Monthly Archives: March 2010

The Housing Bubble – Part 3

http://www.thegreathousingbubble.com/images/HomePageImage.jpgThe Bubble Bursts

When a bubble in a financial market pops, it does not explode in spectacular fashion like a soap bubble; it is more comparable to a breached levee which releases water slowly at first. [1] Once the financial levee is ruptured, the equity reservoir loses money at increasing rates. It washes away the imagined wealth of homeowners who bought late in the rally or used home equity lines of credit to fuel consumer spending until the reservoir is nearly empty and the torrent turns to a trickle. Ultimately, the causes of failure are examined, the financial levee is repaired, and the reservoir again holds value, but not until the dreams and equity of many homeowners are washed away.

Denial runs deep in the financial markets. The vast majority of participants either wants or needs prices to steadily increase. Any facts or opinions that run counter to the idea of ever increasing prices must be quelled in order to prevent a catastrophic collapse of prices due to panic selling. One of the more glaring examples of this phenomenon was the slow leak of information regarding the debacle in the housing market. In February and March of 2007 as the subprime lending implosion became front page news, market bulls were presented with a major public relations problem. It was imperative for the bulls to convince buyers the damage from subprime lending was “contained” and would not “spill over” into other borrower categories and ultimately into the overall economy. [ii] The supposition was that the widespread use of exotic loans was not the problem; it was the practice of giving these loans to those with low credit scores. In other words, it was not the loans, it was the borrowers. This was wrong. It was not the borrowers; it was the loans. Exotic loans were given to people of all credit backgrounds. Subprime borrowers where the first to show distress, but the Alt-A and Prime borrowers had the same problems and experienced the same outcome.

Conventional wisdom (or market spin) was that the risk of default from subprime would not spill over into Alt-A and Prime loans. This argument was made because these two categories have historically had low default rates. Of course, this argument ignored the “liar loans” taken out by those with higher credit scores, the unmanageable debt-to-income ratios, and payment resets for interest-only and Option ARM loans which were also given to the Alt-A and Prime crowd. Historically, this group had not defaulted because they have not been widely exposed to these loan types.

An adjustable rate mortgage resets to a different (usually higher) interest rate or payment schedule at a time specified in the loan agreement. The increase in payment may be caused by an increasing interest rate or it may be caused by a recast of the loan to a fully-amortized payment schedule. In either case, the monthly payment will rise. If a borrower is unable to make the new payment because wages did not increase or perhaps the payment increase was simply too large, the borrower will need to refinance to a new loan with an affordable payment structure. If at the time of refinancing the borrower is not eligible for available loan programs because the borrower or the property no longer meets the prevailing loan standards, the borrower may have no choice but to default on the existing loan and go through foreclosure on the property. In short, if borrowers cannot make the new payment or refinance, they will lose their homes. This is how many borrowers lost their homes during the Great Housing Bubble.

Loan standards vary over time as the credit cycle loosens and tightens. Many borrowers in the bubble rally were qualified with low credit scores, very high combined-loan-to-values, high debt-to-income ratios, and little or no income verification. When the ensuing credit crunch occurred, all of these standards were tightened and many of those who previously qualified did not qualify under the new standards. If no other conditions changed, this tightening of standards would have forced many borrowers into foreclosure; however, this credit tightening caused a chain reaction sending market prices for residential real estate which were already falling into an even steeper decline.

Figure 27: Adjustable Rate Mortgage Reset Chart

The Adjustable Rate Mortgage Reset Chart produced by Credit Suisse in 2007 details the dollar amounts of mortgages facing payment resets in the six years from 2007-2012. The bulk of the first two years (24 months on the chart) are loan resets from subprime borrowers who purchased in 2005 and 2006. These subprime borrowers paid peak prices for properties. Most of these borrowers were given 100% financing (if they could have saved up for a downpayment, they probably would not have been subprime,) and they were often only qualified based on their ability to make the initial payment rather than on their ability to make the payment after the reset. There was a special loan program called a 2/28 that most subprime borrowers purchased. [iii] This loan fixed a payment for two years; afterward, the payment would increase to a higher interest rate and on a fully-amortized schedule over the remaining 28 years. The payment shock was extreme. This created a condition where most subprime borrowers could not refinance or make their payments, and many of these borrowers defaulted on their loans. Data from early 2008 showed the 2006 and 2007 vintage of subprime loans default rates running close to 50%, and this was before the resets were coming due. Most of these subprime borrowers who went into default lost their properties in foreclosure, and these foreclosures were added to the supply of an already overwhelmed real estate market.

Figure 28: ARM Reset through Foreclosure to Final Sale

There is a sequence of events which occurs between the mortgage reset and the final sale of a property to a new owner on the open market. After the borrower is faced with a mortgage reset, many try to make the new payment and keep their houses. They may borrow from other sources including credit cards or even their retirement accounts–anything to make the payment and keep their homes. Depending on the resources available and the burden imposed by the new payment, the borrower may stay afloat for an indefinite period of time. Some chose to give up immediately and 30 days later, they are in default. Once a borrower defaults on a loan, in most states the lender is required to wait 90 days to give the borrower a chance to get current on their payments. Once a borrower is 90 days late, he receives a Notice of Default from the lender. Following the Notice of Default, there is another 90 day window where the borrower can make good on their payments. If he is unable (or unwilling) to do so, the lender will file a Notice of Trustee Sale and schedule a public auction for 21 days later. If the borrower cannot pay back the loan or find other ways to delay the process, the property is put up for public auction, generally on the courthouse steps in the jurisdiction where the property is located. At this auction, the lender will generally bid the amount of the outstanding loan and hope another party bids more and pays them off. If the lender is the highest bidder, which is often the case, the lender ends up owning the house.

During the bust, the vast majority of properties at auction went back to the lenders because the loan amounts usually exceeded market value. Properties purchased by the lender at a foreclosure auction are called Real Estate Owned or REO. Lenders are not permitted to keep REOs on their books for long, so these properties are offered at market prices, and they must be sold. It will take some time for the property to be prepared for sale. Once the property is finally listed for sale in the conventional resale market, the lender will follow loss mitigation procedures intended to maximize revenue from the property. This often delays the eventual sale 90 days or more. The whole process from mortgage reset to final sale in the market takes at least a year, and it may take much longer.

The subprime borrowers made up the bulk of the mortgage rate resets in 2007 and 2008. Since the default rates were very high, and since prices were already falling before these REOs were added to the market, the subprime foreclosures pushed prices down significantly. This effect was not uniform as subprime borrowers were often concentrated in specific areas or communities. Markets with large concentrations of subprime were decimated first, but all markets are interrelated, as all real estate markets within driving distance are linked together by commuters. When the subprime-dominated markets declined, they created a drag on prices and sales volumes in nearby markets. There was a price differential that enticed people to fringe markets. This created a price drag on the primary markets as some potential buyers were siphoned off by the fringe markets. In California, the collapse of the real estate market was like a land tsunami: it started inland and made it way overland to the coast leveling everything in its path.

