Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Pending Sales of Previously Owned Homes Rise Unexpectedly

After declining for two consecutive months, pending sales of existing homes unexpectedly increased in February, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Monday.

The trade group’s pending home sales index rose 2.1 percent compared to January but remains 8.2 percent below February 2010.

The index reading for last month was 90.8. Despite the month-to-month increase, weakness in the housing market is still apparent, as a reading of 100 indicates a healthy level of sales activity. The last time the pending sales index registered above the 100 mark was in April 2010 when homebuyers were rushing to sign contracts before the homebuyer tax credit deadline.

NAR’s pending sales index is a forward-looking indicator which is based on contracts rather than closings. The pending sales numbers typically lag actual sales numbers by about two months.

However, the latest reading may not be a clear indication of what can be expected of the actual sales numbers in light of statements from NAR earlier this month. The trade group says its market analysis has revealed that a “measurable” number of contracts are being cancelled as a result of appraisals that don’t support prices negotiated between buyers and sellers.

“Month-to-month movements can be instructive, but in this uneven recovery it’s important to look at the longer term performance,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist.

Yun explained, “Pending home sales have trended up very nicely since bottoming out last June, even with periodic monthly declines. Contract activity is now 20 percent above the low point immediately following expiration of the homebuyer tax credit.”

NAR pointed out in its report that there were “notable regional variations” in pending home sales during February, but Yun notes there could have been some weather impact reflected in the data.

“All of the regions saw gains except for the Northeast, where unusually bad winter weather may have curtailed some shopping and contract activity,” Yun said.

Pending sales of existing homes in the Northeast fell 10.9 percent between January and February. The region’s index reading of 65.5 is 18.4 percent below a year earlier.

In the Midwest the index rose 4.0 percent in February to 81.1 but is 15.9 percent below February 2010.

Pending home sales in the South increased 2.7 percent month-over-month to an index of 100.3 but are 5.3 percent below a year ago.

In the West the index rose 7.0 percent to 105.6 and is 0.6 percent higher than February 2010.

On how the pending sales numbers will likely translate to actual sales, Yun said, “We may not see notable gains in existing-home sales in the near term, but they’re expected to rise 5 to 10 percent this year with the economic recovery, job creation, and excellent affordability conditions providing confidence to buyers who’ve been on the sidelines.”

via DSNews.com

San Diego & Washington D.C. record positive year-over-year changes...

Data released Tuesday morning by Standard & Poor’s show that home prices are continuing to trend downwards.

The 10-city and 20-city composites of the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index fell 0.9 percent and 1.0 percent, respectively, in January 2011 when compared to the previous month.

The 10-city composite is down 2.0 percent from its January 2010 level, while the 20-city reading dropped 3.1 percent on a year-over-year basis.

San Diego and Washington D.C. were the only two markets to record positive year-over-year changes. However, San Diego was up a scant 0.1 percent, while Washington D.C. posted a healthier 3.6 percent annual gain.

The same 11 cities that had posted recent index level lows in December 2010, posted new lows in January from their 2006/2007 peaks: Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Detroit, Las Vegas, Miami, New York, Phoenix, Portland, Seattle, and Tampa.

“Keeping with the trends set in late 2010, January brings us weakening home prices with no real hope in sight for the near future” said David M. Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at Standard & Poor’s.

“These data confirm what we have seen with recent housing starts and sales reports,” Blitzer continued. “The housing market recession is not yet over, and none of the statistics are indicating any form of sustained recovery. At most, we have seen all statistics bounce along their troughs; at worst, the feared double-dip recession may be materializing.”

Blitzer explained that S&P defines a double-dip for home prices as seeing the 10- and 20-city composites set new post-peak lows.

He noted that the 10-city composite is still 2.8 percent higher and the 20-city is 1.1 percent above their respective April 2009 lows, but he warns that both series have moved closer to a confirmed double-dip for six consecutive months.

“At this point we are not too far off, and that is what many analysts are seeing with sales, starts, and inventory data too,” Blitzer said.

