Category Archives: News

The Housing Bust Did Not Deflate The Mortgage Bubble

House prices have crashed in many markets but banks have barely begun the process of writing down their bad loans.

Irvine Home Address … 6 INDIANA Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $999,000

Celebrate the day you've waited for

Party like you're ready for so much more

Do it like you know it's never been done

Go a little crazy, have too much fun

Today's the day, come on everyone

The party's just begun

The Cheetah Girls — The Party's Just Begun

The big mortgage write down party has just begun. Banks have barely scratched the surface on the total dollar value of loans they will need to write off.

The housing bubble was really a credit bubble. Lenders extended far too much credit to people who had no ability to repay it. When the housing market crashed, lenders were in no rush to write their loans down to market value. The result is a huge remaining bubble in home mortgages.

Many lenders honestly believe house prices will rise back to levels that will eliminate the negative equity problem. This is wishful thinking on a grand scale. In reality, the overhang of distressed properties will keep price appreciation in check for quite some time. The mortgage bubble will be deflated by a combination of short sales and foreclosures — many facilitated by accelerated default — causing lenders to write down the mortgage debt to reach market values.

Mortgage Bubble Haunts Housing Recovery

By Lita Epstein Jul 20th 2010

You may not realize it, but there's another major financial bubble ready to burst. Few are talking about it, but Michael David White, a mortgage and real estate professional has graphed the mortgage bubble due to burst.

When the housing bubble burst, it left many with underwater mortgages. Yet nothing was done to deal with the debt levels on these homes. The mortgage values shown on the banks' books are still elevated beyond their true worth.

Right now we're seeing more and more people walk away from this debt. While property values fell from $20 trillion to $13 trillion when the housing bubble burst. Mortgages fell from $11.95 trillion to $11.68 trillion.

John Lounsbury, a financial and investment adviser, says home equity is now over 90 percent mortgaged. Historically our mortgage levels were 50 to 60 percent. He agrees with White that we're in a mortgage bubble that is ready to burst. In order to get back to the normal historic relationship, Lounsbury says "outstanding mortgage values would need to be about $7 trillion, which is $5 trillion below the latest level."

He says, "Banks are looking to resolve this bubble by waiting for mortgage repayment and for house prices to rise." He calls this the "extend and pretend" mode. The big question is: Will people continue to pay these mortgages as they wait for homes to rise enough in price to get back above water. In some of the hardest-hit areas that could take 10 to 20 years or longer.

There is no way borrowers are going to wait that long. Most can't. Do you think people will remain immobilized through 2025 for a decision they made in 2005? No way. When it becomes apparent house prices are not coming back, people will give up hope and walk away. Look for the double dip to crush the feeble hopes of those who haven't accelerated their inevitable defaults.

The Business Insider focused on the 15 hardest hit areas, with Nevada leading the pack. In Nevada, 69.9 percent of mortgages are underwater. Arizona comes in second with 51.3 percent of mortgages underwater, and Florida is third with 47.8 percent.

Based on mortgage debt, we're becoming a country of haves and have-nots. Those stuck in homes underwater cannot move to find work in another location, even if there's no work where their home is located. Without jobs, they may have no choice but to walk away or work with their bank for a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. In many cases, these homes are so far underwater that banks won't agree to short sales.

As more and more people realize that they have no choice but to give up their homes, the mortgage bubble will deflate. The only question left is whether the bubble will burst rapidly or continue to deflate slowly as foreclosures are resolved.

I do think the mortgage bubble will deflate slowly. Lenders are being allowed to use mark-to-fantasy accounting, so there is no regulator pressure to write down the loan balances. Also, denial is a basic human reaction to catastrophe, and borrowers will surrender and capitulate at different rates. The brief bear rally we just witnessed will give false hope to many who will hang on for a few more payments.

But Lounsbury thinks that some areas of the country that have not yet been hard hit by the housing meltdown are ripe for problems. For example, he thinks the New York area is a bubble waiting to happen. In fact, Keith Jurow of the Real Estate Channel thinks a housing collapse in Queens is almost certain.

IMO, you can add coastal California to that list. I still believe the high end is going to be wiped out. There are no government supports for the jumbo loan market, and very few people can afford the large number of homes priced in that range.

As the housing bubble continues to deflate in areas that right now are not among the hardest hit, will that finally cause the mortgage bubble to burst? Will the banks be able to withstand these shocks or are we looking at another bank bailout?

Based on some reports, the banks may have pushed the worst of these mortgages onto Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, leaving the taxpayers holding the bag for this next bubble burst. So the big question is not whether there's a mortgage bubble, but who will be left holding the bag when it bursts.

There is no question that we will engineer another bailout for the banks if the mortgage bubble deflates too quickly. Whatever losses cannot be pushed off to the taxpayer through the GSEs will become part of another massive bailout. Either that, or we will print money until the problem goes away.

The $4 Trillion Dollar Question

By Barry Ritholtz – July 15th, 2010

The US has built far too many houses

Perhaps homeowners suffering negative equity are patiently expecting house prices to rise again. But they may be in for a long wait. Prices are likely to be weighed down by a massive oversupply of homes relative to underlying demographic demand.

Between 2002 and 2006, US homebuilders went on a construction binge, building 12 million new homes while the number of households went up by just 7 million. The painful legacy is a massive oversupply of houses relative to the number of households.

The oversupply will take years to clear

With household formation running at just 0.9 million while the US is still building 0.6 million new homes annually, only 0.3 million of the oversupply will be absorbed per year. As there are currently 4 million too many homes, it may take years to mop up the huge oversupply of houses.

The negative equity problem and excess inventory will put pressure on the government to continue to subsidize mortgage interest rates. If interest rates rise and prices resume their downward slide, more people will opt for accelerated default causing the mortgage bubble to finally deflate.

