Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Fixed-Rate Mortgages Hit a New Year-To-Date Low

Freddie Mac released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), which shows slower economic activity pushing fixed-rate mortgages slightly lower for the sixth consecutive week. The 30-year averaged 4.60 percent; the 15-year averaged 3.78 percent, marking new lows for 2011.
News Facts
30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 4.60 percent with an average 0.7 point for the week ending May 26, 2011, down from last week when it averaged 4.61 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 4.84 percent.
15-year FRM this week averaged 3.78 percent with an average 0.7 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.80 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 4.21 percent.
5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged 3.41 percent this week, with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.48 percent. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 3.97 percent.
1-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 3.11 percent this week with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.15 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 3.95 percent.
Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total cost of obtaining the mortgage.
Quotes
Attributed to Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist, Freddie Mac.
"Fixed mortgage rates eased slightly for the sixth consecutive week amid reports of slower economic activity. The index of leading indicators fell 0.3 percent in April and represented the first monthly decline since June 2010. In addition, the Federal Reserve banks reported less business and manufacturing activity in Philadelphia, Chicago and Richmond.
"U.S. house prices indexes may be nearing a bottom soon. On a national basis, prices fell 0.3 percent between February and March, which was the smallest decline since November 2009, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. In addition, four of the nine Census Regions exhibited positive growth, compared to none in February. Separately, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported a further reduction in the serious delinquency rate (90 or more days plus foreclosures) in the first quarter, which stood at the lowest reading since the second quarter of 2009."
Source: FreddieMac

Monday, May 30, 2011

Construction of New Homes Plummeted in April

Fixed mortgage rates fell this week to the lowest point of the year, offering incentive for homeowners to save money by refinancing their loans.

Freddie Mac said Thursday that the average rate on the 30-year loan fell to 4.61 percent. That's down from 4.63 percent and the lowest level since mid-December.

The average rate on the 15-year fixed mortgage, a popular refinance option, slipped to 3.80 percent from 3.82 percent. That marked the lowest point since late November.

Rates track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which fell to the lowest level of the year this week.

Low rates haven't been enough to jumpstart the weak housing market. Fewer people bought previously occupied homes in April, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday. Sales fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million units, far below the 6 million homes a year that economists consider a healthy market.

However, the number of borrowers looking to refinance is now at the highest level since the second week of December, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Refinance activity has increased 33 percent over the last five weeks, mirroring the steady decline in rates.

Despite the gains, refinancing is only at half the level it reached in the fall of last year when mortgage rates fell to record lows. The rate on the 30-year home loan hit a four-decade low of 4.17 percent in November. The 15-year mortgage rate reached 3.57 percent that same month, the lowest level on records dating back to 1991.

"We're not seeing a (refinancing) boom by any means," said Pava Leyrer, president of Heritage National Mortgage in Michigan.

She said many borrowers refinanced when rates were lower last year. Others don't have enough equity in their homes because values have fallen too much or their credit isn't polished enough for them to qualify.

And those who may shave off a percentage point or more from their mortgage rate face higher closing costs this year because of a recent fee increases for appraisals, title insurance and other costs. That could offset any savings from an interest rate reduction.

"If it's purely a rate decision, the difference needs to be one and a half percentage points," said Ritch Workman, co-owner of Workman Mortgage in Melbourne, Fla.

Workman has notice an uptick in applications for purchase mortgages. Would-be buyers are taking advantage of the combination of low rates and declining home prices.

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

The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage rose to 3.48 percent from 3.41 percent. The five-year adjustable-rate loan hit 3.25 percent last month, the lowest rate on records dating back to January 2005.

The average rate on a one-year adjustable-rate loan also increased to 3.15 percent from 3.11 percent, the lowest level for the rate in the last year.
The rates do not include add-on fees, known as points. One point is equal to 1 percent of the total loan amount. The average fee for the 30-year fixed loan and 15-year fixed loan in Freddie Mac's survey was 0.7 point. The average fee for the five-year ARM and the 1-year ARM was 0.6 point.

Source: MercuryNews.com

Foreclosures Taking Longer

Big banks are taking longer to push borrowers into foreclosure and through each stage of the process amid increased scrutiny.

Increased scrutiny of how lenders foreclose on Americans has dragged the repossession process out to unprecedented lengths, driving down the pace at which banks are taking back homes.

Big banks are taking longer not only to push borrowers into foreclosure, but also to move homeowners through each stage of the process than in previous years, according to a report by Irvine-based RealtyTrac.