Looking deeper at market-level results, S&P found that Atlanta has now joined Cleveland, Detroit, and Las Vegas as markets where average home prices are currently below their January 2000 levels.

The agency’s report states that Washington D.C. appears to be the only market that has weathered the recent storm.

It’s the only market to post a month-over-month gain in January, and its annual rate of return is the healthiest among all cities included in the study. Home prices in Washington D.C. are still 10.7 percent above their March 2009 low, and almost 85 percent above the city’s January 2000 index level.

 

via DSnews.com

Friday, March 25, 2011

Cash Investors are King in Today's Distressed Market

 

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For many homebuyers, mortgage financing is hard to come by these days. Lenders have tightened up credit requirements in an about-face from the lax lending of pre-crisis days that put people into mortgages they couldn’t afford and fueled record-high delinquencies.

Evidence of constricted mortgage credit was highlighted in the latest HousingPulse report from Campbell Surveys and Inside Mortgage Finance as cash transactions set a new record, accounting for 33.7 percent of home purchases in February.

A separate study conducted by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) shows the same trend. NAR also found that all-cash sales were a record 33 percent in February. By comparison, they were 27 percent in February 2010, according to NAR’s historical data.

The HousingPulse report notes that the increase in cash purchases last month paralleled a rise in activity among investors, who for the most part have their sights set on distressed properties that can be scooped up at a discount.

Investors bought 23.5 percent of the homes sold in February, up from 19.9 percent just two months earlier, according to the industry survey. Real estate agents participating in the HousingPulse survey of February transactions confirmed the surge in investors.

“We are seeing investors come back into the market. One investor told me that one house he wanted came on Wednesday p.m and had nine offers by Thursday a.m.,” stated an agent in New Jersey.

“There are a number of investors and businesses buying up the short sale and REO properties and renovating them and then selling them as traditional sales,” reported an agent from Arizona.

NAR’s February report on existing-home sales noted that the median sales price on previously owned homes dropped 5.2 percent in February compared to the price points of a year earlier to hit a nine-year low.

The trade group attributed the decline to a larger number of distressed properties in the sales pool – 39 percent in February – thanks to investors with cash in their hands snapping up homes at bargain prices.

There are conflicting views within the industry as to the effect increased investor activity in the distressed property marketplace has on communities struggling to recover from the housing crisis. A separate article here on DSNews.com examines both sides of the debate over whether property investors are solving or contributing to neighborhood blight.

While investor appetite is strong for REOs and short sales that carry a discount price tag, the selection of properties that fall into this class has contracted somewhat.

The HousingPulse Distressed Property Index (DPI) registered a slightly lower reading in February than in January, marking its first decline since last fall.

The report notes that the drop was not likely the result of a healing housing market, rather is appears to be linked to delays in the listing and sale of distressed properties as mortgage servicers continued to deal with legal and regulatory fallout surrounding title and paperwork issues following the robo-signing mess.

The HousingPulse survey polls over 3,000 real estate agents from across the country each month to provide insight into home sales and mortgage usage patterns.

The survey also found that average transactions per real estate agent fell from 2.1 in January to 1.7 in February – a sign the home sales are slipping at a time of the year when they typically begin to increase. The report notes this may be an indicator that the spring buying season will start with a deficit.

via DSNews.com

Sunday, March 20, 2011

15-year mortgage dips below 4 pct.

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Associated Press

By JANNA HERRON, AP Real Estate Writer

Fixed mortgage rates tumbled this week and the 15-year loan dipped below 4 percent for the first time in three months. Rates followed the yield on U.S. Treasury bonds, which fell on worries that the crisis in Japan could slow economic growth.

Freddie Mac said Tuesday the average rate on the 15-year fixed mortgage, a popular refinance option, dropped to 3.97 percent from 4.15 percent. The last time the rate was below 4 percent was in mid-December. It reached 3.57 percent in November, the lowest level on records dating back to 1991.

The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 4.76 percent from 4.88 percent the previous week. It hit a 40-year low of 4.17 percent in November.

Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. Those yields have tumbled as investors sought safer investments.

