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Team Empowerment Mortgage Chatter: June 16; Housing Prices Will Continue To Tumble; Renters Are Next Victims of Housing Market; Is The Economy Worse Than We Think?

“It is literally true that you can succeed best and quickest by helping others to succeed.” – Napoleon Hill

 

HOUSING PRICES WILL CONTINUE TO TUMBLE

We have written several blogs recently quoting numerous sources saying now is the time to buy a home. We agree that now is definitely the time to buy. This is NOT because we are calling the bottom for real estate PRICES. What we have said is that the COST of purchasing a home is probably near a bottom or has hit the bottom.

The difference is that COST is determined by two components: the price of the home and the expenses associated with mortgaging that home. As we have put forth in several posts, we believe that the expense of obtaining a mortgage will increase as the year goes on.

We also believe strongly that, in most parts of the country, prices will continue to soften. Here are the reasons why:

Existing Months’ Supply of Inventory Is Still Too High

A balanced market (where prices are stable) can handle 5-6 months worth of active inventory. Anything less than 5 months constitutes a seller’s market as there are not enough houses to meet buyer demand. This usually results in price appreciation. Anything more than 6 months constitutes a buyer’s market as there are not enough buyers for the number of houses on the market. This usually results in price depreciation.

Currently, as per the National Association of Realtors (NAR), there is a 9.2 month supply of inventory. This alone would put downward pressure on prices.

Distressed Property Inventory Is About to Enter Market

There are over over 4 million homes that have the potential to become a distressed property sale (foreclosure or short sale) over the next few years. A percentage of these properties are set to enter the market before year’s end. No one knows exactly how many will come to market in each region but the common belief is that the number will be substantial.

These properties will sell at a discount thereby attracting a portion of buyers in the market. After they close, they can also be used in an appraisal to help establish values of other homes which sell in the area. A short sale sells for approximately 90% of it’s non-distressed value. A foreclosure sells for approximately 65% of full value.

Bottom Line

The inventory of homes currently for sale added to the inventory of distressed properties about to come to market will far exceed demand for the next twelve months. When there is less demand for any item then there is supply of that item, prices fall. Check with a local real estate professional to see how this may impact the value of your home over the next year.


RENTERS ARE NEXT VICTIMS OF THE HOUSING MARKET

Stephan Metelica, a 24-year old charter pilot, shares a two-bedroom apartment with a friend in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood. The duo split the $1,525 monthly rent, but they were surprised this month when their landlord lease came up for renewal and their landlord asked for a 5 percent increase, to $1,600.

“I was pretty upset about it,” Metelica says of what would amount to nearly $40 more per month per person. “I thought a 5 percent increase was ridiculous.”

Renters, long happy to sidestep the drama homeowners have suffered in the roller-coaster housing market, are now facing their downside of the real estate market’s correction. With apartment and rental housing construction halved in recent years and a wave of former homeowners competing for apartment space with “echo boomers” and other renters, conditions have suddenly ripened for landlords to raise the rent.

Last year the rental market quietly shifted from a tenants’ market to what is now decidedly a landlord’s market, said Chris Herbert, research director at Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. The supply of properties is tightening and vacancy rates are dropping, so landlords have been emboldened to raise the rent.

Nationally, rents are expected to rise 5 percent this year and another 5 percent in 2012, according to Greg Willett, vice president of research and analysis at MPF Research in Carrollton, Texas. The trend is not expected to moderate until 2013, when new multifamily housing construction adds to supply and the housing market stabilizes enough to attract new buyers.

“In California, landlords have to file a 60-day notice if they plan to raise rents by more than 10 percent,” Herbert says. “And in some markets, we’re once again seeing them issue those notices.”

Of course all rental markets are local, and the trend is more pronounced in the San Francisco Bay area, for example, than in Southern California where rents are little changed.

In its annual State of the Nation’s Housing report released last week, the Harvard center said rising rents and the rising cost of owning a home are forcing Americans across all income levels to pay a higher proportion of their income for housing. As of 2009, more than 19 million households paid more than half their incomes for housing, including more than 10 million renters, according to the study. Households in the $45,000 to $60,000 income range have faced a particularly sharp increase in the housing cost burden over the past decade.

Considering that the government-sponsored mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are facing potential reforms that could tighten lending standards, and that there’s still a heavy supply of homes for sale, some say renters may not be swayed to move into the ownership market for many years – especially if many new renters tend to be younger.

Most first-time buyers are in their early 30s, according to data from the National Association of Realtors. Metelica, the 24-year old renter, says he’ll probably be at least 29 before he thinks about buying. That means he, and others in his age range, may suffer through a few rent increases before they move to ownership.

To hear landlords discuss the marketplace, the good times have returned.

National apartment operators have adjusted their 2011 forecasts in recent weeks, citing a strong market that is allowing above-average rent increases. Avalonbay Communities, which owns 187 apartment buildings in ten states and Washington, D.C., said this month that rental revenue is expected to increase from 5 to 5.75 percent this year, up from a prior estimate of 4 to 5.5 percent.

“At this point we don’t anticipate a recovery in for-sale housing until at least 2013,” Michael Schall, president and chief executive officer of Essex Property Trust, stated in an earnings conference call last month. “We are now confident that the apartment supply and demand equation is tipping toward housing shortage and thus both rents and occupancies are improving.”

Tammy Kotula, spokeswoman for Apartments.com, an online guide to apartments, urges renters to negotiate with landlords, or if they know they’re staying awhile, get a multiyear lease that allows tenants to lock in a low rent.

“You can definitely talk to your landlord and ask to negotiate,” she says. “A two-year lease is a pretty popular option.”

Just don’t expect keeping your rent down to be the cake walk it once was.


 IS THE ECONOMY WORSE THAN WE THINK?

We are presented with conflicting data almost daily about the “health” of the economy. And I am no economist, but I believe that I do possess some common sense.

So, here’s what I have been thinking. It is obvious that millions of people are NOT paying their mortgage, rightly or wrongly, for their own reasons:

  • They can’t because of a job loss, death, disability or something outside of their control.
  • They won’t because it makes poor financial sense as their house is underwater.

My question is that with so many people NOT paying their mortgage, how can there be an economic recovery of any fashion? And then it hits me, people who used to spend thousands of dollars every month on their housing are spending that money now on food, clothing, vacations, gasoline, cars and alike. With the lag time between the moment of not making a mortgage payment to eviction being as long as two years, it seems logical to me that the reported economic numbers have to be inflated.

As foreclosures and short sales continue and people transition from non-paying homeowners to renters, millions of consumers will start having a housing expense again which will leave them less cash every month to buy other things. The result will be a slowing economy.

If you are a home seller, I think it means continued lower sales prices for at least the next 18 months. Price aggressively and get top dollar now!

If you are a home buyer, most of the recent data points to higher prices of everyday goods (largely because of higher energy prices), and that leads to inflation. Inflation is combated by the Federal Reserve with higher interest rates. So buy now, while the monthly carrying COST of a home is at near all time lows. Lower home prices sound good, but higher interest rates will nullify that benefit.

I have learned that “Common Sense Is Not Common Practice”. Today, I wanted to share some common sense conclusions, to push you to make it part of your practice.

 

Team Empowerment Mortgage Chatter: June 14; News & Headlines; QRM: The Potential Cost To A Purchaser; Why They Are Saying To Buy A Home Now; 7 Highest-Performing Major Housing Markets

“To be successful, all you have to do is give up everything you know.” – Asara Lovejoy: Motivational author and coach

 

NEWS & HEADLINES

World economies are struggling, debt in the US is mounting, mortgage bankers are grappling with disclosure, buyback, and volume issues, banks are holding huge amounts of cash reserves in case the “worst case scenario” hits, and…NMLS is reminding everyone that “the NMLS Approved Course Provider logo will no longer be authorized for use after July 1, 2011. Providers who are currently using the logo on their web site and/or are using it in marketing materials should begin the process to remove it. We are currently finalizing the new approved course logo and anticipate starting to send the updated logo to providers the first week of July. To deter unauthorized use, the new logo design incorporates the unique course ID number and a digital watermark.”

Life is tough when even the agency set up to regulate you seems to not only take the credit for your improved performance, but then indicates it would rather you went away: FHFA.

Yesterday the commentary mentioned a report stating that broker business was down to about 7% of total originations. Say what you will about how mortgage production statistics are tabulated, broker business is down. What is the “investor chatter” out there with regard to broker business? Barclays released a piece reminding us that for brokers, “The new loan compensation guidelines, which went into effect on April 1, have several key provisions that limit the types of compensation that they can receive. Yield spread premiums are prohibited. Compensation based on loan characteristics or terms is prohibited, other than the loan balance. Only the borrower or the lender, but not both, may compensate the loan originator for making a loan. A broker can no longer receive fees from both parties. Overall, these changes seek to eliminate the incentives for originators’ steering borrowers into riskier loans for financial gain. While correspondents, and retail lenders are somewhat affected by these rules, they substantially restrict the previously existing business model for brokers.”

Turning to the markets, yesterday MBS prices were unchanged although traders reported higher-than-average volumes. “J.P. Morgan anticipates that buying from banks and REITs will more than offset the dealer positions, while a new quarter and month will bring in some balance sheet space.” The 10-yr ended at 2.99% with no substantive news.