Like foolish buyers during the housing bubble, banks really have no plan B. They are in amend-extend-pretend mode for the long haul. They can't afford to lose $4,000,000,000,000, yet that is what they must do. Perhaps they can extend it long enough to only lose $2,000,000,000,000? The banks have much pain ahead.

Peak buyer walks away

This property was purchased on 10/4/2006 for $1,150,000 the owner used a $805,000 first mortgage, a $115,000 stand-alone second, and a $230,000 down payment which was lost at auction. This property was pushed through the foreclosure process in about a year, so this owner did not get as much squatting time as others.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 11/12/2009

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 07/22/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

In a last minute attempt to record an interest in the property, there was a loan for $10,500 recorded three days before the trustee sale. I don't know what they were hoping to accomplish as the first lien holder blew them out at trustee sale. This property, like many other trustee sale flips I profile, was purchased by Palladio Properties LLC, a fund very active in the Irvine market.

The property was auctioned on 4/5/2010 for $814,000. The opening bid was $751,500. After sales commissions and preparation for sale, Palladio Properties LLC will probably make about a 12% profit on this deal.

If you would like to learn how you can get involved with trustee sales, please contact me at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

Irvine Home Address … 6 INDIANA Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $999,000

Home Purchase Price … $814,000

Home Purchase Date …. 4/5/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $125,060

Percent Change ………. 15.4%

Annual Appreciation … 63.0%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$999,000 ………. Asking Price

$199,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.59% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$799,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$197,306 ………. Income Requirement

$4,092 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$866 ………. Property Tax

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

$83 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$116 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$5,157 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$981 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$1035 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$343 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$125 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$3,609 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$9,990 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$9,990 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$7,992 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$199,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$227,772 ………. Total Cash Costs

$55,300 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$283,072 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 6 INDIANA Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

Beds: 5

Baths: 2 full 1 part baths

Home size: 3,471 sq ft

($288 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 8,100 sq ft

Year Built: 1998

Days on Market: 82

Listing Updated: 40355

MLS Number: S614610

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Community: Walnut

Tract: Camb

——————————————————————————

Large Beautiful Home in Harvard Square Gated Community. 5BR & 3BA with Large Bonus Room. 3 Fireplaces decorated with Marble. Plantation Shutters, Crown Moldings & Recessed Lights Through out. Upgraded Porcelain Tile & Hardwood Flooring. Granite Countertop & Walk-in Pantry in Kitchen. New Stainless Steel Appliances Installed.

Prime Loan Delinquencies Increase for 37th Straight Month

Prime mortgages are defaulting at ever-increasing rates. The problem with mortage delinquency is not improving.

Irvine Home Address … 14902 ELM Ave Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $769,000

Cars are crashin' every night

I drink n'drive everything's in sight

I make the fire

But I miss the firefight

I hit the bull's eye every night

It's so easy, easy

Guns N' Roses — It's So Easy

It is rare to find a great deal of consistency in financial data. There are always statistical blips where some indicator moves against the prevailing trend, and reporters are keen to report on any insignificant change as if it is a new trend. For the last 3 years, the news on mortgage delinquencies has been very consistent — consistently bad. This is one indicator that hasn't yet provided the slightest glimmer of hope to those waiting for the housing rebound.

Seriously Delinquent Prime RMBS Rise for 37th Straight Month: Fitch Ratings

Diana Golobay — Tuesday, July 13th, 2010, 11:22 am

The 60-plus-day delinquency rate for US prime residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) rose in the 37th consecutive month in June, according to Fitch Ratings.

The credit-rating agency noted the "seriously" delinquent rate — of 60 days or more — within prime jumbo RMBS rose to 10.4% in June, up from 10.3% in May and 6.4% at the same time last year.

What is even worse is that once borrowers go "seriously" delinquent, the cure rate has been getting steadily worse.

Think about what we have going on. We have a very large number of borrowers who purchased at the peak and can't afford the home with conventional financing even at very low interest rates. People simply can't pay off a loan that is six-times their yearly income no matter how favorable the interest rate. Add to all these peak buyers the HELOC abusers and other peak refinancers, and you have a recipe for enormous debt that will never get repaid. Once these struggling loan owners stop paying, they enter the abyss never to return.

The five states with the highest volume of prime RMBS loans outstanding — California, New York, Florida, Virginia and New Jersey — represent a combined two-thirds of the estimated $354bn market, Fitch said. Prime jumbo RMBS delinquencies of 60 days or more rose in all but one of these top volume states:

The rate of loans rolling into later stages of delinquency within prime RMBS remained above 1% in June after a dip months earlier, but is still below the record high 1.4% recorded in March.

"The persistently high roll rates indicate that the delinquency declines are more a reflection of increased property liquidation and ongoing loan modification activity than of widespread improvement in mortgage payment performance," said Fitch managing director Vincent Barberio, in a statement, adding that "Prime RMBS has yet to show any signs of a favorable turnaround."

Almost nobody cures their debt by bringing payments current. This used to happen before the bubble, but with the huge debt loads, negative equity positions, and high unemployment, very few borrowers come up with the cash to cure their loans. The next best alternative is to get a loan modification and add the missed payments to the loan balance. Many in our government thought this solution might actually work. It won't because the debt load is far to large, and with negative equity, many borrowers don't see the point. This leaves liquidation through short sale or foreclosure as the ultimate solution. The loan is "cured" because it no longer exists.

Despite improvements in subprime and Alt-A RMBS delinquencies, roll rates remain elevated in those loan types, too.

Subprime RMBS delinquencies fell again in June to 43.7% from 44.8% in the previous month. The subprime RMBS roll rate fell slightly to 4.2% from 4.3% a month earlier.

