Category Archives: News

Commercial Real Estate Borrowers Extinguish Their Debts

Public attitude toward commercial borrowers who strategically default is much different than it is toward commercial borrowers. Today, we explore this difference.

Irvine Home Address … 29 BURLINGAME Irvine, CA 92602

Resale Home Price …… $579,000

{book1}

Do you live, do you die, do you bleed

For the fantasy

In your mind, through your eyes, do you see

It's the fantasy

30 Seconds to Mars — The Fantasy

Home debtor fantasies

The endless parade of Bailouts and False Hopes serve to give hope to the hopeless and keep them paying their mortgages rather than strategically default. Those who are underwater and making payments in excess of rent have two real alternatives and two fantasy alternatives. The real alternatives are (1) continuing to pay until they implode or (2) strategic default. Neither option is very satisfying as both generally lead to bankruptcy later on.

The fantasy alternatives are (1) the re-inflation of the housing bubble giving debtors equity again and (2) government mandated principal reduction to give debtors equity again. Neither one is going to happen. The overhead supply of distressed housing units will eventually need to be sold, and in the process, the best case is for prices to hold steady with super-low interest rates. Principal reduction is the ultimate debtor fantasy, and it will not happen because it would require massive theft by the government with a direct transfer of money from the State to individual debtors with the commensurate moral hazard. That's the kind of thing that sends rioters into the streets besides costing trillions of dollars.

Since the real options are bad, most will cling to the fantasy, and in the process, they will continue paying their mortgages until they implode or get pissed off enough to default.

Strategic Default

Some have expressed a concern that I have gone soft on HELOC abusers and those who strategically default. I have made it clear that I believe Foreclosure Is a Superior Form of Principal Reduction because it has consequences for the borrower. I have no desire to see those who over-borrowed be given a free pass. My endorsement of strategic default is a recognition of the lesser of two evils. Strategic default is the better of two bad alternatives; when faced between a life of servitude and a walking away from a huge debt, walking away is the better choice. Both alternatives have negative consequences — as they should.

It irritates me the lengths lenders are willing to go to manipulate people to keep paying for the lender's mistake. Lenders Are More Culpable than Borrowers, and their consequences should be more severe. The fact that lenders would sentence families to a lifetime of servitude to pad their bottom line is wrong, and I will continue to speak out against it.

Why aren't commercial defaulters labeled as evil?

Borrowers who strategically default on commercial real estate aren't immoral thieves or hysterical fools as their residential counterparts are made out to be. When commercial borrowers strategically default, they are "extinguishing debt" to produce "positive results." The contrast between the attitude between commercial borrowers and residential borrowers is remarkable.

MPG Office Trust Eliminates Debt Obligation on 17885 Von Karman in Irvine, California

LOS ANGELES, May 26, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) — MPG Office Trust, Inc., a Southern California-focused real estate investment trust, today announced that the company has extinguished the $26.4 million construction loan obligation secured by 17885 Von Karman in Irvine, California. The Company contributed approximately $2.0 million in reduction of the loan, turned the property over to the lender pursuant to a deed-in-lieu transaction, and was relieved of the $26.4 million obligation and a $6.7 million repayment guaranty. The loan was scheduled to mature on June 30, 2010.

They strategically defaulted. They took a look at the numbers and determined it was not in their best interest to keep paying, so they didn't. When residential borrowers make the same calculation, they are decried as immoral or stupid and they are blamed for the collapse of the US banking system; however, when commercial borrowers do it, they are lionized as great financial thinkers who are looking out for the best interests of their companies.

MPG Office Trust President and Chief Executive Officer Nelson C. Rising commented, "Our efforts that started two years ago to reduce debt, eliminate repayment and debt service guarantees and extend debt maturities continue to produce positive results. In addition to the transaction announced today, earlier this month, we made a principal payment of $9.7 million on the 207 Goode construction loan and in exchange, the lender agreed to substantially reduce our repayment guaranty on this loan. We are currently marketing the property for sale. As a result of meeting the prescribed debt service coverage ratio for five consecutive quarters, the Company eliminated a debt service guaranty on a $109.0 million mortgage secured by Brea Corporate Place and Brea Financial Commons in Orange County, California. The Company also extended the maturity of this loan to May 1, 2011."

These guys are cramming down lenders on every deal. Lenders are going to lose a fortune on the actions of commercial borrowers just like these guys, yet when they do it, the strategic default is considered positive.

Maguire Properties swings to profit

May 11, 2010: By Roger Vincent, Los Angeles Times

The Los Angeles real estate investment trust reports first-quarter net income of $18.6 million, largely on the forgiveness of a $49.1-million debt.

Long-suffering office landlord Maguire Properties Inc. on Monday reported a first-quarter profit linked largely to the forgiveness of a $49.1-million debt it was unable to pay.

The Los Angeles real estate investment trust, which owns some of the region's best-known skyscrapers including the US Bank Tower in downtown Los Angeles, finished the quarter with $18.6 million in net income attributable to common shareholders, a dramatic contrast from the $53.9-million loss reported a year earlier.

Finances in both quarters were influenced by significant one-time events, however.

This year, Maguire was forgiven $49.1 million in debt on Griffin Towers, a Santa Ana office complex it sold in March as part of a long campaign to reduce its liabilities. It also recorded a $16.6-million deferred gain on the 2006 sale of a parking garage in downtown Los Angeles. The first quarter in 2009 was affected by a $23.5-million write-down of the value of an Irvine office building and other charges.

Maguire reported a profit of 38 cents a share in the quarter, compared with a loss of $1.13 in the same quarter of 2009. Revenue was down 2% to $111.5 million.

"Revenues are flattening and their leasing seems to be going at a stable pace," said analyst Craig Silvers, president of Bricks & Mortar Capital. "They seem to have stabilized their operations."

Just like any debtor, when they quit paying their debts, their cashflow situation improves. Not exactly a news flash.

She couldn't afford it

  • The previous owner purchased this property on 6/13/2005 for $665,000. She used a $498,750 first mortgage and a $166,250 down payment.
  • When she purchased, she got a HELOC for $99,750, but it doesn't appear she used it.
  • On 12/29/2005 she obtained a $200,000 HELOC which I don't think she used.
  • On 12/13/2007 Bank of America refinanced her first mortgage for $417,000 and gave her a second mortgage for $168,000.
  • Total property debt is $585,000.
  • Total mortgage equity withdrawal is $86,250 which doesn't recover her down payment.
  • Total squatting was only about 9 months. B of A did not waste much time in foreclosure.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 12/23/2009

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 09/22/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

Trustee Flip

This house was purchased for $463,000 at auction on 2/16/2010. Most trustee sales go off about 15%-20% under comps. This seller is hoping to get an extra 5%. It is not a bad pricing strategy as it gives them some room to negotiate back down to comps. This is typical of what happens when the lenders finally let one go through the system. Our current backlog is enormous.

Irvine Home Address … 29 BURLINGAME Irvine, CA 92602

Resale Home Price … $579,000

Home Purchase Price … $463,000

Home Purchase Date …. 2/16/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $81,260

Percent Change ………. 25.1%

Annual Appreciation … 69.0%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$579,000 ………. Asking Price

$115,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.87% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$463,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$118,120 ………. Income Requirement

$2,450 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$502 ………. Property Tax

$125 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$48 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$348 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,473 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$417 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$570 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$217 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$72 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,775 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$5,790 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$5,790 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$4,632 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$115,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$132,012 ………. Total Cash Costs

$42,500 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$174,512 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 29 BURLINGAME Irvine, CA 92602

——————————————————————————

Beds: 3

Baths: 2 full 1 part baths

Home size: 1,782 sq ft

($325 / sq ft)

Lot Size: n/a

Year Built: 2000

Days on Market: 63

Listing Updated: 40276

MLS Number: S610651

Property Type: Condominium, Residential

Community: Northpark

Tract: Brib

——————————————————————————

This property is in backup or contingent offer status.