But today we’ve had Retail Sales for May at -.2%, ex-auto +.3%. RS was close to expectations but still a negative number. May PPI was +.2%, ex-food & energy +.2%, a little stronger than expected. The inflation gauges Producer and Consumer Price Indexes are expected to confirm the Fed’s belief that inflation is not a threat at this time and is expected to remain a nonevent for some time given the economic growth slowdown. Later this morning we have Business Inventories – hardly a market mover but is seen +0.9%. After the early numbers stocks are pointing higher, the 10-yr is at 3.06% and agency mortgage prices are worse by .250.


QRM: THE POTENTIAL COST TO A PURCHASER

The Quality Residential Mortgage (QRM), a proposal by the government to tighten lending standards, has initiated quite a debate. The government feels strongly that standards must be raised while others have debated that the new guidelines are an example of the pendulum swinging back much too far. For the government’s position on QRM, click here. For the other side of the debate, click here.

We do not want to enter this debate today. Instead, we just want to shed some light on the increased cost a buyer should expect under the new guidelines. The fact that it will cost a purchaser more is not argued by either side. The only question is the extent of the increase.

The most complete study we could find on this issue was JP Morgan’s 55 page report on Securitized Products. According to their research, in order to entice lending institutions to replace government lending, mortgage interest rates could increase 3%.

“…in this new world of higher capital requirements, mortgage rates would need to rise by more than 300 basis points (3%) from current levels…”

That’s assuming the banks would be looking for the same returns they normally receive. The report went on to say that perhaps the banks would be satisfied with a smaller return.

“This is not to say that the new capital requirements will necessarily drive interest rates 3% higher…the mortgage rate impact could be anywhere from 1% to 3% higher.”

Let’s assume the eventual increase in mortgage rate is 2% (the middle of that 1% – 3% window). What impact would that have on a purchaser?

Today, interest rates are approximately 4.5%. A two percent increase would bring them to 6.5% which happens to be about where they were prior to government intervention. On a $200,000 mortgage, a buyer’s monthly mortgage payment (principle and interest) would go from $1,013.37/month to $1,264.14/month.

That is an additional $3,009 each year and a total of $90,277 over 30 years.

Bottom Line

It doesn’t matter which side of the QRM debate you are on. If you are considering the purchase of a home, waiting could be expensive if lending costs do increase.

 


WHY THEY ARE SAYING TO BUY A HOME NOW

Despite what appears to be a non-stop wave of tough news regarding real estate, four major media players have come out this month with the same advice: It Is Time to Buy a Home! Here are the four articles and a breakdown as to why the advice makes sense.

The Wall Street Journal: Why It’s Time to Buy

CBS Money Watch:Why the Time to Buy is Now

Forbes Magazine: 9 Reasons to Buy a House Now

National Public Radio: For Many, It’s Still a Good Time to Buy a Home

With prices continuing to depreciate in most regions of the country, some may wonder why these four entities are suggesting to their readership that now is the time to buy. Each organization realizes that PRICE is not as important as COST. The cost of a home can go up even if prices continue to fall. Unless you are an all cash buyer, you must take into consideration the expense of mortgaging when calculating the full cost of a home. Here is some information to consider.

Interest Rates

Currently, interest rates sit at historic lows. However, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, PMI and the National Association of Realtors are all projecting approximately a 1% increase in mortgage rates over the next year. A one percent increase in rate negates a ten percent fall in prices.

Lending Standards

The government has proposed a tightening of lending standards called Quality Residential Mortgage (QRM). If accepted as proposed two things will happen:

The qualification process for loans will become more difficult

The cost of a loan will increase

Bottom Line

There is a reason more and more financial organizations are suggesting to their followers that now is the time to buy a home: because the cost of purchasing a home is about to increase (even if prices continue to fall).


 

7 HIGHEST-PERFORMING MAJOR HOUSING MARKETS

Several real estate markets are starting to show signs of improvement with home prices in the last quarter as the industry demonstrates more signs of stabilizing, according to Clear Capital’s latest monthly Home Data Index Market Report.

REO saturation rates have improved in the majority of the country’s largest markets. However, many areas are still battling year-over-year price declines. Clear Capital’s index reports that quarter-over-quarter home price declines were 2.3 percent in the latest quarter, which is less than half compared to the previous month.

“The latest market report results through May suggest that home prices are starting to ease back from the heavy declines seen over the winter,” says Alex Villacorta, director of research and analytics at Clear Capital. “We are still far away from the strong demand needed to fully turn things around for the housing market. However, it is clear from the initial spring sales data that prices are softening, suggesting stabilization in the market.”

The High Performers

Seven of the top 15 markets posted quarter-over-quarter property price gains in this month’s report, compared to none in last month’s, according to Clear Capital. Here are the seven highest-performing major real estate markets, according to the report.

1. Washington, D.C.-Arlington, Va.-Alexandria, Va. Quarter-to-quarter home price change: 4.5% Year-to-year price changes (May 2010-May 2011): 4.9% REO saturation: 17.5%

2. St. Louis, Mo. Quarter-to-quarter home price change: 2.2% Year-to-year price changes: -11.4% REO saturation: 35.3%

3. Pittsburgh, Pa. Quarter-to-quarter home price change: 1.6% Year-to-year price changes: 0.3% REO saturation: 10.9%

4. New York, N.Y.-Long Island, N.Y.-No. New Jersey, N.J. Quarter-to-quarter home price change: 1.5% Year-to-year price changes: 1.4% REO saturation: 9.6%

5. Virginia Beach, Va.-Norfolk, Va.-Newport News, Va. Quarter-to-quarter home price change: 1.4% Year-to-year price changes: -13.2% REO saturation: 22.4%

6. Miami-Ft. Lauderdale-Miami Beach, Fla. Quarter-to-quarter home price  change: 0.6% Year-to-year price changes: -5.2% REO saturation: 39.6%

7. San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif.  Quarter-to-quarter home price change: 0.5% Year-to-year price changes: -5% REO saturation: 25%

Tthe lowest-performing market for the fifth straight month was Detroit-Warren-Livonia, Mich., with a 13.2 percent decrease in quarter-over-quarter home price change and a 58 percent REO saturation rate.

 

Team Empowerment Mortgage Chatter: June 13; News & Headlines; Homes Prices: Even More Confusion; 40% of Underwater Borrowers Took Out Cash; Too Many Errors Found in Listing Information?; 3 Banks Penalized for Loan Mod Failings; Falling Home Prices Ch

“This one step, choosing a goal and sticking to it, changes everything” – Scott Reed

 

NEWS & HEADLINES

Here is a NMLS “heads-up” for folks: on June 16 a license deficiency will be placed on companies who have not submitted their Q1 Mortgage Call Report. Over 11,000 companies have successfully completed their Q1 MCR in NMLS. If you haven’t yet, get started: NMLSQ1CallReport.

Last week the commentary discussed REIT’s impact on the residential mortgage market. The total market capitalization, or the aggregate value, of real estate investment trusts could be as high as $42 billion and growing, according to an estimate from investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (versus $500 million in 1971 and $30 billion by the end of 2010). Real Estate Investment Trusts have special tax exemptions and an ability to hold more capital under upcoming risk-retention rules. So why are REIT’s buying? This is a key reason that spreads remain range-bound despite the news of the Treasury unwinding its MBS portfolio, and the leverage opportunities are very attractive.

Analysts believe that more growth could come as the mortgage market becomes dependent on more capital. Currently, $1.5 trillion in mortgages and MBS sit on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac balance sheets with another $1 trillion in MBS at the Federal Reserve. Assuming a run-off rate of 10% per year replaced by private capital, the mortgage market could need roughly $110 billion in private capital in the next decade which could double the current $42 billion that REIT’s control. For more information visit REITPrimerAnalysis. And David Akre with Whole Loan Capital has written a presentation for lenders considering a REIT structure.

Yes, there is some inter-day volatility, but with the 10-yr sitting around 3% and 30-yr fixed rates around 4.375%, rates are not the issue. Last week rates closed lower, with the 10-yr at 2.97% and MBS prices slightly better than the previous Friday’s. We have zilch for scheduled economic news today, but tomorrow the pace increases with Retail Sales, the Producer Price Index, and Business Inventories. Wednesday is the Consumer Price Index, Empire Manufacturing, and Industrial Production & Capacity Utilization. Thursday is Jobless Claims, Housing Starts & Building Permits, and the Philly Fed. Friday is a University of Michigan number, and Leading Economic Indicators. Quite a bit! Rates are slightly higher with the 10-yr at 3.01% and MBS prices worse about .125-.250.


HOME PRICES: EVEN MORE CONFUSION

We attempt to keep you abreast of the housing market. When will demand for housing return to historic averages? What impact will foreclosures continue to have? Where are interest rates headed? There are no simple answers to any of these questions. However, the most difficult question to answer seems to be: Where are home prices headed? Yesterday, we read two vastly different opinions on this issue.

Clear Capital claims prices seem to be stabilizing in their most recent Home Data Index Market Report.