Alt-A RMBS delinquencies slipped to 3.7% in June from 33.9% in May, marking the third monthly decline since April 2006. Roll rates rose to 3.4% in June from 3.1% in May.

Many of the loans in Irvine are packaged into prime residential mortgage-backed securities. We are not subprime dominated, so despite the high delinquency rates, lenders have not foreclosed on delinquent borrowers here. Orange County has high delinquency rates, and the steady increase in defaults on prime mortgages has not missed Irvine. Each day I profile a property that was likely a prime mortgage gone bad. With the sky-high prices we had here (and still have) the level of mortgage distress is high as well. Perhaps the lender's gambit of allowing borrowers to squat will succeed, and Irvine will not see further price declines. Anything is possible, but I rather doubt it.

Late buyer still milked the equity cash cow

  • Today's featured property was originally purchased on 6/10/2005 for $749,000. The owner, a married woman buying as her sole and separate property, used a $495,000 first mortgage and a $254,000 down payment.
  • On 11/10/2005, she refinanced with a $499,000 first mortgage.
  • On 1/27/2006 she obtained a $190,000 HELOC.
  • On 3/28/2007 she refinanced with a $688,000 first mortgage and she got a $86,000 HELOC.
  • Total property debt is $774,000
  • Total mortgage equity withdrawal is $279,000 including her substantial down payment.
  • Total squatting time was at least 22 months.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 04/23/2009

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 10/23/2008

Document Type: Notice of Default

Palladio Properties LLC also purchased this place at auction. They have been very busy in the foreclosure auction market.

If you would like to learn how you can get involved with trustee sales, please contact me at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

Irvine Home Address … 14902 ELM Ave Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $769,000

Home Purchase Price … $625,000

Home Purchase Date …. 5/4/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $97,860

Percent Change ………. 15.7%

Annual Appreciation … 85.9%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$769,000 ………. Asking Price

$153,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.59% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$615,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$151,880 ………. Income Requirement

$3,150 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$666 ………. Property Tax

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

$64 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$43 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,924 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$755 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$797 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$264 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$96 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,732 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$7,690 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$7,690 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$6,152 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$153,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$175,332 ………. Total Cash Costs

$41,800 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$217,132 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 14902 ELM Ave Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

Beds: 3

Baths: 3 baths

Home size: 2,600 sq ft

($296 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 5,000 sq ft

Year Built: 1972

Days on Market: 28

Listing Updated: 40374

MLS Number: S621843

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Community: Walnut

Tract: Cp

——————————————————————————

College Park Remodeled Home. Wood flooring, Crown Moldings & Recessed lighting throughout. Granite Countertop. 3 Bedrooms plus spacious bonus room. Mater bedroom with Deck. New Air-conditioner & New Stainless Steel Appliances installed. New interior paint. New light fixtures.Walking distance to school & Association Pool.

Amid Weak Sales Volume Irvine Inventory Hits 23-Month High

Sales volumes are still 20% below historic norms, and inventory just hit a new 23-month high. Will prices hold up, or will they weaken and move lower?

Irvine Home Address … 59 DEL CAMBREA Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $610,000

I feel too close to be losin' touch

By givin' in, what am I givin' up

Am I losin' way too much

Hey

California waiting

Every little thing's gotta be just right

Kings of Leon — California Waiting

I wish I could be bullish on Irvine or Orange County real estate. I am bullish on the beaten down fringe markets like Riverside County or Las Vegas because prices are in line with incomes, and with low interest rates, the payment affordability is fantastic. When people go back to work in these areas, particularly in Las Vegas, prices will rebound. Orange County in general, and Irvine in particular, has not corrected enough for me to be bullish on pricing here. We are all still waiting.

In Friday's astute observations, I was asked about my predictions for the future. I replied:

With all the government manipulation and the cartel behavior of the lenders, it is really hard to tell when prices will reach a bottom. Much will depend on interest rates.

I suspect we will see a bottoming of payment affordability in 2011 with the combination of high inventory and low interest rates. As interest rates go back up, prices will continue to go down, but as inventory pressures abate, payment affordability may not be as good. I could easily see a scenario where the low interest rates make the median home affordable with a 25% DTI in 2011 and by 2013, the prices may actually be lower, but in order to purchase a median home, the median household income may require a 28% DTI.

Further, I think we will see affordability bottom at different times for different market strata. The low end will bottom first, and we are close to that now. The high end will bottom last as the gap between the low end and the high end recompresses to its historic relationship. The low end may bottom in 2011 while the high end may slowly deflate through 2014.

Sales Volume 20% below historic norms

A recent OC Register article noted that O.C. home sales hit 4-year high. That sounds great, but the very first item published in that article was the chart below showing sales are running 20% or more below historic norms of the last 22 years.

July 13th, 2010 — posted by Jon Lansner

The article does provide some context for its occasionally bullish statistics.

  • June buying is 21.7% below the average sales activity of June from 1988 through 2009. (See chart above comparing sales activity of the most recent 12 months compared to their respective 1988-2009 monthly averages.)
  • In the 12 months ended in June, Orange County home sales totaled 32,813 – that is 26% below the average sale activity of 44,344 for a year from 1988 through 2009
  • … sales in 2010’s second quarter sales were 24% percent below the 1988-2009 average.

Those numbers are pathetic. Lenders are afraid to process too many foreclosures or complete too many short sales with those grim absorption numbers. There simply isn't enough buyer interest to absorb the distressed inventory, so lenders are preventing it from hitting the market.

Uncle Sam likely had a hand in this sales bump. House shoppers who entered escrow by April 30 were told they had to close the deal by June 30 to possibly collect up to an $8,000 federal tax credit. Just after the June 30 deadline — which spurred a deal-closing flurry — that deadline was extended by Congress to Sept. 30. (DETAILS HERE!)

