Thursday, June 30, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.30.2011

Commentary: The Greek parliament approved and implemented into law the austerity measures needed to avert (at least temporarily) a debt default. As if responding to a script -- stock prices around the world soared and credit market prices fell as the global financial marketplace breathed a sigh of relief that this immediate crisis has passed.

Mortgage investors gave news earlier this morning from the Labor Department indicating the number of Americans filing first-time claims for government unemployment assistance fell by a paltry 1,000 to 428,000 nothing more than a passing glance. It was the 12th straight week that initial claims have been above 400,000, a sign the labor market has stagnated.

Most mortgage investors will probably stick around until 10:00 a.m. ET tomorrow to get a look at the Institute of Supply Management's Manufacturing Index for May. If, as expected, the report shows the index slumped from the 53.5% mark in April to 51.9% last month look for most market participants to sneak away early to get a jump on buying sparklers and bug spray before the big three-day summer holiday formally gets underway. Before they go I suspect many traders will jot a note to themselves as a reminder to look for an opportunity to be an aggressive buyer on Tuesday or Wednesday of next week.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.29.2011

Commentary: One down and one to go.

The Greek parliament approved a five-year austerity plan earlier today - clearing the first of two hurdles that will allow the country to secure bailout funds to prevent a major financially crippling default on their sovereign debt.

Attention now shifts to the vote on the second bill tomorrow that will authorize implementation of the measures set forth in today's legislation.

A successful affirmative vote on this second measure will likely be followed by a collective sigh of relief from the global credit markets. Against this backdrop there is a very strong chance capital will temporarily flow out of its current safe-harbor parking places like dollar-denominated Treasury debt obligations and mortgage-backed security into riskier but higher yielding assets like stocks. Such a scenario, should it develop, will almost certainly produce a period of modestly rising mortgage interest rates.

Should the Greek parliament fail to ratify the second measure with tomorrow's vote global investors will be quick to connect the dots from Greece to Germany to European banks to U.S. financial institutions. Against this backdrop expect stock prices to plummet and Treasury prices to soar as the global market place braces for another major financial meltdown.

It is a very close call. My expectation is that the Greek government will ultimately pass the austerity measure -- and will receive the first round of debt relief - only to default later as civil resistance to the plan proves too strong to overcome. If my assessment proves accurate, mortgage interest rates will likely creep fractionally higher into the first week or two of July -- before turning the corner and moving lower once again.

In other news of the day the Mortgage Bankers of America have released their Mortgage Application Survey for the week ended July 24th. The composite index dropped 2.7% from the previous week but remain higher than the month ago mark. The number of refinance applications taken during the week dropped by 2.6% while the number of purchase money request dropped by 3.0%.

The contract for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages finished at 4.46%, down 11 basis points from the prior week, down 12 basis points from the month ago mark, and down by 21 basis points compared to the same time a year ago. Refinance requests represented seven out of ten loan applications taken last week.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.28.2011

Commentary: Different day - same story.

The trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates over the balance of the week will probably be most influenced by a combination of auction results from Uncle Sam's $64 billion sale of 5- and 7-year notes together with the results of the Greek Parliament's vote on a five-year austerity plan.

The relative short-term of the securities offered at the upcoming Treasury auctions combined with the uncertainty surrounding the Greek debt crisis will likely be enough to induce both domestic and foreign investors to bid aggressively. If so, look for little, if any noticeable influence on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates as a result of the remaining two note sales.

Most analysts expect the Greek Parliament to hold two critical votes this week - one tomorrow, Wednesday, June 29th on the austerity plan itself to be followed by a second vote on Thursday, June 30th to implement the law.

If the austerity program becomes law -- look for the global financial market place to breathe a sign of relief - with riskier assets rising in value as safe-haven capital flows back to the pursuit of earning the biggest bang for the buck/euro.

Passage of the austerity plan is not certain. Should the Greek Parliament fail to ratify the measure, look for stock prices to plummet while Treasury prices soar as the global market place braces for another major financial meltdown.

It is a very close call. My expectation is that the Greek government will ultimately pass the austerity measure -- and will receive the first round of debt relief - only to default later as civil resistance to the plan proves too strong to overcome. If I'm right, mortgage interest rates will likely creep fractionally higher into mid-July.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Monday, June 27, 2011

Welcome Aboard the Foreclosure Express by TBWS

Click here to view the video.