“The latest Market Report results through May suggest that home prices are starting to ease back from the heavy declines seen over the winter. We are still far away from the strong demand needed to fully turn things around for the housing market; however, it is clear from the initial spring sales data that prices are softening, suggesting stabilization in the market.”

At the same time, Housing Wire reported that Robert Shiller, the Yale University professor and co-founder of the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, believes home prices still have a major correction ahead.

“While other people expect home prices to bounce along the bottom for a while without going up much, Robert Shiller is inclined to be more pessimistic.

There is room for home prices to decline another 10% to 25% in real terms over the next five years, according to Shiller.”


40% OF UNDERWATER BORROWERS TOOK CASH OUT OF HOMES

Homeowners with home equity loans are more than twice as likely to be “underwater” as those who didn’t take cash out of their homes, according to statistics compiled by real estate and loan data aggregator CoreLogic.

CoreLogic estimates that at the end of March, 22.7 percent of homeowners with mortgages — about 10.9 million borrowers — owed more on their mortgage than their home was worth. That’s down slightly from an estimated 11.1 million underwater borrowers at the end of December.

Falling home prices can put borrowers who have little equity in their homes underwater. By allowing homeowners to convert equity they have in their homes into cash, home equity loans reduce the cushion borrowers have against price declines.

CoreLogic said that 38 percent of borrowers with home equity loans were underwater at the end of March, compared with 18 percent of homeowners who had no home equity loan. More than 40 percent of all underwater homeowners (4.5 million) have home equity loans, CoreLogic said.


TOO MANY ERRORS FOUND IN LISTING INFORMATION?

Some real estate professionals say they are finding too many errors in property information online and that agents need to do a better job of making sure listing details are accurate and up-to-date.

For example, Troy Deierling, a real estate professional in Sedona, Ariz., recalls a client recently asking him to set up appointments for three homes he viewed online for-sale. However, Deierling discovered all three of the properties had been sold and had been off the market for three months, despite the postings online that indicated otherwise.

While more buyers are turning to online home searches, the information they find may not always have the latest information, such as failing to indicate the latest price cut or even whether the home is still on the market.

Nearly a quarter of the data that real estate professionals individually submit for posting on real estate Web sites is never updated when changes are made to the price or when the property is sold, according to a recent report by Trulia.

While real estate listing Web sites say they try to keep a lookout for errors, many of these sites rely on MLS feeds. As such, real estate professionals need to make sure to keep their listings on the MLS current and listing details accurate, industry experts say.


3 BANKS PENALIZED FOR LOAN MOD FAILINGS

Three major banks have lost federal mortgage modification incentives in delivering a foreclosure relief program until they make big changes to improve their practices.

Obama administration officials have told Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Wells Fargo & Co. that they must make “substantial improvements” to the way they administer the Home Affordable Modification Program, and they will not receive any more federal money from the program until they do so. For example, officials noted that banks need substantial improvement in correctly evaluating borrowers’ incomes, which is a critical component for determining eligibility for the program.

Some of the banks also need to improve how they identify and contact borrowers for the program.

Last month, the banks received $24 million in payments through HAMP, but no more payments will be made until servicers improve their performance, officials warned.

While Bank of America agreed that it needed to improve its practices in the program, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo say they disagree with the poor evaluation. Wells Fargo, in fact, says they plan to contest the administration’s evaluation of how well it’s done with administering HAMP. The review, which examined all 10 servicers who administer the program, found that all 10 were performing below its benchmarks.

This marks the first time the Obama administration has taken major punitive action against banks in the HAMP program, which has been under attack in recent months from some lawmakers and critics who say the program has not done enough to help save home owners from foreclosure.

Republicans in the House of Representatives voted to end the program earlier this year. However, the measure has yet to pass the Senate and the White House already has threatened a veto.


FALLING HOME PRICES CHIPPING AWAY AT EQUITY

On average, home owners now hold about 38 percent equity in their homes, down from 61 percent a decade ago, the Federal Reserve says in citing data from the first quarter of this year.

Despite outstanding balances on loans getting smaller, home owners are losing equity due to drastically falling home prices, which have inched down in many markets since prices peaked in 2006, the Fed reports.

Home equity is an important indicator to the overall health of the economy because the more home equity people have, the more wealthy they tend to feel. Plus, home equity also tends to serve as collateral for other loans.

However, sinking home prices in many markets has caused more home owners to owe more on their home than it is currently worth. About 23 percent of people who have mortgages are underwater and another 5 percent are near that stage, according to CoreLogic.

The average household owes about $119,000 on mortgages, auto loans, credit cards, and other debt, according to the Fed’s report.

 

Team Empowerment Mortgage Chatter: June 7; News & Headlines; Why It’s Time To Buy; Are Home Prices Headed Up or Down?

“No matter how much pressure you feel at work, if you could find ways to relax for at least five minutes every hour, you’d be more productive” – Dr. Joyce Brothers: Psychologist and advice columnist

 

NEWS & HEADLINES

Over in the agency side of the world, Fannie and Freddie have both been busy in recent weeks. Fannie Mae announced it has approved Genworth Residential Mortgage Assurance Corporation (GRMAC) as an insurer of conventional mortgage loans in a limited number of states. The insurer is responsible for compliance with its state limitations and which entity is used: Genworth. Fannie has spread the word regarding policy changes regarding deferred student loans, documentation requirements for retirement accounts, prohibition of certain mortgage insurance agreements, DU resubmission policies, MERS updates, and two other miscellaneous items. Fannie Mae is “requiring servicers, in determining whether a borrower faces imminent default, to apply the evaluation methods now used only for HAMP modifications to non-HAMP modifications secured by owner-occupied properties. In addition, Fannie Mae is requiring servicers to use Fannie Mae Network Providers to obtain broker price opinions or appraisals to complete the evaluation of preforeclosure sales and deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure.” In addition, Fannie will be conducting a reapplication process for the Retained Attorney Network in 16 states, is updating the maximum number of allowable days in which routine foreclosure proceedings are to be completed in each jurisdiction, announcing new servicer requirements to streamline and simplify servicing processes related to delinquency management, updating the Servicing Guide to simplify the existing servicing fee structure for mortgage loan modifications while making the servicing fee comparable to that of other secondary market investors, and reminded clients that if a mortgage loan is registered with the MERS and “is originated naming MERS as the original mortgagee of record, MERS must not be named as the loss payee on property insurance policies.” All of these can be viewed at Fannie.

Across the agency aisle and down the road a ways, Freddie Mac has made changes to its selling requirements to improve the quality of appraisal data and introduce additional borrower qualification sources. FreddieQualification. Freddie has also revised its credit requirements to “Provide an avenue for borrowers with unrestricted access to eligible assets to utilize those assets to qualify for a mortgage” for manually underwritten loans as long as the borrower “must not currently be using the eligible assets as a source of income.” Freddie also announced that an increase in the limit for “credit card charges, or the use of a cash advance or an unsecured line of credit to pay mortgage application fees. We are increasing the maximum amount a borrower may charge to a credit card, or receive from a cash advance or unsecured line of credit to pay fees associated with the mortgage application process from 1 percent of the mortgage amount to the greater of 2 percent of the mortgage amount or $1,500. Additionally, we are removing the provision regarding the maximum allowable amount of $500 for appraisals and credit reports.”

In September Freddie is amending property eligibility and appraisal requirements related to property underwriting and review of appraisals and taking another step in the implementation of UAD (Uniform Appraisal Dataset). Freddie also announced revised eligibility requirements for manufactured homes, incomplete improvements including energy conservation improvements (effective September 1), appraisal photographs (effective March 19, 2012), transmitting appraisal reports (effective March 19, 2012), and seller warranties for Established Condominium Projects and New Condominium Projects. As always, for these and everything Freddie, go to the source at FreddieBulletins.

On the FHA/VA side, GNMA speeds will likely remain depressed as originators brace for increased put-back risks by the FHA. Late last year, HUD proposed new rules to streamline the process of indemnifications related to underwriting defects and more recently “the proposed Biggert FHA bill seeks to expand HUD’s authority to pursue indemnification to more lenders (currently, HUD’s right is limited to 29% of all FHA lenders, or 70% of total FHA origination).”

Yesterday was pretty quiet, market-wise, and don’t look for much more today. Tradeweb’s MBS volume registered at 52% of the 30-day average with all sectors below normal. On no news the 10-year Treasury note closed at a yield of 3.00%, nearly unchanged, and MBS prices were also flat to Friday’s close. Today we do, however, have yet another auction starting up – this time $66 billion for the week with $32 billion in 3-yr notes. And we have a speech by Chairman Bernanke on “The U.S. Economic Outlook” at the International Monetary Conference in Atlanta, GA at 3:45 EST.


WHY IT’S TIME TO BUY

Back in June 2006, when the housing market peaked, the prospect of a five-year national housing bust seemed unimaginable to most people. And yet here we are, with the latest Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller index showing that prices hit new bear-market lows, falling back to 2002levels nationally and to 1990s levels in some battered regions.