The extended timelines have meant a reprieve for troubled borrowers. But economists said the delays could hold back a national housing rebound if foreclosures remain a significant part of the market for years to come.

In April, U.S. foreclosure activity fell for the seventh month in a row on a year-over-year basis to the lowest point in more than three years, RealtyTrac said. The sharp April drop was the result of the foreclosure-processing slowdown and not an indication of a housing rebound lifting people out of default, experts said.

"The banks have had to slow down and get more lawyers involved because of all of the fuss over the robo-signing scandal," said Christopher Thornberg, principal of Beacon Economics, referring to the revelations last year that banks foreclosed on properties using faulty paperwork.

Foreclosure filings— notices of default, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — dropped 9% in April from March and plunged 34% from April 2010 as 219,258 U.S. properties received new filings in April. The number of bank repossessions fell 5% from the prior month and 25% from April 2010, with lenders taking back 69,532 U.S. properties. In all, 239,795 foreclosure filings were made, with some properties receiving multiple filings.

In California, 55,899 properties received new foreclosure filings, down 7% from the previous month and off 20% from a year earlier. But a 22% jump in home seizures compared with March contributed to keeping the state's foreclosure rate the third highest in the nation, with 13,741 homes seized. That was still down 19% from April 2010.

One in every 240 California homes received a foreclosure filing in April, RealtyTrac said.

Houston Smith, a Hermosa Beach real estate agent who markets foreclosures for big banks, said that as a result of the paperwork fiasco, he has seen the pace of bank-owned properties released into the market slow significantly.
"[Lenders] are under increased pressure and encouragement to make every effort to do a loan modification, or a short sale, and that has been a dramatic change," Smith said. "It does not mean that there are fewer properties in trouble."

New laws have helped drag out the process in many states. Consumer advocates and attorneys also are increasingly challenging bank actions in courts and are ramping up their lobbying efforts to push for more mortgage workouts for borrowers in trouble.

"In the end it is really a sideshow," said Alys Cohen, a staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center. "The paperwork needs to be proper, but the real question is whether homeowners will get loan modifications when they qualify for them."

Nationally, foreclosures completed in the first quarter of 2011 took an average of 400 days from start to finish, according to RealtyTrac, an increase from 340 days during the same period in 2010 and more than double the average of 151 days it took to foreclose during the same period in 2007.

The process has even slowed in California, where foreclosures remain largely outside of the court system. In California, the average foreclosure took 330 days in the first quarter, up from 262 days during the same period last year and more than double the average of 134 days during the period in 2007.
In states where a court order is needed to repossess a home, foreclosures are taking even longer.

The average timeframe from start to finish in New Jersey and New York was more than 900 days in the first quarter, more than three times the average in the first quarter of 2007 for both states, according to RealtyTrac.

In Florida, the average foreclosure took 619 days in the first quarter, up from 470 a year earlier and nearly four times the average of 169 during the same period in 2007.

Federal regulators last month ordered the nation's biggest banks to overhaul their procedures and compensate borrowers injured financially by wrongdoing or negligence. A wider-ranging investigation conducted by a coalition of state attorneys general and other federal agencies is ongoing.

Several states have sought to put their own limitations on how quickly banks can take back homes. Homeowners also appear to be increasingly challenging foreclosures, particularly in states where a court order is required.

States with a judicial foreclosure process registered a 3% decrease in overall foreclosure activity from March, but a 47% plunge from April 2010. States with a non-judicial foreclosure process posted an 11% month-over-month decrease and a 26% year-over-year decrease.

Some economists are concerned that a slower foreclosure process will mean that the housing recovery will take longer to get going. Foreclosures tend to sell at a discount, and, when making up the bulk of sales in a market, give the perception that prices are falling. In addition, residential builders are struggling to compete with foreclosed homes. Home building has typically been an important boost to an economy exiting recession.

"Clearing this stuff out and getting this stuff over with is just essential, and so in the long run the faster these things can be resolved now, the better," said Richard Green, director of USC's Lusk Center for Real Estate. "That is the only point at which the market can resume normalcy."

But Kurt Eggert, a professor at Chapman University School of Law, said that much of the slowdown in California and other states has been intentional by banks that do not want to see another steep drop in prices. Fewer foreclosures and more mortgage modifications would be a good thing, he said.
"If servicers foreclosed as quickly as they could, and they dumped all the properties on the market, you could get a downward spiral," Eggert said. "As that happens, more and more borrowers go underwater and you could have a vicious cycle — just like the housing boom was fed by the perception that prices always go up, you could have a housing slump that is fed by the perception that prices always go down."