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.27.2011

Commentary: Mortgage investors showed little response to this morning's news from the Commerce Department indicating personal incomes rose a very modest 0.3% in May while spending was unchanged from month-earlier levels. Core inflation at the consumer level, as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditure index component of this report, accelerated at a slightly uncomfortable 0.3% pace in May. Mortgage investors took note of the uptick in the pace of inflation -- but the gain was not enough to induce them to nudge rates higher.

The trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates over the course of the week will probably be most influenced by a combination of auction results from Uncle Sam's three-part, $99 billion sale of 2-, 5- and 7-year notes together with the results of the Greek Parliament's vote on a five-year austerity plan.

The relative short-term of the securities offered at this week's Treasury auction combined with the uncertainty surrounding the Greek debt crisis will likely be enough to induce both domestic and foreign investors to bid aggressively. If so, look for little, if any noticeable influence on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates as a result of these three events.

Most analysts expect the Greek Parliament to hold two critical votes this week - one on Wednesday, June 29th on the austerity plan itself to be followed by a second vote on Thursday, June 30th to implement the law.

If the austerity program becomes law -- look for the global financial market place to breathe a sign of relief - with riskier assets rising in value as safe-haven capital flows back to the pursuit of earning the biggest bang for the buck/euro.

Passage of the austerity plan is not certain. Should the Greek Parliament fail to ratify the measure, look for stock prices to plummet while Treasury prices soar as the global market place braces for another major financial meltdown.

It is a very close call. My expectation is that the Greek government will ultimately pass the austerity measure -- and will receive the first round of debt relief - only to default later as civil resistance to the plan proves too strong to overcome. If I'm right, mortgage interest rates will likely creep fractionally higher into mid-July.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Friday, June 24, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.24.2011

Commentary: Mortgage investors showed little response to this morning's news from the Commerce Department indicating orders for manufactured goods and business spending plans rose in May.

A separate government guesstimate indicating the economy grew a little more strongly in the first-quarter than initially reported brought nothing more than a disinterested yawn from investors as well.

Trading action in the stock markets will probably prove to be the primary driver behind changes in the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates for the balance of the day. Lower stock prices will likely prove supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower rates while higher stock prices will probably drag mortgage interest rates higher.

Looking ahead to next week Uncle Sam will be in the credit markets from Monday through Wednesday looking to borrow $99 billion in the form of $35 billion of 2-year notes, $35 billion of 5-year notes and $29 billion of 7-year notes. The relative short-term of these debt instruments combined with the uncertainty surrounding the Greek debt crisis will likely be enough to induce both domestic and foreign investors to bid aggressively. If so, look for little, if any noticeable influence on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates as a result of these events.

Next week's economic calendar will be bookended by Monday's Personal Income and Spending figures for May and Friday's Institute of Supply Management's Manufacturing Sector Index for June. Both sets of data are expected to be mortgage market neutral.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Walk away from your mortgage? Time to get 'ruthless'

June 7, 2011: 11:52 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Should you keep paying your mortgage on a home that's dwindling in value?

No way, say an increasing number of underwater homeowners who are voluntarily choosing to "walk away" from their home loans, a practice known as "strategic default."

Jon Maddux, CEO of YouWalkAway.com, reports 10% more clients this year to his company, which advises people how best to handle the walk away process.

Charles Gallagher, a real estate attorney in St. Petersburg, Fla., has also seen an uptick.

And a recent survey by home finance company Fannie Mae found that while only about 27% of homeowners would even consider walking away, that's up from 15% last year.

In an early 2010 report, Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) researchers said nearly 200,000 defaults in the prior year were voluntary, or roughly 12% of the total. The bank expects to issue updated estimates in coming weeks.

10 dirt cheap housing markets

The profile of a typical strategic defaulter is not what you'd expect, said Peter Ticktin, a Florida-based attorney, whose firm is handling 3,000 foreclosure cases.

"Because they borrowed money and stopped paying their loans, you would think they're deadbeats -- but it's not like that," Ticktin said.

In fact, most are good credit risks with high FICO scores, according to Andrew Jennings, chief analytics officer at Fair Isaac (FICO), the company behind FICO.