ABSOLUTELY STUNNING!!! This highly sought after floor plan is located in the exclusive gated community of Northpark. This charming home is very bright and open, featuring upgrades such as granite countertops, custom tile flooring, high-end appliances, fresh paint, brand new Berber carpet, and much more. This home is completely turnkey and ready for you. There is an attached 2 car garage with plenty of guest parking. There are resort style amenities with a nice clubhouse, pool, spa, greenbelts, and other great design features in the community. This is HIGH END living at a very affordable price. It is in a great school district, and close to plenty of shopping with easy freeway access. This is a MUST SEE!

Why Our Bear Rally Might Fizzle Out

Is the housing market ready to survive without government props and supports? We are about to find out.

Irvine Home Address … 2 SANTA LUZIA AISLE Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $699,000

{book1}

Don't you know me I'm the boy next door

The one you find so easy to ignore

Is that what I was fighting for?

Walking on a thin line

Straight off the front line

Labeled as freaks loose on the streets of the city

Walking on a thin line

Angry all the time

Take a look at my face, see what it's doing to me

Huey Lewis and the News — Walking on a Thin Line

To all of you who served in the armed forces: thank you. Your sacrifice does not go unnoticed.

I hope everyone is enjoying this Memorial Day holiday.

And now, back to real estate…

The bust's second act

May 25th 2010, 15:12 by R.A. | WASHINGTON

FOR a brief moment last fall, it looked as though the American housing sector might not be the persistent economic drag economists had feared. Home prices and sales leveled off and began climbing. Construction did the same. In the third and fourth quarter of last year, residential investment was a minor but positive contributor to American output growth. Buoyed by a generous homebuyer tax credit and mortgage rates held down by Federal Reserve purchases, housing markets seem poised for stability, if not a new boom in activity.

But the good times haven't lasted. Construction and builder confidence have weakened once again. The latest data on existing home sales show a spike in activity and the best April performance since 2006. But this was almost certainly due to the looming end of the federal tax credit. Sales also rose and spiked before and immediately after the previous deadline, last fall, only to decline again through the winter. More worrying still, the previous spike in sales coincided with a decline in housing inventory. This time, inventories have risen dramatically. Even as the end of government incentive programmes lead buyers to exit the market, the number of homes for sale will have grown significantly.

And so it's not surprising that prices have also been falling again. According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, home prices declined 1.9% from the fourth quarter of 2009 to the first quarter of 2010. Prices were up 0.3% in March, according to the FHFA data, but the general trend is not encouraging. The latest Case-Shiller home price figures are similarly disappointing. Both of the Case-Shiller national indexes had declined for six consecutive months, through March. Only two of the individual markets, San Diego and San Francisco, saw a rise in home values in the first quarter. Total declines from last fall's price peak haven't been catastrophic. But they are troubling. Nearly a quarter of all mortgage borrowers remain underwater on their home loans. In the first quarter, the share of prime loans that were delinquent or in foreclosure rose sharply. That's bad for housing inventory, bad for home prices, and bad for the residential investment outlook.

These trends are the more worrisome given the end of the homebuyer tax credit and of Fed purchases of mortgage-backed securities. Just this week, the head of the Federal Housing Administration declared that, "This is a market purely on life support, sustained by the federal government…having FHA do this much volume is a sign of a very sick system.” The federal government may come to regret its decision to focus on measures aimed at encouraging sales, rather than on efforts to deal with negative homeowner equity. The latter issue has made for a steady-stream of foreclosed-upon housing inventory, too substantial to be absorbed by new buyers. And so with government measures winding down, the housing bust is free to carry on as before.

It is unlikely (though not impossible) that prices will plummet once more; price declines are likely to be small relative to those experienced in 2008 and 2009. But small declines are enough to do damage. Four years after the housing boom reached its apex and the bust began, and end to the mess remains just out of reach.

Delaying the decline

If justice delayed is justice denied, what is a market bust delayed? For as ominous as the signs are for our market, prices locally will likely continue to rise for the near term. Lenders have constricted inventory by failing to approve short sales and failing to foreclose on delinqent borrowers. With interest rates below 5% again, payment affordability is good. Until more product is released to the market or interest rates go up, prices will hold steady or rise. Unless lenders consider squatting a permanent solution to the problem, this product will come to the market, and it will impact pricing. it is only a matter of time.

Auction with equity

Today's featured property is a rarity in the trustee sale market since the crash: and equity owner who did not sell prior to auction.

The property was purchased on 4/15/2003 for $490,000. The owner used a $392,000 first mortgage and a $98,000 down payment. On 1/13/2005 he opened a $100,000 HELOC, but there is no indication that he used it. Then he defaulted:

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 05/26/2009

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 02/18/2009

Document Type: Notice of Default

I looks like they gave him about nine months after the NOT was filed before they actually went to auction. It isn't known why the owner did not sell and obtain his equity during that time.

The opening bid at auction was about $416,833.94. It was quickly bid up to $596,000. It is being flipped for a quick profit.

Irvine Home Address … 2 SANTA LUZIA AISLE Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $699,000

Home Purchase Price … $596,000

Home Purchase Date …. 3/16/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $61,060

Percent Change ………. 17.3%

Annual Appreciation … 65.5%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$699,000 ………. Asking Price

$139,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.87% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$559,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$142,600 ………. Income Requirement

$2,958 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$606 ………. Property Tax

$225 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$58 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$151 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,998 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$719 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$688 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$262 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$87 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,940 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$6,990 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$6,990 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$5,592 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$139,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$159,372 ………. Total Cash Costs

$45,000 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$204,372 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 2 SANTA LUZIA AISLE Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

Beds: 3

Baths: 2 full 1 part baths

Home size: 1,678 sq ft

($417 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 3,161 sq ft

Year Built: 1996

Days on Market: 40

Listing Updated: 40289

MLS Number: S614144

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Community: Westpark

Tract: Rave

——————————————————————————

Gorgeous Home in Westpark. Upgraded Marble in entrance. Walking distance to school & park. Custom Window Covering. Mirrored walk-in closet door. Cathedral-vaulted ceilings. New Paint. Move-in ready.

.

I will not be participating in the comments today. It is my tenth wedding anniversary, and I will be be spending the day out with my family.

Ten years in, and I love my wife more than the day we were married. I am looking forward to the next ten and many more.

Preventing the Next Housing Bubble – Part 1

Preventing the Next Housing Bubble

The pain of the deflation of a housing bubble cannot be avoided by trying to keep the bubble inflated, or by trying to deflate it slowly. The only way to avoid these problems is to prevent the bubble from inflating in the first place through some form of intervention in the mortgage market. Intervention can take the form of a market-based intervention demanded by investors and ratings agencies, and it can also come about through direct government regulation.

Necessary Intervention

The regulated free-market system in place at the turn of the millennium allowed the creation of the Great Housing Bubble. Some combination of market-based and regulatory reforms is necessary to prevent the same circumstances that created the bubble from creating another one; it is imperative to prevent the next bubble in order to avoid the problems from the bubble’s deflation. [iii] The kind of intervention proposed here is not a bailout plan. A substantive bailout plan to rescue homeowners would be fraught with problems and unintended consequences. In September of 2008, the banking system neared collapse due to the problems of the fallout, and a banking system bailout became necessary. This outcome argues more forcefully for an intervention to prevent future bubbles from occurring in the housing market.

Economic Problems

The foremost problem resulting from the deflation of the Great Housing Bubble was the imperilment of our banking and financial system. The Great Depression was precipitated by the collapse of margin trading and the subsequent decline of the stock market beginning in 1929; however, this decline is not what made the Great Depression so severe. The policies responding to the upheaval caused many banks to fail, and it was the failure of banks that led to the dramatic decline in business activity and asset deflation of the Great Depression. To prevent a repeat of those problems, Congress passed a number of banking reforms granting the Federal Reserve broad powers over our currency and effectively abandoned the gold standard. One of the most successful of these policies was the establishment of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to guarantee the safety of deposits in banking institutions and prevent panic-induced, mass depositor withdrawals (aka “bank runs”) from decimating our banking system. Since the FDIC has been in effect, mass depositor withdrawals at American banks have been relatively uncommon. Just as the deflation of the stock market asset bubble of the Great Depression imperiled the banking system, the deflation of the Great Housing Bubble endangered the banking system because the bank losses were so severe that most became insolvent and many went bankrupt or were taken over by other lenders. Whenever the banking system is put in jeopardy, economic growth is curtailed, and other major economic problems develop.

