of existing homes dipped by 0.2 percent in July from June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.75 million units.

The median price of a home sold last month slid to $230,200, down by 0.6 percent from the median price a year ago. It marked the 12th consecutive month that home prices have declined, a record stretch.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Home re-sales fall as inventories soar

Courtesy of Reuters
By Joanne Morrison

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The pace of sales of pre-owned U.S homes fell slightly in July but the inventory of unsold properties soared to the highest level in over 15 years as troubles in the subprime mortgage market continued to wreak havoc on the housing sector.

Home sales slid 0.2 percent in July to a seasonally adjusted 5.75 million unit annual rate, according to the National Association of Realtors.

That brought the supply of unsold homes at the current sales pace to 9.6 months' worth, the highest level on record since 1999, when the association began tracking all types of properties, such as condominiums, together with single-family homes.

The supply of single-family homes, the bulk of the inventory included in the association's data, rose to 9.2 months' worth, which was the biggest supply on hand for sale since October 1991.

"This shows that the housing downturn continues to intensify. It shows no sign of abating. Given the turmoil in the financial market from lending problems, the housing problem will continue in the months ahead," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

Worries over the housing market coupled with high energy costs have eroded investor confidence, with the UBS/Gallup Index of investor confidence falling for the third straight month, bringing it down to the lowest reading in a year.

This sentiment also held true for a panel of key business economists who in a survey released on Monday concluded that the risk of massive defaults on subprime mortgages and heavy debts is a bigger threat to U.S. economic prosperity than terrorism.

"The combined threat of subprime loan defaults and excessive indebtedness has supplanted terrorism and the Middle East as the biggest short-term threat to the U.S. economy," the National Association for Business Economics said.

That panel's conclusion was based on a survey of 258 NABE members conducted between July 24 and August 14. In that survey, only 20 percent of members said terrorism was now their top concern, compared with 35 percent surveyed in March.

U.S. Treasury debt prices rose on Monday following the housing data but trading volume in Treasury securities was particularly thin due to a market holiday in London and with many U.S. players out on summer vacation.

U.S. stocks were down amid concerns housing market troubles would impact the economy and corporate profits. At midday, the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 40 points (.DJI), or 0.3 percent.

HOUSING IMPACT ON ECONOMY

Even with a somewhat dismal picture continuing on the housing front, National Association of Realtors economist Lawrence Yun maintained that this key segment of the U.S. economy is still holding on.

"In the aggregate, we don't see the subprime market damaging the economy," Yun said.

Bob Moulton, president of the Americana Mortgage Group, a mortgage brokerage firm in Manhasset, New York, said there is still a steady stream of mortgage business.

"We are still writing our fair share of business. We are still seeing transactions. We still see homeowners buying houses," Moulton said, noting that declining home prices will ultimately boost home sales.

According to the latest home sales data from the Realtors association, median home prices fell 0.6 percent from a year ago to $228,900.

"Volatility creates transactions and with median home prices falling, it's great for first-time home buyers," Moulton said.

Last month's decline in existing home sales was smaller than expected. Economists polled ahead of the report forecast home resales to drop to a 5.70 million-unit pace.

(Additional reporting by Glenn Somerville in Washington and Richard Leong in New York)

Home sales hit slowest pace in 5 years

Courtesy of AP

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON - Sales of existing homes dropped for a fifth straight month in July, falling to the slowest pace in nearly five years, while home prices fell for a record 12th consecutive month.

The National Association of Realtors reported that sales of existing homes dipped by 0.2 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.75 million units.

The median price of a home sold last month slid to $230,200, down by 0.6 percent from the median price a year ago. It marked the 12th consecutive month that home prices have declined, a record stretch.

The deep slump in housing, combined with recent severe turmoil in financial markets, has raised worries about a possible recession. But many economists believe the Federal Reserve will ward off a full-blown downturn by reducing a key short-term interest rate should financial market conditions fail to stabilize.