The loan reset issue is not confined to those who bought late in the bubble rally. Many borrowers are homeowners who refinanced to take advantage of more favorable loan terms. During the Great Housing Bubble, prices rose dramatically in nearly every market nationally. With such a dramatic increase in prices, one would expect the total home equity for homeowners to increase dramatically as well. If fact, the opposite occurred; home equity declined during the rally of the real estate bubble. By the end of 2007, home equity as a percentage of home values was at record lows. Where did all the equity go? Existing homeowners spent it, and many new homeowners had such low downpayments, that they had very little equity to begin from the start. Refinancing and home equity withdrawal is the primary reason home equity did not rise as prices increased. There was a great deal of conspicuous consumption in the bubble rally, particularly in California. It seemed every house had two luxury cars in the driveway, the malls were always full of shoppers, and every homeowner was busy competing with her neighbor to see who could look richer. Many also spent their “liberated” equity to acquire other properties which was a major driver of the prices in the bubble rally.

Figure 29: Total Home Equity, 1985-2006

Aggregate home equity statistics can be misleading because approximately 30% of US households have no mortgage at all. Also, during the bubble rally, home ownership increased 5% nationwide, and many of these new homeowners were subprime borrowers who utilized 100% financing. This will have some impact on home equity statistics, but it is not sufficient to cancel out a 45% increase in home prices without massive home equity withdrawal. If the home equity statistics are viewed in the context of those households that have a mortgage, total equity nationwide was around 35% in 2006.

The initial price declines caused by defaulting subprime borrowers set the stage for defaults by Alt-A and Prime borrowers by lowering property values. At the time of this writing, the Alt-A and Prime borrowers have not yet faced the prospect of their loans resetting to higher payments as they start facing resets in 2009 that continue through 2011; however, it is not difficult to speculate on what will happen. Both new homes and foreclosures are must-sell inventory. The presence of must-sell inventory in the market forces prices lower. Builders aggressively cut prices in many markets in 2007 and 2008, and it did not help sales. The builders will be forced to lower prices more in 2009 and beyond until prices bottom in the new home market. Foreclosures increased dramatically in all markets in 2007 as the pressure of large debt loads overwhelmed many borrowers. The number of new units and foreclosures is not a problem in a healthy market, but in a declining market with large numbers of REOs, this must-sell inventory drives prices lower. The lowered property values will make it difficult for these borrowers to refinance because they will no longer meet the more stringent loan-to-value ratios that will be required to refinance. It is likely many of these borrowers will not be able to afford the payment at reset, and they will lose their homes just as the subprime borrowers lost their homes. If Alt-A and prime borrowers had utilized conventional mortgages as they had in the past, they would not be facing the mortgage reset time bomb, and they could simply ride out the subprime debacle just as many homeowners did through the declines of the early 90s. However, it is different this time. This time, the loans they have taken out are going to ruin them. It’s not the borrowers, it’s the loans.

The Credit Crunch

In 2007, the financial markets were abuzz with talk of a “credit crunch.” It was portrayed as some unusual and unpredictable outside force like an asteroid impact or a cold winter storm. However, it was not unexpected, and it was not caused by any outside force. The credit crunch began because borrowers were unable to make payments on the loans they were given. When lenders started losing money, they stopped lending money: a credit crunch.

New Century Financial is the poster child for the Great Housing Bubble. New Century Financial was founded in 1995 and headquartered in Irvine, California. New Century Financial Corporation was a real estate investment trust (REIT), providing first and second mortgage products to borrowers nationwide through its operating subsidiaries, New Century Mortgage Corporation and Home123 Corporation. The company was the second largest subprime loan originator by dollar volume in 2006. On April 2, 2007, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protections. [iv] The date of their financial implosion is regarded as the day the bubble popped. The death of New Century Financial has come to represent to death of loose lending standards and the beginning of the credit crunch. Subprime lending was widely regarded as the culprit in starting the cycle of credit tightening, and New Century has been linked to this problem, but the scale and scope of the disaster was much larger than subprime.

The massive credit crunch that facilitated the decline of the Great Housing Bubble was a crisis of cashflow insolvency. Basically, people did not have the incomes to consistently make their mortgage payments. This was caused by a combination of exotic loan programs with increasing payments, a deterioration of credit standards allowing debt-to-income ratios well above historic norms, and the systematic practice of fabricating loan applications with phantom income (stated-income or “liar” loans). The problem of cashflow insolvency was very difficult to overcome as borrowing more money would not solve the problem. People needed greater incomes, not greater debt loads.

When more money and debt was created than incomes could support, one of two things needed to happen: either the sum of money needed to shrink to supportable levels (a shrinking money supply is a condition known as deflation,) or the amount of money supported by the available cashflow needed to increase through lower interest rates. Given these two alternatives, the Federal Reserve chose to lower interest rates. The lower interest rates had two effects; first, it did help support the created debt, and second, it created inflationary pressures which further counteracted the deflationary pressures of disappearing debt and declining collateral assets. None of this saved the housing market.

Credit availability moves in cycles of tightening and loosening. Lenders tend to loosen credit guidelines when times are good, and they tend to tighten them when times are bad. This tendency of lenders often exacerbates the growth and contraction of the business cycle. During the decline of the Great Housing Bubble, the contraction of credit certainly played a major role in the decline of house prices. Lenders continued to tighten their standards for extending credit for fear of losing even more money. This meant fewer and fewer people qualified for smaller and smaller loans. This crushed demand for housing and made home prices fall even further.

Figure 30: Personal Savings Rate, 1952-2007

One of the biggest problems for the housing market was the reinstatement of downpayment requirements. During the bubble rally, 100% financing was made widely available. This made it unnecessary for people to save money to get a house. People respond to incentives (Deming, 2000). This is basic economic theory. The availability of 100% financing removed the incentive to save for a downpayment. People responded; our national savings rate went negative. [v] Potential homebuyers, who ordinarily would have been saving money for a downpayment to get a house, stopped saving, borrowed money and went on a consumer spending spree. This created a situation in the aftermath of the bubble crash where very few potential entry-level buyers had any saved money for the newly required downpayments. This created very serious problems for a market already reeling from low affordability, excess inventory, and a large number of foreclosures.

100% Financing

Once 100% financing became widely available, it was enthusiastically embraced by all parties: the lenders suddenly had a huge source of new customers to generate high fees, the realtors and builders now had plenty of new customers to buy more homes, and many potential buyers who did not have savings were able to enter the market. It seemed like a panacea; for two or three years, it was. There was a problem with 100% financing (which was masked by the rampant appreciation brought about by its introduction): high default rates. The more money people had to put in to the transaction, the less likely they were to default. It was that simple. The borrowers probably intended to repay the loan when they got it, however they did not feel much of a sense of responsibility to the loan when the going got tough. High loan-to-value loans had high default rates causing 100% financing to all but disappear, and it made other high LTV loans much more expensive, so much so as to render them practically useless. It was all part of the credit tightening cycle.

Besides stopping people from saving for downpayments, 100% financing harmed the market by depleting the buyer pool. In a normal real estate market, first-time buyers are saving their money waiting until they can make their first purchase. This usually results in a steady stream of first-time buyers that enter the market each year. When 100% financing eliminated the downpayment requirement, it also eliminated any need to wait. Those who ordinarily would have bought 2-5 years in the future were able to buy immediately. This emptied the queue. This type of financing appears periodically in the auto industry, especially in downturns when it is necessary to liquidate inventory. The term for this is “pulling demand forward,” because it reduces demand for new cars in the next few years. This might not have been a problem if 100% financing would have been made available to everyone forever; however, once downpayment requirements came back those who would have been saving were already homeowners, so there were few new buyers available, and any potential new buyers had to start over saving for the downpayment they thought would never be required. The situation was made worse because those late buyers who were “pulled forward” from the future buyer pool overpaid, and many lost their homes. This eliminated them from the buyer pool for several years due to poor credit and newly tightened credit underwriting standards. Thus, most who thought 100% financing was a dream come true found it to be a nightmare instead.