Another source of economic problems caused by housing market bubbles is the immobility of workers. These problems were witnessed in the deflation of the coastal bubble during the early 1990s, and they occurred again in the deflation of the Great Housing Bubble. When people owe more on their mortgage than their house is worth, they could not move freely to accept promotions or work in other areas. In such circumstances the borrower had limited options. The borrower could have tried to rent the property, but those who bought at bubble prices paid in excess of its rental value so renting the property did not cover the costs of ownership. They were losing money each month trying to keep the house. If they tried to sell the house to avoid the monthly loss, they could not get enough money in the sale to pay off the debt. The borrower would either pay the lender the difference or accept the negative consequences of a short sale or foreclosure. Most often they chose the latter option. Since none of the options available to borrowers were very palatable, many passed on promotions or other opportunities because they were trapped in their homes. Employers also faced difficulties when house prices were much higher than local incomes. When an employer wanted to expand and hire new people, the potential new employee was repelled by the high house prices and either demanded a higher wage or refused to accept employment. Both circumstances were detrimental to the economy when an employee was trapped in their home and could not move and when an employer could not attract new employees because local house prices were very high.

Like all financial bubbles, the bubble in residential real estate caused the inefficient use of capital resources. When prices rose, it signified an increase in demand, and the supply chain went to work to deliver more supply to meet this demand and capture the profits from increased prices. When the demand was artificial, as was the case in a bubble, the market became oversupplied, and this supply was not of the type or quantity the market really needed. For instance, in the NASDAQ stock market bubble, billions of dollars of investment capital flowed into internet companies. This money went into all forms of unproductive uses which ultimately provided little or no return on the investment capital. In the Great Housing Bubble, the inflated prices prompted builders to construct many large houses known as McMansions. The economics favored this because the largest homes had the lowest cost per-square-foot to construct, and these houses obtained some of the highest revenues per-square-foot on the market. The result was entire neighborhoods of homes that were very resource wasteful. If the construction resources had been allocated based on true market need, which would have happened in the absence of price bubble distortions, fewer construction resources would have gone into each home, the ongoing cost of maintenance would have been reduced, and fewer total homes would have been built. The temporary demand of construction resources in a financial bubble also impacted human resources. There was a nationwide increase in construction employment to meet the bubble demand. When the bubble burst, many of these people were laid off causing both economic and personal turmoil.

Financial bubbles also witnessed the birth, growth and death of unsustainable financial models. The NASDAQ bubble had internet companies, and the Great Housing Bubble had subprime lending. The subprime lending model was profitable despite a 10% to 15% default rate among its customers. The industry was able to sustain this rate of default because the default losses they sustained were small as long as prices were rising. As soon as prices stopped rising, their loan default rates increased, and their default losses drove the entire industry into oblivion. [iv]

In the aftermath of the coastal housing bubble of the early 90s, the economy experienced a period of diminished consumer spending because many homeowners who bought during the bubble and did not go into foreclosure were making payments that represent a high percentage of their income. The extra money going toward their mortgage payment, the money in excess of normal debt-to-income guidelines was money the borrower did not have available to spend on other things. The diminished discretionary spending income from this population of borrowers slowed economic growth in an economy heavily dependent upon consumer spending such as the United States. [v] Many borrowers during the Great Housing Bubble became accustomed to supplementing their income through mortgage equity withdrawal. When house prices fell, mortgage equity withdrawal was curtailed. This forced many to adjust their lifestyles to live within the money provided by their wage incomes after paying the large debt-service payments. This loss of spending power was not just a difficult economic problem, it was a deeply personal problem for those who wished to spend freely.

Personal Problems

The economic problems caused by asset price bubbles often lead to personal problems in the wake of the deflating bubble. Statistics about unemployment, foreclosure and bankruptcy are impersonal. The events that result in any one of these outcomes was anything but impersonal: these things happened to real people who had very real emotional responses. Many people during the fallout of the Great Housing Bubble experienced all three. Any one of these outcomes can lead to depression, suicide, divorce and a whole host of traumatic personal problems. All of it was preventable if the bubble was not allowed to inflate in the first place.

The volatility of price action during a bubble had a profound and capricious impact on people’s financial lives. Many people became enriched by fortuitous timing. Some of these people were market savvy individuals who knew when to buy and sell in a volatile market; however, since the mindset of a successful trader was rare, and since most housing market participants were amateurs with emotional responses almost guaranteed to produce a loss, the majority of bubble participants lost a great deal of money. Some were lucky. Some people bought and sold at the right time due to life circumstances beyond their control. Those who transferred out of bubble markets for their careers and sold their houses at the peak reaped huge windfalls. Of course, for every seller who reaped a windfall, there was a buyer who faced major financial difficulties. The unequal distribution of gains and losses from bubble market volatility is not a positive feature.

Another group of people deeply impacted by bubble market volatility are those who chose not to participate. Some of these people recognized the bubble for what it was, and some could not set aside common sense to accept the fallacious beliefs of bubble mentality. This group was forced to rent during the bubble and subsequent decline. Many of these people would have preferred ownership, preferred to have the freedom to customize a property to their liking, and preferred to obtain the intangible benefits of ownership such as a feeling of community and belonging. These people had to endure the patient “waiting game” and feelings of groundlessness renting can entail.

Addressing the Cause

Before a doctor prescribes a treatment, the patient must first be evaluated and a disease must be diagnosed. Similarly, implementing a new policy in either the public sector or private sector to prevent future housing bubbles can only take place after the causes of the housing bubble are accurately identified. If the root causes are not identified correctly, policy initiatives may not have the desired effect. The Great Housing Bubble was a credit bubble, and some form of restriction of credit must be part of any policy initiative. A common criticism of past initiatives restricting credit availability to homeowners is that these initiatives tended to limit opportunities for home ownership without properly addressing problems with lending practices. [vi] The goal of any policy initiative with regards to preventing future housing bubbles is to limit or constrain irrational exuberance without impacting the smooth operation of the financial market. It is no easy task.

Before a policy can be formulated, there needs to be an open discussion of the goal of maximizing home ownership. Owning a home has become synonymous with the American Dream. Every Presidential administration has had the expansion of home ownership as one of its goals. The tax code is structured to give tax breaks to home owners to encourage home ownership. The idea of home ownership is deeply embedded in our culture.

Managing the rate of home ownership is analogous to managing the rate of economic growth. It is not the policy of our government or the Federal Reserve to maximize economic growth. Instead, the Federal Reserve balances economic growth with inflation and tries to manage economic growth to keep it on a sustainable path. This policy grew out of our painful history of economic cycles of boom and bust. It was realized that economic growth must be tempered to a sustainable level to minimize the damage of economic downturns. Similarly, the rate of home ownership should not be maximized. Home ownership will never reach 100%, and this should not be the goal of housing policy. Just as economic growth is tempered by the rate of inflation, home ownership rates are tempered by the rate of default of mortgage loan programs.

The harsh reality is that a certain percentage of the population lacks the desire, discipline or responsibility requisite to be a homeowner. There is a percentage of the population who do not want to be homeowners. Many people require mobility to pursue career opportunities or other goals. Some people like the freedom of renting and do not want the responsibilities of home ownership that go beyond monthly payments. There are some people who simply do not make housing payments consistently. This group is not capable of sustaining home ownership. There may be opportunities for policy initiatives to increase education to make this group smaller, but there will always be some people who cannot or will not do what is necessary to keep a house: make their payments. There is a percentage of the general population who should be renters.