Take Jeff Horton, an IT manager in Orlando, Fla.

He stopped making mortgage payments on two homes in October 2009, a condo purchased for $140,000 in 2005, and a house he bought two years later for $265,000. He had occupied the condo until he bought the house, and then rented it out.

"I would have kept up the payments, but the condo was appraised for $54,000 and the house, $135,000," said Horton.

To keep paying off the homes didn't add up. He could rent a nice three-bedroom home in town for about $1,000 a month, less than half what he was paying for his mortgages, even after rental income.

For him and other homeowners, that makes up for the credit-score hit and the fact that you won't be able to get a mortgage for several years.

Before he stopped paying, his credit score was an excellent 750. It dipped as low as 520, but is up to 600 again.

"Strategic default can be a financially sophisticated thing to do," said Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic, the financial analytics company. "And it makes sense that more financially savvy people do it. They may treat their mortgages like they would their investment portfolios -- in a financially ruthless manner."

Home price 'double-dip'

Sometimes, borrowers have to acquire that ruthlessness.

Helen Sheridan purchased a townhouse condo in 2006 at the height of the boom in San Diego. She paid $630,000 for a place worth $450,000 today.

When the economy tanked, she lost about 30% of her income as a certified public accountant and her mortgage payments, while still doable, became burdensome. With a teenage daughter and son, she was facing college costs.

She had to overcome some conventional thinking about the sanctity of debt repayment to make what she realizes is the correct financial choice.

"I still feel guilty," Sheridan said. "I break out in tears, but I have a family to support."

One factor that pushed her over the edge was that the house needs maintenance and repair.

"People are more educated about the process," said Maddux of YouWalkAway. "They're making more calculated, less emotional, decisions and are less fearful and less concerned about the stigma."

Sheridan is getting help from YouWalkAway and her house will be auctioned off on June 13.

University of Arizona law professor Brent White thinks the past few years of banking scandals have reinforced the view that it's not unethical to walk away.

"There's a sense that the banks don't follow the 'rules,' but somehow the little guy is supposed to -- more and more people are saying 'enough is enough' and walking away," said White, who is also the author of "Underwater Home: What Should You Do If You Owe More on Your Home than It's Worth?"

Some homeowners, however, can't get past the stigma.

Gallagher represents a Florida couple, a dentist and a financial consultant who is well known in the area. They bought a house for $1.4 million during the boom, and considered walking away when it was appraised recently at close to $400,000.

"Ultimately, the couple did not default," said Gallagher. "Given her public profile, she was worried about the backlash. She remains making payments on a deeply underwater mortgage." To top of page

Treasury punishes top servicers for failing troubled homeowners

June 10, 2011: 7:41 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Three top mortgage servicers are finally being taken to the woodshed by the Obama administration.

Federal officials say these banks are doing such a bad job at foreclosure prevention that the government will stop paying them for modifying delinquent loans.

The Treasury Department announced on Thursday that it will withhold incentive payments to Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) and Wells Fargo (WFC, Fortune 500) until they substantially improve their performance in the federal Home Affordable Modification Program, known as HAMP.

Ocwen Loan Servicing (OCN) was also cited but will continue receiving payments. Its results were affected because it started servicing a large pool of mortgages while under review.

The banks needed to boost their performance in several areas, including correctly evaluating whether a homeowner meets the HAMP income requirements.

Though the administration has talked tough in the past, this is the first time it is wielding the most powerful weapon in its HAMP arsenal -- the withholding of payments. Servicers are eligible for up to $4,500 over three years if they put borrowers into sustainable modified mortgages.

Until now, officials had hoped that compliance reviews and publication of each servicer's performance would be enough to get the banks to improve their handling of troubled borrowers. They stressed the withholding of payments is the "next step" in the process.

"While we continue to get tens of thousands of new homeowners into mortgage modifications each month, we need servicers to step up their performance to meet the needs of those still struggling," said Tim Massad, a Treasury official.

So far, the administration has paid $1.3 billion in incentive payments -- paid for with funds from the 2008 TARP law -- to 84 servicers. It has used about $2 billion of the $46 billion in TARP funds dedicated to homeowner help.

Banks react: The cited banks had varying responses to the Treasury's action, with Wells Fargo saying it would formally dispute the findings.