Table 9: Increasing Interest Rates Impact to House Prices

$ 244,900

National Median Home Price

$ 47,423

National Median Income

$ 3,952

National Monthly Median Income

28.0%

Debt-To-Income Ratio

$ 1,106.54

Monthly Payment

Interest Rate

Loan Amount

Value

Value Change

4.5%

$ 218,387

$ 272,984

18%

5.0%

$ 206,127

$ 257,659

12%

5.5%

$ 194,885

$ 243,606

6%

6.0%

$ 184,561

$ 230,701

0%

6.4%

$ 177,046

$ 221,307

-4%

7.0%

$ 166,321

$ 207,901

-10%

7.5%

$ 158,254

$ 197,818

-14%

8.0%

$ 150,803

$ 188,503

-18%

8.5%

$ 143,909

$ 179,886

-22%

9.0%

$ 137,522

$ 171,903

-25%

9.5%

$ 131,597

$ 164,496

-29%

10.0%

$ 126,091

$ 157,613

-32%

Note: An increase in interest rates will have a strongly negative impact on house prices.

Rising Interest Rates

Mortgage interest rates are determined in an open market and are subject to the forces of supply and demand. These rates are the sum of three main components: riskless rate of return, risk premium, and inflation expectation. The Great Housing Bubble was characterized by historic lows in the federal funds rate, risk premiums and inflation expectations which resulted in the very low mortgage interest rates. When credit tightened as prices started to decline, the federal funds rate was lowered in an attempt to provide liquidity to the financial markets. This did temporarily lower one of the three components of interest rates; however, since other central banks around the world did not immediately follow with similar rate cuts, the value of the dollar declined and inflation began to rise. This increased the inflation expectation among investors. The impact of increased inflation expectation was greater than the drop in short-term interest rates, and mortgage interest rates rose steadily. Declining prices also caused losses for lenders as many borrowers defaulted on their loans and the value of the collateral was not sufficient to recover the loan balance. As lenders and investors lost money, they began to demand higher risk premiums. The greater risk premiums and higher inflation expectations caused interest rates to rise and house prices to fall.

Higher interest rates had a dramatic impact on exotic financing as it became more expensive for borrowers. Interest rate spreads grew and the qualification standards tightened to the point they were not usable. This was driven by the defaults and foreclosures. In the heyday of negative amortization loans, lenders qualified borrowers based only on the teaser rate payment without regard to whether or not they could afford the payment at reset. For more sophisticated borrowers, lenders allowed stated income or “liar loans.” Basically, borrowers would tell lenders how much they wanted to borrow, and lenders would fill out fraudulent paperwork showing the borrowers were making enough money to afford the payments. This is amazingly irresponsible lending, but it was widespread. Once the price crash began, lenders required borrowers to be able to actually afford the payments; of course, this makes many borrowers unable to obtain financing. When a negative amortization loan costs 13.8% rather than 3.8%, few borrowers wanted it, and if lenders required borrowers to actually afford the 13.8% interest rate, few borrowers qualified. Either way, negative amortization loans died, and the fate of stated income loans was no better.

Mortgage rates for prime customers were very low because they rarely default. During the rally few defaulted because prices were rising; people just sold if they got in trouble. This allowed banks to originate risky loans at very low interest rates because the loans did not appear risky. Once the market stopped rising, the underlying risk started to show with increasing default rates and default losses. When prices crashed, default rates increased for all borrower classes. Prime borrowers did not default at the high rates of sub-prime borrowers, but they still defaulted at rates higher than in the past; therefore, interest rates increased for prime borrowers as well. The crash in house prices caused all mortgage interest rates to rise. Banks have to make enough money on their good loans to pay for the losses on their bad loans and still make a profit. Higher interest rates make for lower amounts of borrowing, and this in turn leads to lower house prices.

Summary

The ratio of house prices relative to incomes rose considerably during the Great Housing Bubble. Some of this increase was due to lower interest rates, but in bubble markets most was due to supply constraints, regulatory delays, deteriorating credit underwriting standards, and irrational exuberance and the belief that prices were going to rise forever. People stretched to buy real estate as evidenced by the increasing debt service burdens they took on during this time. The rally reached affordability limits where buyers could not push prices any higher. Once these limits were reached, lenders were forced come up with new programs allowing borrowers to take on even more debt to push prices higher, or the rally was going to end. Once prices stopped rising, people lost their incentive to buy and ultimately prices began a decline. This decline is expected to continue unabated until prices fall back to fundamental valuations, or perhaps even lower.


[1] Robert Shiller noted that the causes of a major turning point signifying the popping of a real estate bubble are “fuzzy.” (Shiller, Historic Turning Points in Real Estate, 2007) Any events associated with the end of a speculative bubble may be simply coincidental.

[ii] Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave a speech (Bernanke B. , 2007) in front of the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress on March 28, 2007 when he claimed, “Although the turmoil in the subprime mortgage market has created severe financial problems for many individuals and families, the implications of these developments for the housing market as a whole are less clear. The ongoing tightening of lending standards, although an appropriate market response, will reduce somewhat the effective demand for housing, and foreclosed properties will add to the inventories of unsold homes. At this juncture, however, the impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime market seems likely to be contained. In particular, mortgages to prime borrowers and fixed-rate mortgages to all classes of borrowers continue to perform well, with low rates of delinquency.” In short, the FED Chairman completely missed the scale and scope of the problem. Either that, or he knew how bad the problem was and chose to lie for public relations impact.

[iii] According to Credit Suisse, 80% of subprime loans were the 2/28 variety.

[iv] The information on New Century Financial comes from their website.

[v] Studies have shown people feel less need to save when house prices are increasing in value (Baker D. , 2002).

IHB News 3-20-2010

Today's featured property is a Woodbridge dreamer hoping to cash out in our re-inflated housing bubble.

Irvine Home Address … 23 EMERALD Irvine, CA 92614

Resale Home Price …… $1,125,000

{book1}

I'll speak a little louder

I'll even shout

You know that I'm proud

And I can't get the words out

Oh I…

I want to be with you everywhere

Oh I…

I want to be with you everywhere

(Wanna be with you everywhere)

Fleetwood Mac — Everywhere

IHB News

The Irvine Housing Blog saw tremendous reader traffic this week. Four posts were picked up by Patrick.net:

Swiss Central Bank Openly Discourages Mortgage Lending (irvinehousingblog.com)

Why Do Struggling Houseowners Keep Paying Their Mortgages? (irvinehousingblog.com)

Responsible House Owners Are Hurt by Irresponsible Loan Owners (irvinehousingblog.com)

One Defaulting Owner's Free Ride: Three Years and Counting (irvinehousingblog.com)

Calculated Risk also made us a feature of the post: Squatter Stimulus: No Mortgage Payment for Three Years and Counting.

Where does IHBs traffic come from?

The numbers below are from IP addresses Clicky can identify their locations. The raw numbers do not mean much, but you get some idea of the geographic concentration of our readers.

Below is a graphic of the last 500 visitors taken on Friday evening.

Jack Otremba

When I lived in Florida, I became very close friends with Chris and Sharon Otremba. Two years ago, they nearly lost their first child as he was born prematurely at a birth weight of one pound one ounce. He was given a 10% chance of survival.