Low mortgage rates haven't been enough to jumpstart the housing market. Home construction last month plunged to its lowest level in almost two years, while building permits, an indicator of future housing activity, sank to a five-decade low, the government said this week.

Homebuilders remain pessimistic about the outlook for housing. High unemployment, a record number of foreclosures and tough credit standards have kept many people from buying homes. And most economists don't expect home values to bottom out until midyear, another factor dissuading potential homebuyers.

To calculate average mortgage rates, Freddie Mac collects rates from lenders across the country on Monday through Wednesday of each week. Rates often fluctuate significantly, even within a single day.

The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage fell to 3.57 percent from 3.73 percent. The five-year hit 3.25 percent last month, the lowest rate on records dating back to January 2005.

The average rate on one-year adjustable-rate home loans slipped to 3.17 percent from 3.21 percent. That is the lowest level in a year for the one-year ARM rate.

The rates do not include add-on fees, known as points. One point is equal to 1 percent of the total loan amount. The average fee for the 30-year fixed loan and 15-year fixed loan in Freddie Mac's survey was 0.7 point. The average fee for the five-year ARM and the 1-year ARM was 0.6 point.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

West Coast Foreclosure Activity Slowed in February

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Foreclosure activity last month slowed down along the West Coast, according to the foreclosure tracking firm ForeclosureRadar.

The California-based company monitors filings and auctions in Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington, and said the numbers were down across the board. Foreclosure sales saw a similar decline in the firm’s coverage area, and bank-owned inventories were mostly flat, suggesting fewer REOs were sold.

“Foreclosure filings dropped to low levels not seen in quite a while,” says Sean O’Toole, CEO and founder of the company. “We will likely see more sluggish foreclosure activity in the months ahead while lenders continue to work through lingering concerns over foreclosure documentation and deal with process changes.”

Arizona notice of trustee sales were dropped 27.9 percent in February from January. This is the lowest point since ForeclosureRadar began tracking Arizona filings in August 2009. There was also a large dip in foreclosure sales, with a 38.9 percent dip in sales back to the bank and a 14.5 percent dip in sales to third parties.

In California, filings dropped to 2008 levels as notice of default filings dropped 12.8 percent and notice of trustee sales dropped 12.5 percent. On a year-over-year basis filings were down as well, with notice of default filings down 29.6 percent and notice of trustee sales down 17 percent. Foreclosure auctions were down as well, with a 24.5 percent decline in back to bank sales and a 20.3 percent drop in properties sold to third parties.

Nevada notice of default filings decreased 25.2 percent from January levels, also to the lowest rate since the firm began tracking Nevada foreclosures. Notice of trustee sales fell 6.4 percent, reaching the lowest point since February 2010. Foreclosure auctions fell 48.4 percent and sales to third parties fell 35.3 percent.

In Oregon foreclosure filings fell significantly with a 26.3 percent drop in notices of default and a 34.5 percent drop in foreclosure sales. Sales to third parties fell slightly by 2.9 percent and back to bank sales fell 28.2 percent.

Washington saw the smallest decrease in notice of trustee sales with a 2.9 percent drop. Foreclosure sales fell as well, with back to bank sales falling 37.4 percent and sales to third parties down 21.1 percent.

via dsnews.com

Underwater Borrows Get Extension Through Mid 2012

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has pushed the cut-off date for the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) out by a year.

HARP is one of several mortgage aid programs under the administration’s Making Home Affordable umbrella. It allows homeowners who owe more on their mortgage than the home is worth obtain a new loan at today’s lower interest rates with the goal of pulling borrowers “above water” to get out from under plummeting property values.

The program, administered by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, was originally set to expire on June 30, 2011. FHFA has now extended the program through June 30, 2012.

Under the program, borrowers with mortgages owned by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, who are current on their

payments and whose loan-to-value (LTV) ratio is between 80 percent and 125 percent, can refinance into a lower-rate loan.

“The program expands access to refinancing for qualified individuals and families whose homes have lost value,” Edward DeMarco, FHFA acting director, explained in a statement.