Despite all the gloom, however, there are growing indications that it is a good time to buy. Mortgage rates, which fell to 4.55% for the week ending June 2, according to Freddie Mac, are near 50-year lows. Homes have become more affordable than they have been in years: According to Moody’s Analytics, the ratio of home prices to income is now 20.9% lower than the 15-year average through 2010, and 12.5% lower than the 1989-2004 average. A historic glut of homes, meanwhile, has created a buyer’s market: There were about 15 million vacant homes in the U.S. last year, according to John Burns Real Estate ConsultingInc.-some 3.1 million more than normal.

Such conditions might not last long. Moody’s Analytics predicts that the number of distressed sales will begin to fall in 2013, and that prices will begin to edge upward then. Home building is at a virtual standstill, so the supply overhang isn’t likely to get much worse. Meanwhile, demographic indicators such as “household formation”-the number of new households each year-are on the rise, and promise to take a bite out of the glut in coming years.

The upshot: “While we might not see rapid growth in the next couple of years, there are a tremendous number of positive signs that could lead to a rebound,” says Anthony Sanders, a real-estate finance professor at George Mason University.

The short-term outlook isn’t encouraging. Job growth remains weak, foreclosure sales are making up more of the market, and economists are predicting that home prices will fall more in the coming months.

But the long-term benefits of homeownership remain very much intact. For now, at least, you can deduct the mortgage interest on your taxes-a big perk for people in higher tax brackets. You get to paint your walls any color you wish, without having to clear it with a landlord. And assuming you can buy a home for about the same price as you can rent one, buying will give you the ability one day to live rent-free. Come retirement time, a paid-off mortgage means your monthly expenses are significantly reduced, and you have a chunk of equity to play with.

So what might the next five years look like? Once the foreclosure mess begins to clear up, say housing economists, the traditional drivers of the housing market-demographics, affordability, loan availability, employment and psychology-should take over.

Here is a glimmer of what the future may hold: While overall home prices fell by 7.5% in April over the same period a year earlier, according to CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif., provider of real-estate data and analytics, if you exclude distressed sales, prices were off just 0.5%. So if you are in a market that isn’t battered by foreclosures, you may be close to a bottom already.


ARE HOME PRICES HEADED UP OR DOWN?

Here are two headlines that appeared in print last week:

LA Times: Case-Shiller Home Price Index Hits New Low

Forex: CoreLogic: Home Price Index Increased 0.7%

In the Los Angeles Times story, David Blitzer, chairman of the S&P index committee, was quoted as saying:

“This month’s report is marked by the confirmation of a double-dip in home prices across much of the nation. Home prices continue on their downward spiral with no relief in sight.”

In the second article, Forex quotes Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic:

“While the economic recovery is still fragile and one data point is not a trend, the month-over-month increase based on April sales activity is a positive sign.”

The Case Shiller and the CoreLogic price indices are both very well respected. How can they come to seemingly opposite conclusions? There are two reasons for this.

1. Each Index Has a Different Lag Time

Each report is actually looking at data from different periods of time. Therefore, they are not technically comparing apples to apples.

The Case Shiller Index Methodology:

The CSI is reported with a two-month lag and is based on three months of data. For example, data released in January 2011 was for the three months ended November 2010 (November, October, September 2010).

The CoreLogic Index Methodology:

The CoreLogic HPI is published on approximately a 5 week lag from the end of the data collection period. For example, the CoreLogic January HPI will be published in mid-March.

2. The REO Saturation Level Has Changed

The Case Shiller report covered data several months old. This data would contain transactions where prices were negatively impacted by the large number of distressed properties on the market

However, inventories of distressed properties have decreased recently because the process of foreclosure has slowed. The CoreLogic data, being more current, would have fewer homes impacted by distressed properties. Therefore, prices would be higher.

The difference in time table helps explain some of the conflict in the conclusions of the reports. Once the banks again start to introduce more distressed properties to the market, prices will again be negatively impacted.

Bottom Line

Prices of properties in your region will not be determined by the different price indices. Prices will be determined by the supply of homes available in ratio to the demand for those homes in your area. Whether you are buying or selling, check with a local real estate professional to help you analyze these numbers.

 

TEAM EMPOWERMENT MORTGAGE CHATTER: June 2; News & Headlines; 10 Reasons to Attend Real Estate Connect SF; Home Price Bargains Coming This Summer

“If we do not learn to live together as friends, we will die apart as fools” – Martin Luther King

 

NEWS & HEADLINES

In a recent article, Caroline Baum pointed out that the yield curve “says” that there will be no recession. “With the Federal Reserve’s benchmark rate at zero to 0.25 percent and the 10-year Treasury note yielding 3.06 percent, the spread between the two interest rates is among the widest in history. It’s the reverse configuration (an inverted yield curve with short rates above long rates) that augurs recession… When the yield curve is steep, as it is now, it’s an inducement for banks to expand their balance sheets — borrow short, lend long — and increase the money supply. That bank credit isn’t growing now owes more to the hangover from a period of excess leverage and new-found religion on lending standards than any restrictive policy on the part of the Fed…A $15 trillion economy doesn’t turn on a dime. Listening to the media, you’d think that one day inflation is ready to take off and the next the economy is struggling to stay afloat.”

The ADP Private Sector Employment number only increased by 38,000 in May, far less than the 175k that was expected. But remember that the ADP number, while it grabs headlines, is of dubious predictive ability for tomorrow’s government-produced employment number. Over the last 6 months alone ADP’s initial figure has ranged from understating the gain in jobs by 5k to overestimating it by 184k!

But the ADP only started the market moving yesterday, making everyone who locked in a loan earlier in the week wish that they hadn’t. The ISM Purchasing Managers’ index fell in May, and was much lower than expected. In fact, it was the lowest reading in a year. Construction Spending increased 0.4% in April although during the first 4 months of 2011, construction spending is 8.4% below the same period in 2010. These components, pointing to a slow economy, moved stocks lower but pushed 10-year UST note yields below 3% for the first time in 2011. Generally speaking, a slow economy helps keep rates low – but is that what the mortgage industry really needs? Low rates help, but be careful what you wish for.


10 REASONS TO ATTEND REAL ESTATE CONNECT SF

The industry event of the year, Real Estate Connect®San Francisco is fast approaching – so what are you waiting for? Here are 10 reasons to lock down your spot at this summer’s hottest ticket.Register online now!

10. Fabulous 15: It’s our 15th anniversary! Help us celebrate in style. It’s a milestone achievement and we’ll mark the occasion with an unparalleled event.

9. Sparkling San Francisco: Spend your free time (or an extra day) enjoying our host city’s famous cuisine, phenomenal scenery, and fantastic attractions.

8. Killer Keynotes: Want big names? We got’em! Our featured speakers include David Pogue of the New York Times, author and social-web expert Brian Solis, Virgin America CMO Porter Gale, and HootSuite CEO Ryan Holmes.

7. Top-Notch Workshops:Choose from four can’t-miss options: the Broker Summit, our Internet Marketing workshop, Connect Tech, The Paperless Agent.

6. Four Intense Tracks:High-profile speakers and panelists tackle the hottest topics in Broker Summit, our Internet Marketing workshop, Connect Tech, The Paperless Agent.

5. Trailblazing Brokers: Meet the brokerages of the future – five groundbreaking companies that’ll change the way we think about the real estate business.

4. New Kids on the Block: We’ll unveil the coolest companies you’ve never heard of in this annual panel, always a Connect must-see.

3. Generation Next: Learn strategies and tactics to attract and target the growing and increasingly critical under-44 demographic.

2. The Innovator Awards: We’ll hand out top honors in seven categories, including Most Innovative Brokerage or Franchise and Most Innovative Website or Web Service. Which of your peers will win?

1. All-Star Attendees: All the top names in the industry will be here – it’s the ideal place to meet, greet, and exchange ideas.


HOME PRICE BARGAINS COMING THIS SUMMER

Home prices are already a third off their highs, but this summer could bring the real discounts.

Buyers are still cautious, and anxious sellers will have to price aggressively to get them off the fence.

That could result in a “summer clearance sale,” predicts Pete Flint, CEO of Trulia, the real estate web site.

“We don’t imagine a stampede of buyers, like outside of Macy’s on Black Friday,” he said. “We see this more akin to January sales where retailers are trying to get rid of stock before it gets stale.”

Several factors, he said, will lead to blow-out prices: Accelerating price drops: Home prices have already reached their lowest level since the housing bubble burst, and are now at 2002 levels. Sellers will feel the pressure to make deals before their homes lose even more value. Bloated inventory: There are boatloads of homes on the market, more than eight months worth at the current rate of sales. Many are distressed properties — short sales and bank repossessions. Such homes are selling at discounts up to 50%. Tight credit: Some homebuyers still can’t obtain mortgages, limiting demand. Unemployment: While the job picture has brightened, unemployment is still around 9%. People without jobs don’t buy homes, obviously, but high unemployment also rattles working people. Lacking the confidence that their jobs are secure, they may not look to buy.

These forces could all come to a head this summer, according to Flint, because of the cyclical nature of homebuying. Buying takes off in spring as many young families hope to make their moves before the new school year.

“By the end of the homebuying season, sellers will become increasingly desperate,” said Flint.