Over the last two years, I have been following this story closely. It is difficult to imagine what it is like to have your baby undergo multiple life-threatening surgeries and accept a difficult prognosis of future problems. This family knows love like few others.

Jack recently celebrated his second birthday, and he keeps defying the odds. As he continues to grow and develop, his prognosis continues to improve as well. He is poised to live a normal life but with a unique life story.

Link to Video on Jack Otremba.

Matthew John Gilmer

Since I brought up babies, I also want to congratulate my cousin Kathryn and her husband Steve who announced the delivery of their first child on March 16th. My Aunt Pat needs to master emailing photos….

Housing Bubble News from Patrick.net

US House Prices Decline 1.9% in January (calculatedriskblog.com)

6 SoCal Houses Showing the Continued California Housing Correction (doctorhousingbubble.com)

Florida foreclosures create logjam in courts (miamiherald.com)

Phoenix real estate agent pleads guilty in fraud scheme (abc15.com)

KB House ex-CEO tried to keep stock option scheme secret (latimes.com)

Lessons learned from 25 years of forecasting the US economy (emerginvest.com)

Greenspan On The Housing Bubble: Not My Fault (npr.org)

Former Soviet Union to blame for housing bubble: Greenspan (financialpost.com)

Federal Reserve Wants To Eliminate Reserve Requirements Completely? (theeconomiccollapseblog.com)

Unusual Admission that National Debt Will Never Be Paid (thenation.com)

Land tax can reduce other taxes (kansascity.com)

Who is prospering from Prop 13? Commercial landlords. (almanacnews.com)

More houseowners are opting for 'strategic defaults' (latimes.com)

More owners opt to walk and leave mortgages behind (azcentral.com)

Free house for any deliquent CA mortgage owner (patrick.net)

Houseowner associations block guests (orlandosentinel.com)

Alameda land-use ruling could lower cost of a house in CA (sfgate.com)

How to lose $222 million in real estate (lansner.freedomblogging.com)

US mortgage demand tepid even as loan rates sink (reuters.com)

Artificially Low Interest Rates Pump Up Asset Prices (pbs.org)

Fed System Designed to Punish Savers and Encourage Debt (mybudget360.com)

The Fed To Stop Buying Mortgages? (curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com)

Housing Market Sure to Double-Dip (cnbc.com)

US Mortgage delinquencies at historic highs (moremoney.blogs.money.cnn.com)

Orange County Feb. bankruptcies highest for the decade (jan.freedomblogging.com)

Winners and losers if inflation skyrockets (finance.yahoo.com)

Misconceptions about Money and Velocity (Mish)

Foreclosure starts up nearly 20 percent in California (centralvalleybusinesstimes.com)

Central Valleys Stanislaus County tops for mortgage fraud (modbee.com)

Ex-NY bank president first accused of TARP fraud (reuters.com)

Is it time for Canadians to bottom fish for US real estate? (montrealgazette.com)

Avalanche of Maturing Junk Bonds Looms for Markets (nytimes.com)

Moodys Warns U.S. Debt Could Test Triple-A Rating (nytimes.com)

It's Official: The US Housing Downturn Has Resumed in Earnest (huffingtonpost.com)

New round of foreclosures threatens housing market (washingtonpost.com)

Houseowners take cash for keys to escape debt (msnbc.msn.com)

How Strategic Default Could Save Our Economy (blog.youwalkaway.com)

Something From Nothing (Mish)

Realtors lie about when to buy (mobile.nytimes.com)

The Foreclosure Shadow Market Grows (motherjones.com)

Kern County, CA Property Value Per Sqft Back to 2002 (kerndata.com)

Wall Street: Inside the Collapse (cbsnews.com)

Planet Money Tracks Its Very Own Toxic Asset (npr.org)

Rental investors braving a dismal apartment market (latimes.com)

The Going Gets Tougher For Borrowers (nytimes.com)

FHA challenged on projected risk to taxpayers (washingtonpost.com)

The higher the price range, the worse the market (ocregister.com)

$35 million house assessed at $3.2 million (lagunahomes.freedomblogging.com)

Nicolas Cage: One-Man Real Estate Bubble (nbcnewyork.com)

Irvine Home Address … 23 EMERALD Irvine, CA 92614

Resale Home Price … $1,125,000

Home Purchase Price … $650,000

Home Purchase Date …. 8/13/1993

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $407,500

Percent Change ………. 73.1%

Annual Appreciation … 3.3%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$1,125,000 ………. Asking Price

$225,000 ………. 20% Down Conventional

5.00% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$900,000 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$232,942 ………. Income Requirement

$4,831 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$975 ………. Property Tax

$0 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$94 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$80 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$5,980 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$1323 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$1081 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$438 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$141 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$4,154 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$11,250 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$11,250 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$9,000 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$225,000 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$256,500 ………. Total Cash Costs

$63,600 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$320,100 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 23 EMERALD Irvine, CA 92614

——————————————————————————

4 Beds

3 full 1 part baths Baths

3,070 sq ft Home size

($366 / sq ft)

5,000 sq ft Lot Size

Year Built 1984

5 Days on Market

MLS Number U10001082

Single Family, Residential Property Type

Woodbridge Community

Tract L2

——————————————————————————

Turn Key,Remodeled and Expanded with approx.3,070 sf In desirable Woodbridge, Landing II tract. Huge Great Room w/custom Granite Fireplace,New Built in Cabinets,65' Pioneer Elite TV,is open to Kitchen and Large Eating Area Combo,French Doors & Windows.Gourmet Kitchen with Granite Counters,Custom Cabinets,Stainless Oven & Microwave,Meile Dishwasher,Reverse Osmosis. Hardwood flors,Plantation Shutters.Vaulted ceilings in Sunken Living Room.Formal Dining Room.Custom Crown Moldings,Chair Rails & Paint.Lake view Master Suite,dual sided fireplace,2 walk in closets,built in bookshelves. Separate Laundry room,washer&dryer included.Dual AC's,wired for Security System,Tankless Hot water heater,built in garage cabinets.Beautifully hardscaped w/built in BBQ,Putting green in back yard (no house backing up to this).Low tax rate (1.03544%),No Mello Roos!Among Highest Rated Schools in CA.Assoc has 23 pools,2 tennis clubs,2 lakes,bike & walking trails,parks.

I think this is cool. Of course, I get weak around nice built-in bookshelves:

Guys, do you have this much stuff? Perhaps I am too Spartan.

realtors Slammed in New York Times

I last pounded realtors back in January in Urgency Versus Reality: realtors Win, Buyers Lose. It's a subject entertaining to revisit. Today, the New York Times takes a shot.

Warning! This post has a graphic with an objectionable four-letter word… and perhaps another seven-letter word….

Irvine Home Address … 35 MORNING Vw Irvine, CA 92603

Resale Home Price …… $1,275,000

{book1}

Oh I should have seen the signs

Now we're falling back in time

So far from where we started

So far from what we wanted

And I'm trying to right this wrong

So I need you to be strong

So far from where we started

So far from what we wanted

State of Shock — Money Honey

As the housing bubble deflates, I am struck by how far we are from where we started, and rather than try to regain our sanity, we blow air into the bubble, we foster moral hazard, and we embrace any get-rich-quick scheme available. There is no concern for the collective good any longer. Or are we only concerned with homeowners. If so, then everyone should own a home; thus it must be a great time to buy, right?