Source: Los Angeles Times

Friday, May 27, 2011

Talking Points

Occasionally, homeowners hoping to close a deal agree to purchase home warranties to give the home buyer peace of mind. However, prospective homeowners should do their homework to make sure the policies will actually help.

Typical home warranties cover the major mechanicals and appliances in a home for one year after the sale. Warranties range in price from $350 to $800. If purchased from reputable companies, home warranties can help homeowners deal with broken appliances, malfunctioning air conditioning, and other problems.

The policies usually require homeowners to contact the service company when something breaks. The company then sends out a repair person who provides an evaluation for a set fee, usually about $65. Once a professional has determined what the problem is, the warranty company pays for the broken items to be repaired or replaced.

Source: California Association of Realtors

Why are Short Sales So Long and Drawn Out?

It's understandable that lenders would want to squeeze as much money as possible from a deal in which a home is being sold for less than what is owed on it, but turning short sales into an ordeal is discouraging potential buyers.

The housing market may be on the ropes, but Curt Beck was ready to come out swinging. He offered $385,000 for a three-bedroom house in Acton. The seller was happy with the terms. But it was unclear if the mortgage holders would allow the deal to go through.

Beck, 56, is typical of many would-be home buyers trying to navigate what's known as a short sale — when a property is sold for less than the outstanding mortgage (or mortgages).

Real estate experts say this can be a particularly challenging process, complicated by lenders trying to squeeze as much money as possible from a transaction, even though a failed deal often results in the property being foreclosed on.

The situation has grown so problematic that the California Assn. of Realtors recently ran ads in newspapers statewide saying more needs to be done to assist homeowners on the verge of foreclosure by expediting the short-sale process.

"Horror stories abound from potential home buyers and Realtors forced to wait 90 or more days for a response to a purchase offer or being required to fax short-sale applications or other paperwork as many as 50 times," said Beth Peerce, president of the organization.

"These delays discourage potential home buyers from considering a short-sale purchase and undermine the process for those who short sales are intended to benefit — the hundreds of thousands of families facing foreclosure," she said.
April home sales in Southern California fell 9.2% from a year earlier, according to market researcher DataQuick. The figure was 25.4% below the month's average since record-keeping began in 1988. The median price paid for a home in the region fell 1.8% from a year earlier to $280,000.

Meanwhile, 21% of homes in the Los Angeles metropolitan area are now underwater, according to the real-estate website Zillow.com. That's another way of saying their mortgages are greater than what the homes are currently worth.

Lenders aren't acting nefariously in most short sales. They're going to take a bath no matter what by allowing a home to be sold for less than is owed for the property. It's understandable they'd want to minimize their loss as much as possible.

But Beck's experience illustrates how a home buyer may feel he's getting the runaround when entering into a short sale.

Beck, of Santa Clarita, had been eyeing the Acton house for months. According to real-estate listings, the house had been offered for $479,000 in October and then pulled from the market a few weeks later.

It was listed again in February for $399,000. In March, the asking price was cut to $374,000.

Wendy Ann Moore, the agent representing the property owner, said no offers were received at the higher prices. But when the house was listed for $374,000, a motivated buyer came forward.

The three lenders holding about $500,000 in loans on the property — GMAC Mortgage, Bank of America and Specialized Loan Servicing — each agreed to the terms of the short sale.

But Moore said the deal fell apart during the escrow process after the buyer lost his job. It was at this point that Beck stepped in.

He told me that as soon as the house returned to the market, he offered to pay the full list price with no contingencies. In other words, he was ready to buy the house as-is.

"My wife and I liked everything about it," Beck said. "We liked the house. We liked the land. We liked the neighborhood."

A few days after making his offer, though, the primary mortgage lender, GMAC, countered that now it wanted $400,000 for the house.

Beck wasn't pleased.

"If they wanted $400,000, they should have told the owner to list it at $400,000," he said. "But it was still listed at $374,000."After much consternation, Beck reluctantly raised his offer to $385,000. But he felt as if he was being taken advantage of.

"It just seems like they're trying to get more money out of us because they've looked at our credit file and think they can get it," Beck said.

Moore, the real estate agent, said she's been down this road more times than she can count.

"It's very, very frustrating," she said. "It just doesn't seem like banks want to work with buyers and sellers."

Like I say, I get that lenders want to cut their losses in a short sale. But considering that banks filed 68,239 notices of default on California residents during the first quarter, according to DataQuick, you'd think lenders would be eager to avoid repossessing additional properties.