The steep slump in housing has trimmed overall growth for the past year and recently the economy has been shaken by spillover effects in financial markets. Rising defaults in subprime mortgages have triggered a serious credit crunch as investors have worried that hedge funds and other big investors in securities backed by subprime loans could suffer serious losses.

The 0.2 percent drop in July sales, compared with activity in June, marked the fifth straight monthly decline and left sales 9 percent below the level of a year ago. The sales pace was the slowest since November 2002.

By region of the country, sales fell by 2.2 percent in the Midwest and were unchanged in the South. Sales rose by 1.8 percent in the West and 1 percent in the Northeast.

The increase in the Northeast, which also saw the median home price increase, was seen as possibly hopeful sign that the worst of the housing downturn may be ending.

"The rise in sales and prices in the Northeast region on a fairly consistent basis in recent months is promising because this was the first region that underwent sales and price weakness after the boom," said Lawrence Yun, senior economist for the Realtors. "Now, it appears that it will be the first region to climb back, indicating that other regions could follow a similar path."

However, many analysts believe it could be months before housing stabilizes because of the threat that rising delinquencies could dump further homes onto an already glutted market.

The inventory of unsold homes rose by 5.1 percent at the end of July to a record of 4.59 million units.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Friday, August 10, 2007

Featured Listing - 118 West Henderson Ave., Clintonville, 43214

Featured Listing - 1716 Bethel Road, COlumbus, OH 43220

Featured Listing - 6000 Winstead Road, (Indian Hills), 43235

Featured Listing - 4429 Blythe Road, Columbus, OH 43224

Featured Listing - 1530 Ridgeview Road, UA 43221

Declining home prices - Four ways to cope with a sluggish market

Friday, August 10, 2007

By Bernice Ross
Inman News

The subprime fiasco, tougher underwriting standards, and increasing foreclosure rates and interest rates are all exerting additional pressure on the slowing market many places in the country. Are you prepared to survive a declining market?

A buyers' market, where the prices are declining, is the worst possible market in which to be a commissioned sales person. Price deflation is bad for everyone. Buyers are reluctant to purchase because they fear that prices will decrease further. Sellers are unable to sell, which results in more foreclosures. Lenders end up taking back more property, and brokers end up doing fewer transactions.

If your market is declining, here are four steps that you can take to avoid being caught in the downward price spiral.

1. Price properties below the comparable sales

Declining prices make obtaining an accurate CMA difficult. Assume that a seller's property is currently worth $400,000. If property is declining at an annual rate of 5 percent per year ($20,000), then the seller's property 180 days from now is worth only $390,000. Given that few sellers price their property exactly at market value, their list price of $410,000 is now $20,000 higher than the property's value. Thus, even with a $10,000 price reduction, the list price would still be $10,000 over the new market value. This is exactly where the seller started at the beginning of the listing period. If a price that was $10,000 over market value did not result in a successful sale, it is even less likely to produce a sale as the market continues to decline.

To avoid this trap, list the property below the comparable sales. The reason for this is simple -- today's comparable sales represent what the prices were 60 to 90 days ago. If the market is declining, then the property is actually worth less than the comparable sales suggest.

2. Avoid letting the sellers "test the market"

Persuading your sellers to be realistic is challenging in any market. This is especially true when the market has been very good and is now transitioning into a buyer's market. As a result, sellers often want to "test the market." This is a huge mistake. Many sellers mistakenly believe that the initial activity on their property will continue throughout the listing period. Nothing could be further from the truth. When they first list their property, there is pent-up demand among the current buyers who haven't found a property. Once this initial surge ceases, showings will be limited to new buyers coming into the marketplace. Missing this initial "honeymoon period," which normally lasts the first 21 days a property is listed, usually results in longer market time and a substantially lower price. Do everything within your power to keep sellers from making this costly mistake.

3. When it comes to price reductions, you need a chain saw, not a pair of nail clippers

When property values are declining, reducing the price to the current market value is not sufficient. Instead, you must be slightly below market value to sell the property. To persuade the sellers about the wisdom of this approach, show them how much they lose each month they hold their property. To illustrate this point, assume that a seller is paying $3,000 per month in principal, interest, taxes and insurance (PITI) and that the prices are decreasing by $1,000 per month. The actual cost to the seller of not being accurately priced is $4,000 per month ($3,000 in PITI + $1,000 in depreciation.)

