IHB News 11-6-2010

Keep Wednesday evening November 10 open. You might get a chance to be on national TV.

Irvine Home Address … 105 FALLINGSTAR 59 Irvine, CA 92614

Resale Home Price …… $299,000

Hey, look me over

Tell me do u like what u see?

Hey, I ain't got no money

But honey I'm rich on personality

Hey, check it all out

Baby I know what it's all about

Before the night is through

U will see my point of view

Even if I have 2 scream and shout

Prince — Baby I'm a Star

IHB News

At the IHB Block Party we had on June 16, 2010, Pat Regnier from Money Magazine attended to do research for a story on Orange County real estate. That story is due to appear in the December issue. I may be quoted in the story.

On Friday afternoon, I received a call from a producer from CNN/Money asking me if I could arrange an IHB meeting for Wednesday evening. This producer talked to Pat Regnier, and she is planning to bring a camera man to do a story on our little gathering. I don't know if this story will appear on the web, or if it may make national TV (it probably depends on how it turns out).

I am trying to arrange an event for Wednesday, November 10, 2010. Our usual venue is not available on short notice, so I am looking into other locations. Any suggestions in the comments would be helpful. Dave and Busters at the Irvine Spectrum is a likely candidate, but the person I need to speak to will not be in until Monday. This is not an investor meeting; although, I should have time to discuss the fund with anyone looking to make a last-minute investment.

I will provide more details as they become available, but I will appreciate everyone who attends to show support for the IHB. It should be fun, and you might get on national TV.

Housing Market News

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Fri Nov 5 2010

Gearing up for housing correction version 2.0 (doctorhousingbubble.com)

Bank of America Edges Closer to Tipping Point (bloomberg.com)

No free pass in the mortgage foreclosure debacle (heraldonline.com)

Foreclosure shadow inventory will take more than 40 months to clear (housingwire.com)

Fitch Ratings Predict Longer Recovery Period For Housing Market (rejournalonline.com)

Corporations, wealthy dominating politics (mcclatchydc.com)

Where do we go from here? (sanders.senate.gov)

2 More Nails In Dollar's Coffin: Republican "Victory", and Fed's QE2 (gonzalolira.blogspot.com)

Bernanke Admits Targeting Stock Prices (Mish)

Nic Lenoir Interprets The Oracle's Words (zerohedge.com)

The Fed's $600 Billion Statement, Translated Into Plain English (npr.org)

As Fed Policy Sinks the Dollar, Prices of Essentials Soar (dailyfinance.com)

Who really runs Economy money amp; Banking system (youtube.com)

Federal Reserve celebrates 100 years of dominating America (youtube.com)

Bernanke & FED Warlords Head Back To Jekyll Island To Celebrate 100 Years Of Printing (dailybail.com)

America's Alarm Clock Has Rung: Time's Up (4closurefraud.org)

America Has Been Checkmated By China (patrick.net)

What's it really worth?


Thu Nov 4 2010

7 Million Noncurrent Loans, 2 Million Foreclosures (Mish)

Trump to sell California estate at huge loss: paid $27M, asking $12M (housingwatch.com)

Why Las Vegas Property Tax Assessments Will Exceed Market Value (nreionline.com)

Experts Scuffle Over Australian Housing Market (blogs.wsj.com)

New rule to cool property speculation in Malaysia (btimes.com.my)

On The Reality Of Depressions; Bernanke's Folly (market-ticker.org)

The Fed's big gamble.. even lower interest rates (patrick.net)

Huge bank profits needed to protect the public. Right… (theage.com.au)

Make Rogue Corporations Pay for Foreclosure Crisis (news.yahoo.com)

Stalemate seen in Congress on banking and housing (reuters.com)

Freddie Mac Posts Net Loss of $4.1 Billion (nytimes.com)

Housing Recovery Stalled: Freddie CEO (thestreet.com)

Nancy Pelosi on Jon Stewart (dailybail.com)

Should the IRS Give Taxpayers an Itemized Receipt? (taxprof.typepad.com)

Discussion of Land Tax in Ireland (long video – smarttaxes.org)

Fraud Started At the Very Top: With Government Leaders (washingtonsblog.com)

Mortgage Lending Catching Up to Politicians in Legalized Corruption Department (sites.google.com)

Why not just mortgage your children? (salon.com)

What's it really worth?