There is a natural, sustainable level of home ownership. Home ownership rates in the United States increased markedly at the end of World War Two as the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage became the commonly accepted vehicle of home finance. In the 60 years that followed, home ownership rates stabilized between 60% and 65% through good economic times and recessions and interest rates ranging from below 6% to above 18%. Subprime lending demonstrated that increasing the home ownership rate through the widespread use of lending programs with high default rates is inherently unstable. Managing the home ownership rate is not a subject of governmental policy. Any legislative initiative to specifically limit home ownership rates would be politically unpalatable; however, either a market-based initiative or a legislative initiative that prevents the widespread use of loan programs subject to high rates of default rates would effectively manage the home ownership rate and prevent painful declines in that rate. Home ownership rates decline as homeowners become renters, a painful process known as foreclosure.

What did not cause the bubble?

There are a wide variety of ideas for preventing future housing bubbles, and all the ideas in the public forum are not discussed here. Some of the more popular are examined to demonstrate why they would not be successful. Most of the ideas that will not work are some form of direct regulation of interest rates, secondary mortgage market activities, price-to-income ratios or investment of equity capital. All regulatory initiatives carry a common problem: there is little enforcement once a bubble starts inflating. When times are good, there is immense political pressure for regulators to look the other way. When there is no apparent, immediate harm from a given practice, there is only a vague memory of a time long ago when circumstances were quite different and some restrictive law was passed. The law may seem quaint and old-fashioned or simply an obstruction to the wheels of progress. The rationalizations and justifications for ignoring laws are many, and the pressure to do so is intense when powerful lobbying interests are pressuring Congressmen who subsequently pressure government regulators.

Many believe that lower interest rates created the Great Housing Bubble, and the regulation of interest rates would prevent future bubbles. This is wrong on both counts. The lowering of interest rates did help precipitate the bubble by reducing borrowing costs and increasing home prices; however, once house prices started to rise, prices went much higher than the lower interest rates alone can account for. At most, one-third to one-half of the national price increase was due to lower interest rates, and less than 10% of the increase in coastal areas can be attributed to these lower rates. The direct regulation of mortgage interest rates would disrupt the free flow of capital in the mortgage market. If the regulated rate was too low, no money would be made available, and if the rate was too high, excess money would flow into real estate working to create another bubble. No form of mortgage interest rate regulation would prevent a future bubble because interest rates were not responsible for the Great Housing Bubble.

Much of the responsibility for the bubble can be attributed to the flow of funds into the market from hedge funds through collateralized debt obligations. There have also been calls for greater regulation of hedge funds and the secondary mortgage market. Any kind of regulation would likely restrict the flow of money to all mortgages and disrupt the secondary market. Also, regulating hedge funds themselves will prove problematic, if for no other reason, it is difficult to define exactly what a hedge fund is. Also, hedge funds are simply investment vehicles, and it is unclear exactly what they do that other investment entities do not do that causes problems resulting in financial bubbles. Much of the demonization of hedge funds is demagoguery and looking for someone to blame. Many of the problems with the secondary markets will correct themselves as investors stop investing in products that lose money. In fact, one of the greatest challenges in the aftermath of the Great Housing Bubble is going to be getting investors back into the secondary market. One of the market-based solutions proposed herein addresses these issues. Direct legislative intervention to hedge funds and collateralized debt obligations would be more disruptive than productive.

Another proposed solution is to regulate the loan-to-income ratio of the borrower. When 30-year fixed-rate mortgages first came out, mortgage debt was limited to two and one-half times a borrower’s yearly income. It was an artificial limit that made sense when interest rates were higher and people were accustomed to putting less money toward housing payments. A legislative cap on the loan-to-income ratio would prevent future housing bubbles, if it was enforced. This would not work for the same reason lenders went away from the two-and-one-half-times-income standard years ago: it does not reflect changes in borrowing power due to changes in interest rates. This idea of regulating loan-to-income ratios is actually an evolution of the idea of regulating interest rates. If the total loan-to-income ratio is limited, very low interest rates do not cause dramatic price increases, but since low interest rates were not really the cause of the bubble, limiting the loan-to-income ratio is not addressing the real cause of the bubble. Plus, there are ways to get around a cap on home loan borrowing by obtaining other loans not secured by real estate. It would be relatively easy for a borrower to obtain bridge financing to acquire a property and then obtain a HELOC to pay off the bridge financing. In the end, the borrower would have borrowed more than the cap amount thus rendering any cap meaningless. To close the various loopholes, more regulations would be required, and a regulatory nightmare would ensue. A better and more effective method of limiting borrowing is to regulate the debt-to-income ratio. This idea is explored in the next section.

What did cause the bubble?

The Great Housing Bubble was caused by an expansion of credit that enabled irrational exuberance and wild speculation. The expansion of credit came in the form of relaxed loan underwriting terms including high debt-to-income ratios, lower FICO scores, high combined-loan-to-value lending including 100% financing, and loan terms permitting negative amortization. Addressing the conditions of expanding credit is a legitimate focus for intervention in the credit markets. Another major lending problem is unrelated to the terms: low documentation standards. The credit crunch that gripped the markets in late 2007 was exacerbated by the rampant fraud and misrepresentation in the loan documents underwriting the loans packaged and sold in the secondary mortgage market. It is essential to an evaluation of the viability of a mortgage note to know if the borrower actually has the income necessary to make the payments. When investors lost confidence in the underlying documents, the whole system seized up, and it was not going to work properly until the documentation improved to reflect the reality of the borrower’s financial situation. Any remedy for the housing bubble must address the issue of poor documentation in order to facilitate the smooth operation of the secondary market.

There are some factors that created the Great Housing Bubble that cannot be directly regulated. One of these is the lax enforcement of existing regulations as described previously. Even though lenders and investors lost a great deal of money during the price crash, their behavior during the bubble was still predatory. Lenders peddled unstable loan programs to borrowers who could not afford the payments. They did not do this to obtain the property as is ordinarily the case with predatory lending; they did it to obtain a fee through loan origination. Since they felt insulated from the losses to these loans being packaged and sold to investors, they were in a position to profit at the expense of borrowers–the definition of predatory lending. Another factor that cannot be regulated is the crazy behavior of borrowers caught up in a speculative mania. It is not possible to stop people from overpaying for real estate, but it is possible from preventing them from doing so with borrowed money. If people wish to risk their own equity in property speculation, it is their money to lose, but when lender money is part of the equation, the entire financial system can be put at risk, which it was during the Great Housing Bubble. The fickle nature of borrowers became apparent during the decline of the bubble when many borrowers behaved in a predatory manner refusing to make payments on loans they could have afforded to make because the property had declined in value. Borrowers who were grateful to receive 100% financing and what was perceived at the time to be favorable loan terms were not hesitant to betray the lenders when their speculative investment did not go as planned.

The 30-year fixed-rate conventionally-amortizing mortgage with a reasonable downpayment is the only loan program proven to provide stability in the housing market. Many of the “affordability” products used during the Great Housing Bubble and many of the deviations from traditional underwriting standards created the bubble. Mortgage debt-to-income ratios greater than 28% and total indebtedness greater than 36% have a proven history of default. Despite this fact, debt-to-income ratios greater than 50% were common in the most extreme bubble markets. [vii] Limiting debt-to-income ratios is critical to stopping loan defaults and foreclosures. Lower FICO scores was the hallmark of subprime lending. FICO scores provide a fairly accurate profile of a borrower’s willingness and ability to pay their debts as planned. Low FICO scores are synonymous with high default rates. Limiting availability of credit to those with low FICO scores was a historic barrier to home ownership because these people default too much. The free market solved this problem. Subprime was dead. High combined-loan-to-value (CLTV) lending including 100% financing is also prone to high default rates. In fact, it is more important than FICO score. FICO scores are very good at predicting who will default when downpayments are large, but when borrowers have very little of their own money in the transactions, both prime and subprime borrowers defaulted at high rates. Many prime borrowers are more sophisticated financially, and the unscrupulous recognized 100% financing as a perfect tool for speculating in the real estate market and passing the risk off to a lender. The primary culprits that inflated the housing bubble were the negative amortization loan and interest-only loans where lenders qualified buyers on their ability to make only the initial payment. As the Great Housing Bubble began to deflate, Minnesota and some other states passed laws restricting the use of negative amortization loans and required lenders to qualify borrowers based on their ability to make a fully amortized payment. The Minnesota law is a good template for the rest of the nation.