“This is good news, even if part of it is due to stimulus programs such as tax credits and very low interest rates,” says Kerry Vandell, director of real estate studies at the Merage School of Business at UCI. “Consider how we all would feel if, after all the stimulus activity, sales and prices continued to drop. The fact that a broad array of economic indicators — including Wall Street hiring — is pointing toward recovery is a very good sign. However, in the end, recovery will not be complete until job growth in the private sector turns solidly and significantly positive. We are not there yet. However, I anticipate solid job recovery by year end.”

Do you get the feeling Dr. Vandell was reaching for something positive to say? Consider how we would all feel if… people in the industry told the truth! Why am I the only voice bothering to point out that not everything is perfect in the housing market? Sometimes I think these people forget that not everyone expects or wants house prices to rise at double-digit rates.

The tax credit program in combination with low interest rates and withheld inventory has provided a brief respite on the way to the bottom. Perhaps the tax credit made for a higher bottom by giving some false hope to those contemplating accelerated default. Perhaps it was a massive waste of taxpayer dollars subsidizing those who were going to buy anyway. It was likely a little of both.

And post tax break, there’s talk that the market is cooling …

  • Steve Thomas of Altera Real Estate calculates a “market time” benchmark tracking how many months it theoretically takes to sell all the inventory in the local MLS for-sale listings at the current pace of pending deals being made. By this Thomas logic, as of last Thursday, it would take 3.78 months for buyers to gobble up all homes for sale at the current pace. This is slower pace than the 3.37 months of inventory found two weeks earlier or 2.66 months of a year earlier. (See more of “‘Unrealistic’ sellers flood O.C. home market” by CLICKING HERE!)

Even Steve Thomas's unreliable, made-up numbers based on escrows rather than closed sales is showing undeniable weakness.

  • Holly Schwartz of Torelli Realty in Costa Mesa concurs, saying her firm sees a drop in activity as tax-break deadlines passed. “The first half of 2010 was strong; the tax credit incentive helped,” she said.

An honest view of what is happening in the market. I hope her broker doesn't get too angry with her for failing to shovel manure at the OC Register. Not to worry, the two interviewed from Seven Gables scooped the poop:

  • But Carolynn Santaniello of Seven Gables Real Estate hasn’t seen that much buyer drop-off: “I have seen a slowdown in the under $450,000 range since the tax credit expired. In the mid and upper range, I have not see as much as a drop in buyer demand. The first half of 2010 has been very busy and I don’t see an end in sight for me, personally. Serious buyers are still buying.”
  • Amanda Wernick of the Sandy DeAngelis Team at Seven Gables adds: “Post tax credit has not shown any loss of activity. We’re constantly speaking to possible new buyers, though sellers are re-evaluating their sales strategy.”

What does it mean to re-evaluate a sales strategy. Is that realtor talk for backing off their WTF asking prices?

Beach town home sales swoon

July 18th, 2010 — posted by Jon Lansner

While the affordable slice of the housing market enjoyed a sales boost from an expiring federal tax credit, Orange County’s beach communities had falling sales activity as the June 30 tax-break deadline arrived. (Then it was extended to Sept. 30.)

In June, DataQuick shows 553 homes sold in 17 Orange County beach cities ZIP codes — off 3% from May and just up 5% from a year ago. In May, beach homebuying was running 40% above a year ago. And, perhaps most stunning: News that owner of “Portabello” has cut the seaside, blufftop mansion’s asking price by $25 million!

Now in beach towns where the median selling price if $685,000 — up only 1.4% vs. a year ago — a tax break of up to $8,000 is no market mover. Still, in today’s climate, anything should help. But as beach sales fell 3% from May to June as the rest of the market saw sales rise by 7%.

Very little is selling in the beach towns because prices are way too high. Anything requiring financing in excess of the jumbo conforming limit of $729,750 is selling at an extremely slow pace. First, the cost of financing is considerably higher (5.5% instead of 4.5% at Wells Fargo), and second, now that people have to be qualified for these loans with their real incomes rather than the fantasies they were allowed to put on loan applications in the past, there are very few qualified buyers. With the huge default rates on over $1,000,000 loans, expect to see a great deal more inventory in the beach communities.

Irvine's Inventory hits 23 month high

We have been watching the inventory in Irvine rise steadily throughout 2010. From a low of 440 homes on 1/2/2010 to the current 794, the inventory has now entered a more normal range. If sales rates were near historic norms, the current level of inventory would pose no problems for absorption, but with buyer demand weak, the current level of inventory should blunt further price increases, and if this trend continues through the end of the prime homebuying season, we will begin to see price weakness this fall and winter despite lower rates. For now, it is still a seller's market, but the balance of power is shifting, and a few months from now, buyers may not need to be so aggressive to obtain properties.

It is typical for inventory to peak in July or August as new sellers quit entering the fray. Lenders may also pull back on new listings for fear of what it will do to the market. This fall and winter will be the first test of the strength of the lending cartel. If all the members of the cartel stop adding inventory, pricing may hold up during the off season; however, if some members of the cartel choose to keep the liquidation going at full speed, inventory will continue to climb, and prices should soften.

IMO, lenders would be foolish not to take advantage of very low interest rates and still inflated prices to offload some inventory. Those banks that choose to break from the cartel will be rewarded with higher prices whereas those that try to hold on will be stuck with increased REO inventory and the likelihood of lower prices next year.

Two failed loan modifications and over three years of squatting

The owners of today's featured property set a new standard for HELOC abuse and gaming the system.