Wed Nov 3 2010

Selling $4M-plus house? Wait 6 years! (lansner.ocregister.com)

9 Years of Housing Backlog at Current Sales Pace (Mish)

Houseownership Rate at 1999 Levels (calculatedriskblog.com)

Housing's Head and Shoulders Formation Bay Area Real Estate Trends (bayarearealestatetrends.com)

How the Election Will Affect Housing (newsweek.com)

Houseownership Stays At Lowest Level In A Decade (huffingtonpost.com)

18.8 Million Vacant Housing Units Mean Housing Bottom Still Far Away (economicpopulist.org)

1 out of 21 distressed properties show up on the MLS for Pasadena (doctorhousingbubble.com)

Why interest rates make it a bad time to buy (market-ticker.org)

Bernanke Will Cause "Massive Shock" To The Hong Kong Housing Bubble (businessinsider.com)

Bank of India hikes short-term rates, tightens housing loan norms (thehindubusinessline.com)

Collapse of Irish Economy Predicted in 1998 (RTE on youtube.com)

Irish, Greek bonds drop (marketwatch.com)

England Housing Prices Out Of Reach For Many First-Time Buyers (nuwireinvestor.com)

First-time House Buyers – Gazundering is your friend (firsthomebuyer.co.uk)

Gaming the New Rules of Health Insurance (kiplinger.com)

The Real Estate Market in 2030 (zerohedge.com)

Fixing The Deficit By Taxing The Rich (dailybail.com)

What's it really worth?


Tue Nov 2 2010

U.S. house prices expected to slide another 8% (money.cnn.com)

Robert Shiller Sees More Housing Pain Ahead (kiplinger.com)

Number of Californians entering foreclosure rises 19% (latimes.com)

Indians investing in US foreclosures (indiatimes.com)

The foreclosure effect on house prices (baltimoresun.com)

Estimating Impact of Land Regulation On House Cost (newgeography.com)

Extreme Readings in Bullish Investor Sentiment, Insiders Bail at Highest Rate Ever (Mish)

Personal income drops unexpectedly (money.cnn.com)

Millions of houseowners keep paying on underwater mortgages (latimes.com)

Two views of the post-housing bubble apocalypse (latimes.com)

Housing Matters Little to U.S. Consumers' Wealth (bloomberg.com)

Quantitative Easing QE2 Won't Necessarily Lead To High Inflation (minyanville.com)

Conflict of interest continue at the banks (nytimes.com)

William Black testimony to Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (patrick.net)

Mortgage bond insurer Ambac misses bond payment. Oh the irony. (news.yahoo.com)

Republicans Now Best At Taking Bribes From Finance and Real Estate Interests (realestatechannel.com)

Well, try reverse again. (dvorak.org)

36 Ind. unemployment officers to have armed guards (chicagotribune.com)

Thank You Marc D. ($50) for your kind donation.

What's it really worth?


Mon Nov 1 2010

Foreclosure Freeze Cuts Sales, Supply in Hardest-Hit States (bloomberg.com)

Foreclosure Mess Even Worse in 'Nonjudicial' States (dailyfinance.com)

Amid mortgage mess, owners blindsided (washingtonpost.com)

Orange County daydreaming prices to increase 50 percent by 2016 (doctorhousingbubble.com)

Housing Question From Down Under (Mish)

Australians swoop in on U.S. foreclosures (money.cnn.com)

Don't Think Housing Matters Like It Used To (businessinsider.com)

To keep college debt to minimum, don't think of it as surefire investment (boston.com)

Keep government out of housing (commercialappeal.com)

Hedge-fund Manager Criticizes Bernanke, Warns Of Hyperinflation (nasdaq.com)

US Hears Echo of Japan's Woes (nytimes.com)

BOA Gets $20 Billion Warning Letter From Insurance Industry (livinglies.wordpress.com)

How the Banks Put the Economy Underwater (nytimes.com)

On election day, make sure we don't throw the bums in (latimes.com)

3.8% tax on real estate transactions applies ONLY to PROFITS over $500,000 (snopes.com)

White collar recession, blue-collar depression (marketwatch.com)

Do the Rich Need Coddling? (motherjones.com)

How to End the National Debt in One Day (youtube.com)

Thank You Brad D. ($20) for your kind donation.