In addition to HARP’s extension, FHFA announced changes to each GSE’s program parameters to better align the joint initiative.

Previously, qualifying loans for Fannie Mae had to have been made prior to March 2009, while for Freddie Mac it was prior to May 2009. Going forward, both companies will use the May 2009 cut-off date for program eligibility.

FHFA also said Freddie Mac will be required to exempt HARP loans from its recently announced pricing adjustments. Freddie announced last November that effective March 2011, it was increasing loan level fee pricing up to 50 basis points, depending on the borrower’s FICO score and LTV ratio. FHFA has instructed Freddie to exclude all HARP refinancing from the new fee structure.

DeMarco says HARP has grown substantially over the past year. Through 2010, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased or guaranteed more than 6.8 million refinanced mortgages. Of this total, 621,803 were HARP refinances with LTVs between 80 percent and 125 percent. This is up from 190,180 in 2009, when HARP began.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Research Firm Says U.S. Housing Has Never Been This Undervalued

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by  Mission Hills Prudential

The continuing depreciation of residential property values at the end of last year has made housing look more undervalued relative to income than ever before, according to analysts at the research firm Capital Economics.

Based on the latest Case-Shiller home price index, Capital Economics’ study shows that in the fourth quarter of 2010, housing was 21 percent undervalued when compared with disposable income per capital.

Looking at data included in the index published by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), the firm found that housing in Q4 was 15 percent undervalued as measured against individuals’ disposable income.

Capital Economics says its results illustrate “housing is exceptionally undervalued,” and the gap is getting bigger. In its third quarter 2010 report, the research firm pegged the Case-Shiller index readings as 19 percent undervalued and the FHFA index as 14 percent below what would constitute a balanced housing value in relation to income.

The recent fall back in house prices, coupled with low rates, explains why the initial monthly mortgage payment on a median priced house bought with a 20 percent down payment has fallen to a record low of 13 percent of the median income, Capital Economics pointed out in its report.

Home prices in 29 states hit a new cycle low in the fourth quarter of last year, and the research firm says on both

the FHFA and Case-Shiller house price indices, housing now appears close to fair value when set against rents.

Such favorable valuations mean there is plenty of scope for housing to perform well in the medium-term, according to Capital Economics, but over the next year, the firm says the combination of weak demand, high supply, and more forced sales of foreclosed properties will push prices lower.

As Capital Economics pointed out, the sharp fall in the mortgage delinquency rate at the end of last year means there are fewer homes in the foreclosure pipeline, but the elevated number of defaulted properties still in process means home values will continue to be negatively impacted by the presence of distress for some time.

On top of low prices, mortgage rates have fallen back a bit in recent weeks, leaving them even further below the 20-year average of 7 percent, the firm’s analysts wrote. Last week marked the third consecutive week that rates have continued to decline. A national survey conducted by Freddie Mac shows that the average 30-year fixed-rate has dropped to 4.87 percent, while the 15-year fixed-rate has slipped to 4.15 percent.

When you wrap declining home prices and historically low mortgage rates together, Capital Economics says, “The incredibly favorable affordability and valuation environment is the housing market’s one big positive.”

But despite this fact, mortgage applications have remained subdued. While buyer demand is notably weak by conventional standards, Capital Economics says the decrease in mortgage apps of late reflects, at least in part, the prevalence of cash buyers.

The company says the recent “de-valuing” of housing stock appears to be attracting cash buyers and investors back into the market.

They have driven 70 percent of the increase in existing home sales seen since last July, particularly among heavily discounted foreclosed homes, Capital Economics pointed out. Over that same period, first-time buyers have been responsible for just 6 percent of the increase in sales of previously owned homes.

House Votes to End Emergency Homeowner Relief Program

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On Friday the U.S. House voted to end the Emergency Homeowner Loan Program (EHLP), a program that helps homeowners who are unable to make their mortgage payments because of unemployment.

The fund was established under the Dodd-Frank Act to provide interest-free loans to homeowners for up to 24 months, and would need to be paid back, along with the money homeowners already owe on their mortgages.