In Beck's case, there's a happy ending. He said GMAC told him the other day that it's willing to accept the $385,000. The other mortgage holders will probably follow GMAC's lead.

But thousands of other home buyers are still struggling to get short sales approved.

Colleen Badagliacco, who heads the California Assn. of Realtors' distressed properties task force, said many lenders don't get serious about short sales until a property owner starts missing mortgage payments. By that time, however, foreclosure proceedings can be imminent.

"This is crazy," Badagliacco said. "You would think they'd work to sell the property before people start missing payments."

The housing crunch won't last forever. We shouldn't be going out of our way to prolong the pain.

Source: Los Angeles Times

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Home Sellers are Financing Buyers with Poor Credit

Sue and Douglas Reed knew no bank would give them a mortgage - not with a bankruptcy and two foreclosures fresh in their credit history.

They turned to Hilarie Walters, whose childhood home on 15 acres in Marshall, Mich., had been on the market since 2009. The unemployed single mother of twins agreed in December to sell the property to the Reeds for $105,000. She also consented to a risky payment plan that in effect makes her the couple's mortgage lender.

Financing provided by home sellers, popular in the 1980s when mortgage rates reached 18 percent, is making a comeback in markets such as Michigan that have been hit hard by foreclosures and where tightening lending standards and years of economic distress have drained the pool of creditworthy buyers. For a small but growing number of people, it's the only way to get a deal done.

"This is the American dream, and we're going for it no matter what," said Sue Reed, 56, who sells snacks from a trailer at estate auctions and going-out-of-business sales. "We'll either make it or it will break us."

Michigan, where unemployment is 10.3 percent, leads the nation with about 1,600 home listings advertising seller financing, according to Trulia Inc., a San Francisco real estate information company. It is followed by Florida, Ohio, California, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Texas.

Last year, 52,991 U.S. homes were purchased with various forms of owner financing, up 56 percent from 2008, said Realtors Property Resource LLC, a subsidiary of the National Association of Realtors, citing data collected from county record offices. Such deals accounted for 1.5 percent of all transactions in 2010.

"Anytime the market is in this much trouble, people have to find ways to get it to function," said Dennis Capozza, a professor of finance at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Capozza has direct experience with seller financing: He purchased a friend's foreclosed home a couple years ago and allowed him to buy it back in installments.

Home sales, weighed down by a 9 percent national jobless rate and tight credit, have languished even as 30-year mortgage rates remain below 5 percent. Loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration carried an average FICO score of 703 in March, compared with 629 two years earlier, highlighting that lenders are requiring stronger credit histories. FICO scores range from 300, the least creditworthy, to 850 for the best borrowers.

"The market is locked up because there's no financing," said Gordon Albrecht, executive vice president of FCI Lender Services Inc., an Anaheim Hills firm that oversees mortgages for private investors. "This is moving houses."

Source: San Francisco Chronicle

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Many Homeowners are Refinancing Their Mortgages to Shorter Terms

Borrowers who can afford the higher payments, and who meet lenders' tougher requirements, often opt to replace their 30-year mortgages with shorter-term loans at near-record low rates.

Want to refinance into a seven-year fixed-rate mortgage at 2.99%? Or how about 10 or 15 years fixed in the mid-3% range?

These may sound suspiciously like teaser quotes with tricks in the fine print, but they are in fact signs of an important shift underway among American homeowners: Not only have they been refinancing at a robust pace in recent weeks, but they're dialing down on the remaining number of years they plan to pay on their mortgages.

Freddie Mac chief economist Frank Nothaft calls the shift to shorter terms "a very strong trend." In his company's latest quarterly survey of refinancers, more than 1 in 3 borrowers who ditched their 30-year fixed-rate loans opted to replace them with 15-year or 20-year mortgages at near-record low rates.

Among community banks and lending institutions that originate mortgages to retain for their own portfolios, the trend is toward even shorter maturities. Jeff Lipes, president of the Connecticut Mortgage Bankers Assn. and senior vice president of Family Choice Mortgage near Hartford, Conn., says some institutions are dangling fixed rates just under 3% to refinancers who want to compress their terms to as little as seven years and are willing to set up automatic payment withdrawal accounts.

"It can make a lot of sense if you can do it," he said — especially for baby boomers in their 50s who want to be mortgage-free by the time they hit retirement.