4. Tap into the seller's motivation to sell

In a declining market, many people are selling because they must. It may be a divorce, financial difficulties, a job transfer, or some other event where the seller has no choice. An important part of providing the seller with excellent service is to understand his or her motivation. While a seller's market is difficult for buyers because prices are constantly climbing, a buyer's market is tough on sellers because prices are declining. If the sellers have to sell and are reluctant to accept a reasonable offer, you can ask, "Which is more important, getting on with your life or waiting for the real estate market to improve?"

If the sellers are purchasing a more expensive home, remind them that they will be making additional money on the deal. For example, the owner of a home worth $300,000 who experiences a 5 percent price decline will see a $15,000 reduction in value. If that same individual is purchasing a $600,000 home, that home will experience a $30,000 reduction in value. Thus, the seller comes out $15,000 ahead. In fact, the higher price ranges usually experience greater drops than entry-level homes.

Helping your clients understand the psychology of a changing market will make the job of selling their home easier. More importantly, it can save your clients plenty of money as well.

Bernice Ross, national speaker and CEO of Realestatecoach.com, is the author of "Waging War on Real Estate's Discounters" and "Who's the Best Person to Sell My House?" Both are available online. She can be reached at bernice@realestatecoach.com or visit her blog at www.LuxuryClues.com.

***

Friday, July 27, 2007

Featured Listing: 181 E. Longview Avenue, Clintonville, 43202

Featured Listing: 1897 Denise Drive, Columbus (Forest Park) 43229

Columbus Residential Resale Statistics for June 2007

Franco Is Still Dead, and Housing Is Still Bust: Caroline Baum

Courtesy of Bloomberg.com
By Caroline Baum

Foreclosure resolutions ad displayed in front of a home July 27 (Bloomberg) -- The latest round of housing statistics -- sales, starts, homebuilders' outlook surveys and earnings reports -- offered little hope that residential real estate would be back on its feet anytime soon.

``Housing is bust, and wishful thinking cannot unbust it anytime soon,'' says Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics in Valhalla, New York.

Just to recap what we learned this week: New home sales plunged 6.6 percent in June to 834,000, just above the seven- year low set in March. Sales are down 22 percent from a year earlier, even with builders throwing in the kitchen sink to sweeten incentives and lighten the load (inventories).

Home resales fell 3.9 percent last month to 5.75 million, a five-year low. They're down 11 percent in the last 12 months.

The only surprise is that prices haven't fallen more. The median price of an existing home was unchanged from a year earlier while new home prices fell 2.2 percent, removing the refinancing/cash-out option for strapped homeowners but not much of a real loss given soaring home prices from about 2001 through 2005.

Shepherdson warns against taking any comfort in the stabilization in home prices for two reasons: one, the deterioration in the supply picture; and two, the lack of adjustment in median prices for either seasonal variations or the mix of properties sold from one month to the next.

Because most of the problems have been in the subprime and Alt-A sectors, and because non-prime borrowers probably buy lower-priced homes, ``their absence from the market will limit the speed of the decline in the median home price,'' he says.

`Challenging'

Moving along to the builder side, things are equally glum. (The outlook is ``challenging,'' in homebuilder speak.) Six U.S. homebuilders, including D.R. Horton Inc. and Pulte Homes Inc., reported losses in the second calendar quarter this week. The chief executives of these companies were not optimistic about the rest of this year. Many weren't optimistic about next year either. Homebuilders' stock prices, which early this year saw a housing renaissance, plunged, with the Standard & Poor's Supercomposite Homebuilding Index dropping to a three-year low.

Yet the real blow this week seemed to come from someone outside the homebuilding industry. Countrywide Financial Corp., the biggest U.S. mortgage lender, did to the stock market this week what HSBC Holdings Plc did to the subprime loan market back in February. Countrywide's road-side bomb, delivered with its second-quarter earnings report, was news that the stress in the home-loan market was spreading from deadbeats to folks with good credit histories.