Any proposal to prevent bubbles from reoccurring in the residential real estate market must properly identify the cause, provide a solution that is enforceable, and allow for the unhindered working of the secondary mortgage market. The solutions outlined below are both market-based, meaning it does not require government regulation, and regulatory based, meaning it entails some form of civil or criminal penalties to prevent certain forms of behavior leading to market bubbles. All changes are difficult to implement and the solutions presented here would be no exception. Any policies which prevent future bubbles will be opposed by those who profit from these activities and homeowners who are in need of the next bubble to get out of the bad deals they entered during the Great Housing Bubble. Despite these difficulties, it is imperative that reform take place, or the country may experience another housing bubble with all the pain and financial hardship it entails.

Market Solutions

The secondary mortgage market was created in the 1970s by the government sponsored entities, Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and Ginnie Mae. This market was expanded by the creation of asset-backed securities where mortgage loans are packed together into collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). This flow of capital into the mortgage market is a necessary and efficient tool for delivering money to borrowers for home mortgages. This market must remain viable for the continued health of residential real estate markets. The problem during the Great Housing Bubble was that the buyers of CDOs did not properly evaluate the risk of loss through default on the underlying mortgage notes that were pooled. The reason these risks were not evaluated properly is due to the appraisal methods used to value real estate serving as collateral backing up these loans.

There is one potential market-based solution that would require no government regulation or intervention that would prevent future bubbles from being created with borrowed capital: change the method of appraisal for residential real estate from valuations based exclusively on the comparative-sales approach to a valuation derived from the lesser of the income approach and the comparative-sales approach. Both approaches are already part of a standard appraisal, so little additional work is necessary–other than appraisers will have to focus on doing the income approach properly. In the current lending system, the income approach is widely ignored. This change of emphasis in valuation methods could come from the investors in CDOs themselves. When the fallout from the Great Housing Bubble is evaluated, it is clear that the comparative-sales approach simply enables irrational exuberance because the past foolish behavior of buyers becomes the basis for future valuations allowing other buyers to continue bidding up prices with lender and investor money. Prices collapsed in the Great Housing Bubble because prices became greatly detached from their fundamental valuation of income and rent. This occurred because the comparative-sales approach enables prices to rise based on the irrational exuberance of buyers. If lenders would have limited their lending based on the income approach, and if they would not have loaned money beyond what the rental cashflow from the property could have produced, any price bubble would have to have been built with buyer equity, and lender and investor funds would not have been put at risk. There is no way to prevent future bubbles, and the commensurate imperilment of our financial system, as long as the comparative-sales approach is the exclusive basis of appraisals for residential real estate.

Investor confidence in the market for CDOs and all mortgages was shaken during the decline of the Great Housing Bubble–and rightly so. Investors were losing huge sums, and nobody clearly understood why. There was a widespread belief these losses were caused by some outside factor rather than a systemic problem enabled by the lenders and investors themselves. [viii] For investor confidence to return to this market, investors must first ascertain a more accurate evaluation of potential losses due to mortgage default. This requires an accurate appraisal of the fundamental value of the residential real estate serving as collateral for the mortgage loans that comprise the CDOs. Since the fundamental value of residential real estate, the value to which prices ultimately fall during a price decline, is determined by the potential for rental income from the property, revaluing properties using the income approach would provide a more accurate measure of the value of the mortgage note and thereby the CDO.

The ratings agencies who rate the various tranches of CDOs must adopt the method of valuation utilizing the lesser value of the income approach and the comparative-sales approach. The ratings agency’s recommendations and ratings carry significant weight with investors, and the ratings agencies clearly made a tragic error in their ratings of CDOs during the Great Housing Bubble. If the ratings agencies properly evaluate the underlying collateral backing up the mortgages that are pooled together in a CDO, investors will regain confidence in the ratings, and money will return to the secondary market. If investors in CDOs recognize the chain of valuation as described, they would be unwilling to purchase CDOs valued by other methods. If investors are unwilling to purchase CDOs where the underlying collateral value is measured using the comparative-sales approach and instead demand a valuation based on the income approach, the syndicators of CDOs will be forced to respond to investor demands or they will not be able to sell their syndications. Investors and the ratings agencies can mandate a new valuation method for residential home mortgages.

In September of 2008, the Federal Government took “conservatorship” of the GSEs responsible for maintaining the secondary mortgage market. With the collapse of the asset-backed securities markets and CDOs, the GSE swaps were the only viable market for mortgage paper. This provides a unique opportunity for changing the market dynamics with limited government intervention. If the government in its role as conservator were to decide to mandate a change in appraisal methods, the secondary market would be forced to accept this change. Like any sweeping change in methodology, it could be phased in over time to properly train appraisers and work out the details of implementation. If the GSEs lead, the rest of the market will follow.

The main objection with the income approach is the difficulty of evaluating market rents, particularly in markets where there may not be many (or any) comparative properties for rent in the market. This is an old problem, one that has been studied in great detail by the Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics. [ix] Comparative rents have been collected by the DOL since the early 1980s as part of their calculation of the Consumer Price Index. The problem of irrational exuberance in the late 1970s in coastal markets, particularly California, caused the consumer price index to rise rapidly. Since the CPI is widely used as an index for cost-of-living adjustments, volatility in this measure caused by the resale housing market needed to be urgently addressed. After over a decade of study, the DOL decided to value the change in housing costs by a comparative rental approach rather than a change in sales price approach used previously. This smoothed the index and reduced volatility because the consumptive aspect of housing services were tethered to rents and incomes rather than being subject to the volatility caused by irrational exuberance in the housing market.

The Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics measures the market rental rate in markets across the United States. It breaks down the market into subcategories based on the number of bedrooms, and it does a good job of estimating market rents in the various subcategories. These numbers are updated each year. The figures from the DOL would serve as a basis for evaluation of market rents, and it may be the only basis in areas where there are few rentals. In submarkets where there is sufficient rental activity, the income approach can use real comparables to make a more accurate evaluation. Appraisers will decry the lack of available data on rentals as many rentals, particularly for single-family detached homes are done by private landlords who do not report these transactions; however, if this method of appraisal were the standard, private companies would spring up to track these transactions and maintain an up-to-date database. Valuing properties based on the income approach may be more difficult than the comparative-sales approach, but when the latter method is fundamentally flawed, ease-of-use is not a compelling reason to continue to rely on it.

There is also the objection that the income approach method of valuing residential real estate has the same problems as the comparative-sales approach because both approaches rely on finding similar properties and making an estimation of market value by adjusting the values of comparative properties. In both approaches the appraiser must explain their reasons for the adjustments to justify the appraised value of the subject property, and this is a potential source of abuse of the system. No system is perfect, but the potential to inflate prices though manipulating appraisals based on the income approach is far less than the potential problems emanating from the comparative-sales approach because the basis of adjustment in the income approach is a property's fundamental value whereas the basis of adjustment in the comparative-sales approach is the prices paid by buyers subject to bouts with irrational exuberance. If lenders start accepting appraisals where the income approach contains adjustments to value that increase the appraised amount 100%–something that would have been required to justify pricing seen during the Great Housing bubble–then the system is hopelessly broken. The main argument for using the income approach is that its basis is the fundamental value whereas the basis for the comparative-sales approach is whatever price the market will currently bear. Prices are not likely to decline below a properties fundamental value where as a property may decline significantly from a point-in-time estimate of market value. Using the income approach lessens the risk to lenders and investors and ensures the smooth operation of the secondary mortgage market. Using the comparative-sales approach exclusively results in the turmoil witnessed during the price decline of the Great Housing Bubble.