This is the second vote to end a foreclosure mitigation program that some lawmakers claim just isn’t working.

On Thursday the House voted to end the Federal Housing Administration’s Short Refi Program which is aimed at homeowners who are underwater.

The House voted to end EHLP 242 to 177, but the termination bill is not expected to make it through the Senate. Even if it did, the White House has promised to veto it.

The vote comes only a few days after HUD announced it would in April begin allocating funds for the program.

Next week the House is set to vote on two more bills that would kill the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) and HUD’s Neighborhood Stabilization Program.

Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-Alabama) said he is pleased with the progress the House has made in terminating the programs.

“The American people sent us here to tell them the truth, and the truth is our country is in serious trouble because of excessive government spending,” he said.

He continued, “We are on an unsustainable path that will lead to ruin … We must take action immediately to change course and put a stop to this reckless culture of spending that has ruled Washington for far too long.”

Friday, March 11, 2011

Mortgage applications at highest level in 3 months: MBA

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Now is the time to buy a home.  Home prices and mortgage rates remain affordable....

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Applications for home mortgages jumped to the highest level in three months last week, buoyed by improvements in the job market, an industry group said on Wednesday.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, rose 15.5 percent in the week ended March 4.

It was the highest level since the week ended December 10 and was the biggest increase since June 11.

The MBA's seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications climbed 17.2 percent, while the gauge of loan requests for home purchases gained 12.5 percent.

"An improving job market is beginning to pave the way for an improving housing market," Michael Fratantoni, MBA's vice president of research and economics, said in a statement.

"Additionally, mortgage interest rates remained below 5 percent for a second week, maintaining affordability for buyers and leading to an increase in refinance applications."

Fixed 30-year mortgage rates averaged 4.93 percent in the week, up from 4.84 percent the week before.

(Reporting by Leah Schnurr; Editing by Diane Craft)

Monday, March 7, 2011

Good bye to Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac? What Happens to 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgages?

by Binyamin Appelbaum
Friday, March 4, 2011

provided by
The New York Times

nytforsale.jpg
A Miami home last month. If Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were closed, homeownership in America could change greatly. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

How might home buying change if the federal government shuts down the housing finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac?

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage loan, the steady favorite of American borrowers since the 1950s, could become a luxury product, housing experts on both sides of the political aisle say.

Interest rates would rise for most borrowers, but urban and rural residents could see sharper increases than the coveted customers in the suburbs.

Lenders could charge fees for popular features now taken for granted, like the ability to "lock in" an interest rate weeks or months before taking out a loan.

Check our Mortgage Calculators here

Life without Fannie and Freddie is the rare goal shared by the Obama administration and House Republicans, although it will not happen soon. Congress must agree on a plan, which could take years, and then the market must be weaned slowly from dependence on the companies and the financial backing they provide.

The reasons by now are well understood. Fannie and Freddie, created to increase the availability of mortgage loans, misused the government's support to enrich shareholders and executives by backing millions of shoddy loans. Taxpayers so far have spent more than $135 billion on the cleanup.

The much more divisive question is whether the government should preserve the benefits that the companies provide to middle-class borrowers, including lower interest rates, lenient terms and the ability to get a mortgage even when banks are not making other kinds of loans.

Douglas J. Elliott, a financial policy fellow at the Brookings Institution, said Congress was being forced for the first time in decades to grapple with the cost of subsidizing middle-class mortgages. The collapse of Fannie and Freddie took with it the pretense that the government could do so at no risk to taxpayers, he said.

"The politicians would like something that provides a deep and wide subsidy for housing that doesn't show up on the budget as costing anything. That's what we had" with Fannie and Freddie, Mr. Elliott said. "But going forward there is going to be more honest accounting."

Some Republicans and Democrats say the price is too high. They want the government to pull back, letting the market dictate price, terms and availability.

"A purely private mortgage finance market is a very serious and very achievable goal," Representative Scott Garrett, the New Jersey Republican who oversees the subcommittee that oversees Fannie and Freddie, said at a hearing this week. "No one serious in this debate believes our housing market will return to the 1930s."