The San Francisco-based bank said Treasury is using data from last year and that it has cut its error rate to 4.5%, down from the 27% cited in the report.

"We realize that continued improvements are needed, but this report does not fairly reflect our leading role in making loan modifications," the bank said in a statement. "It paints an unfairly negative picture of our modification efforts and contradicts previous written assessments shared with us by the Treasury."

Chase said it "respectfully disagrees" with the assessment, while Ocwen said it was surprised that it was dinged for problems with the modifications made by servicers whose portfolios it took over.

Bank of America said it acknowledges it must make improvements, particularly in areas affecting homeowners.

"We have made great progress in several key performance areas and, in the first quarter, Bank of America was responsible for one of every four modifications completed under HAMP," said Dan Frahm, a senior vice president at the nation's largest servicer.

Squatter Nation

Pressure building: The Obama administration has been under fire for not getting the banks to do more to help homeowners practically since the HAMP program began in the spring of 2009. Officials have been repeatedly pressed to hold the banks accountable for their poor results in the administration's signature foreclosure prevention program, which has performed far below expectations.

Through April, nearly 700,000 homeowners have received permanent modifications through the HAMP program, which the administration said would help up to 4 million people.

Servicers have also started 25,500 second lien modifications through a separate Obama administration program and have helped nearly 15,000 people get out of their homes through short sales or other foreclosure alternatives.

Also, nearly 4,300 people with Federal Housing Administration mortgages have received modified loans through another foreclosure prevention initiative. To top of page

It’s Official… You’re Working Through a Tougher Situation than the Depression

It’s Official… You’re Working Through a Tougher Situation than the Depression

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.23.2011

Commentary: The number of Americans standing in line to file first-time claims for government jobless benefits unexpectedly rose by 9,000 to 429,000 during the week ending June 18th -- according to Labor Department figures released earlier this morning. The latest gain in this statistic is viewed by most mortgage investors as further evidence the economic recovery has lost momentum in recent months. Claims had been as low as 385,000 in early April. A slowing economy reduces the demand for capital - which in turn reduces interest rates. Rising initial weekly jobless claims tends to be good news for the prospects for lower interest rates - but bad news for the prospects of a surge in the number of homebuyers active in the market place.

Speaking of homebuyers - the Commerce Department reported this morning that the pace of new home sales fell 2.1% on a month-over-month basis. Mortgage investors had actually been anticipating new home sales would be softer last month - so the decline was already well priced into your rate sheets.

Trading action in the stock markets will probably prove to be the primary driver behind changes in the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates for the balance of the week. Lower stock prices will likely prove supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower rates while higher stock prices will probably drag mortgage interest rates higher.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

First Time Homebuyer Program!

The Portland Housing Bureau is offering a first time home buyers program. It is for homes purchased in the city of Portland and it is an awesome program! The borrower(s) receive a federal income tax credit for 20% of their mortgage interest. The other 80% continues to receive a federal income tax deduction. Click here to view a short video explaining the program in more detail.

Mortgage Industry Issues by Steve Emory

I would ask that those of you with me in the mortgage industry, to help to get the truth and real situation in the mortgage industry today, out to the public as best we can. Speak out in every format. We won't truly fix the mortgage industry until the general public perceives a crisis to them and that its way beyond a problem just for people that shouldn't have got a loan in the first place or Big Banks/Wall Street. Normal people and society are being harmed.

We can respond to newspaper articles in our local area or blog comments, explaining unintended consequences in layman's terms. We can comment on all Federal proposals or Rules with reality and stand up for what's right. Share any comments you make with your database of customer and referral sources with links. Yes, you will get negative responses, sometimes personally. Sometimes they will easily find you directly. Some comments could upset your referral sources that could perceive you as being negative though not the true professionals. Still it needs to be done. Not just for your personal career/income or the mortgage industry, but for the country's economic wellbeing. If we who understand the real issues and the nuances don't speak out for what's right, who can? Don't wait for MBA or other trade groups to put out their responses, respond personally now & often.