  • Today's featured property was purchased on 9/15/1998 for $299,000. My property records show this was purchased with a $90,000 first mortgage and a $209,000 down payment; although, it is possible that my data source is not correct and missed the first mortgage.
  • On 12/15/1998 they obtained a $40,000 HELOC.
  • On 12/28/1999 they opened a $60,000 HELOC.
  • On 7/2/2001 they refinanced with a $200,000 first mortgage.
  • On 5/29/2003 they refinanced the first mortgage for $270,000.
  • On 9/19/2004 they needed more money so they refinanced yet again for $400,000.
  • On 1/27/2005 they went back one more time and obtained a $448,000 first mortgage.
  • Total mortgage equity withdrawal is $358,000.
  • Total squatting time is at least 40 months, although the borrowers may have made a few payments during the period from July 2007 through December 2008.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 05/20/2010

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 02/19/2010

Document Type: Notice of Default

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 06/29/2009

Document Type: Notice of Rescission

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 12/10/2008

Document Type: Notice of Default

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 07/25/2007

Document Type: Notice of Rescission

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 06/13/2007

Document Type: Notice of Default

It is pretty obvious these borrowers cannot afford their home. Since they still had equity, the bank was willing to go above and beyond the call of duty to modify their loan over and over again. These borrowers crossed the invisible event horizon of the Ponzi limit during the refinance of 2004 or 2005. With the amend-pretend-extend dance on its third encore, these owners are facing the prospect of finally selling their home.

I imagine they are quite attached to the property. After providing several hundred thousand dollars of spending money and over three years with no housing costs, it will be quite an adjustment for them to rent a property that actually costs them money rather than gives it to them.

Irvine Home Address … 59 DEL CAMBREA Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $610,000

Home Purchase Price … $299,000

Home Purchase Date …. 9/15/1998

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $274,400

Percent Change ………. 91.8%

Annual Appreciation … 6.1%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$610,000 ………. Asking Price

$122,000 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.59% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$488,000 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$120,477 ………. Income Requirement

$2,499 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$529 ………. Property Tax

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

$51 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$156 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,234 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$419 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$632 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$209 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$76 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,469 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$6,100 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$6,100 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$4,880 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$122,000 ………. Down Payment

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

$139,080 ………. Total Cash Costs

$37,800 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$176,880 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 59 DEL CAMBREA Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

Beds: 3

Baths: 2 full 1 part baths

Home size: 1,350 sq ft

($452 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 2,352 sq ft

Year Built: 1994

Days on Market: 17

Listing Updated: 40371

MLS Number: S623648

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Community: Westpark

Tract: Posi

——————————————————————————

Positano Plan A in a quiet inside tract location. Upgraded flooring,custom interior painting and low maintenance backyard. Main floor bedroom with full bath, direct access garage and high vaulted ceiling.Walk to Plaza Vista school, pools, parks and tennis courts. Must see.

Trustee Sale Hedge Fund

Pooled-investment funds have been on my mind lately, so when I saw the cartoon below, I thought it was particularly funny.

If anyone is interested in a bonk in the head and five minutes of memory loss, contact me at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

1,000,000 Foreclosures in 2010 and Three More Years of Pain

The number of foreclosures will set new records this year, and rates are ten times historic norms. It will take at least three more years to clean up this debris.

Irvine Home Address … 17255 CITRON Irvine, CA 92612

Resale Home Price …… $498,000

walk away and taste the pain

come again some other day

aren't you glad you weren't afraid

funny how the price gets paid

Red Hot Chili Peppers — Taste the Pain

Homes lost to foreclosure on track for 1M in 2010

LOS ANGELES — Rosalyn Dalebout rents out space in her home to three tenants, has cut off her phone service and canceled her earthquake and life insurance — all to pay her mortgage every month.

So far, she's one of the lucky ones.

Lucky? Stupid is more like it. Are we supposed to look at this woman as the modern Joan of Arc? Lenders would love for her to be a role model. When she starts turning tricks, then we will know she is serious about keeping the property.

More than 1 million American households are likely to lose their homes to foreclosure this year, as lenders work their way through a huge backlog of borrowers who have fallen behind on their loans.

Nearly 528,000 homes were taken over by lenders in the first six months of the year. If foreclosures continue at that rate, the yearly number would eclipse the more than 900,000 homes repossessed in 2009, RealtyTrac Inc., a foreclosure listing service, said Thursday.

"That would be unprecedented," said Rick Sharga, a senior vice president at RealtyTrac.

Lenders have historically taken over about 100,000 homes a year, he said.

realtors are celebrating "the bottom" yet we have double-digit unemployment and foreclosures occurring at ten times the historic average. Lenders may attempt to meter these properties out to the market, but they certainly have a great deal of inventory to absorb. And despite claims of booming sales, the actual sales rate in Orange County is still well below historic norms.

The surge in foreclosures reflects a crisis that has shown signs of leveling off in recent months but remains a crippling drag on the housing market and the economy.

Many homeowners struggling to make their monthly payments have had little success in negotiating more deals.

That is why many homeowners are walking away from their mortgages. The "deals" they are being offered aren't that great. What these borrowers really want is housing that doesn't cost them anything, and every now and again, they want to have the house give them some free cash. Unless they get that, they aren't going to be satisfied. The housing bubble has created a distorted sense of reality among loan owners.

Dalebout, a manager of a recreation center who lives in the Salt Lake City suburb of Holladay, said her lender has refused to refinance her loan with lower rates and payments.

The monthly payments on her $240,000 mortgage take more than half her salary.

"I'm just running into a lot of brick walls," Dalebout, 58 said.

A 31% DTI often does take more than half of a persons take-home salary because of the tax withholdings and social security. That is why the ridiculous DTIs we saw in the bubble were not sustainable. Once people actually have to start making those payments from their wage income, they can't do it.

HELOC

Banks seem to be creating two classes of troubled homeowners. Those who are falling behind in their payments are being allowed to stay in their homes longer because lenders are reluctant to add to the glut of foreclosed homes on the market. At the same time, lenders are stepping up repossessions to clear out the backlog of bad loans.