Great Time to Buy (Famous Last Words)

By DAMON DARLIN

Published: March 12, 2010

“IT’S a great time to buy a home.”

Real estate agents were saying that in 2001, as home prices were rising. They also said it when home prices peaked in 2005 — in fact, David Lereah, former chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, published a book that year titled “Are You Missing the Real Estate Boom?”

And many real estate agents said it was time to buy as prices began to drop — and continued to say it over the past several years as prices fell by an average of 33 percent in America’s 20 largest cities.

Mr. Lereah would acknowledge that he had gotten it wrong. But from the perspective of many real estate agents, it is always a good time to buy.

I suppose I should be content trashing David Lereah in the Wall Street Journal, but since his name popped up in this article, I couldn't resist.

“What they are really saying is that it is a good time to be involved in a transaction that generates a commission,” says Barry Ritholtz, C.E.O. and director of equity research at FusionIQ, a quantitative research firm. He’s also author of “The Big Picture,” an irreverent blog on markets.

Barry is the man! [pictured right]

Glenn Kelman, chief executive of Redfin, is not.

“I can’t prove to you that housing prices have definitely bottomed out,” Mr. Kelman says. “I can say with a fair degree of certainty that the cost of money will go higher.” [I agree]

OF course, if rates go up, home prices tend to dampen. Borrowing $300,000 at 5 percent costs you $1,610 a month. If rates rise to 6 percent, that’s $188 a month more, or $67,680 over 30 years. Would the price of a $375,000 house fall because of a half-point rate hike? Now you are back to guessing about home prices. Don’t go there. Maintain your focus.

WTF? Don't go there? Don't think about future house prices? I thought I was going to be able to praise Redfin's guy, but then he spouted nonsense like a realtor, so I will try not to focus on that.

“People are frequently buying for the wrong reasons,” says Frank LLosa, a real estate agent working in northern Virginia. In most cases, he says, they think that they are getting an income tax break or that their home is an investment.

He points out that a buyer of a $300,000 home would have to see the house appreciate $18,000 just to cover the commission and closing costs. Then figure in the predictable costs of maintenance, the opportunity costs of the mortgage down payment and the amount one could have saved by renting a similar place more cheaply.

Mr. LLosa thinks that many people — including him — would be better off renting. People ought to buy a house for what he calls “warm and fuzzy feelings,” but they shouldn’t try to predict home prices. Nor should real estate agents, who aren’t much wiser.

“I don’t think real estate professionals should be in the business of telling people when it is a great time to buy,” he said.

I like this guy. Might he be a Realtor with a capital R? "An alternative perspective on Real Estate… the truth." Wow! This is promising. Check out some of these posts: Go FSBO! Save $20,000! Agent Tells All!; Agent Rebates. Free Money or Expensive Savings?

A good time to buy?

Bulls celebrate massive government intervention as a good thing, as if we are rescued from a temporary downturn and prices are set to head to the moon. Personally, I think that is crazy, particularly locally and closer to the coast, but I am just an opinionated blogger.

What do you think? Do you believe this is a good time to buy?

Irvine Home Address … 35 MORNING Vw Irvine, CA 92603

Resale Home Price … $1,275,000

Home Purchase Price … $695,000

Home Purchase Date …. 8/28/2001

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $503,500

Percent Change ………. 83.5%

Annual Appreciation … 7.0%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$1,275,000 ………. Asking Price

$255,000 ………. 20% Down Conventional

5.00% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$1,020,000 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$264,001 ………. Income Requirement

$5,476 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$1105 ………. Property Tax

$0 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$106 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$376 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$7,063 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$1476 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$1226 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$496 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$159 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$5,016 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$12,750 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$12,750 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$10,200 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$255,000 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$290,700 ………. Total Cash Costs

$76,800 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$367,500 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 35 MORNING Vw Irvine, CA 92603

——————————————————————————

3 Beds

2 full 1 part baths Baths

2,415 sq ft Home size

($528 / sq ft)

5,000 sq ft Lot Size

Year Built 1979

3 Days on Market

MLS Number S608552

Single Family, Residential Property Type

Turtle Rock Community

Tract Rp

——————————————————————————

35 Morning View is the home that you have been waiting for.Sit and look out at spectacular views of Shady Canyon,Strawberry Farms Golf Club,the lake/reservoir, mountains and city lights.This secluded home is located at the end of a cul da sac with a large landscaped island. As you enter the courtyard,with bubbling fountain,through the Dutch Entry doors you are in the homes entry and formal dining room,with vaulted ceilings and wood floors. A few steps up and you are in the formal living room with it marble fireplace,handcrafted mantle and panoramic,sit down view.The master bedroom is on this level with a walk in closet,built-ins,French Doors to the deck and views,views, views.Downstairs is a family room with another fireplace,built-ins,a door to the large patio and more views. There are also two bedrooms and a full bath downstairs.The kitchen is on the main level and is light and bright with an oversized skylight,built in refrigerator and an eating area. Don't miss this fantastic home.

Did the agent forget to mention THIS IS A DUPLEX!!! $1,275,000 for a duplex that needs an updated kitchen. Hmmm… No bubble here.

Nice view…

I am not sure if these owners deserve a B for mortgage management. They refinanced their mortgage in 2003 with a lower balance and lower interest rate, so it appears they may have even accelerated their payoff which would earn an A, but there is no way to be certain. There are two HELOCs that appear later which would earn them a C, but there is no other evidence that they took out the money.

I hope you have enjoyed this week, and thank you for reading the Irvine Housing Blog: astutely observing the Irvine home market and combating California Kool-Aid since 2006.

Have a great weekend,

Irvine Renter

Why Do Struggling Homeowners Keep Paying Their Mortgages?

With the housing entitlement firmly in place, borrowers have little incentive to continue making mortgage payments, particularly if they have difficulty with the payment or if they are underwater. [image content warning]

Irvine Home Address … 1 West ALBA Irvine, CA 92620

Resale Home Price …… $675,000

{book1}

You can get just so much from a good thing

You can linger too long in your dreams

Say goodbye to the "Oldies But Goodies"

Cause the good ole days weren't always good

And tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems

Billy Joel — Keeping the Faith

Homedebtors are struggling borrowers who cannot afford their payments or are deeply underwater. They are keeping the faith in appreciation and dutifully making their payments — for now. Homedebtors are the lynchpin holding together the housing market; if they lose faith in appreciation, as they have in subprime markets, then they may strategically default in large numbers.

The banking cartel in cahoots with the US government created a huge problem for themselves. They provide borrowers an attractive alternative to paying their mortgage; borrowers who strategically default and properly game the system can take advantage of the loan owner housing entitlement and squat in the property indefinitely. Over the last few days, I profiled HELOC abusers in Irvine and Riverside County who are living in homes they don't own and are not paying for, squatting by virtue of signing loan documents — if only lease documents were so advantageous…

It really makes me pause and wonder why any struggling homeowners make their payments. They have much to gain and little to lose. If they stop paying, it frees up thousands of dollars of income each month. That is, after all, why people want to pay off their house, so they don't have a payment. If homeowners simply stop paying now, they will still have a house, and they will not have a payment. It is just as useful as having the house paid off, it is much easier to accomplish, and it requires no patience or discipline — we wouldn't want to burden mortgage holders with that.