Obviously you'd need to have the income or financial reserves sufficient to pay the extra money each month. Plus you'd need to be able to qualify for a refi in the first place under today's toughened underwriting standards.

Paul Skeens, chief executive of Colonial Mortgage in Waldorf, Md., said shifting to shorter-term debt "is a great move" — he's refinancing his own home to a 10-year term right now — "but do you have the appraisal to support it? Do you have the credit scores you need?"

With short sales and bank foreclosures still a heavy drag on market values, getting an appraisal high enough for a refi "can be almost impossible in some areas," Skeens said.

For some low-cost refi programs, lenders want to see at least 25% equity in the house. Higher FICO credit score requirements by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are another big impediment; both companies reserve their best rates for borrowers with FICO scores of 740 and higher.

The shift to shorter-term loans is part of an even broader trend among consumers emerging from the scary moments of the recession and global financial crisis: de-leveraging, reducing long-term household debt burdens and getting out of adjustable-rate loans. According to Freddie Mac data, "cash-out" refinancings, where homeowners increase their mortgage debt by more than 5%, accounted for just 25% of refinancings in the latest quarter, compared with 80% and higher during the boom years.

In the first quarter of 2011, 84% of homeowners who refinanced hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages switched to fixed-rate replacement loans ranging from 15-year to 30-year terms, Nothaft says. Part of the reason, he believes, is that today's rock-bottom fixed rates — with conventional 15-year rates in the upper 3% range and 30-year loans averaging just above 4.6% — are exceptionally attractive.

Plus, Nothaft said, "there's a lot of chatter about the [Federal Reserve] pushing rates up" in the coming months, so many homeowners are checking out their options on locking in rates that may well be the best they will ever see. Freddie Mac's own forecasts put 30-year fixed rates at 5.25% by the final quarter of this year.

The takeaway here: Even if you've already got a low mortgage rate, consider going shorter term, lowering your rate even further and owning your home debt-free sooner.

Source: LA Times

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Financing Foreclosed Homes

Foreclosure properties, especially those with the water and power turned off, may not qualify for standard financing, but would-be owner-occupants may qualify for a federally insured 203(k) loan.

Making sense of the story

Would-be owner-occupants who do not have enough money to purchase a foreclosure home using cash, may qualify for the federally insured 203(k) loan, which allows borrowers to roll projected rehab costs into the loan.

According to one real estate expert, most foreclosure properties are sold as is, and, oftentimes, heat, plumbing, and electric are turned off, making it unlikely a lender will lend money on the home.

To qualify for a 203(k) loan, buyers generally hire an independent consultant hired by the Federal Housing Administration to review contractor cost estimates and architectural plans for things like whether the work will bring the property up to minimum standards, while not going overboard on improvements.

Buyers should be aware that not all foreclosure properties are eligible. For instance, a partially built house that has never had a certificate of occupancy requires a construction loan of the kind that a commercial developer would use.

The interest rate on a 203(k) loan is approximately a quarter of a percentage point higher than on a standard FHA-insured loan, and a buyer also can expect to pay 1 or 2 points.

Also, as with other FHA-backed loans, down payments may be as low as 3.5 percent, and loan limits apply. Currently, most FHA loans are capped at $729,750.

Source: New York Times

Monday, May 23, 2011

Fixed-Rate Mortgages Hit a New Year-To-Date Low

Freddie Mac released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), which shows fixed-rate mortgages declining for the fifth consecutive week amid mixed economic and housing data. The 30-year fixed averaged 4.61 percent and the 15-year, 3.80 percent.

News Facts

30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 4.61 percent with an average 0.7 point for the week ending May 19, 2011, down from last week when it averaged 4.63 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 4.84 percent.

15-year FRM this week averaged 3.80 percent with an average 0.7 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.82 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 4.24 percent.

5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged 3.48 percent this week, with an average 0.6 point, up from last week when it averaged 3.41 percent. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 3.91 percent.

1-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 3.15 percent this week with an average 0.6 point, up from last week when it averaged 3.11 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 4.00 percent.

Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total cost of obtaining the mortgage.

Quotes

Attributed to Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist, Freddie Mac.

"Fixed mortgage rates inched down for the fifth consecutive week as financial markets try to ascertain the current strength of the economy. Industrial production was unchanged in April owing to disruptions in automobile parts supplies due to the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Netting out automobiles and gasoline, retail sales rose 0.2 percent in April, which was less than a third of the increase in March and the weakest growth since December 2010. However, consumer confidence, as measured by the University of Michigan, rose above the market consensus in May to the highest reading since February.