Rising delinquencies on mortgage payments on prime loans contributed to the company's third consecutive quarterly loss and a one-day 10 percent loss in its stock price.

Technology Redux

On top of rising late payments, Chief Executive Officer Angelo Mozilo said on a conference call that the U.S. was experiencing ``home price depreciation almost like never before, with the exception of the Great Depression.''

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 226 points, or 1.6 percent, following the news, and another 312 points yesterday.

``We've been looking at the same data on housing for months, and it took the CEO of a lender to make everyone say, ouch,'' says Joe Carson, director of global economic research at AllianceBernstein in New York.

Carson says Mozilo's comments were not unlike those of Cisco Systems Inc. CEO John Chambers when technology companies woke up in late 2000/early 2001 to find their order books had evaporated (at least that's when companies owned up to it).

Chambers rattled the stock market in early 2001 when he admitted that the previous quarter had been ``a little bit more challenging than expected.''

Visibility, Hindsight

One year earlier, when capital spending and the economy were plowing headfirst into a brick wall, Chambers said he had ``never been more optimistic about the market opportunities for our industry as a whole and for Cisco within that market.''

Just call it visibility in hindsight.

While everyone from the Federal Reserve chairman to the Treasury secretary has been talking housing containment, the damage has started to seep out from under the foundation and spill over to other parts of the economy. Home improvement retailers such as Home Depot and Lowe's Cos. are feeling the pinch. Consumer spending slowed markedly in the second quarter. Wall Street is having trouble finding buyers for loans to finance leveraged buyouts. Investors are starting to reprice risk.

The yield curve has inverted again as the yield on the 10- year Treasury plummeted 50 basis points in the last six weeks.

Rerun Time

Haven't we seen this movie before? Every bubble has a credit kicker when the price of whatever asset folks were chasing stops rising. Banks find religion when it comes to making new loans. Regulators step in to make sure there will be no repeat of the last bubble. Consumers save more; businesses invest less.

Housing has been the economy's weakest link for some time, subtracting about 1 percentage point from growth in every quarter from the second quarter of 2006 through the first quarter of 2007.

Residential investment, as it's referred to in the gross domestic product accounts, may not be the real threat to the U.S. economy. The danger lies in the fact that ``there's a lot more household debt associated with housing'' than there was with the stock-market bubble, Carson says.

Maybe you can take housing out of the economy for analytical purposes (see ``GDP ex-housing''). But when it comes to the real world, the two are inextricably linked.

(Caroline Baum, author of ``Just What I Said,'' is a columnist for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are her own.)

To contact the writer of this column: Caroline Baum in New York at cabaum@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: July 27, 2007 00:03 EDT

Monday, July 23, 2007

The housing market: How bad will it get?

Part 1: Midyear housing update
Monday, July 23, 2007

By Glenn Roberts Jr.
Inman News

Editor's note: How bad will the real estate market get before it gets better? Inman News compiles the facts and analysis in this five-part series.

Speculation, rampant building, risky loans, overborrowing and escalating prices propelled the housing market to an unprecedented peak -- and are now counted among its greatest failings.

The "soft landing" that so many analysts and economists had predicted has given way to a record number of foreclosures, an implosion in the subprime lending market, an oversupply of housing, and home-price declines in many market areas. The dreamy days of the housing boom have received a cold slap of reality.

Real estate markets are historically cyclical -- that's nothing new. But in this case, the nation is in the midst of a downturn following a long-lasting and massive real estate run-up, and it remains to be seen whether this period will become known as one of the greatest real estate slumps in history.

How bad will the real estate market get before it gets better? Many experts have said they don't expect a quick return from these doldrums, and this outlook could turn dire if the overall U.S. economy hits a snag. While there is not a nationwide epidemic of job loss, there are worries about rising inflation and energy prices, and declining consumer spending.