Japan endured 15 years of slow deflation from the combined stock market and real estate bubbles of the late 1980s. The 1990s are known in Japan as “the lost decade” due to the problems from the slow deflation of their asset bubble.

In July of 2008, the Fed made changes to Reg Z which would have been helpful in reducing the size of the housing bubble, the amount of fraud during the bubble, and the resulting pain of the bust. Unfortunately, they were at least five years too late. The changes to Reg Z were: The rule, for “higher-priced loans: 1. Prohibits a lender from making a loan without regard to borrowers' ability to repay the loan from income and assets other than the home's value. A lender complies, in part, by assessing repayment ability based on the highest scheduled payment in the first seven years of the loan. To show that a lender violated this prohibition, a borrower does not need to demonstrate that it is part of a "pattern or practice. 2. Prohibits a lender from relying on income or assets that it does not verify to determine repayment ability. 3. Bans any prepayment penalty if the payment can change during the initial four years. For other higher-priced loans, a prepayment penalty period cannot last for more than two years. 4.Requires that the lender establish an escrow account for the payment of property taxes and homeowners' insurance for first-lien loans. The lender may offer the borrower the opportunity to cancel the escrow account after one year. The rule, for all closed-end mortgages secured by a consumer's principal dwelling: 1. Prohibits certain servicing practices: failing to credit a payment to a consumer’s account as of the date the payment is received, failing to provide a payoff statement within a reasonable period of time, and "pyramiding" late fees. 2. Prohibits a creditor or broker from coercing or encouraging an appraiser to misrepresent the value of a home. 3. Creditors must provide a good faith estimate of the loan costs, including a schedule of payments, within three days after a consumer applies for any mortgage loan secured by a consumer's principal dwelling, such as a home improvement loan or a loan to refinance an existing loan. The rule, for all mortgages: Requires advertising to contain additional information about rates, monthly payments, and other loan features. The rule also bans seven deceptive or misleading advertising practices, including representing that a rate or payment is "fixed" when it can change. “

[iii] In their paper Predicting Bubbles and Bubble Substitutes (Thompson, Treussard, & Hickson, 2004), the authors contend that certain kinds of bubble intentionally created by government authorities can have positive long-term effects.

[iv] The subprime mortgage industry may mount a comeback in the aftermath of the Great Housing Bubble. The original business plan was to take borrowers who had good incomes and savings to put toward a downpayment, but they had low FICO scores which prevented them from getting a Prime loan. These borrowers used subprime as bridge financing until their FICO scores improved and they could refinance into Prime loans. The subprime business plan relied on capacity (income) and collateral (downpayment) to make up for the lack of good credit. Those who go through foreclosure in the bubble will end up with bad credit, but they may have good income and savings. They will be an underserved borrower class that will likely prompt resurgence in subprime lending. The problem with subprime was not that the borrowers had poor credit scores; it was that lenders ignored capacity and collateral on the loans. This is why Alt-A and Prime loans also performed poorly when prices deflated. Subprime will likely resurface, whereas Alt-A is permanently defunct.

[v] Much of California’s lingering economic troubles of the early 90s can be linked to diminished consumer spending due to excessive mortgage obligations. Many people inaccurately point to job losses in the aerospace industry as the cause of California’s economic weakness, but this sector was small, and the contraction only lasted a couple of years, whereas the economic slump persisted almost 6 years.

[vi] This is the primary argument against any kind of legislative reform (Wallace, Elliehausen, & Staten, 2005).

[vii] When credit first began to tighten in 2007, the government sponsored entities who insure mortgage loans for sale in the secondary market issued a series of guidelines on the loans they would insure. In the first version, debt-to-income ratios were limited to 50%. In a subsequent revision in late 2007, the debt-to-income ratio was limited to 45%. The tightening of credit was slow enough to keep some transactions occurring in the market, but fast enough to stop underwriters from originating bad loans. As of the time of this writing it is anticipated that the ratio will continue to fall.

[viii] In his groundbreaking work The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable (Taleb, 2007), the author describes how unpredictable and dramatic events shape our history.

[ix] There is a great synopsis of the history and calculation of the rental components of the consumer price index contained in the report Treatment of Owner-Occupied Housing in the CPI (Poole, Ptacek, & Verbrugge, 2005).

IHB News 5-26-2010

I hope you are all taking advantage of our perfect weather and enjoying your holiday weekend.

Irvine Home Address … 518 LUMINOUS Irvine, CA 92603

Resale Home Price …… $1,599,000

{book1}

Then as it was, then again it will be

An' though the course may change sometimes

Rivers always reach the sea

Flyin' skys of fortune, each have separate ways

On the wings of maybe, downy birds of prey

Kind of makes me feel sometimes, didn't have to go

But as the eagle leaves the nest, it's got so far to go

Led Zeppelin — Ten Years Gone

Housing Bubble News from Patrick.net

Fri May 28 2010

The Root of the Housing Bubble Remains Unchanged (Charles Hugh Smith)

The Hard Truth About Residential Real Estate (zerohedge.com)

Easy Money, Hard Truths (nytimes.com)

New $3bn Foreclosure Prevention Program Added to Wall Street Reform Bill (209.236.64.240)

How real estate became the new volunteer slavery (theroot.com)

California "Millionaires": Debtors Who Service Over $1,000,000 (irvinehousingblog.com)

Mortgage Rates Fall to 4.8%, House Buyers Still Scarce (blogs.wsj.com)

No Progress in Weekly Unemployment Claims for Five Months (Mish)

Questions To Ask Those Who Believe That Economic Recovery Is Real (theeconomiccollapseblog.com)

Economist says inflation coming due to gov't printing money — gets cut off (dvorak.org)

The Cult of Subprime Central Bankers (huffingtonpost.com)

Bank fails and goes about its business (latimes.com)

Is Australian Housing Market Set to Topple? (moneymorning.com.au)

Sydney property market – a cold wind is blowing (curtisassociates.com.au)

San Francisco gets a taste of the commercial real estate bust (mybudget360.com)

Thousands more in S.F. seek property tax breaks (sfgate.com)

Oklahoma City Hailstorm Meets Poor Construction (stumbleupon.com)

Fun Stock Map Showing Market Values As Areas (finviz.com)

Perfect for the do-it-yourselfer (patrick.net)


Thu May 27 2010

San Francisco's Parkmerced in default (sfgate.com)

Lessons of hard times in Vallejo, CA (latimes.com)

Bank-owned properties alter character of SF East Bay neighborhoods (contracostatimes.com)

Seattle's backyard cottages make a dent in housing need (usatoday.com)

Is South Florida housing rebound a myth? (weblogs.sun-sentinel.com)

House prices overvalued by 14 per cent in Canada (yourhome.ca)

Bad at Math? You're More Likely to Default on Your Mortgage (money.blogs.time.com)

More "Buy Now" spin from the builders (patrick.net)

In a Word, the Problem is "Debt" (timiacono.com)

FHA loans pass Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in Q1 (doctorhousingbubble.com)

Bill Gross, Robert Mundell say Sovereign Default Likely Inevitable (Mish)

Moodys Reiterates U.S. Spending Risks Credit Rating (bloomberg.com)

Mapping the Mortgage Interest Deduction (economix.blogs.nytimes.com)

Economics and the Nature of Political Crisis (theautomaticearth.blogspot.com)

The Financial Power Elite (monthlyreview.org)

Empty Desks Are Commercial Shadow Inventory (nytimes.com)

Projecting commercial mortgage delinquency trajectory (snl.com)


Wed May 26 2010

House prices drop 0.5 pct. from February to March (google.com)

House prices fall in March (latimes.com)

Southern California rents fall 7 straight months (lansner.freedomblogging.com)

Don't Rule Out a Double Dip Recession (online.wsj.com)

Anyone Still Bullish On Housing Clearly Isn't Paying Attention To Real Numbers (businessinsider.com)