Adding to already swollen inventories will be a flood of new distressed properties poised to hit the market.

“By the summer, most of the ‘robo-signing’ delays will be over and more distressed properties will be on the market,” said Celia Chen of Moody’s analytics.

Many banks had slowed foreclosure proceedings until they made sure that paperwork was in order. That put hundreds of thousands of homes into foreclosure limbo: Borrowers were no longer making payments in many cases, but were allowed to remain living in the homes.

There’s little urgency for buyers to act in this stagnant market because no one expects prices to turnaround, according to Ken Johnson, a real estate professor at Florida International University and co-author of a new study on whether it’s better to buy or rent. Realizing that home prices will likely get even better, buyers can wait for even better deals.

“If people think we’re at the bottom of the market, they’ll act,” he said.

All the experts, however, are telling buyers that prices will continue to erode all through 2011. Even after that, no one is predicting outsized price gains.

“There will be a lousy housing market for another year or two,” said Michael Larson, a housing analyst for Weiss Research.

Even if we’re at or near the bottom, buyers are unlikely to see prices rise much if they wait.

“I myself continue to rent,” said Johnson. “I know that even if I don’t buy for a year, it’s no big deal. Who cares if I miss the bottom if prices only go up a couple of points or so?”

TEAM EMPOWERMENT MORTGAGE CHATTER: June 1; Should You Rent or Buy in This Market?; How To Make An Offer That Will Get Accepted; Foreclosure Starts Fall, But Pipeline Full

“If you care enough for a reasult, you will most certainly attain it…” – William James: Was a psychologist and author

 

 

SHOULD YOU RENT OR BUY IN THIS MARKET?

Families are trying to determine whether or not now is the time to buy a home. Some are advising these families to sit out the current real estate market and instead rent for the next year or two. We do not agree with this advice. Homeownership means a lot to a family. We also realize that the financial aspects of purchasing a home today can be a concern. The challenge is any advice given by someone in the real estate community is immediately dismissed as self-serving.

For this reason, we want to give you the advice of three entities not involved in real estate sales:

Citigroup

“When we examine the relationships between mortgage payments and income and mortgage payments and rent, we see that these relationships have also reverted back to or below equilibrium points. In some cases, particularly when mortgage payments are compared to the cost of renting, home prices actually appear cheap.”

JP Morgan

“JPMorgan analysts said ‘the continuation of falling rental vacancies and rising rental demand will make home buying increasingly attractive’, especially as rental prices increase.”

Business School professors Eli Beracha and Ken H. Johnson

“Fundamental drivers now appear to be in place that favor homeownership over renting in the near term future…

The second finding might seem unwise to many given the recent crash in the real estate markets around the country. However, rent-to-price ratios now seem to be in place along with other fundamental drivers that favor ownership over renting…

Conditions (historically low mortgage rates and relatively low rent-to-price ratios) now seem in place to favor future purchases.”

Bottom Line

Is it better to rent or buy? According to those quoted above, it seems it may be becoming a no-brainer.


HOW TO MAKE AN OFFER THAT WILL BE ACCEPTED

You have finally found the house of your dreams. It is priced right and is receiving a lot of attention from other buyers. You don’t want to miss this opportunity so you are ready to put in an offer with the real estate agent immediately. What can you do to guarantee your offer is the one accepted? Financially, offers can be broken down into three categories:

1.) An All-Cash Offer

Obviously, a cash purchaser is always favored by any seller. In today’s real estate market, an all-cash offer is even more enticing. Last month, one in four real estate transactions were impacted by a low appraisal. An all-cash buyer eliminates the need for the bank appraisal.

2.) A Non-Contingency Offer

If you don’t have the cash reserves for an all-cash purchase, the next best thing would be to make a non-contingency offer. To do this you should be already pre-approved for a mortgage and have your current house already in contract. This gives the seller the confidence that you are already a qualified buyer who will be able to complete the purchase.

3.) A Contingency Offer

Some buyers start the process of looking for a new home before their current home is sold. This could be a big mistake. If you find the home you were hoping for (perfect for your family AND priced right), it will be very difficult to get your offer accepted because you are not actually qualified to buy.

Asking a seller to wait for your home to sell is somewhat unreasonable in today’s environment. One of the reasons you would want the home is because the seller priced the home at a value to sell it NOW. They want to know it is sold when they accept an offer. They normally will not even entertain a contingency offer.

Bottom Line

Unless you have the ability to purchase with cash, the best thing to do is to be pre-approved for a mortgage and have your current house already in contract before looking for the home of your dreams. That guarantees you will get the home you love at a price that makes sense.


FORECLOSURE STARTS FALL, BUT PIPELINE FULL

Foreclosure starts dipped below the 200,000 mark during April for the first time in years, but the foreclosure pipeline remained bloated by more than 4 million homes whose owners are in foreclosure or delinquent by 90 days or more.

That’s according to the latest numbers from loan data aggregator Lender Processing Services, which show foreclosure starts fell nearly 31 percent from March to April, totaling 187,423 — a 14.7 percent decline from a year ago.

LPS estimated that 2.18 million mortgages were in foreclosure, down nearly 2 percent from a record 2.22 million in March but up 9.5 percent from a year ago.

Another 1.96 million mortgages were delinquent by 90 days or more in April, down about 1.5 percent from the previous month and 29 percent from a year ago.

All told, LPS tallied 4.14 million loans in foreclosure or delinquent by 90 days or more at the end of April.

Those numbers are in line with the Mortgage Bankers Association’s most recent National Delinquency Survey, which suggested about 4 million residential mortgages were in foreclosure (2.24 million) or delinquent by more than 90 days (1.78 million) at the end of the first quarter.

LPS data showed a 7.5 percent month-over-month bump in the number of homeowners behind on their mortgages by just one payment, to 1.63 million, to roughly the same level seen a year ago.

While LPS estimates 60-day delinquencies grew by 1.2 percent from March, to 615,608, that’s down 14 percent from a year ago.

The total number of noncurrent loans stood at 6.39 million loans, up less than 1 percent from March and down nearly 11 percent from a year ago.

LPS estimates that the number of noncurrent loans has fallen 21.2 percent from a peak of 8.12 million in January 2010, when the number of homes in foreclosure or delinquent by 90 days or more totaled 5.17 million.

 

Team Empowerment Mortgage Chatter: May 26; Real Estate Affordability Sets Record in Q1; Spy on your Real Estate Competition; How’s Your Online Etiquette?; RPM in Contra Costa Times

“Information is the oxygen of the modern age.” – Ronald Reagan

 

REAL ESTATE AFFORDABILITY SETS RECORD IN Q1

Housing affordability hit a new record high in the first quarter, surpassing the previous high set in fourth-quarter 2010, according to an index released by the National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo today.

The Housing Opportunity Index found that 74.6 percent of new and existing homes sold in the first quarter were affordable to families earning the national median income of $64,400. That’s up from 73.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, and it’s the highest level recorded in the more than 20 years the index has been measured.

“With interest rates remaining at historically low levels, today’s report indicates that homeownership is within reach of more households than it has been for more than two decades,” said Bob Nielsen, chairman of the NAHB, in a statement.

“While this is good news for consumers, homebuyers and builders continue to confront extremely tight credit conditions, and this remains a significant obstacle to many potential home sales.”


 SPY ON YOUR REAL ESTATE COMPETITION

Do you know who your real competitors are? More importantly, do you know what your potential clients think of your competitors’ services? If not, it’s time to start spying.

At our recent Awesome Females in Real Estate conference in Scottsdale, Ariz., Kathy King of REICaravan.com led a session, “Keep Your Friends Close and Your Enemies Closer.”

 If you want to keep ahead of the competition, competitor reconnaissance (spying) — of the legal variety, of course — is the name of the game.

Why you should spy

A primary reason for engaging in a spying program is to craft your own unique selling proposition that differentiates your services from competitors. Furthermore, it will also help you to be better prepared to meet the objections someone may have about using your services vs. services provided by a competitor.

Another reason for spying is to identify who your true competitors are online. King recommends a site called SpyFu.com. Enter your domain and SpyFu will display the competing domains that have the greatest overlap.

It also tells you which key words generate the best organic results for your business. Perhaps the most useful feature is the ability to see the keywords that your major competitors are using.

Your spy kit

King outlined a number of key resources to use in your spy kit. First, check your competitors’ information by plugging their names into Google and LinkedIn. It’s also smart to check out whether they have a blog as well as Facebook and Twitter accounts.

If they have a blog, subscribe to the RSS feed to see what they are posting. Also, if they have a newsletter, it’s probably smart to subscribe to that as well.

Perhaps the most important step to take is to carefully examine how your competitors are marketing themselves on their main website. You can use SpyFu to compare keywords. This tool is especially useful since it provides the top keywords that are generating your organic search results.

It also shows the keywords and results for your competitors, as well displaying the percentage of overlap in your keyword searches.

SpyFu also allows you to determine which websites and searches produce the most leads. An important point to note is which traffic sources are generating the most leads for your site, as well as for your competitors. The goal is to expand what is already working, as well as to take search and market share from competitors.