Still, powerful interests in both parties want the government instead to construct a system that would preserve many of the same benefits, with changes intended to minimize the risk of future bailouts. They say the recent crisis showed that the market could not stand on its own.

"The kind of backstop that we have now, if it didn't exist, we would have had a much more severe recession and a much sharper fall in home values," said Michael D. Berman, chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association, which represents the lending industry.

Hanging in the balance are the basic features of a mortgage loan: the interest rate and repayment period.

Fannie and Freddie allow people to borrow at lower rates because investors are so eager to pump money into the two companies that they accept relatively modest returns. The key to that success is the guarantee that investors will be repaid even if borrowers default -- a promise ultimately backed by taxpayers.

A long line of studies has found that the benefit to borrowers is relatively modest, less than one percentage point. But that was before the flood. Fannie, Freddie and other federal programs now support roughly 90 percent of new mortgage loans because lenders cannot raise money for mortgages that do not carry government guarantees.

One prominent investor, William H. Gross, the co-head of Pimco, the major bond investment firm, has estimated that he would demand a premium of three percentage points to buy such loans -- a cost that would be passed on to the borrower.

 

Proponents of a private market want the government gradually to withdraw its support, allowing investors to regain confidence. They argue that interest rates would eventually settle into roughly the same patterns that held before the financial crisis.

Some supporters of government backing also like the idea, believing that it will demonstrate the need for a backstop.

"I myself am eager to see whether there needs to be a guarantee," said Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, a crucial Democratic voice on housing issues.

Fannie and Freddie also make ownership more affordable by allowing borrowers to repay loans with fixed-interest rates over an unusually long period. A person who borrows $100,000 at 6 percent interest will pay $600 each month for 30 years, compared to $716 each month for 20 years.

The 30-year loan first became broadly available by an act of Congress in 1954 and, from then until now, the vast majority of such loans have been issued only with government support. Most investors are simply not willing to make such a long-term bet. They prefer loans with adjustable rates.

Alex J. Pollock, a former chief executive of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, said such loans would remain available in the absence of a federal guarantee, but they might be harder to find. And lenders might demand a larger down payment. Or a better credit score.

That would be a very good thing, said Mr. Pollock, now a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Longer terms make ownership affordable only by increasing the total cost of the loan, because the borrower pays interest for a longer period. Moreover, Mr. Pollock noted that over the last several years, borrowers with adjustable-rate loans paid less as interest rates fell, while those with fixed rates kept paying the same amount for devalued homes.

"One of the reasons that American housing finance is in such bad shape right now is the 30-year mortgage," he said, noting that such loans are not available in most countries. "For many people, it's not at all clear that that's the best product."

Fannie and Freddie also allow a wide swath of the American public to borrow money at the same interest rates and on the same terms. Borrowers who did not meet their standards were forced to pay higher interest rates to subprime lenders, but the companies essentially persuaded investors to treat a vast number American families as if they were interchangeable.

They took messy bunches of loans, with risks as variable as snowflakes, and created securities of uniform quality, easy to buy and sell. The result was one of the most popular investment products ever created.

And in its absence, experts on housing finance say that fewer borrowers would qualify for the best interest rates.

Susan M. Wachter, a real estate professor at the University of Pennsylvania, said a new government guarantee was needed to preserve a homogenous market.

"There needs to be a systematic way of preventing" fragmentation, said Professor Wachter. "That's what we need a bulwark against. Because if there isn't, it will occur."

The government seems least likely to maintain a final set of benefits -- leniencies in loan terms that taxpayers effectively have subsidized for borrowers.

Fannie and Freddie slashed the requirements for down payments in recent years, saying that they were helping people with minimal savings become homeowners. Two-thirds of the borrowers whose loans were guaranteed by the companies from 1997 to 2005 made a down payment of less than 10 percent. But borrowers who invest less default more often. The Obama administration has said that it wants the companies to demand a minimum down payment of 10 percent.