"Data on the housing market was also mixed. New construction on single-family homes fell 5.1 percent in April, with the largest declines occurring in the Midwest and South regions where tornados hit the hardest. Homebuilder confidence remained unchanged in May and near its January 2009 historical low, according to the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index. However, conventional mortgages applications rose for the past five straight weeks ending May 13th, buoyed by lower mortgage rates and stronger refinancing activity."

Source: FreddieMac

Friday, May 20, 2011

Existing Home Sales Rise in Most States in First Quarter

Existing-home sales rose 8.3 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.14 million units in the first quarter, an increase from 4.75 million in the fourth quarter, but are 0.8 percent below the 5.18 million recorded during the same period in 2010, NAR reported.
The national median existing single-family home price was $158,700 in the first quarter, down 4.6 percent from $166,400 in the first quarter of 2010. Distressed homes, typically sold at a discount of about 20 percent, accounted for 39 percent of first quarter sales, up from 36 percent a year earlier.
Investors accounted for 21 percent of first-quarter transactions, up from 18 percent a year ago, while first-time buyers purchased 32 percent of homes, down from 42 percent in the first quarter of 2010 when a tax credit was in place. Repeat buyers accounted for a 47 percent market share in the first quarter, up from 40 percent a year earlier.
Regionally, existing-home sales in the West, which includes California, rose 13.5 percent in the first quarter to a level of 1.29 million and are 2.1 percent above a year ago. The median existing single-family home price in the West declined 4.7 percent to $197,400 in the first quarter compared with the first quarter of 2010.
Source: National Association of Realtors

Fast Facts

Calif. median home price: March 2011: $286,010 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. highest median home price by region/county March 2011: Marin $826,700 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. lowest median home price by region/county March 2011: Lake County $94,170 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. Pending Home Sales Index: March 2011: 128.7 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. First-time Buyer Affordability Index: Fourth quarter 2010: 69 percent (Source: C.A.R.)
Mortgage rates: Week ending 5/5/2011 30-yr. fixed: 4.71 fees/points: 0.7% 15-yr. fixed: 3.89 fees/points: 0.7% 1-yr. adjustable: 3.14% Fees/points: 0.5% (Source: Freddie Mac)

Thursday, May 19, 2011

April Existing-Home Sales Ease

Existing-home sales slipped in April, although the market has managed six gains in the past nine months, according to the National Association of Realtors®.
Existing-home sales, which are completed transactions that include single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, eased 0.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million in April from a downwardly revised 5.09 million in March, and are 12.9 percent below a 5.80 million pace in April 2010; sales surged in April and May of 2010 in response to the home buyer tax credit.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the market is underperforming. “Given the great affordability conditions, job creation and pent-up demand, home sales should be stronger,” he said. “Although existing-home sales are expected to trend up unevenly through next year, unnecessarily tight credit is continuing to restrain the market, along with a steady level of low appraisals that result in contract cancellations.”
A parallel NAR practitioner survey shows 11 percent of Realtors® report a contract was cancelled in April from an appraisal coming in below the price negotiated between a buyer and seller, 10 percent had a contract delayed, and 14 percent said a contract was renegotiated to a lower sales price as a result of a low appraisal.
According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage was 4.84 percent in April, unchanged from March; the rate was 5.10 percent in April 2010.
“Although sales are clearly up from the cyclical lows of last summer, home sales are being held back 15 to 20 percent due to the very restrictive loan underwriting standards,” Yun said.
All-cash transactions stood at 31 percent in April, down from a record level of 35 percent in March; they were 26 percent in March 2010; investors account for the bulk of cash purchases.
NAR President Ron Phipps, broker-president of Phipps Realty in Warwick, R.I., said the lending community needs to return to sensible standards. “We want to ensure that qualified buyers will be able to own their property on a sustained basis from a sound credit evaluation, but banks needn’t be so stingy as to only lend to those with the highest credit scores,” he said.
“Very high shares of cash purchases, and high credit score requirements, have led to historically low default rates among home buyers over the past two years. This trend implies a gulf is opening between those who can and cannot have access to the American dream of home ownership,” Phipps said. “At the same time, existing guidelines from Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae must be fully implemented so all appraisals are done by valuators with local expertise.”
The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $163,700 in April, which is 5.0 percent below April 2010. Distressed homes – typically sold at a discount of about 20 percent – accounted for 37 percent of sales in April, down from 40 percent in March; they were 33 percent in April 2010.
“Home values, despite month-to-month volatility, have been remarkably stable in the range of $160,000 to $170,000 for the past three years,” Yun said. “Stable home prices in turn will steadily lower loan default rates, including strategic defaults.”
Total housing inventory at the end of April increased 9.9 percent to 3.87 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 9.2-month supply at the current sales pace, up from an 8.3-month supply in March.
First-time buyers purchased 36 percent of homes in April, up from 33 percent in March; they were 49 percent in April 2010 when the tax credit was in place. Investors slipped to 20 percent in April from 22 percent of purchase activity in March; they were 15 percent in April 2010. The balance of sales was to repeat buyers, which were 44 percent in April.
Phipps added that proposals and regulations are being considered in Washington that could further constrain the housing market. “One of the most damaging proposals would effectively raise downpayment requirements to 20 percent, which would slam the brakes on the housing market,” he said. “What we need to do is simply return to the sound standards that were in place before the introduction of risky mortgage products.”
“Our data shows only one out of five first-time buyers needing a mortgage could afford a 20 percent downpayment, and without first-time buyers the trade-up market would stall with very negative consequences for housing and the overall economy,” Phipps said. “Ironically, low downpayment FHA and VA loans, which are so critical to this segment, have performed well and never needed a taxpayer bailout because those borrowers stayed well within their budgets.” NAR consumer survey data shows 56 percent of entry-level buyers in the past year financed with an FHA loan.
Single-family home sales slipped 0.5 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.42 million in April from 4.44 million in March, and are 12.6 percent below the 5.06 million pace in April 2010. The median existing single-family home price was $163,200 in April, which is 5.4 percent below a year ago.
Existing condominium and co-op sales fell 3.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 630,000 in April from 650,000 in March, and are 15.0 percent below the 741,000-unit level one year ago. The median existing condominium price was $167,300 in April, down 2.3 percent from April 2010.
Existing-home sales in the West slipped 1.6 percent to an annual level of 1.24 million in April and are 0.8 percent below April 2010. The median price in the West was $203,400, down 6.1 percent from a year ago.
Source: NAR