Absent false hope and faith in the miraculous recovery, there isn't much reason to hold on. Many homedebtors simply can't afford the properties they have. If they stop paying, the lender will not boot them out; they can dance with lenders indefinitely, and when those ploys run out, they can game the system further. If enough people dance at the same time, lenders will fear stopping the music, and shadow inventory will cover the land.

Millions of defaulting borrowers are occupying homes without paying. Few are saving this money. Some don't save because they are unemployed and don't have it, and some don't save because it is a four-letter word. Much of the money that went into mortgages is being spent by squatters and propping up the economy. Here in California the economy is not showing many signs of life — improvement yes, but activity is not robust. Those that are unemployed are not contributing to the economy, and those that are over leveraged are not either because so little of their income is available to spend.

How Strategic Default Could Save Our Economy

… So what’s the answer? Less debt. Also known as de-leveraging. Not more stimulus and bailout paid for by taxpayers… which partly ends up in the bankers bonus check. The answer is also in getting back to freedom. Our country was founded on freedom and we have betrayed ourselves by thinking it’s ok to owe thousands of dollars to other people. This has robbed our freedom and caused us to be so dependent upon working long hours and doing everything to just “get by”. I am sick of just “Getting by”.

Since the government can theoretically spend only what it takes from the people (taxpayers), its increased spending will drive the people to poverty. We are allowing this to happen to our country.

After 2 and a half years of listening to YouWalkAway.com customers and seeing time after time that by defaulting, they feel freedom again, they can afford a normal life again, I am convinced that a strategic default could possibly save our economy…and much quicker than any other solution that I’ve seen thus far. Let’s look at a real life example.

In the WSJ, there is an article titled: American Dream 2: Default, Then Rent

“It’s just a better life. It really is,” says Ms. Richey. Before defaulting on her mortgage, she owed about $230,000 more than the home was worth. People’s increasing willingness to abandon their own piece of America illustrates a paradoxical change wrought by the housing bust: Even as it tarnishes the near-sacred image of home ownership, it might be clearing the way for an economic recovery.

In the WSJ, there is an article titled: Americans Pare Down Debt

“The speed of the adjustment is lightning fast because it’s happening through debt destruction,” said Joseph Carson, director of global economic research at AllianceBernstein in New York. “It puts us closer to the point where the consumer can start making a stronger contribution to recovery.”

I guess I’m not alone in my thinking. In essence, you are taking back the power from the bank by saying I don’t care about my credit score right now, I care about my economic future. You are creating your own stimulus package by following the law and staying in the home until the bank takes it back. There is a breakdown of how it works here.

“A rapid and cost-efficient mark to market”. consider: Snow Job: Strategic Defaults in an Era of Negative Equity

Strategic walkaways employ laws established to protect them from predatory or avaricious lending practices. They create an efficient, rapid, cost-efficient mark to market, stripping away inaccurate and illusory pricing practices that lenders cling to. Solving the mortgage crisis is going to take more than nibbling away at the edges of valuation, tweaking monthly loan payments through interest rate adjustments and loan extensions.

Being protected from crisis may simply be doing nothing more than preventing and delaying a true healthy economic recovery. Strategic defaults are paving the way for true home values, responsible lending practices and allowing for homeowners that once felt trapped…to be free again.

Jon Maddux, CEO

More homeowners are opting for 'strategic defaults'

Borrowers are certainly sending a message to lenders.

March 17, 2010

[Wynn Bloch bought her Palm Desert house for $385,000 in 2006. Now she says it will never be worth anywhere near the amount of her mortgage, so she stopped paying on her loan and moved out. (Bret Hartman / For The Times / March 4, 2010). Not pictured right?]

Wynn Bloch has always dutifully paid her bills and socked away money for retirement. But in December she defaulted on the mortgage on her Palm Desert home, even though she could afford the payments.

Bloch paid $385,000 for the two-bedroom in 2006, when prices were still surging. Comparable homes are now selling in the low-$200,000s. At 66, the retired psychologist doubted she'd see her investment rebound in her lifetime. Plus, she said she was duped into an expensive loan.

The way she sees it, big banks that helped fuel the mess all got bailouts while small fry like her are left holding the bag. No more.

"There was not a chance that house was ever going to be worth anywhere near what my mortgage was," said Bloch, who is now renting a few miles away after defaulting on the $310,000 loan. "I haven't cheated or stolen."

Ms. Bloch is right. Her and her lender entered into a contract; they loaned her money, and she agreed to to give up her house if she failed to pay the money back. She is exercising her contractual right. It just annoys me that the lender is passing the loss on to us.

Many homeowners are just coming to grips with the idea that prices will take years to reach the pre-crash peak: as long as 14 years in California, according to economist Chris Thornberg.

Stuck with properties whose negative equity won't recover for years, and feeling betrayed by financial institutions that bankrolled the frenzy, some homeowners are concluding it's smarter to walk away than to stick it out.

"There is a growing sense of anger, a growing recognition that there is a double standard if it's OK for financial institutions to look after themselves but not OK for homeowners," said Brent T. White, a law professor at the University of Arizona who wrote a paper on the subject.

People who conclude it is wiser to default are generally correct. Financially, it is not in their best interest to hang on.

To some homeowners those consequences are a small price to pay to gain a measure of revenge against the financial institutions whose loose money helped fuel the crisis.

Joseph Shull, a 68-year-old marketing professor, said he's planning to walk away from the town house he bought in Moorpark in June 2006.

"I'm angry, and there are a lot of people like me who are angry," he said.

He purchased the home for $410,000 and spent $30,000 renovating. Now the house is worth around $225,000.

Shull admits he overpaid for his property. But he said it fell in value in part because of "regulatory mismanagement."

"The bank stabbed me, but at least I got in a pinprick back," he said. "This is the new economy. The old rules don't apply any more."

As people realize they were screwed by lenders, they default and send their lenders a strong message.

Lenders brought this on themselves

It is difficult to make a case for continuing to pay on oversized mortgages. It is financially crippling to the borrower, and this limitation hurts the local economy because so much borrower money goes elsewhere. If continuing to pay too much is harmful to the borrower and harmful to the borrower's community, and if there are no repercussions for stopping payment with our new housing entitlement, why should borrowers continue to struggle with burdensome debt-service payments? Why should any borrower continue making payments? Why not rely on entitlement? Squat?

I hope you picked up on the subtle sarcasm throughout this post. But my tongue is only slightly in cheek because lenders, enabled by our government, created a situation loaded with moral hazard that encourages people to default in larger numbers. If the entire mortgage system falls apart, you and I as taxpayers will pay for it. Even now, we pick up the unpaid mortgage bills.

You are paying the bills of squatters everywhere.

Irvine Home Address … 1 West ALBA Irvine, CA 92620

Resale Home Price … $675,000

Home Purchase Price … $674,000

Home Purchase Date …. 12/10/2009

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $(39,500)

Percent Change ………. 0.1%

Annual Appreciation … 0.4%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$675,000 ………. Asking Price

$135,000 ………. 20% Down Conventional

5.00% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$540,000 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$139,765 ………. Income Requirement

$2,899 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$585 ………. Property Tax

$0 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$56 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$79 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$3,619 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$709 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$649 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$263 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$84 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$2,608 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$6,750 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$6,750 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$5,400 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$135,000 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$153,900 ………. Total Cash Costs

$39,900 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$193,800 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 1 West ALBA Irvine, CA 92620

——————————————————————————

4 Beds

2 full 1 part baths Baths

2,266 sq ft Home size

($298 / sq ft)

4,320 sq ft Lot Size

Year Built 1980

58 Days on Market

MLS Number S602198

Single Family, Residential Property Type

Northwood Community

Tract Ps

——————————————————————————

According to the listing agent, this listing is a bank owned (foreclosed) property.