In addition to SpyFu, you can also use the Google Keyword Tool. Type in the terms you want to search as well as your URL and see the number of searches for each of the key terms. Use the most popular key terms as often as possible in the text of your website, on your blog, and especially in your headlines.

Another excellent tool is WebsiteGrader.com from HubSpot. You can plug in your URL as well as that of your competitors to see their strengths and weaknesses. The site gives you a comprehensive analysis as well as providing suggestions on how to upgrade areas that need improvement.

If you haven’t already done so, sign up for Google Alerts and enter your name and the names and companies of the competitors who you want to track. Another great tool is StepRep.com, which allows you to follow what others are saying online about your business, your industry or competitors.

What to look for

A key variable to track is your competitors’ marketing messages. How are they positioning themselves in the marketplace? Are they appealing to specific demographics or lifestyles? Is their branding specific to certain market niches? And if so, which ones? Look for gaps in what they’re doing to find opportunities they may have overlooked. 

Print marketing

Although King did not discuss this point, a great spy exercise is to have your entire office collect as many marketing pieces from your competitors as possible. Go through each piece at your office meeting and determine which types of messages are the most effective.

Two additional tips are to eliminate “I” and “me” language in marketing and to replace it with “you” language. Also, eliminate as many adjectives as possible from your text, replacing them with verbs. For example, instead of saying, “really lovely, lovely pool,” say, “Relax by the zero edge pool overlooking the breathtaking view below.”

Spying can be a critical element in your marketing strategy. Spying allows you to identify gaps in your competitors’ print and online marketing strategies. As a result, you not only beat your competitors to the punch, you can also prevent their punches from having a major impact on your business. 


 HOW’S YOUR ONLINE ETIQUETTE?

Real estate agents seeking to reach global clients through social media should proceed with caution, as cross-cultural blunders are easy to make when non-verbal communications cannot be read.

For example, it is common in the United States for people to ask personal questions to start a conversation or to address people on a first-name basis; but in some cultures, such communication is frowned upon.

Those who have completed Certified International Property Specialist training know to ask only safe questions. Experts also recommend that agents using Facebook or other social networking sites to conduct business should communicate in a more formal tone. Una Coleman, a marketing consultant from Ireland, says, “Be a reserved version of yourself.”


 RPM ON THE FRONT PAGE OF BUSINESS SECTION OF CONTRA COSTA TIMES

 

Dodging the debris unleashed by a shattered housing market, RPM Mortgage powered to its most successful year in 2010 and is off to a robust start this year.

Walnut Creek-based RPM generated hundreds of millions of dollars more in mortgage business in 2010 and hired hundreds of new employees over the past two years, a track record that sparkles against the gloomy backdrop of the real estate sector.

“We’ve been very fortunate,” said Robert Hirt, RPM’s chief executive officer. “2010 was the best year in the history of our company.”

The company’s success has been fueled in great measure by its ability to meld its connections to Fannie Mae with a veteran sales force and low interest rates. By being able to sell loans directly to Fannie Mae, RPM has attracted experienced loan officers who can drum up more business.

In 2010, RPM generated $4.55 billion in loan production, up 12.9 percent from the $4.03 billion in loan production in 2009.

The pace is brisk so far in 2011. For the first three months of this year, RPM generated $804 million in loan production, said Elise Watkins, an RPM spokeswoman. That was up 11.4 percent from the $722 million produced in the January-March quarter of 2010.

In contrast, the country’s largest home lender, San Francisco-based Wells Fargo, saw originations for residential loans fall 8.1 percent in 2010 compared with 2009, regulatory filings show. However, in the first quarter of 2011, Wells Fargo’s originations for home loans rose 10.5 percent compared with the year-ago January-March period, the bank said.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE

Team Empowerment Mortgage Chatter: May 24; Look Past The Headlines; National Housing Survey: What Americans Think; Appraisals: Why You Must Now Sell Your House Twice; RPM in Contra Costa Times

“The art of resting the mind and the power of dismissing from it all care and worry is probably one of the secrets of energy in our great men” – Captain J.A. Hadfield: Author

 

LOOK PAST THE HEADLINES

Earlier this week, Trulia and RealtyTrac issued a press release regarding a survey completed for the two companies by Harris Interactive. The press release, American Expectations for Housing Market Recovery Falters , reported:

“As more cities across the nation experience double dips in home prices, more than half (54%) of U.S. adults believe recovery in the housing market will not happen until 2014 or later, according to the survey released today.”

And both organizations that commissioned the survey addressed the reasons Americans may feel this way:

Rick Sharga, SVP of RealtyTrac

“Our survey reflects a growing perception among potential homebuyers that the housing recovery is still a long way off. Demand remains weak, loans are increasingly difficult to qualify for, and the shadow inventory of several million distressed properties is weighing down the market. All of these things need to improve before housing can recover.”

Pete Flint, CEO of Trulia

“Most Americans, as our latest survey revealed, overestimated how quickly the housing market would bounce back, but when it does, it will likely be a long and gradual process. Looking at the recent double dips in home prices, I expect the rest of 2011 to be volatile for real estate… In my eyes, we have another 18 months until we start to see signs of price stability in the housing market.”

These findings created a rash of sensational headlines declaring the housing market’s further decline.

While we are not sure how people defined ‘recovery’, we don’t disagree that the housing market still needs time to heal. How much time? What do other experts predict? We’ll leave that to another time.

Today, we want to mention other parts of the press release that didn’t receive the same coverage as the the parts that created those strong headlines. Mr. Flint addressed the nation’s concerns (above) but also said:

“On the flip side, mortgage rates won’t stay low forever and even if home prices continue to fall for a bit, now is still a good time to enter the housing market.”

And Ken Shuman, a Trulia spokesperson said:

“According to our latest data, it is more affordable to buy a home than to rent in 78 percent of major U.S. cities. With concerns of rising inflation and the potential for rising interest rates, now is a good time for people to buy and we may not be in this environment for much longer.”

Bottom Line

There is great data about today’s housing market being released almost every day. Let’s make sure that we read not only the headlines but instead study the entirety of the information.


NATIONAL HOUSING SURVEY: WHAT AMERICA THINKS

Each quarter, Fannie Mae releases their National Housing Survey.  They survey the American public on a multitude of questions concerning today’s housing market. We like to pull out some of the findings we deem most interesting each time it is released. Here they are for the most recent report:

The Most Important Reasons to Buy a Home

When we talk about homeownership today, it seems that the financial aspects always jump to the front of the discussion. However, the study shows that the four major reasons a person buys a home have nothing to do with money. The top four reasons, in order, are:

  • It means having a good place to raise children and provide them with a good education
  • You have a physical structure where you and your family feel safe
  • It allows you to have more space for your family
  • It gives you control of what you do with your living space (renovations and updates)

The Home as an Investment

Though most people purchase a home for non-financial reasons, everyone realizes their is a money component to homeownership. Here is what they said on this issue:

  • 66% of the general population (and 71% of homeowners) believe that homeownership is a ‘safe’ investment. This is the first time since the studies inception in 2003 that this number increased.
  • 57% believe that homeownership has more potential as an investment than any other traditional asset class.
  • 67% think that now is a good time to buy a home

Rent vs. Buy

We are always interested in the difference people see in renting vs. owning.

  • 65% of renters have aspirations to someday own their own home
  • 74% of renters think that owning is superior to renting (up 6% since the last survey)
  • 96% of homeowners see homeownership as a positive experience (3% see it as a negative experience) while 82% of renters see renting as a positive experience (16% see it as a negative experience)
  • 92% of homeowners live in a single family residence while 48% of renters live in a multi-unit building

Bottom Line 

Our belief in the value of homeownership grows each time this survey is released.


APPRAISALS: WHY YOU MUST NOW SELL YOUR HOUSE TWICE

Banks have become very conservative when lending mortgage money today. With the current foreclosure challenges in the country, we can’t really blame them. The requirements now necessary to qualify for mortgages have gotten much more stringent and it seems will get even more stringent as we move forward. The banks want to make sure the prospective buyer has the ability to repay the loan. However, this does not just involve the borrower buying the property.

The second way a bank can protect their investment in the mortgage is to make sure that the collateral backing that mortgage is secure. That is where the appraisal comes in. The bank wants to make sure that, should the buyer not be able to make their payments, the house they will be forced to take back will sell for an amount at least equal to the balance left on the mortgage. For that reason, the banks seem to be getting more conservative with appraisals also.

This past week, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) released their Existing Homes Sales Report. In that report, they said:

“11 percent of Realtors® report a contract was cancelled in April from an appraisal coming in below the price negotiated between a buyer and seller, 10 percent had a contract delayed, and 14 percent said a contract was renegotiated to a lower sales price as a result of a low appraisal.”

One out of four real estate transactions was either cancelled (11%) or renegotiated to a lower sales price (14%) because of a low appraisal!!

Bottom Line

Every house now has to be sold twice: first, to a potential purchaser and then to the bank appraiser. And, it seems that the second sale may be the more difficult of the two. Sit with a local real estate professional and make sure you put together a plan for both sales.


RPM ON THE FRONT PAGE OF BUSINESS SECTION OF CONTRA COSTA TIMES

Dodging the debris unleashed by a shattered housing market, RPM Mortgage powered to its most successful year in 2010 and is off to a robust start this year.