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Home Values Decline at Fastest Pace in Q1 Since 2008

Home values nationwide declined at a faster pace in the first quarter of 2011 than in any quarter since 2008, when the housing market experienced its worst performance, according to Zillow's first quarter Home Value Index.  The Index decreased 3 percent in the first quarter compared with the fourth quarter of 2010, and declined 8.2 percent year-over-year to $169,600. Home values have declined 29.5 percent since they peaked in June 2006.
Negative equity reached a new high mark with 28.4 percent of single-family homeowners with mortgages underwater at the end of the first quarter, up from 27 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.
Foreclosures also increased in the first quarter, as banks unfroze moratoriums and allowed foreclosures to resume. Foreclosures had fallen in late 2010 due to the slew of moratoriums brought about by the "robo-signing" controversy. In March, one out of every 1,000 homes in the country was lost to foreclosure.
Source: Zillow

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Reported Incidents of Mortgage Fraud Decrease in 2010

Reported incidents of subscriber-verified mortgage fraud and misrepresentation by professionals in the mortgage industry decreased 41 percent in 2010 compared with 2009, according to a new report by the LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute.  This is the first time in several years there was a reported decrease in mortgage fraud.  California ranked number three for reported mortgage fraud and misrepresentation based on the Mortgage Asset Research Institute Fraud Index.
“The data suggests that in 2010 there was a decrease in the number of verified incidents of fraud reported to the LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute. While this is a noticeable decrease, we believe it can be attributed to a variety of factors, including the post-economic crisis mortgage fraud landscape,” said Jennifer Butts, LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute manager of Data Processing and co-author of the report. “We are seeing the convergence of several factors, including decreasing loan origination volumes and fewer resources available to investigate and report incidents of fraud as discovered.”
Source: LexisNexis Mortgage Asset Research Institute