Private Location at the End of a Cul-De-Sac. Sides to Greenbelt, No Homes Behind. Expanded Master Bedroom with Fireplace, Dual Vanities, Walk-In Closet, Seperate Shower and Tub. Fireplace in Family Room. Attached 2 Car Garage with Direct Access. Private Spa in Back Yard. Side Yard on Both Sides of Home, Breakfast Nook, Formal Dining. It does need some minor repairs, but at this price it's worth it.

That description is a bit austere, but I appreciate the truthful observation in the final sentence.

Who lived here?

Gaming the System

How many loan modifications are we going to give this borrower?

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 11/12/2009

Document Type: Notice of Sale (aka Notice of Trustee's Sale)

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 05/07/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 12/30/2008

Document Type: Notice of Rescission

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 12/04/2008

Document Type: Notice of Default

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 08/14/2008

Document Type: Notice of Rescission

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 06/11/2008

Document Type: Notice of Sale (aka Notice of Trustee's Sale)

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 03/06/2008

Document Type: Notice of Default

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 11/05/2007

Document Type: Notice of Rescission

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 07/02/2007

Document Type: Notice of Default

Who do you think is absorbing the last three years worth of missed payments?

Now we are paying the piano man.

Responsible Home Owners Are Hurt by Irresponsible Loan Owners

Responsible homeowners are not losing their homes, but they are forced to pay a price for the foolish irresponsibility displayed around them.

Irvine Home Address … 43 SANTA COMBA Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $799,990

{book1}

Dance with me

I want to be your partner

Can't you see the music is just starting

Night is calling and i am falling

Dance with me

Fantasy could never be so giving

I feel free I hope that you are willing

Pick the beat up and kick your feet up

Dance with me

Let it lift you off the ground

Starry eyes and love is all around us

I can take you if you want to go

Oh oh

Orleans — Dance With Me

Lenders and borrowers dance with disaster. Borrowers have the lead in the amend-pretend-extend fandango, but as the economy improves, along with lender balance sheets, lenders will take the lead. As the default shuffle plays out, wallflowers who chose not to cha-cha are wilting under the economic distress caused when the music stopped. Dancers are short on chairs.

Walking One Block Damaged By The Housing Crisis

by Tamara Keith

Dana Lane doesn't look devastated.

It's part of a California subdivision built in the late 1980s, a mix of stucco and wood siding with mismatched fences. It looks like so many working-class suburban blocks.

But since the foreclosure crisis started, Riverside County, Calif., has ranked near the top of the list for its rate of homes being taken back by banks. This is a county that has long attracted Los Angeles refugees who drove east until they could afford to buy, then had to commute hours every day. Neighborhoods are hurting. Even people who didn't get swept up in the bubble have been hurt by the bust.

Dana Lane is one particularly hard-hit block in the city of Moreno Valley. There are hints of what its residents have been through — a broken window, for-sale signs and brown lawns.

More than two years into the housing bust, 20 percent of the homes on Dana Lane have gone into foreclosure, and residents here wonder who will be next.

It is difficult for us to relate in our elitist bubble here in Irvine, but prices have been crushed in neighborhoods where borrowers in default have been foreclosed from their homes. Many more foreclosures are yet to come.

Fall from entitlement

Anita Sandoval stopped paying her mortgage five months ago. …

The house across the street just went for $75,000 in a foreclosure sale.

"And I bought mine for $260,000, and it's the exact same home," Sandoval says. "I've been in the house. It's the exact same home." [Ouch!]

But that's not why Sandoval stopped making her mortgage payments. Her savings ran out, and she was finally hit with the painful reality that she and her husband really couldn't afford this house. They never could.

Isn't that a textbook example of The Unceremonious Fall from Entitlement?

HELOC Abuse Riverside County Style

The Bubble Mindset

"Like everybody else, I'm in an upside-down loan," says Brenda Moore, who owes more than $300,000 on her mortgage. This is remarkable considering she bought her house in 1989 for $80,000. A search of public records reveals that Moore, a retired nurse, has refinanced her home eight times since 1998.

The loans are from a who's who of subprime lenders. With each loan she took out more equity, and each time the loan terms got worse.

"Hey, I had a lot of equity, so I would just go in there using it and having a lot of things done — outside and inside," Moore says.

Please, help me with the HELOC abuse grade. Based on her statement — and the fact that she quadrupled her mortgage — would you characterize her spending as thoughtless? She clearly rationalizes spending appreciation, so the grade is at least a D. But do you think she maintained her delusion that she was not spending her house? Or did she cross the line to earn an E?

Moore replaced a sagging fence. She put in new carpet and a tile floor in the kitchen. But that doesn't explain where all the money went. Most of it didn't go to tangible things; it went to raising her five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren even after she was no longer able to work.

At one point, Moore had just pulled out a chunk of equity when a family member passed away. She used the money to help pay for the burial.

"So that was a blessing because I had just — about a week [ago] — had just did the refi and was going to do some more work around the house, and that happened," Moore says.

Who are we kidding here? She blew the money on her entitlements. Even her justifications are weak. This woman spent the money obtained from her home through mortgage equity withdrawal as if this money were earned income. She carelessly managed her finances and created a Ponzi Scheme of debt. Her theft was enabled by her victim, so it is difficult to apportion blame, but there is plenty of guilt to go around. Is that character deserving of sympathy? And your tax money? Not that you have much choice in the matter….

When it got to the point that she could no longer make her mortgage payments, Moore thought about walking away.

But she says the Lord intervened. A nonprofit group helped her get a loan modification. Her payments have been cut in half. When a reporter tells her about the Betts family down the street, she seems a little surprised that there's anyone on the block who didn't refinance.

She is surprised her moral bankruptcy wasn't shared by her neighbors. Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds documents this behavior over the centuries; it's nothing new.

The Lord is now fostering moral hazard? The Lord wanted to bail this woman out rather than see her experience the consequences of her decisions? That isn't the Being I revere. A 50% reduction in payment means her modification is acting like an Option ARM, and this woman will be in foreclosure once banks stop dancing. I wonder if she will feel blessed then?

"So that's good they didn't have to," Moore says. "But then, too, I look at it this way: You're sitting on a bank, so if you can use it, use it because you can't take it with you, so enjoy it while you can."

Any of you that thought she earned a HELOC abuse grade of D rather than an E because you thought her spending was not thoughtless, do you want to rethink your grade?

My Heroes

[William and Laura Betts live on Dana Lane in the community of Moreno Valley, Calif. The couple stand out because they actually paid off their mortgage in 2005. William, who lost his job in November 2009, is glad they don't have to worry about making payments on their house.]

The bubble mindset here was infectious, but it didn't affect everyone.

William and Laura Betts stand out on Dana Lane. They've actually paid off their mortgage. They made their last payment in 2005 at the height of the refinance frenzy. It was a goal from the moment they moved in back in 1986.

This couple made paying off a mortgage a goal and a priority just as I recommend in Time to Payoff and Accelerated Amortization.