Walnut Creek-based RPM generated hundreds of millions of dollars more in mortgage business in 2010 and hired hundreds of new employees over the past two years, a track record that sparkles against the gloomy backdrop of the real estate sector.

“We’ve been very fortunate,” said Robert Hirt, RPM’s chief executive officer. “2010 was the best year in the history of our company.”

The company’s success has been fueled in great measure by its ability to meld its connections to Fannie Mae with a veteran sales force and low interest rates. By being able to sell loans directly to Fannie Mae, RPM has attracted experienced loan officers who can drum up more business.

In 2010, RPM generated $4.55 billion in loan production, up 12.9 percent from the $4.03 billion in loan production in 2009.

The pace is brisk so far in 2011. For the first three months of this year, RPM generated $804 million in loan production, said Elise Watkins, an RPM spokeswoman. That was up 11.4 percent from the $722 million produced in the January-March quarter of 2010.

In contrast, the country’s largest home lender, San Francisco-based Wells Fargo, saw originations for residential loans fall 8.1 percent in 2010 compared with 2009, regulatory filings show. However, in the first quarter of 2011, Wells Fargo’s originations for home loans rose 10.5 percent compared with the year-ago January-March period, the bank said.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE

TEAM EMPOWERMENT MORNING MORTGAGE CHATTER: May 18; RPM in Contra Costa Times; News & Headlines; New Homes Competing Against Foreclosures; Fewer Borrowers Purposely Default on Mortgages; Gas Prices Impact Real Estate Choices

“Many can argue that reality is as it is, but my experience is that the oppositre is exactly true, reality is ours for the making” – Asara Lovejoy: Human potential author and coach

 

RPM ON THE FRONT PAGE OF BUSINESS SECTION OF CONTRA COSTA TIMES

Dodging the debris unleashed by a shattered housing market, RPM Mortgage powered to its most successful year in 2010 and is off to a robust start this year.

Walnut Creek-based RPM generated hundreds of millions of dollars more in mortgage business in 2010 and hired hundreds of new employees over the past two years, a track record that sparkles against the gloomy backdrop of the real estate sector.

“We’ve been very fortunate,” said Robert Hirt, RPM’s chief executive officer. “2010 was the best year in the history of our company.”

The company’s success has been fueled in great measure by its ability to meld its connections to Fannie Mae with a veteran sales force and low interest rates. By being able to sell loans directly to Fannie Mae, RPM has attracted experienced loan officers who can drum up more business.

In 2010, RPM generated $4.55 billion in loan production, up 12.9 percent from the $4.03 billion in loan production in 2009.

The pace is brisk so far in 2011. For the first three months of this year, RPM generated $804 million in loan production, said Elise Watkins, an RPM spokeswoman. That was up 11.4 percent from the $722 million produced in the January-March quarter of 2010.

In contrast, the country’s largest home lender, San Francisco-based Wells Fargo, saw originations for residential loans fall 8.1 percent in 2010 compared with 2009, regulatory filings show. However, in the first quarter of 2011, Wells Fargo’s originations for home loans rose 10.5 percent compared with the year-ago January-March period, the bank said.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE


 NEWS & HEADLINES

NAR released some interesting Realtor profile information.Their median income (half above, half below) declined 4.5% to $34,100 last year, which followed a 3 percent decline in 2009. Members licensed as brokers earned a median of $48,700 in 2010, while sales agents earned $24,900. Per NAR, 16% earned a six-figure income, 14% work less than 20 hours per week, 57% are women. The typical NAR member is 56 years old with only 3% of members being under the age of 30 (22% are 65 or older). NAR had less than 1.1 million members in 2010, a 21.3% decline from the peak in 2006. For all the stats visit NARPress.

Freddie Mac reported that in the first quarter of 2011 fixed-rate loans accounted for more than 95% of refinance loans, regardless of whether the original loan was an ARM or a fixed-rate loan. An increasing share of refinancing borrowers chose to shorten their loan terms during the first quarter. Of borrowers who paid off a 30-year fixed-rate loan, 34 percent chose a 15- or 20-year loan, the highest such share since the first quarter of 2004. We had the MBA’s weekly Mortgage Application Survey this morning. Apps jumped 8% last week, up for the third week in a row. Refinancing was up over 13%, although purchases dropped 3%. Both the overall index and the refinance index reached their highest levels since early December, with refi’s accounting for almost 67% of total apps.

Regardless of debt worries, yesterday the fixed-income market did quite well, and the trend is continuing today. The yield on the 10-yr T-note broke down below 3.15%, making new lows for 2011, and mortgage pricing is going along for the ride. Their prices don’t always move in opposite directions, but once equities slipped into negative territory Treasuries rebounded off the lows on very light activity. The weaker-than-expected housing and Industrial Production data only increased the bid for Treasuries. By the end of the day the 10-yr was down to 3.12% and current coupon mortgage pricing was better by .125-.250 on average mortgage banker selling of MBS’s.

With rates dropping investors sense a short run pickup in refi activity, but also believe that it will be weaker compared to 2010 based on equity issues, LLPA hurdles, and the usual underwriting issues. There’s a sizeable amount of distressed property on the market, credit conditions remain very tight for borrowers, home values keep slipping, existing home owners are having a difficult time selling their homes, and the economy and jobs market aren’t exactly confidence boosters at the moment. All of this puts a damper on lending, as well as homebuilders’ sentiment.

There isn’t much pushing the market today. We had the MBA’s weekly Mortgage Application Survey, noted above. Later we’ll have the release of the FOMC Minutes from the late April meeting at 2PM EST. In the early going here the 10-yr got down to 3.10% (but is now unchanged) and MBS prices are roughly unchanged.


NEW HOMES COMPETING AGAINST FORECLOSURES

Builders broke ground on fewer homes in April as the new-home sector continues to face competition from a glut of foreclosures that in many markets has brought home values down.

Construction on homes and apartments dropped 10.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 523,000 units, the Commerce Department reported on Tuesday. In March, housing starts reached a 585,000-unit pace (an upward revised figure). Residential construction is down 23.9 percent compared to April of last year–its largest drop since October 2009.

Considered the “volatile part” of the new-home market at the moment, construction of multifamily homes (buildings with five or more units) particularly hampered housing starts last month, decreasing 28.3 percent. Single-family home construction–which generally makes up 75 percent of all housing starts–dropped 5.1 percent from a month earlier.

Regionally, the results were mixed. In the South, housing starts dropped 23 percent and 4.8 percent in the Northeast. However, the Midwest posted a 15.7 percent gain in housing starts, as well as the West with 3.7 percent.

Permits for future home construction dropped last month, falling 4 percent to a 551,000-unit pace last month, the Commerce Department reports.

The Distressed Sales Impact

New-home construction is being weighed down by an oversupply of existing homes on the market, particularly foreclosures, experts say. Buyers are increasingly choosing bargain-priced foreclosures and previously owned homes over–in general–pricier new homes.

“Builder confidence has hardly budged over the past six months as persistent concerns regarding competition from distressed property sales, lack of production credit, inaccurate appraisals, and proposals to reduce government support of housing,” NAHB Chairman Bob Nielsen said Monday in statement about the National Association of Home Builder/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index, which shows builders’ confidence about the new-home market remains low.


FEWER BORROWERS PURPOSELY DEFAULT ON MORTGAGE

As home values decreased and more borrowers found themselves underwater, some home owners were opting for “strategic default,” choosing to stop making mortgage payments even though they could afford to pay. But analysts say the trend is on the decline.

In an analysis by JPMorgan Chase into strategic default, analysts found 60 percent of all defaults were strategic by the middle of 2009–that’s more than double the percentage in January 2008.

However, the number has been decreasing. Analysts say that strategic defaults now make up less than 30 percent of all defaults (or 10,000 strategic defaults compared to 20,000 from one year ago) and that borrowers who are delinquent more than 90 days have even “lesser strategic delinquencies.”

“Overall, strategic defaults have stabilized as home prices flattened and initial jobless claims declined,” analysts say.

About 42 percent of underwater borrowers–those who owe more on their mortgage than their home is currently worth–remain current on their mortgage, according to the JPMorgan Chase analysts.

“Of course, the moral hazard of potential strategic defaults in the future is still present,” analysts say. “Even though these borrowers have not been defaulting in large numbers, the event risk remains that they could.”


GAS PRICES IMPACT REAL ESTATE CHOICES

Rising gas prices have spurred homebuyers to look for homes that offer shorter commute times to work, according to a survey of Coldwell Banker Real Estate professionals.

The company conducted the survey online between April 28 and May 3, 2011, and garnered responses from 1,188 Coldwell Banker real estate professionals.

Three-quarters of respondents said the recent jump in gas prices had influenced where their clients chose to live. The main client concern was commute time to work: 89 percent of respondents said buyers look for homes closer to work and 93 percent said a continued rise in gas prices would prompt more homebuyers to choose to live where commute times are shorter.

Almost half (45 percent) of respondents said buyers are choosing homes closer to shops and services as a result of higher gas prices.