Monday, May 16, 2011

30-Year Fixed-Rate Mortgage Drops to 4.63 Percent

Freddie Mac released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), which shows mortgage rates at their lowest level for 2011 after declining for the fourth consecutive week. The 30-year fixed-rate averaged 4.63 percent, and the 15-year fixed averaged 3.82 percent.
News Facts
30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 4.63 percent with an average 0.7 point for the week ending May 12, 2011, down from last week when it averaged 4.71 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 4.93 percent.
15-year FRM this week averaged 3.82 percent with an average 0.7 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.89 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 4.30 percent.
5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged 3.41 percent this week, with an average 0.6 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.47 percent. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 3.95 percent.
1-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 3.11 percent this week with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.14 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 4.02 percent.
Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total cost of obtaining the mortgage.
Quotes
Attributed to Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist, Freddie Mac.
"Mortgage rates continued to decline this week following a mixed employment report. The economy added a healthy number of 244,000 workers in April, the most in 11 months, and the figures for March and February were revised up by 56,000 more jobs. However, the unemployment rate rose to 9.0 percent from 8.8 percent in March and was the highest reading since January. In addition, wages grew by only 0.1 percent, which was below the market consensus forecast.
"Distressed homes are suppressing house prices in many local areas. The National Association of Realtors® reported these homes sold at a 20 percent discount in the first quarter of this year and accounted for 39 percent of all existing home sales, up from 36 percent in the first quarter of 2010. As a result, only 22 percent of metropolitan areas exhibited higher median sales prices from a year ago, compared to 51 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.
"However, households have been strengthening their balance sheets over the past year. The New York Federal Reserve Bank reported that the serious delinquency rate (90 or more days delinquent plus foreclosures) on first mortgages and closed-end home equity loans balances fell to 7.46 percent in the first quarter from a peak of 8.89 percent the same period last year. This suggests there may be fewer distressed sales later this year."
Source: Freddie Mac

Friday, May 13, 2011

Obama Administration Releases April Housing Scorecard


HUD and the U.S. Dept. of the Treasury have released the April edition of the Obama Administration's Housing Scorecard - a comprehensive report on the nation's housing market.
Highlights of the Housing Scorecard include:
More than 4.5 million mortgage-modification arrangements were started between April 2009 and the end of March 2011 - including more than 1.5 million trial modification starts through HAMP, more than 808,000 FHA loss mitigation and early delinquency interventions, and nearly 2.2 million proprietary modifications under HOPE Now.
Servicers reported more than 36,000 trial HAMP modifications and more than 36,000 permanent modifications with a median payment reduction of 37 percent - or more than $500 every month.
Home prices remain weak under continued strain from foreclosures and distressed homes. However, mortgage delinquencies continued a downward trend compared with early 2010 and foreclosure starts and completions remain below peak.
Source: HUD

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Foreclosures Down for 7th Straight Month


The number of foreclosure filings issued in April plunged 34% from a year ago -- the seventh straight month of declines.
And there were just 69,532 homes repossessed last month, a 32% fall from the peak last September just before the eruption of the "robo-signing" scandal, in which banks were found to be mishandling the foreclosure process.
Will the seeming good news continue? No way, said Rick Sharga of RealtyTrac, which issued the latest monthly figures on Thursday.
Even with the drop, there were nearly 220,000 foreclosure filings during the month, including notices of default, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions.
And there are 3.7 million borrowers at least 90 days late on payments. Normally a large percentage of them would already be in foreclosure. They are not -- for two reasons.
One is that ongoing regulatory issues. Banks want to make sure their procedures are all in place.
Second, the banks have already saturated many markets with repossessions they've put back on the market.
"Banks can't move inventory fast enough, at prices high enough, that they're excited about foreclosing on any more homes," said Sharga.
On the other hand, there are a couple of reasons to believe the conditions may be improving. Hiring has picked up, enabling some borrowers to resume paying their bills.
Banks are also doing more to keep borrowers in their homes. In March, banks completed 77,000 mortgage modifications without government assistance, according to Hope Now, a coalition of mortgage servicers, investors and private counselors. That was 26% more than in February.
"What's important," said Faith Schwartz, the head of Hope Now, "is that these modifications are much more affordable. They should perform much better."
Home prices, however, continue to erode. That's a problem because it pushes more borrowers "underwater," with home loans worth more than the value of their homes.
That removes an important financial cushion should the borrower run into financial problems. And it given incentive to "strategically default," or walk away from their homes and mortgage payments.
The percentage of underwater owners of single-family homes has now reached 28.4%, according to real estate web site Zillow. That will worsen if home prices fall further.
"Home value declines are currently equal to those we experienced during the darkest days of the housing recession," said Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries. "That's going to put more homeowners in default."
Home prices have fallen so fast lately that Humphries changed his 2011 outlook, forecasting a 7% to 9% price drop for the year, up from 5% to 7%.
Just as falling home prices result in more foreclosures, rising foreclosures hurt home prices by swamping housing markets with repossessed homes.
Bottom line is that the crisis could last for years, according to Sharga. It could be 2014 before the housing market returns to a more normal condition.
Source: CNN