David Shulman, of the Anderson Forecast at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in his latest report that he expects a 10 percent peak-to-trough home-price decline that could extend into 2009, with the swell of foreclosures growing "well into 2008." His forecast report bears a one-word title: "Turbulence."

Real estate industry consultant John Burns said during a housing conference in May that the buyer's market will continue for at least two more years, and "we're heading into a year with more price declines," with builders dropping prices by about 20 percent in some markets.

The National Association of Home Builders expects a 21 percent drop in total housing starts and an 18 percent drop in new-home sales this year compared to last year, and the National Association of Realtors expects a 4.6 percent drop in existing-home sales, a 1.3 percent drop in median existing-home prices and a 2.3 percent drop in new-home prices this year compared to 2006.

'Market-fed downturn'

The sensational rise of the housing boom may be a key factor in its demise.

"This was sort of a market-fed downturn," said Jay Q. Butler, director of Realty Studies at Arizona State University's Morrison School of Management and Agribusiness. The rapid upswing in home sales and pricing was not sustainable, he said.

"A lot of the system was being stretched, both legally and illegally to some degree, with the idea that this was going to continue. So people got in over their heads. It really sort of turned in on itself. You usually find a (real estate) downturn associated with a downturn in the economy -- we really haven't seen the downturn in the economy."

Likewise, the latest annual housing market report by Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies stated that the housing downturn "has been driven largely by the market's own excesses," including an oversupply of new homes that was artificially inflated by activity among investors and speculators.

Some familiarities exist now from past cycles, Butler said. For example, in a real estate boom there are always people who overextend themselves financially to purchase homes during a real estate boom, perhaps thinking that they will be able to sell the home for a profit based on the appreciation trends.

"I don't think we really ever learn. The lenders and real estate agents and everybody else is more than willing to help people achieve this goal (of home ownership) because they make a commission for you to achieve this goal," Butler said.

But the housing market's stellar performance leading up to the downturn was unique, he said, in featuring historically low interest rates, a massive subprime market, and the Wall Street concept of packaging mortgages and selling them off.

It may take awhile for the market to return to the bustling days of the boom, Butler said, and he expects a gradual recovery. The home-price bubble that took on air in some markets has gone away, he said, and more normal conditions seem to be prevailing.

In Arizona, "all the markets that were well above normal are returning to more of what would be expected of the housing market," he said, noting that the state is home to a high tide of foreclosures in comparison to other states.

The inventory of for-sale homes remains bloated, he said, and will take awhile to work off. The population centers that are farthest away from the job centers will face the toughest challenges, he said, as long commutes, inadequate transportation systems and rising energy costs are working against housing sales in those markets.

While some home builders reported that they were taking steps to avoid sales to speculators and overbuilding, the strategy wasn't 100 percent effective, Butler added. "They claimed that they were stopping the investor by multiple means -- that they were only selling to people who qualified for homes. Then it ... appeared that maybe they weren't doing what they were saying they were doing. I've seen booms and busts before, and home builders always seem surprised (by the downturn)."

Public home-building company Lennar Corp., in its latest quarterly earnings report, reported a second-quarter net loss of $244.2 million, and KB Home reported a $148.7 million loss for the same quarter. Builder Pulte Homes announced a net loss of $85.7 million and MDC Holdings announced a net loss of $94.4 million in the latest earnings reports this year, and other builders, too, have announced quarterly net losses this year to the tune of tens of millions of dollars.

Foreclosures climbing

Meanwhile, foreclosure rates are soaring, according to foreclosure data companies and the Mortgage Bankers Association. The association reported last month that the rate of loans entering the foreclosure process in first-quarter 2007 reached a record high, due mostly to increases in Florida, Nevada, California and Arizona. An estimated 1.28 percent of all loans outstanding were in a foreclosure process at the end of the first quarter, the trade group reported, and the delinquency rate jumped 43 basis points compared to last year's rate while dropping 11 basis points compared to fourth-quarter 2006.