A quirkier example is the ability to "lock in" an interest rate. Fannie and Freddie permitted lenders to make such promises at no risk because the companies had already obtained commitments from investors. In the companies' absence, borrowers seeking rate locks may need to pay for them.

 

 

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Friday, March 4, 2011

CA single- and multi-family housing starts

SFR and Multi-Family Residential Construction

Chart last updated 2/27/2011

Chart last updated 2/27/2011

Data courtesy of Construction Industry Research Board
*Forecasts are made by first tuesday in January and adjusted in July based on current new homes sales trends, actual construction starts and government measures taken in reaction to national and state economics.

TRENDS:

  • 1,506 SFR starts were originated in January of 2011. This is a 45% drop from December 2010. A large decline from December to January is not historically abnormal, but this is the most dramatic one-month drop in SFR starts since before the start of the Great Recession.
  • The pace of single family residence (SFR) construction during January 2011 was at an annual rate of 22,100 starts; 27% below one year ago.
  • The present trend in the number of SFR starts is flat, following a downward trend that lasted from 2004 through February 2009.
  • The most recent peak year in SFR starts was 2005, with 155,322 starts, and the most recent trough year is 2010 with a total of 25,387 SFR starts.
  • Average dollar value of an SFR start in January 2011 was $306,444. This is 19% more than one year ago, and 40% more than the peak year of 2005.

FORECAST:

  • The forecast for total SFR starts in 2011 by the Construction Industry Research Board (CIRB) is 33,000. This is up 30% from 2010.
  • first tuesday’s own forecast for total SFR starts in 2011 is 35,000, up 38% from 2010.
  • The trough year for SFR starts in the Great Recession was most likely 2010, and the next peak year for SFR starts is likely to occur during the three year period of 2016-2018, as forecast by first tuesday.

APARTMENT/CONDO CONSTRUCTION TRENDS

  • 1,414 apartment/condo starts were originated in January 2011. This is a 42% drop from December 2010.
  • The pace of apartment/condo construction during January 2011 was at an annual rate of 17,500 starts; 22% above one year ago.
  • The present trend in the number of apartment/condo starts is flat, following a downward trend that lasted from 2004 through May 2009.
  • The most recent peak year in apartment/condo starts was 2004 with 61,543 starts, and the most recent trough year is 2009 with a total of 10,967 apt/condo starts.
  • Average dollar value of an apartment/condo start in January 2011 was $132,140. This is 4% more than one year ago, and 26% more than the peak year of 2004.

FORECAST:

  • The forecasted total apartment/condo starts in 2011 by the Construction Industry Research Board (CIRB) is 29,000. This is up 49% from 2010. Note that CIRB forecasts tend to be set artificially (and unreasonably) high in the first months of the year, and are usually readjusted downward as time passes.
  • first tuesday’s own forecast for total apartment/condo starts in 2011 is 20,000, up 2% from 2010.
  • The trough year for apartment/condo starts in the Great Recession occurred in 2009, with the next peak year for apartment/condo starts likely to occur during the two year period of 2016-2017, as forecast by first tuesday.

STATISTICS RELATED TO CALIFORNIA HOUSING:

  • Population growth in California is currently at an annual pace of 427,000 (according to the US Census Bureau).
  • The number of people employed in California in December 2010 was 14,016,100 (from the CA Employment Development Dept.), down 1,332,100 (9%) from the December 2007 peak of 15,348,200.
  • The downward trend in the number of California jobs has ended, and is beginning to rise once more (though slowly). [For more detailed information on current employment trends, see first tuesday's Market Chart, Jobs Move Real Estate]
  • The number of vacant homes and apartments/condos was 500,000 in early 2009, as reported by the USPS. The US Census Bureau reports that the rental vacancy rate in 2009 was 7.6%, and the SFR vacancy rate was 2.2%. [For more on vacancies in California, see first tuesday's Market Chart, California Residential Vacancy Rates]

Copyright © 2010 by first tuesday Realty Publications, Inc. Readers are encouraged to reprint or distribute this information with credit given to the first tuesday Journal Online — P.O. Box 20069, Riverside, CA 92516.