What's it really worth?

Another Option ARM implosion

It is a consistent pattern among HELOC abusers to refinance over and over and finally implode with an Option ARM. Contrary to the myth that Option ARMs were pushed on unsuspecting borrowers, many Ponzis chose Option ARMs because it allowed them to increase their cash-out activities while decreasing their payment. The terms didn't matter; borrowers were being offered free money and a lower payment. Few said no.

  • Today's featured property was purchased on 9/13/2002 for $278,000. The borrowers used a $269,500 first mortgage and a $8,500 down payment.
  • On 6/27/2003 they refinanced with a $273,000 first mortgage.
  • On 12/21/2004 they obtained a $50,000 HELOC. I bet that was a prosperous Christmas….
  • On 8/15/2005 they refinanced with a $384,000 Option ARM with a 1% teaser rate.

No NOD has been filed, but their option ARM is 5 years old now, and they are likely approaching their LTV limit when the loan recasts into a fully amortizing payment. Perhaps they make 30% more than they did in 2004 and they can afford the new mortgage. I doubt it.

Irvine Home Address … 105 FALLINGSTAR 59 Irvine, CA 92614

Resale Home Price … $299,000

Home Purchase Price … $277,273

Home Purchase Date …. 9/13/2002

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $3,787

Percent Change ………. 1.4%

Annual Appreciation … 0.9%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$299,000 ………. Asking Price

$10,465 ………. 3.5% Down FHA Financing

4.29% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$288,535 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$57,005 ………. Income Requirement

$1,426 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$259 ………. Property Tax

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

$50 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$335 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$2,070 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$129 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$395 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$16 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$37 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$1,600 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$2,990 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$2,990 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$2,885 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$10,465 ………. Down Payment

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

$19,330 ………. Total Cash Costs

$24,500 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$43,830 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 105 FALLINGSTAR 59 Irvine, CA 92614

——————————————————————————

Beds: 2

Baths: 2 baths

Home size: 997 sq ft

($300 / sq ft)

Lot Size: n/a

Year Built: 1985

Days on Market: 79

Listing Updated: 40469

MLS Number: H10087361

Property Type: Condominium, Residential

Community: Woodbridge

Tract: Othr

——————————————————————————

According to the listing agent, this listing may be a pre-foreclosure or short sale.

Condominium in Good Condition, very nice area. One bedroom down and one bedroom upstairs. Laminated floors in first floor, carpet on second floor, laundry room right off the kitchen. Located by de pool with visitor parking just a few steps away. Short Sale.

Located by de pool? What's dat?

27 thoughts on “IHB News 11-6-2010

  1. lee in irvine

    Yes … there’s a reason why the media is focused on The OC now. We are indeed one of the wealthiest counties in the country, yet HBO has zoned in on our town with a new documentary:

    Homeless: The Motel Kids of Orange County

    Is Orange County gonna become a town of only have’s and have not’s. Is the bedroom community that many of us grew up in, gone forever? Are cities like Lake Forest & Mission Viejo gonna become overrun with renters as investors wait for the next step down to seize opportunities.

    1. Swiller

      The answer is YES. Lake Forest is already referred to as the “Golden Ghetto” by OCSD,

      Mission Pendejo? …….accomplished

      Never forget, socialism is of the devil, naked capitalism and greed will “trickle down” all the wealth you could ever want, can’t you see how AWESOME this country has become since Reagan…hell since Nixon. Holy shit, if we don’t vote 100% republicans into office we will all die and starve without elite taskmasters to control our every freedom.

      Keep fear and bigotry alive. Maybe we should invade more innocent countries based on lies…er, ahem, I mean “bad intelligence”.

      1. Chris

        Demos didn’t exactly reverse the trend either during the past 2 years.

        Well, if this is any comfort to you, at least it’s a full house Dems here in California. Furthermore, there’s no longer the Prop 13 constraint on CA budget. Whoopie.