Is that the politically correct way of saying "squatting?"

"The banks are really sort of controlling or managing the dial on how fast these things get processed so they can ultimately manage the inventory of distressed assets on the market," Sharga said.

Sort of controlling? Right now the banking cartel is totally controlling the flow of properties, but like any cartel, its power will wane as the members begin to cheat as they liquidate their holdings.

On average, it takes about 15 months for a home loan to go from being 30 days late to the property being foreclosed and sold, according to Lender Processing Services Inc., which tracks mortgages.

… Sherri Leu of Lino Lakes, a suburb of Minneapolis, is unemployed and stopped receiving unemployment benefits earlier this year.

"I burned up my savings," she said. "The best thing that's going to help me is a job."

This problem will not get any better until the jobs situation improves, and even then, it will only help a few on the fringes. The problem with the credit and housing bubble is that too many people have too much debt and not enough income to service it. Once they have some income when they find a new job doesn't mean they will have enough income to pay off the crushing debt.

The software engineer has been living on what's left of a $120,000 home equity line of credit she took out shortly after she bought her house in 2006.

Leu estimates she's got enough money for another five or six mortgage payments.

Borrowing money to pay the mortgage? Has anyone bothered to point out to this woman that she is living a Ponzi Scheme?

"I might try to put it up for sale," Leu said. "The other option is to let the bank have it, but then I'll end up walking away losing money I put down on the house."

Duh! She already lost the money she put down on the house. She been spending that with her home equity loan. Are people really that stupid?

Sometimes I get the impression that people think their down payment is held in a vault and that they get this money back when they sell the property. The average loan owner has no concept of sunk costs, nor do they understand that home equity has nothing to do with how much money they put into the property.

Assuming the economy doesn't worsen, RealtyTrac's Sharga projects lenders won't work through the backlog of distressed properties until the end of 2013. More than 7.3 million home loans are in some stage of delinquency, according to Lender Processing Services. The fastest-growing group of foreclosures is coming from people who took out conventional fixed-rate loans.

The prospect of lenders taking over more than a million homes this year is likely to push housing values down, experts say. Foreclosed homes are typically sold at steep discounts, lowering the value of surrounding properties.

"The downward pressure from foreclosures will persist and prices will be very weak well into 2012," said Celia Chen, senior director of Moody's Economy.com.

3 More Years Of Pain For Housing

Posted by Jill Schlesinger – July 15, 2010

1 million households are on track to lose their homes this year as the nation continues to dig out of the decade's real estate boom and bust. RealtyTrac reported that while month-over-month and year-over-year foreclosure fillings are decreasing, the nation is on pace to set a record in foreclosure filings (including default notices, auction sales and bank repossessions) this year at 3.2 million. Last year, lenders foreclosed on more than 900,000 homes and the historic average is 100,000 annually.

In the first half of the year, lenders repossessed nearly 528,000 homes and about 1.7 million homeowners got a foreclosure-related warning — that represents one in 78 American homes. The numbers are startling, but this process is necessary after the massive housing and credit booms. As is the case with manias, the aftermath is messy and painful.

Everyone seems to think we can avoid the pain. The common delusion I read in the mainstream media is that once the economy starts to improve that house prices will go back up. There is generally a multi-year gap between the bottom of the employment cycle and the bottom of the foreclosure cycle. It will likely be far worse this time around because so many people couldn't afford their houses even in the good times.

Unfortunately, due to the lengthy process involved in unwinding a bad home investment (versus, say a bad internet stock that takes 5 seconds to sell) the hangover period will persist for some time. RealtyTrac CEO James J. Saccacio said that while the foreclosure problem appears to be improving, we shouldn't be too confident, because "a massive number of distressed properties and underwater loans continues to sit just below the surface, threatening the fragile stability of the housing market."

Housing experts believe that it will take three more years to clear out the overhang of housing. There's a certain symmetry to that notion. From the years between 2000-2006, housing prices nationally doubled and it will likely take the seven years between 2007-2013 to rectify that aberration. Now who said that home prices never drop?

Every realtor in America said home prices never drop. That is what clueless shills do. When this mess is finally cleaned up, they will spin a narrative about how this housing bubble was not foreseeable (Alan Greenspan missed it so everyone did). It will be portrayed as an event that will never occur again. realtors will attempt to dupe the next generation into repeating the mistakes of the past so they can make a few extra dollars.

Another Option ARM implosion

This property was purchased by the previous owner on 7/12/2005 for $545,000. She used a $436,000 Option ARM first mortgage a $54,500 second mortgage and a $54,500 down payment. She imploded in late 2008 and squatted for about 15 months.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 03/05/2010

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

Click here to get Foreclosure Report.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 12/04/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

The trustee sale flipper will do well

The property was purchased at auction on 4/1/2010 for $386,400. The flipper is looking at a profit in excess of 20%. Even after renovation costs and commissions, they will probably make 12% to 15% on this deal.

If you would like to learn how you can get involved with trustee sales, please contact me at sales@idealhomebrokers.com. Someone has to clean up this mess.

Irvine Home Address … 17255 CITRON Irvine, CA 92612

Resale Home Price … $498,000

Home Purchase Price … $386,400

Home Purchase Date …. 4/1/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $81,720

Percent Change ………. 21.1%

Annual Appreciation … 78.6%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$498,000 ………. Asking Price

$17,430 ………. 3.5% Down FHA Financing

4.61% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$480,570 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$98,586 ………. Income Requirement

$2,466 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$432 ………. Property Tax

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

$42 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$209 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,149 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$399 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$620 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$30 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$62 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,222 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$4,980 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$4,980 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$4,806 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$17,430 ………. Down Payment

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

$32,196 ………. Total Cash Costs

$34,000 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$66,196 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 17255 CITRON Irvine, CA 92612

——————————————————————————

Beds: 2

Baths: 2 baths

Home size: 1,224 sq ft

($407 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 1,500 sq ft

Year Built: 1974

Days on Market: 29

Listing Updated: 40368

MLS Number: S620822

Property Type: Condominium, Residential

Community: University Park

Tract: Tr

——————————————————————————

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

This property is in backup or contingent offer status.