New Jersey Assembly Approves Fresh Bait For Housing Trap (builderonline.com)

Why buying a house today makes little financial sense (mybudget360.com)

Crash is dead ahead. Sell. Get liquid. Now. (marketwatch.com)

Australian Housing Bubble: California Repeated? (scoop.co.nz)

Glut of bank-owned foreclosures means prolonged agony for California governments (contracostatimes.com)

Make the banks pay! Los Angeles Foreclosures Unmaintained (patrick.net)

CA seeks $4.9 billion in new taxes to pay for Prop 13 fiscal damage (sfgate.com)

New database shows $12.2 billion in SF Bay Area public employee salaries (contracostatimes.com)

Private pay shrinks to historic lows as gov't payouts rise (usatoday.com)

Cheap Mortgages: No Boost to Housing (online.barrons.com)

Hey, Mortgage Industry: Nobody Trusts You (blogs.wsj.com)

'Bailout psychology' destroying the economy (old but good – sfgate.com)

They got away with it: U.S. drops criminal probe of AIG executives (reuters.com)

Roubini: A Crash Course in the Future of Finance (c-spanvideo.org)

Customer stuck with counterfeit cash from post office (US stuck with counterfeits from Fed) (latimes.com)


Tue May 25 2010

Suppressing the Cognitive Dissonance of a Bogus Recovery (Charles Hugh Smith)

Existing House Sales Rise in April, but Inventory Soars (theatlantic.com)

Rising house sales likely to cool despite low rates (finance.yahoo.com)

Strategic Defaults Are Endangering Dead Real Estate Market (nuwireinvestor.com)

Utah's foreclosure crisis: Worst lurks ahead (sltrib.com)

FHA House-Financing Volume Sign of "Very Sick System" (businessweek.com)

Broke, USA: From Pawnshops to Poverty Inc. (businessweek.com)

Insanity Down Under: "Paying Principal on Mortgage Loans is Unnecessary" (Mish)

Can China avoid a real estate bubble burst? (csmonitor.com)

Federal government is trying to reinflate house prices (seekingalpha.com)

U.S. Federal Reserve Meeting Minutes for April 28 (bloomberg.com)

Defaults on Apartment-Building Loans Set Record for U.S. Banks (bloomberg.com)

Obama Versus the Corporations (nytimes.com)

New rule says banks must prove ownership before foreclosing (New rule?) (miamiherald.com)

US Leading Indicators drop in sign recovery to cool (smh.com.au)


Mon May 24 2010

Ignoring mortgage debt for fun and profit (articles.moneycentral.msn.com)

What kind of houseowners choose to default? (latimes.com)

Owner-investors ponder walking away (nctimes.com)

Mortgage Delinquency Rate vs. Unemployment Rate Graphed (calculatedriskblog.com)

Lenders expected to sue houseowners for repayment of mortgage debt (sun-sentinel.com)

East SF Bay town going after deadbeat banks to end foreclosure blight (contracostatimes.com)

Fewer would buy repo'd house vs. a year ago (mortgage.freedomblogging.com)

Principal-Protected Notes Aren't as Safe as They Sound (nytimes.com)

How Allen Stanford is worse than Madoff (money.cnn.com)

9 Southern California men charged with operating foreclosure-relief scam (latimes.com)

Foreclosure scam's mastermind gets 46 years in prison (signonsandiego.com)

The Challenge of Closing Tax Loopholes For Billionaires (robertreich.org)

Gates's Dad Says Rich Arent Paying Fair Share Taxes (bloomberg.com)

Fisher Island, haven of the rich, experiences dose of reality (miamiherald.com)

Slouching Towards Neofeudalism (huffingtonpost.com)

Padded Pensions Add to New York's Fiscal Woes (nytimes.com)

The Crippling Price of Public Employee Unions (usnews.com)

Economic Seer Says U.S. Not Addressing Real Cause of Crisis (time.com)

Today's featured debtor

  • Today's featured property was purchased for $1,830,000 on 12/1/2005. The owner used a $1,464,940 Option ARM with a 2.4% teaser rate, a $183,117 HELOC and a $181,943 down payment.
  • On 4/4/2006, Wells Fargo refinanced them with a $1,600,000 first mortgage and a $60,000 HELOC.
  • On 8/22/2006 Washington Mutual gave them a $229,790 HELOC. I suspect this foreclosure will go through because Wells will not mind blowing WAMU's second out.
  • Total property debt is $1,829,790. Basically, the buy withdrew his down payment with refinances.
  • He quit paying lat last year or perhaps in January of this year.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 04/02/2010

Document Type: Notice of Default

Irvine Home Address … 518 LUMINOUS Irvine, CA 92603

Resale Home Price … $1,599,000

Home Purchase Price … $1,830,000

Home Purchase Date …. 12/1/2005

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $(326,940)

Percent Change ………. -12.6%

Annual Appreciation … -3.0%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$1,599,000 ………. Asking Price

$319,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.94% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$1,279,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$328,831 ………. Income Requirement

$6,820 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$1386 ………. Property Tax

$417 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$133 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$252 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$9,008 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$1541 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$1554 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$611 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$200 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$6,724 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$15,990 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$15,990 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$12,792 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$319,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$364,572 ………. Total Cash Costs

$103,000 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$467,572 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 518 LUMINOUS Irvine, CA 92603

——————————————————————————

Beds: 5

Baths: 0005

Home size: 3792

($422 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 5535

Year Built: 2005

Days on Market: 14

Listing Updated: 40315

MLS Number: S616510

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Community: Quail Hill

——————————————————————————

Customized Tuscan estate w/ almost 4000 s. f. w/ 5BRs, 4.5BAs(including a separate casita) on the top street single-loaded street w/ drop-dead panoramic mountain, hills, valley, city lights & sunset views w/ distinctive builder and seller upgrades. 3-car att. gar. w/ epoxy flooring & custom cabinetry. Formal living & dining; Great rm w/ custom fireplace w/ pre-cast mantle, hearth & media niche; French doors open out to private loggia; gourmet kitchen w/ center island, GE Monogram Professional Series stainless steel appliances inc. gas cook-top, double ovens, microwave & built-in refrigerator ~ granite countertops with full backsplash; Opulent master bedroom with 10 ceiling plus retreat ~ French doors out to huge deck w/ phenomenal views; luxurious MBA replete w/ large soaking tub, separate shower, dual vanities & dual walk-in wardrobes; Professionally landscaped and hardscaped front, rear & side yards w/ blt-in BBQ & fountain; award-winning Alderwood Basics+ elem. & University HS; resort-style amenities

Vacant Bank-Owned Properties Are Being Sold Into the Market Rally

The fix is in to stabilize prices through restricting supply. Will the cartel arrangement hold up and permit an orderly liquidation of REO without crashing prices?

14911 Sumac Ave   Irvine, CA 92606  kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 14911 SUMAC Ave Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price …… $719,000

{book1}

Where were you when I was burned and broken

While the days slipped by from my window watching

And where were you when I was hurt and I was helpless

Because the things you say and the things you do surround me

While you were hanging yourself on someone else's words

Dying to believe in what you heard

I was staring straight into the shining sun

Lost in thought and lost in time

While the seeds of life and the seeds of change were planted

Outside the rain fell dark and slow

While I pondered on this dangerous but irresistible pastime

I took a heavenly ride through our silence

I knew the moment had arrived

For killing the past and coming back to life

Pink Floyd — Coming Back To Life

Is the housing market coming back to life? Am I being foolishly cautious to believe the massive inventory of delinquent borrowers will be a problem for the market?

The fix is in

Whether through concerted effort, foreclosure moratoria, or a coincidental paralysing reaction to crashing prices, banks stopped processing foreclosures as borrowers went delinquent in mid 2008. By early 2009, banks stabilized prices by constricting supply through dis-approving short sales and allowing widespread squatting. The banking regulators who are supposed to watch over lender's non-performing loans are turning a blind eye and allowing the amend-pretend-extend dance to go on. As far as I can tell lenders are going to continue on this path for the foreseeable future.