According to 77 percent of respondents, more buyers are interested in having a home office compared to five years ago. Of those respondents, 68 percent said the high cost of gas is one reason behind the trend.

“The decision to buy a home has always been tailored around the personal, multifaceted lifestyle needs of each buyer,” said Jim Gillespie, Coldwell Banker Real Estate’s CEO, in a statement.

“Today, rising fuel costs and a person’s decision to commute or perhaps work remotely are additional factors of the decision homebuyers must consider.”

Respondents also attributed a rise in interest in urban living at least partially to increasing gas prices. Some 56 percent of respondents said they had noticed more homebuyers interested in living in cities compared to five years ago.

Of those respondents, 81 percent said a desire to reduce gas spending was a factor, and 93 percent agreed or strongly agreed that the desire for shorter commutes was a factor.

Other reasons noted for the increased enthusiasm for city living were “having everything at your fingertips” (91 percent strongly agreed or disagreed), “being able to walk to places” (76 percent), and “being near public transportation” (52 percent).

Team Empowerment Morning Mortgage Chatter: May 17; Giveaway Update; News & Headlines; Freddie Mac’s HomeSteps Launches Nationwide Sales Promotion; NAR Increases Dues; Distressed Sales Hamper Real Estate Pay

“Unless your campaign has a big deal, it will pass like a ship in the night.” – David Ogilvy in Confessions of an Advertising Man: Was an advertising executive, often called “The Father of Advertising”

 

MONDAY GIVEAWAY – UPDATE

UPDATE: Here’s an update to where we stand with our winners as of today, May 17th.

  1. Donna Chan
  2. Tom Watson
  3. Robin Jaurique
  4. Linda Slagle
  5. Angela Muetterties
  6. Larry Harris & Mary Esteban
  7. Name To Be Announced
  8. Name To Be Announced
  9. FUTURE WINNER
  10. FUTURE WINNER

This means we have 2 open winnner slots for our giveaway. See how to become a winner below. Good Luck! And Congratulations to those who have already subscribed!


News & Headlines

The compensation issue involving Quicken Loans is in the news again as “the U.S. Supreme Court asked the Obama administration for its views Monday on a case that examines when mortgage lenders can be sued for charging fees to borrowers when the lender offers no service in return.” The case centers on a group of lawsuits from Louisiana (the Freeman, Bennett and Smith families) alleging Quicken Loans Inc. charged loan-discount fees to borrowers but did not provide them with reduced interest rates on their loans. HUD has already issued relevant regulations and policy guidance that appears to support the plaintiffs’ contention that “Section 8(b) forbids the paying or accepting of any portion or percentage of a settlement service – including up to 100% – that is unearned, whether the entire charge is divided or split among more than one person or entity.” But does this apply to all transactions involving one or more parties, or is it limited to cases with third-parties and fee-splitting situations? Quicken

What does the House Speaker think about “fixing” the housing industry? “…Government programs aimed at preventing mortgage foreclosures have failed, adding that the only real solution is to wait until we get our economy moving again.” House Speaker

Reuters reports that seven new measures have been added to the eight bills already approved by the U.S. House of Representatives’ panel that oversees Fannie & Freddie. It is doubtful that any will sail through, but is more indicative of the confusion surrounding the mortgage industry that seems to be prevalent in Congress (editor’s opinion.) Anything approved by the panel goes to the House Financial Services Committee, and then the full House, and then the Senate, and then to the president. The fifteen bills include preventing a dividend payment increase, require F&F to disclose certain information in response to requests from the media and the public under the Freedom of Information Act, dispose of non-critical assets such as patents and data, cap the dollar amount of government support, prevent the future creation of agencies like F&F, stop the legal burden from falling on the taxpayer, eliminate the Affordable Housing Trust Fund, pay the employees of F&F on a government worker pay scale, raise the guarantee fees, speed up the reduction in F&F’s portfolio (now at $1.5 trillion), increase the oversight power of FHFA, require F&F to abide by risk retention rules, prohibit debt issuance by F&F, curtail any new business activity for F&F (taking the decision out of the hands of FHFA), abolish affordable housing goals of F&F.

(Take note, however, that HR 1859, introduced to eliminate Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae while still keeping a government presence in the housing finance marketplace by using 5 or more private institutions, would extend current loan limits until Fannie and Freddie are no longer in conservatorship. The proposed bill states that FHFA has six months to provide a transition plan to wind down the GSE’s and must determine within one year after five associations have been chartered whether the GSEs can be safely placed into receivership.)

For the bond market, we saw a bit of an improvement yesterday. Rate-sheet MBS prices ended the day better by about .125 and the 10-yr closed around 3.15%. There was no startling news, but instead a combination of weak economic data (Empire State), continued European debt worries, and “hedge unwinds” related to some corporate pricings. Mortgage banker selling remained in the $1+ billion area.

Last month Housing Starts and Building Permits came in stronger than expected, but not so this time around. Housing Starts were -10.6% for April versus up nearly 13% in March. Permits were down 4% in April versus up 7.5% in March. Housing Starts have certainly not followed the growth in the job market – probably due to the high overhang in existing homes. Starts for multi-family units dropped 24%. Later on at 9:15AM EST are Capacity Utilization and Industrial Production for April, called respectively at 77.6% and +0.4% compared to 77.4% and +0.8% in March. No Fed speakers are scheduled. The 10-yr is down to 3.12% and MBS prices are better by nearly .250.


FREDDIE MAC’S HOMESTEPS LAUNCHES NATIONWIDE SALES PROMOTION

Realtors listen up! In a sign of the times, Freddie Mac’s real estate sales unit HomeSteps is launching a nationwide sales promotion for its inventory of foreclosed homes. “The HomeSteps Summer Sales Promotion is offering up to 3.5% buyer’s closing cost and a $1,200 selling agent bonus for initial offers received until July 31 and escrows are closed on or before September 30. This offer is valid only on HomeSteps homes sold to owner-occupant buyers.” There is a potential two-year Home Protect limited home warranty, along with discounts on appliance purchases. Check out SmartBuy or HomeSteps.


REALTORS, YOUR NAR DUES ARE INCREASING

After months of talking about it, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) voted to raised dues by $40 starting next year to fund its political efforts.

That means Realtors’ national dues will increase from the current level of $80 to $120 starting next year. Well, sort of. Realtors now pay $115 in national dues thanks to a $35 assessment for the NAR’s Public Awareness Campaign that has been renewed and funded at varying levels in three-year cycles since it was put in place in 1998. That assessment is up for review again in 2014, meaning national dues have increased – in real dollars – from $115to $155 starting in 2012.

Factor in local and state associations dues that Realtors must pay to be members of the NAR and you’re talking about some real money after awhile. Here in the Natural State, for example, dues to the Arkansas Realtors Association (ARA) were raised from $100 to $160 starting this year, meaning those Realtors who paid state and NAR dues of $215 in 2010 and $275 this year are looking at $315 in 2012 – an increase of 46.51 percent in dues in two years during a time when housing markets are still in full recovery mode. And that’s not taking into consideration any increase in local dues.


STUDY: DISTRESSED SALES HAMPER REAL ESTATE PAY

Distressed sales and economic conditions are causing real estate professionals to make less and work more than they did back in the housing market’s heyday in 2006, according to an annual survey by Inman News about work and pay trends in the real estate industry.

Overall, the survey of more than 1,000 real estate professionals found that real estate professionals are making less on commissions, closing fewer transactions, and facing a spike in distressed properties that is dampening commissions and compensation for many in the industry.

Slightly more than 20 percent of real estate professionals surveyed said they plan to make $100,000-$200,000 in income from their real estate work – before taxes – in 2011; about 17 percent plan to make $70,000-$100,000; and about 12 percent say they intend to make about $35,000-$50,000 this year from real estate, according to the Inman News report, “Real Estate Compensation in 2011: Changing Times in Work and Pay.”

The survey also found:

▪ Distressed sales dampen incomes. More real estate professionals are finding themselves taking part in distressed property transactions, but distressed properties don’t usually nab the same real estate commission rates as typical sales. In general, experts say that’s because these properties tend to have lower sales prices. For example, REO properties sold for 36.9 percent less than nondistressed properties during the fourth-quarter of 2010, according to RealtyTrac. Distressed properties also tend to take longer to close.

▪ Economic conditions pull down compensation. In a separate 2010 study, most real estate professionals cited local and national economic conditions as having the biggest impact on their compensation and income in 2010. In this most recent study, “distressed properties” was an added option, in which the highest share of real estate professionals selected as having the most impact on their compensation/income in 2010. This is a change from just a few years ago. In 2008, the largest share of responses centered on “competition from agents offering discounts” as having the biggest impact on commission rates (only 3.4 percent of respondents in the latest survey said that was a problem).

▪ Agents report fewer sales. Nearly half of those surveyed said they closed fewer than 11 transactions in 2010.

However, more real estate professionals are optimistic that business is improving and plan to close more transactions this year than last, according to the survey. More than 25 percent of respondents say they expect to close more than 25 transaction sides this year–that’s up from 16.8 percent in 2010 and 15.7 percent in 2009. Also, nearly 70 percent of the real estate professionals surveyed said they expect to close 11 or more transaction sides this year.