Ohio, Indiana and Michigan accounted for 19.9 percent of the nation's loans in foreclosure during the quarter -- the region is notable for significant job losses. Foreclosures data company RealtyTrac reported a 90 percent jump in foreclosure filing sin May compared to the same month last year, for a rate of one foreclosure filing for every 656 U.S. households.

A surge in proposed condo projects and apartment-to-condo conversions has slowed, said Richard Swerdlow, CEO for Condo.com, a Web site that features information about for-sale condo properties. "You're not going to see this giant overbuild again. It's hard to image that you'd see in the next decade what we just saw," he said.

The rush to build condos led to speculation and oversupply in some markets. Swerdlow noted that in some markets prospective buyers camped in front of a development site for the chance to buy units.

"Real estate brokers and the developers were in almost a ticket-collecting mode. They were processing orders because there was so much business to go around. Now that sort of investor phenomenon has gone away," he said. "That phenomenon has stopped."

Some investors who bought multiple units hoping for a profitable sale are now returning them to the market as rental units, he said, and some projects never got off the ground or have converted to apartment buildings. In hindsight, some apartment-to-condo conversion projects may have been better off as apartment buildings, Swerdlow said.

There are still projects that are being built, he said, though far fewer new development proposals these days. "In the next six to 12 months we'll see a lot of the projects being completed. We don't have a sense of what the market will look like until those projects (are completed), as it's uncertain whether all of the condo sales of units in those developments will successfully close.

Lending rules for condo buyers have tightened in an effort to screen out speculators from end-user occupants, he said, and international interest in U.S. condos may help to work off any oversupply.

Steve Jacobson, president for Fairway Independent Mortgage Corp., a brokerage with 105 branch offices that handled $1.6 billion in loan volume last year, said that there is definitely fear in the industry, as a wave of loans are scheduled for a reset in rates in the next six to 12 months.

The variety of high-risk loan products "got away from a make-sense standpoint," and contributed to the current market problems, he said. "As long as inflation stays low and unemployment stays low we should be able to come back," he said of the down market. "I don't see us going down to a deep depression."

Lessons learned?

The lesson to be learned from this market cycle is that there was "way too much flexibility" in the loan products offered to consumers, which ultimately led some consumers to buy homes that they couldn't afford, Jacobson said. "Sometimes that's not the right house ... they may not like what they hear but that's the right answer."

What makes this market cycle different than previous cycles, he said, is that the economy is far more globally dependent today.

Author and mortgage banker Richard Cohen, said that a contributor to the market's problems is that too many people have shopped for a house like it's a commodity, and he said it's up to the industry to remind consumers that there can be disastrous consequences for home purchases that do not pencil out financially. "It's part of our culture to buy stuff, and it's even more part of our culture to own your own home. How do you tell someone, 'You are not supposed to buy a home because you can't afford it and it's going to hurt you, potentially'?"

He said he would support a giant banner with a statement to consumers: "Stop going out and shopping like it's a bottle of catsup." He added, "There are a lot of people who are encouraging people not to do the right thing. During those boom years there were a lot of people getting into programs that were risky for them as well as the lender (and) were putting people really on the margin," he said.

While the rising foreclosure rate has been making headlines, Cohen said the story that is less told is about all of the people who are forced to sell to avoid foreclosure and end up as renters again.

Bill Lyons, founder and CEO for LEI Financial, a mortgage and real estate company based in San Diego, Calif., said he expects that prices must stabilize and the interest rates for short-term and adjustable loans must drop or there could be a "major blow up in early to mid-'08" in the real estate market. If one of the two does not happen there will be a blow up that will make the subprime blow up look like a firecracker compared to a scud missile," he said, as option-ARM loan sales peaked in mid-2005 and borrowers may find themselves upside down in the coming year.

Easy credit days over

This real estate cycle will certainly be remembered for its abundance of unconventional mortgage products, said Neil B. Garfinkel, a real estate and banking lawyer who serves as a lawyer for the Real Estate Board of New York, a real estate trade association for New York City's building industry. "We probably saw more creativity in mortgage products than we ever have before," he said.