Everyone in the homebulding and development industries has responded to the apparent stabilization to provide new product to the market. Houses are being built and sold, loans are being written, and people are going to work. I think that is great, but there is one big problem: distressed inventory.

What are we going to do with all those homes?

Whenever I attend a Building Industry Association meeting, I ask the same question, "What are we going to do with all those homes?" Nobody really knows the answer.

Everyone hopes the lenders can meter out the supply at a rate that allows some amount of new construction and doesn't crash prices. The lenders hope the same. The problem is the arrangement is a cartel, and each bank has incentive to cheat and liquidate its non-performing assets. Banks need that capital, and it is wasted while it is tied up in a squatter's loan or vacant property. The incentive to liquidate is stronger than the incentive to hold out for higher prices, particularly since liquidation of the cheaters leads to lower prices for those who hold on.

Imagine the thousands of properties in distress being held until there is sufficient price and volume for lenders to liquidate. This is overhead supply. Until the market absorbs these homes, prices are not going higher. Perhaps in the short term, the limited supply can move prices up, but eventually, lenders need to foreclose and liquidate otherwise they have purchased a large number of properties and given them to squatters.

Today's featured property

This property was originally purchased on 10/28/2005 for $795,000. The owner used $636,000 first mortgage, a $159,000 second mortgage, and a $0 down payment. He defaulted in late 2006, and the property was purchased by U S BANK NA, ; HOME EQUITY ASSET TRUST 2006-1HOME EQUIT, ; SELECT PORTFOLIO SERVICING on 05/22/2007.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 04/27/2007

Document Type: Notice of Sale

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 01/25/2007

Document Type: Notice of Default

I first wrote about today's featured property in Pass the Knife from last July. Back then, the owner was asking $650,000 and couldn't get it. Now they believe the market has appreciated 10% and they can get $719,000.

14911 Sumac Ave   Irvine, CA 92606  kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 14911 SUMAC Ave Irvine, CA 92606

Resale Home Price … $719,000

Home Purchase Price … $600,000

Home Purchase Date …. 5/14/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $75,860

Percent Change ………. 19.8%

Annual Appreciation … 238.0%

Cost of Ownership

————————————————-

$719,000 ………. Asking Price

$143,800 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.94% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$575,200 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$147,861 ………. Income Requirement

$3,067 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$623 ………. Property Tax

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

$60 ………. Homeowners Insurance

$42 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

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

$3,792 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$748 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$699 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment

$275 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$90 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

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

$2,710 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$7,190 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$7,190 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$5,752 ………… Interest Points @1% of Loan

$143,800 ………. Down Payment

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

$163,932 ………. Total Cash Costs

$41,500 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

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

$205,432 ………. Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 14911 SUMAC Ave Irvine, CA 92606

——————————————————————————

Beds: 5

Baths: 2 full 1 part baths

Home size: 2,350 sq ft

($306 / sq ft)

Lot Size: 5,000 sq ft

Year Built: 1972

Days on Market: 8

Listing Updated: 40312

MLS Number: S617168

Property Type: Single Family, Residential

Tract: Cp

——————————————————————————

FAVORITE FLOORPLAN IN COLLEGE PARK WITH 5 BEDROOMS AND 2.5 BATHS .OVER 2 YEARS OLD PAINT IN AND OUT , RECESSED LIGHTING , NEW FLORRING , NEW GAS STOVE , SECTIONAL GARAGE DOOR , GRANITE COUNTERTOP , STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCE , CELLING FAN . CLOSE TO SCHOOL, SHOPPING,PARK , ASS POOL , FWY. BEST PRICE FOR THIS SIZE OF HOUSE IN IRVINE .

FLORRING? CELLING? This listing agent has random double-letter disorder.

I love the abbrviation for "association." I typically add an OC to the end to form "assoc." Although, an OC ASS POOL might be nice too….

{book3}

Despite the threat of overhanging supply and uncertainty about what will happen with distressed inventory, builders are building and selling homes.

Building Is Booming in a City of Empty Houses

By DAVID STREITFELD Published: May 15, 2010

LAS VEGAS — In a plastic tent under a glorious desert sky, Richard Lee preached the gospel of the second chance.

The chance to make money on the next housing boom “is like it’s never been,” Mr. Lee, a real estate promoter, assured a crowd of agents, investors and bankers. “We’re going to come back like you’ve never seen us before.”

Home prices in Las Vegas are down by 60 percent from 2006 in one of the steepest descents in modern times. There are 9,517 spanking new houses sitting empty. An additional 5,600 homes were repossessed by lenders in the first three months of this year and could soon be for sale.

Yet builders here are putting up 1,100 homes, and they are frantically buying lots for even more.

We have bulldozed thousands of homes on paper by tieing them up with squatters or allowing them to stay empty. Jim Cramer was right about bulldozing significant areas of Riverside County. We have. We bulldozed houses on paper by pretending and acting as if the houses are not there. It is even worse in Las Vegas.

Las Vegas is trying to recover by building what it does not need. It is an unlikely pattern being repeated in many of the areas where the housing crash was most severe.

“There’s a surprising rebound in the hardest-hit markets,” said Brad Hunter, chief economist with the consultant Metrostudy. “People are buying again.” From the recession’s lows, construction has nearly doubled in Las Vegas, Phoenix and Tucson. It is up 74 percent in inland Southern California and soaring in Florida.

Some of the demand is coming from families that are getting shut out of the bidding for foreclosures by syndicates that pay in cash, and some is from investors who are back on the prowl.

This statement is accurate, but it fails to capture what is really happening. The demand is still very low. Total construction and sales are far below the lowest low experienced since WWII. The blue line in the chart below is single-family residential development and construction. The bottom of the trough of the early 90s would feel like a housing boom relative to current activity levels.

The recovery we are seeing in the new home construction market is completely a result of the tight constriction of resale real estate by the banks. The inventory sits over the market waiting for banks to do something. Right now, the banks are feeling rewarded by doing nothing; prices are going up, and on paper, they are doing much better. Of course, they eventually have to sell those homes, and the demand is not infinite. As they sell, either prices will go down or appreciation will be held in check for decades.

Land and labor costs have fallen significantly, so the newest homes are competitively priced. …

“We’re building them because we’re selling them,” Mr. Anderson said. “Our customers wouldn’t care if there were 50 homes in an established neighborhood of 1980 or 1990 vintage, all foreclosed, empty and for sale at $10,000 less. They want new. And what are we going to do, let someone else build it?”

Builders are suppliers who react to market conditions. Builders do not make a market, nor do they exercise much influence over it. If conditions are such that a profit can be made building homes, that is what builders are going to do.

All of this goes contrary to the conventional wisdom, which suggests an improved market for builders is years away. Nationwide, new home sales at the beginning of this year plunged to a level below any recorded since 1963, when the figures were first officially tabulated.

The entire building industry is on life support. The minimal amount of homes we are building right now isn't enough to sustain very many people. We had over-employment in the building industry during the bubble, but now employment is so low that many qualified and experienced workers are having to retrain themselves for other work. The small core of knowledgeable professionals that we will need when real demand returns to the housing market is barely getting by.

Simply put, the country already has too many houses, the legacy of wide-scale overbuilding during the boom. The Census Bureau says there are two million vacant homes for sale, about double the historical level. Fewer new households, moreover, are being formed as families double up for economic reasons, putting a further brake on demand.

… “Housing is construction. It’s tables. It’s paint. It’s couches. It’s toilets,” said Sally Taylor, a specialist in liquor and gambling establishments who attended the American West festivities. “If we build more houses, we’re creating more jobs.”

… Analysts have calculated that it could take as long as a decade for inventories to return to their precrash levels and for demand to once again exceed supply. That is a grim prospect for any owner who hopes to accrue equity through rising prices.

That is why buyers should never purchase because of dreams of appreciation riches. That is kool aid intoxication, and it will be revealed as the illusion it is at the worst possible time.