INCREDIBLE OPPORTUNITY!! QUIET INNER TRACT LOCATION, SINGLE LEVEL TOWNHOME. This home just had a $50K remodel and is totally turnkey. It has never been lived in since the remodel. The complete kitchen remodel will be the pride of your at home gourmet with its new stainless steel appliances, breakfast bar, Italian tile floor, new sink, new fixtures, custom hard wood cabinets, and granite counters. The home has new raised panel doors, 6' base boards, new casings, cozy travertine fireplace, new light fixtures, and new carpet throughout. The bathrooms are completely remodeled including new sinks, granite counters, and new oil rubbed bronze fixtures. The ceilings have been scraped, new base boards, crown moulding, and new designer paint throughout. Alluring back yard is freshly landscaped. Large 2 car garage has epoxy coat floors and space for storage. STOP LOOKING THIS IS THE ONE!

INCREDIBLE OPPORTUNITY!! STOP LOOKING THIS IS THE ONE!

Beyond the fact that this is in ALL CAPS, does either one of these phrases convey any meaning? Why do realtors write this crap. It was a waste of a second of my life to read it. It will not influence my decision to see this property, nor will it influence anyone else. I wish they would just stop.

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

Montana Man Forgets to Sign Documents Before Stealing Bank-Owned Property

A petty crook in Montana tried to steal real estate owned by a bank. He's not much different than many participants in the housing market here in California. His real crime was failing to fill out a mortgage loan application first.

Irvine Home Address … 14541 GUAMA Ave Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $749,000

Somewhere high in the desert near a curtain of blue

A sane man skirts under the wind

But down here in the city of limelights

The fans of Santa Ana are withering

And you can't deny the living is easy

If you never look behind the scenery

Bad Religion — Los Angeles Is Burning

Real estate is religion in California. Home price appreciation is the one area where all Californians share the same faith. Faith in the ability of their fellow man to push prices ever higher. Faith in lenders to provide an endless pool of borrowed money. Faith in lenders not to foreclose when they decide to quit paying their mortgages.

Borrowers everywhere are not paying their mortgages and squatting. These people signed loan documents promising to repay a loan which prompted a bank to buy a house for the borrower and allow them to occupy it. Right now, the borrowers are living in that house, they are not making their promised payments, and the bank is not exercising it's right to call a public auction and force them out.

Historically, squatters have lived in houses they were not paying for just as the delinquent borrowers are doing today. In the past, squatters simply moved in and skipped the step where they sign loan documents and get the bank to buy the house for them. Today's squatters added the participation of the lender, but the end result is the same: people are living in houses they do not own and they are not paying for them either through rent or through repayment of a home loan.

I find it ironic that people who squat with traditional methods are being arrested whereas those who squat with permission of the bank are being assisted by our own government. With a little creativity, one squatter has taken possession of a number of properties, attempted to get HELOC money, and rented one of them out for a positive cashflow — very positive considering he didn't pay for it. Although he is a criminal being prosecuted, he isn't much different than the thousands of California squatters and land barons operating across California. I will let you decide whose theft is more sophisticated.

Man claims ‘Yahweh’ sold him a foreclosed home

Wilson convicted of stealing Montana house by removing ‘for sale’ signs, changing locks

7/14/2010 10:07:16 AM ET

POLSON, Mont. — A Lake County jury convicted a transient of stealing a house in foreclosure by removing "for sale" signs, changing the locks and filing strange paperwork with the county claiming he purchased the house from Yahweh.

Stealing a house by filing strange paperwork? Isn't that what every liar loan applicant did during the housing bubble? People all over California filled out strange paperwork full of half-truths and outright lies about their income. We sold homes to transients and anyone else with a pulse. I'm sure many of those buyers thought it was a gift from God. Why should this guy be jailed for it if we are letting slide all those other people here in California who did the same thing?

Jurors deliberated for less than an hour Tuesday morning before convicting Brent Arthur Wilson of theft, deceptive practices and tampering with public records or information. He faces up to 30 years in prison when he is sentenced Aug. 19.

The professor under whom I first studied real estate law also taught a course at the nearby penitentiary. He relayed the story of one convict who forged the signature of the previous owner on a purchase and sale agreement deeding the property to the criminal, and then the criminal recorded it. For anyone doing a title search, the criminal would have looked like the legal owner because he was present in an unbroken chain of title.

The fool in Montana made the mistake of purchasing the house from Yahweh who did not appear on the chain of title. Perhaps he can argue all property rights come from God, but unless God is on title, He does not own the property.

Wilson was charged in February after Polson real estate agent Ed McCurdy investigated the removal of "for sale" signs from a $380,000 house he was selling on behalf of a lender in August 2009.

Further investigation found Wilson tried to use the house as collateral for a $125,000 loan he sought from a Missoula financial institution.

I love this guy. He buys the home from God and immediate applies for a HELOC. His mistake was doing this in Montana where it stands out as unusual. If he had pulled this trick in California, we would have been viewed as just another homeowner.

Prosecutor Jessica Cole-Hodgkinson told the jury Monday that authorities found journals belonging to Wilson that detailed a plan to steal up to 100 homes in foreclosure.