While Garfinkel said the Manhattan real estate market is "always a strong marketplace," some of the Outer Burroughs are seeing properties sit longer on the market. "There is less of an urgency in the marketplace. Two years ago, the marketplace was crazy."

In those days, for-sale properties were moving almost immediately, but that has changed. "The mortgage market is certainly not helping them right now," he said, as credit restrictions have made it more difficult for people to qualify for a home purchase." Garfinkel, like some other industry officials, said he blames the media, in part, for instilling fears about the real estate marketplace. "I think it does affect people -- it's almost like a self-fulfilling prophecy."

While people had been using their home equity as a piggy bank, that scenario is less likely now, Garfinkel said. And rising interest rates could be "really problematic" when coupled with credit tightening -- if interest rates rise up to 9 percent, for example, it "would really push people over the top," he said.

The "easy credit" environment that preceded the downturn makes this housing cycle unique, said Joseph Ventura, president of William Tell Financial Services in Latham, N.Y., which offers mortgage, insurance and other financial services.

The problems stemming from this easy credit "should last about another 12 months until everything is 'washed' out of the cycle, allowing common sense to return to the lending market," Ventura said.

If unsold home inventory levels off for several months in a row that may be the first sign of a market recovery, he said. "Any interest rate rise will delay this phenomenon."

He shies away from labeling the housing market's boom and decline as a bubble. He said it's "more of a turning point in American personal finance history as the economy is relatively strong and unemployment and interest rates are at historically low levels -- this will keep things percolating."

Will any lessons be learned from this latest housing market cycle? "People unfortunately will always be attracted to bargains that are too good to be true, which in a nutshell has been what's happened with the latest mortgage debacle," he said. "Tighter lending laws may help but others will argue that easy credit has enabled many borrowers to successfully invest in home ownership."

While Ventura said that some fallout in the subprime market may be inevitable because it is by nature a high-risk business, he also stated that mortgage lenders that pass loans on to Wall Street firms "are often less responsible to whom they lend," as they may "operate in a virtually risk-free environment since they generally do not 'hold' the loan for a long period."

***

Friday, July 13, 2007

Foreclosure damage to be worse than expected

Real Estate Articles from Inman News
Mortgage market commentary
Friday, July 13, 2007

By Lou Barnes
Inman News

Mortgages are relatively steady in the 6.75-6.875 percent band, but they are the only semi-stable financial instrument out there. The money world is thrashing around, trying to identify the true extent of the housing/mortgage trouble.

June retail sales fell a surprise .9 percent -- maybe the often-forecasted, ultimate fade by consumers, maybe just a modest pullback from an outsize 1.5 percent gain in May.

Markets always oscillate across baseline, overdoing it one way, then another. However, the last year has been unusual in that all the lurching has had one cause, re-played again and again, one long Groundhog Day.

A year ago, as the Fed reached its current 5.25 percent, many bright and well-informed financial operators were just sure that the housing market would knock over the economy. Over and over and over again, the "just sure" bought bonds in anticipation of the recession to come, and within a week or a month were clobbered by resilient data.

Now it's changing. This week the rating agencies acknowledged error, and are re-rating with tougher methodology. That's the trigger for the two-part end-game: If we have huge losses, where are they? Who is exposed? And, if housing distress is as bad as it looks, where is the effect?

Part one, the mortgage losses. Very little money has been "lost." The market value of the securitized mortgages in question has fallen 30-70 percent, but if you don't sell, you don't have to recognize loss. The re-rating of this stuff to junk will force institutional investors to sell, to recognize, and probably depress value farther. We will also learn who has lost, and it's going to be an embarrassing and painful parade. This week, S&P, Moody's and Fitch downgraded no more than 1 percent of the trash outstanding; the outcome for the other 99 percent is sure as sunrise, the holders in frozen panic.

Market losses from forced sales are near, but there is still little actual credit loss from defaulted mortgages -- that's still ahead, and the loss magnitude will depend on the depth and length of the housing recession.