"Payment was $750, I think, and the very first payment we sent in 10 extra dollars, and they sent it back because we had to pay at least a whole month's principle, and that was $15 or something — I forget the exact number, but it was more than we had sent in," says William Betts.

Resisting Temptation

Every month they sent in a little extra. They are Mormon and say their faith guided them to be fiscally responsible. Sure, they got calls from mortgage brokers who were eager to help them turn their home into an ATM. But they resisted. They weren't even tempted.

"I'd hear the commercials on the radio about OK, 'This is the ultimate refinance.' And then three months later, the same company and the same radio host was [saying], 'This is the ultimate final refinance,' " William Betts recalls. "And you know that things just can't keep going like they're going without something happening. You think, this is crazy, this is insane. These people — they're foolish." …

It didn't take a PhD in economics to realize the housing bubble was wrong. In fact, that is perhaps the most upsetting element of the entire injustice: anyone could have seen this coming if they chose to open their eyes.

When William Betts thinks about what's happened to this street, he doesn't resent his neighbors' choices or the nice furniture and granite countertops they bought with imagined equity. He just feels bad for them.

"How do I say this?" Betts asks. "Most of our neighbors, I think, sold their inheritance for a bowl of pottage. The Jet Skis are gone, and so is their house." …

I have stated the same many times; conspicuous consumption can be viewed with pity and astonishment rather than envy and jealousy.

Back in November, Betts lost his job. It's the second time in four years he and his wife have had to live off of savings and unemployment. But at least they don't have to worry about their home.

"I just remember the day that we signed the papers that the house was now ours," Betts recalls. "You know, I've slept pretty good every night since then, 'cause when you own your house, you never have to worry about where you're going to live."

That is inner peace emanating from true financial freedom, and it is this family's reward for showing fiscal discipline, ignoring the Joneses, and living a virtuous life. It is sad that they are getting punished for the insanity around them; worst of all, they are being forced to pay for it in taxes as well.

Home prices in this neighborhood may have bottomed — nobody knows. The Bettses' home is now worth little more than it was when they bought it 25 years ago — not much of a reward for doing everything right.

But that's not how the Bettses see it: "Be it ever so humble," says William Betts, "it's ours."

I respect everything these people thought, said, and did.

These are financial titans worthy of much more respect than fools like the Emperor of Irvine. Net worth isn't the value of assets you control, it's the difference between asset value and debt. Debt subtracts from wealth. Debt does not make people rich.

More than a year ago, I wrote Responsible Homeowners are NOT Losing Their Homes. This couple proves it.

Responsible homeowners are NOT losing their homes.

To see the truth in this statement, one needs to have a clear definition of “responsible homeowner.”

A “responsible homeowner” is a buyer who, if they utilized financing, did not stray from the conservative parameters set forth by lenders (prior to the bubble) and financial planners. This includes using a maximum 28% debt-to-income ratio on the mortgage, at least a 20% down payment and fixed-rate conventionally amortizing financing.

Few who fit this definition are going to lose their homes; although, some of them may chose to walk away from the debt because they are hopelessly underwater. The only ones who fit the above definition who are in danger of losing their homes are those who lose jobs; they are the truly sad casualties of the housing bubble. Unfortunately, this is becoming more common due to the financial crisis caused by all the homeowners who borrowed irresponsibly.

Responsible borrowers are not the ones defaulting on their mortgages; irresponsible homeowners are.

If “responsible homeowner” is defined as a buyer who believed they could manage their monthly payment and did so until the loan terms changed, then by this definition, many responsible homeowners are going to lose their homes.

Almost everyone who signed up for a toxic loan thought they could make the payment; most did for a while. Many were convinced they could make the payments by a predatory lender out to make a few bucks on the origination. Many more believed they could supplement their incomes with the rapid appreciation they would enjoy as their house values rose to infinity. Does ignorance to their inability to sustain their housing payments make them responsible?

With so many Californians believing and acting like the irresponsible loan owners at the beginning of this profile, and with so few Californians believing and acting as our heroes, it becomes very difficult to foresee what the future holds. Contrary to popular belief that the housing bust is behind us, we are only in the 4th inning. The consequences of the bust — millions of foreclosures — have been delayed and deferred but not avoided. Will California kool aid survive the bust resulting in permanently inflated prices?

Irvine Home Address … 43 SANTA COMBA Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $799,990

Home Purchase Price … $680,000

Home Purchase Date …. 2/9/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $71,991

Percent Change ………. 17.6%

Annual Appreciation … 101.6%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$799,990 ………. Asking Price

$159,998 ………. 20% Down Conventional

5.00% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$639,992 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$165,646 ………. Income Requirement

$3,436 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$693 ………. Property Tax

$250 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$67 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$47 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$4,493 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$840 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$769 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$311 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$100 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$3,295 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$8,000 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$8,000 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$6,400 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$159,998 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$182,398 ………. Total Cash Costs

$50,500 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$232,898 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 43 SANTA COMBA Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

4 Beds

2 full 1 part baths Baths

2,300 sq ft Home size

($348 / sq ft)

6,005 sq ft Lot Size

Year Built 1996

8 Days on Market

MLS Number S608182

Single Family, Residential Property Type

Westpark Community

Tract Mon

——————————————————————————

Remodeled and Customized 4/5 Bedroom Home at End of Cul De Sac. Entry to Sunny Living Room with High Ceilings and Custom Modern Flooring. Kitchen with Nook Opens to Family Room with Cozy Fireplace and Sliders to Large Backyard with lots of grass. Kitchen is upgraded with Stainless Steel Oven, Dishwasher and Sink, Glass Back Splash and Modern Decor European Cabinets. Main Floor Bedroom Now Used as Den, could be office of converted to 5th Bedroom. Master Suite Has Dual Vanity Sinks, Shower Stall, Tub and Large Walk-in Closet. Large drive-way, and only 4 homes at the end of the Cul de Sac, so great for children to play.. Apx 42 Acre Irvine Memorial Park Nearby with Tennis courts, Soccer Fields, Softball Diamonds, Batting Cages, Outdoor Amphitheatre, Gardens, Fountains, Large Playground, Tot Lot and Gazebo with Picnic Tables. THIS IS NOT A SHORT SALE OR A BANK REO, EQUITY SELLER CAN CLOSE QUICKLY.. OPEN HOUSE MARCH 13 – 12:00 TO 4:00

The flipper spent money well on staging.

Location, Location, Location:

Do you think this site may have some sound and air quality issues?

In the post, Do We Owe Baby Boomers Their Imagined Home Equity for Retirement? I profiled 55 Castillo which was also a corner property. I speculated then as I do now, "Do you think asset managers are disposing of their worst properties first?"

Previous Owners

I am not sure how to grade these owners as HELOC abusers; the choices are D, E, or F. Please help me out.

They purchased the property on 4/29/2005 for $865,000. They used a $692,000 first mortgage, an $86,500 second mortgage, and an $86,500 downpayment. On 12/11/2007 they refinanced with an ARM for $852,000 which withdrew all but $13,000 of their downpayment that was subsequently lost. They defaulted about a year later:

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 08/10/2009

Document Type: Notice of Sale (aka Notice of Trustee's Sale)

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 05/04/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

When these owners took out the new loan and withdrew most of their downpayment, what was going through their minds? If there were merely setting up a routine practice of equity extraction to fuel consumer spending, then they earn a D. If they took this money out carelessly, then they earn a E, but if they took this money out knowing they were likely to go under, then they gamed the system and earn an F.