It would be more accurate to say the guy had plans to acquire 100 homes just like California land barons. He was thinking like a land baron. Many people during the real estate bubble acquired multiple properties using liar loans, 100% financing and Option ARMs. Since these "legal" land barons lied on loan applications, didn't put any of their own money into the deal, didn't make payments that covered the interest on the debt, and walked away when the investment went bad, it is difficult to distinguish the their behavior from the lunatic in Montana. Land Barons did this because they believed prices would go up, and they would get HELOCs to fuel unlimited consumer spending. I don't see where this guy in Montana's thinking is out of the ordinary.

Cole-Hodgkinson asked Lake County sheriff's detective Rick Lenz to read several entries from journals.

"The prospect of claiming and fulfilling my 100-title vision is growing stronger," read one. "Took down one of two Realtor signs," says another entry. "The other needs a tool to dig it up."

Everyone should have such a strong vision of their future. I imagine people forming funds to buy real estate (not that I would know anything about that) have vision boards with hundreds of properties representing their real estate empire. This kind of creative visualization is a powerful tool. This guy should be complimented as a visionary.

Many of the journal entries appear to be addressed to "the creator, Yahweh."

Don't others pray for their dreams to come true? This guy did more than just pray — he took action. He did more than most when presented with a great opportunity. He should be commended as a role model.

"Wow. You surely have blessed me with some wonderful opportunities," Lenz read from the journals, which referred to a property with a "million-dollar value" that "seems to be waiting for me to claim it. Wow on wow."

This guy should have walked around some of the bubble subdivisions in California. There are opportunities everywhere with so many vacant homes, many of which lenders don't keep good track of.

Wilson refused attempts by District Judge Kim Christopher to appoint legal counsel for him. He didn't participate in his trial and offered no defense. He read from an IRS document Monday and was reading the Bible during Tuesday's court session.

Authorities have said they believe Wilson tried to claim ownership of at least two more houses, one he was living in and one he was renting out, but he has not been charged in those cases.

So he purloined a property and rented it out. That is very common here in California among delinquent land barons. There are thousands of properties where a renter is paying a land baron who is not paying their mortgage. As long as the property was owned for more than one year, it isn't classified as rent skimming despite the fact it looks a great deal like theft. With banks refusing to foreclose, renters are undoubtedly aiding theft by land barons everywhere.

A court-ordered mental health evaluation found Wilson fit to stand trial.

There shouldn't be any question about his sanity. If we were to find this man insane, we would have to lock up most of the kool-aid intoxicated fools here in California whose religion is real estate. They are just as insane, just as crooked as this nut in Montana, but we don't think twice about their transgressions.

When you boil this case down to its essence, there is only one difference between this guy who blatantly stole the property from the bank and hundreds of thousands of similar thieves here in California: he didn't sign a loan document. That is really the only difference.

If this Montana man had gone through a loan process and obtained bank approval, he could keep the house he did not pay for just as the plethora of squatters are doing all over the nation. The only real distinction between this insane man and the pitiful masses squatting in their McMansions is the process they went through to obtain the property. At least this guy has the defense of being insane. The masses of squatters are just thieves with no defense. They were calculating and sane — unless you consider kool aid intoxication as a form of mass insanity, and you think their debts should be forgiven.

These people squatted a long time

  • This property was purchased on 5/29/203 for $475,000. The owners used a $322,700 first mortgage, a $100,000 second mortgage, and a $52,300 down payment.
  • On 2/3/2005 they refinanced with a $623,000 first mortgage from Ameriquest.
  • On 3/16/2006 they were given a $100,000 HELOC by Wells Fargo. Since the first and second mortgages were from different lenders, the first mortgage holder had no problem blowing out Wells Fargo — after a long period of squatting.
  • Total squatting time is at least 27 months.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 03/03/2010

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 11/30/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 02/19/2009

Document Type: Notice of Rescission

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 11/14/2008

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 08/06/2008

Document Type: Notice of Default

This looks like a failed loan modification, so the US taxpayer will end up paying for the loss.

Of course, the taxpayer's loss is a flipper's gain. The house was purchased for $610,500 at auction, and after some renovation work, it is being offered for $749,000. With as ridiculous as the price is, with 4.61% interest rates, the monthly cost of ownership of $2,671 is near rental parity.

Irvine Home Address … 14541 GUAMA Ave Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $749,000

Home Purchase Price … $610,500

Home Purchase Date …. 3/23/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $93,560

Percent Change ………. 15.3%

Annual Appreciation … 62.9%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$749,000 ………. Asking Price

$149,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.61% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$599,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$148,276 ………. Income Requirement

$3,075 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$649 ………. Property Tax

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

$62 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$43 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,830 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$738 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$773 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$259 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$94 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,671 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$7,490 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$7,490 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$5,992 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$149,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$170,772 ………. Total Cash Costs

$40,900 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$211,672 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 14541 GUAMA Ave Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

Beds: 4

Baths: 1 full 2 part baths

Home size: 2,327 sq ft

($322 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 5,000 sq ft

Year Built: 1971

Days on Market: 64

Listing Updated: 40338

MLS Number: S616253

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Community: Walnut

Tract: Cp

——————————————————————————

Gorgeous remodeled home in College Park. Four bedrooms & one spacious bonus room. Recessed lights throughout. Crown moldings & ceiling fans. Granite countertop & stainless steel appliance. Pre-wired surround sound speakers in family room. Newly-built fireplace with BBQ in the backyard. Within walking distance of school & park.

Flip with moderate profits… maybe

The renovation on this property looks extensive. After they lower the price to sell it and pay commissions and renovation costs, the flipper will likely make 6%-8% on the deal. Not bad, but not great. It doesn't look like they will get their asking price as it has been active for over 60 days without a price reduction.

IMO, they overpaid at auction. The opening bid was $510,000, and it was bid up $100,500. With comps closer to $710,000, it shouldn't have been bid up quite so high. The flipper as probably expecting a massive spring rally to make an extra 5%. It isn't happening for him.