Part two, the housing market. Housing moves slowly, in an aching grind. Sellers resist discount, preferring to hold vacant, or to rent at a loss, or to stay put. Loan servicers are slow to foreclose: they are not staffed to do so (or to do anything except to send you all that mail trying to get you to buy insurance and pre-pay programs), fiddle endlessly and pretend to negotiate workouts of hopeless cases.

The housing picture is changing -- not selling, just changing. Foreclosure data is notoriously bad (every county and state has different procedures and law), but RealtyTrac's trend is probably about right, if only in consistency of error. The pattern is stark: national foreclosure filings are up 56 percent year-to-date, but mortgage defaults are up 86 percent -- foreclosure lag. Based on housing markets early to the distress party, Colorado the leading example, Bubble Zone foreclosures will increase for at least the next three years (announcements of bottom in 2008 are fantasy-based).

Do some math. Home resales run a tad over 6 million annually, plus another 1 million new-builds. Re-sellers still want to re-sell, and builders, desperate to unload land and to maintain survival volume, are still building at undercut prices. Demand is off (un-affordability and anxiety), but a new seller has arrived: first-half '07 foreclosure filings just short of 1 million. Pull-through from filing to foreclosure is unpredictable, but it looks as though re-sellers and builders will soon be joined by another million foreclosure re-sellers (or two, or three...). That's market saturation, not clearing.

We are going to get spillover into GDP. Book it. And we're going to see a serial credit panic. However, the disaster mongers are mistaken. Credit losses are distributed globally, and there is great long-term strength in housing (population growth, land scarcity, wealth...). The forecast here continues to be for a long period of flat prices in the Bubble Zones, but vastly more foreclosure damage from flat prices than previously modeled or imagined, the Great Hangover from the '01-'06 Mortgage Credit Party.

Lou Barnes is a mortgage broker and nationally syndicated columnist based in Boulder, Colo. He can be reached at lbarnes@boulderwest.com.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Featured Listing - 6143 Hilmar Drive, Westerville, OH 43082

Finding The Right Contractor -- Home Improvement Survey Points to the Best Ways

Wednesday July 11, 2:23 pm ET

How You Find Your Contractor Makes a Difference

GERMANTOWN, TN--(MARKET WIRE)--Jul 11, 2007 -- In a recently national study of 1,015 US homeowners, Consumer Specialists found that 66% of them had used a contractor for a home improvement project in the past. Overall levels of satisfaction were high with 76% saying that they were either extremely or very satisfied with the project. On a 7 point scale, the average rating was a 5.9 -- almost to the level of very satisfied.

It is the 5% who reported that they were very or extremely dissatisfied that we hear about. The question often raised is how to improve your odds of being one of the highly satisfied customers? According to this survey, how the contractor was located had a marked impact on homeowner's overall satisfaction with the project.

Those who used a contractor with whom they had previous personal experience were the most satisfied -- significantly besting all other methods of finding a contractor. Referrals from family, friends and neighbors placed second in satisfaction followed by getting a recommendation from another contractor.

Having the contractor supplied by a home improvement store, finding them in a telephone directory or via advertising turned out to be significantly less satisfying than the top two locating methods.

"Nothing beats personal knowledge or independent referrals to get the best results for home improvement projects," said Fred Miller, President of Consumer Specialists. "Surprisingly, those that used a home improvement store provided contractor did about the same as those that used advertising as they way they found their contractor."

This data comes from "In the Beginning," a special research project focused on understanding how homeowners approach that critical starting period in their projects. Included is the identification of three groups of consumers with different focuses to seeking information. They are (followed by the % of homeowners they represent): online (17%), personal network (23%) and contractor (23%) focused. The report on this study is available in a unique combined presentation/report format. For a more detailed release go to http://www.consumerspecialists.com/thebeginning.htm

Consumer Specialists is ten-year-old marketing consulting firm with a focus on the home improvement industry. The firm has industry studies for sale and does a broad range of custom research and consulting projects for its clients.

Contact:
For more information please contact:
Fred Miller
President, Consumer Specialists
(901) 757-5865