        1. Swiller

          I hear you Chris, it’s why I’m a registered non-partisan voter. I tend to be fiscally conservative and socially liberal, there’s no room for me in either party. Tea Party doesn’t cut it by a long shot as it’s just another attempt by the far right wing to repress. SAD.

  2. FoolishRenter

    Home prices likely flat in 2011: NAR
    Five years from now, many will say 2010 was year to buy: economist

    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/home-prices-likely-to-stay-flat-in-2011-nar-2010-11-05?siteid=rss&rss=1

    If NAR say housing price to be flat and volume down, are there conversion factors to say:
    real price increase = +0.7 % NAR estimate – 5% factor?
    % # of sale for existing house = +7% NAR – 6% factor?

    As for low downpayment, the 3.5% down are still available and may go to zero down soon. What buyer with zero percent down will care with CA non-recourse loans about overbidding $50,000. Don’t pay and squat a year or two years. Free rent (with the saving/stimulus package), the saving can be used for per paid rent on the next place. I don’t know very many landlords that will turn down a year of prepaid rent. Credit can be rapidly repaired with the cash and all on the backs of the taxpayers and children.

    1. Swiller

      I have no problem with non-recourse loans….as long as the down payment is a minimum of 20%.

      The investor makes the huge profit margin, they should shoulder the highest risk, but with today’s bankster ass-kissing, people seem to believe investors are saviors and should bear zero chance at failure, but the working class stiff should be put in debtors prison. If that comes to pass, here’s to another civil war. (clink)

      1. FoolishRenter

        Wsiller,
        I too have not problem with non-recourse loans as long as people benefitting have skin in the game. The wise borrower with less than 4% down or WS fund manager “investing” in with govt guarantee have no skin in the game. Borrower can just walk away with earning from squatting. Fund manager is using other peoples money, so down side is if interest rates goes up. The real winners are the banks who wrote the prior non-preforming loans who unloads the RE property as current loan values. The group that has real real skin in the game is the taxpayers, who only can lose (no winning possible). Looks like a rigged wheel to benefit the banks.

  3. .

    http://www.mybudget360.com/las-vegas-city-has-3-times-the-rentals-of-los-angeles-city-and-l-a-has-6-times-the-population-u-haul-rate-trends-and-home-sales/

    [quote]”Las Vegas city has 3 times the rentals of Los Angeles city and L.A. has 6 times the population – U-Haul rate trends and home sales higher in Las Vegas than peak months of the bubble driven by absentee investors.”[/quote]

    home sales in vegas today are higher than during the bubble.

    [img]http://www.mybudget360.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/las-vegas-housing-values.png[/img]

    [quote]And it is absolutely clear that it is investors that are buying these homes, not local demand.
    “In September 43 percent of all purchases were done via absentee buyers.”[/quote]

    1. Planet Reality

      Now for the extra point plot Las Vegas unemployment simultaneously.

      If you want to go for the two point conversion also plot non-owner occupied, energy cost, hotel vacancies, and tax revenue.

      Buy now before there are no more renters left.

  4. Vincenzo

    Any news on how the new old governor will raise taxes?

    It’s about time to repel Proposition 13 and raise property taxes. If somebody has $500,000 to buy a spot in the place with the best schools, he must finance these schools.

    1. Chris

      “If somebody has $500,000 to ***buy***…”

      You mean if somebody’s house is worth $500k when he/she bought it at a mere $7k back in Eisenhower era, correct?

      Prop 13 has no effect on those that have bought recently.

  5. Laura Louzader

    Wasn’t Proposition 13 designed to keep taxes in line with what you paid for your house, so you couldn’t be taxed out of what you bought and paid for decades ago?

    The major reason to buy vs. rent is to be able to keep your housing expense level and predictable. These days that’s difficult, with ever mounting government expenditures and tax hikes. There is no advantage in buying a place over renting when your “rent” to your local government can escalate rapidly beyond your means, which has happened to a number of people I know here in IL.

    The property tax is a brutally regressive way to tax, and it’s one you have to come up with whether you can afford it or not. We need to consider dropping property taxes in favor of a local income tax, and we really need to put caps on SPENDING.

    1. Swiller

      Prop 13 is great for homeowners, however, just like most laws, the insidious corporations have benefited FAR more than your regular Joe.

      Example: Laura buys a home in 1978 for $50,000. In 20 years the home price went up to $800,000. Prop 13 saves the owner from getting taxed out of living in their property. They can increase the taxes 2% per year. Hooray!!

      Example: Disneyland has their business taxed in 1978 on a value of, let’s just say, 40 million dollars. Prop 13 passes and now it can only be raised 2% per year. However, because Disneyland is a business, they will continue to grow and develop their LAND, and the surrounding community up to the State level, will have to provide all the social structure around it (transportation, fire, police, energy, communications) yet Disneyland’s tax base will only go up 2% per year.

      Partial quote –

      “Buffett’s brief willingness to raise Prop. 13 and tax fairness issues was short-lived. Post-election, his frustration was still evident in his letter to Steiger: “My sympathies are clearly with the ‘non-billionaire’ family purchasing a $300,000 house in Chico today that faces real estate taxes marginally higher than those borne by this non-resident billionaire on his $4 million house in Laguna. This family, because of Proposition 13, has been selected to subsidize me.”

      Full story, if you desire to read it
      http://www.baycitizen.org/proposition-13/story/death-and-taxes-sfs-gold-coast/

      1. rkp

        Agree with swiller on this one. Prop 13 saves the corps huge amounts when it was supposed to help poor old ladies from getting kicked out of their house. What’s worse is that if a company buys another company, they still benefit from the old tax value of the company’s properties as its the company they bought, not the properties.

      2. HydroCabron

        Ah, the poor little old ladies. One part of the argument I have never understood.

        If you’re living in a $600K house that you bought for $12000 in 1963, and you can’t make the property tax payments, then you can sell the house – which should certainly have no mortgage on it – and rent a beautiful place for the remainder of your days.

        If property taxes are too high, then lower them; if they’re a poor way to tax, then get rid of them. But don’t create squires who pay less by virtue of when they purchased.

        1. Anonymous

          One simple solution to this I have seen elsewhere is to defer the increased taxes for little old ladies, then pay the tax in full upon sale of the home. Works well, Grandma can afford to stay in the house her husband built, die in it eventually, and the tax is still paid.

    2. Walter

      Or keep Prop 13 in place, but if you refi, and the total borrowed against the property it more then the current P 13 assessed value, reset the Prop 13 value to the new total loan amount.

      This is makes you pay something back if you continue to leverage up and get tax free money to spend and make the system less stable because of increase of leverage.

      1. winstongator

        This is my favorite, and something I’ve mentioned here at least ten times. It is sensible, and the arguments against will sound very poorly reasoned very quickly.

        One way to make prop taxes progressive is to have a homestead exemption. Maybe 100-200k for a person’s primary residence. They have this in FL, but only on $50k of value.

        1. Walter

          How do we get this on the ballot? I doubt it will pass, but I am curious to see how many would vote for it after all we have been through.

  6. Vincenzo

    >You mean if somebody’s house is worth $500k when he/she bought it at a mere $7k back in Eisenhower era, correct?

    >Prop 13 has no effect on those that have bought recently.
    So, if he/she bought a mansion for $7k that worth $500k now, the property tax is ridiculous $70 per year, while it should be at least $5,000.
    I’m sure this little homeowner lady/mister receives enormous subsidies from Medi-cal, Medicare, etc paid by taxes.

    Actually, Proposition 13 has effect on the recent buyers. Their tax is only 1%, but there are workarounds in the form of pseudo-taxes like Mello-Roos.

    The main problem of Proposition 13 is that in order to raise any taxes the governor needs 2/3 of the legislature votes, but there is no such limit when somebody wants to increase spending.

    If California were the capitalist society, the taxes would be low, all people, even the poor, would pay equal share of taxes, schools and universities and hospitals would be private and require full pay.

  7. FoolishRenter

    Time to rewrite prop 13 to include only owner occupied property. This will level the playing field and increase the amount of property recycling in the market by having non-owner occuppied property sale instead of holding based on late 1970’s property taxes.

Comments are closed.