We have fundamental problems now (and coming) that are going to harm normal people. Harm society much greater than the financial crisis has to date, and the average person doesn't know it yet. Worse, the media and conventional wisdom is causing the harm to spiral on itself by feeding myths about fixes. The continuing mortgage industry woes with new negative media releases about foreclosures and MERS, doesn't help. Consumer Group's wish hit lists to change mortgage regulation that they've tried to get passed for decades, are getting passed and more. The Congress and States are racing to see who can pass more regulation to "fix" the mortgage industry before the items passed a year earlier even take effect. No one knows the consequences of this "risk layering" of new regulations at this pace. Frank-Dodd Act & the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are the opposite of helping consumers, and we know it. Financial regulation is in the details and very hard for legislators to understand or get close to seeing unintended consequences coming. It is a perfect storm and I don't want to sink.

Below I put forth some of my opinions on the problems today. You may agree with some of what I write, or all, but get the message out in your way with your perceptions. I realize few in media or government want to listen to mortgage industry's warnings as the "they caused this mess in the first place" attitude is widespread. We can succeed getting the message out by getting it directly to the public ourselves.

Jobs, Housing Values, Mortgages, Financial System overall, are deeply connected. Jobs won't come back until the financial crisis is perceived to be over. All lending has tightened, not just mortgages. The public perception on how mortgage loans are done needs to be changed though. Today we are not losing the media labeled "bad loans" of stated income, 100% LTV, bad credit 80/20 ARMs, we are losing loans most would consider easy to get loans for normal people. Sub-Prime has been gone for four years so it's time to quit blaming it for today's problems. We know how the difficulty of even getting the above average consumer a mortgage today has accelerated the last few years.

The tightening of FNMA/Freddie/HUD the last two years has caused the housing value drops the last two years. Look how tight investor loans have got. We may call them "guidelines" but who has seen many underwriters do any exception lately? Appraisals are a nightmare these days. How about needing an excel spreadsheet to try and track all the different MI restrictions for score, DTI, LTV, etc. Investor overlays, need I say more. Throw in seller flips, continuity of obligation, new reserve requirements and right or wrong, credit has tightened on "normal" loans substantially just the last two years.

Securitization with FNMA was the reform and savior of the 1930's in mortgage lending. Before FNMA, money would dry up in an area and housing values would collapse and then the banks that made the mortgage loans locally went next. FNMA was created to fix this by stabilizing the availability of funds nationally. Getting rid of FNMA that operated for 70+ years because of a problem in their behavior '03-'07 is bizarre. Just don't let politicians push home ownership by letting FNMA buy Sub-Prime loans again like they did from New Century and others during this period. If FNMA hadn't funded these loans, they wouldn't have been originated. The taxpayer wouldn't be on the hook for FNMA's losses. Also the fact FNMA bought these Sub-Prime "MBS" let others think they must be safe and the spigot opened wide on Wall Street with a multiplying effect. FNMA should only buy qualified loans that meet traditional FNMA conventional guidelines.

MERS is a good thing for consumers but it is branded because of the foreclosure crisis. It continues the negative perception of the industry and the need to continue to "fix it". Many in society think stopping foreclosures with technical legal maneuvers is a great victory over the villainous mortgage lenders, society will find it is a pyrrhic one. Now mortgage lenders not only have to worry about business risk of their borrower paying back the loan, but also political risk with courts/legislators not allowing them to foreclose on borrowers 1.75+ years behind on their payments. Yes, the mortgage lenders should have done the paperwork a little more carefully when they foreclose, but does that justify letting borrowers stay in their homes for free more than two years? Or declare the mortgage paid? I think the majority of society, especially those still paying their mortgages even with reduced family income in these times, would think it immoral to not foreclose these borrowers almost 2 years behind in payments. In Oregon, mortgage lenders can foreclose in 120 days. Giving someone almost two years should be enough time to try modifying or working out something with the lender. When is enough, enough? If the Judges starting to rule against MERS nationally are right in society's eyes, then we have a huge moral hazard again and a potential financial system collapse just from this one issue.

Even the administration has seen what a mess HAMP has been, but from an opposite to reality perspective. "9 million will be helped", not. They still push for principal reductions with playing the public with the myth "Banks got a bailout, pass it down." without seeing the huge moral hazard this creates. And the press wonders why the financial institutions are holding on to cash? Get real. If banks have to give principal reductions en masse, there isn't enough dollars in the banking system to cover the losses as they accelerate and everyone goes all in. House values will plummet.

Senator Merkley added in the pay cuts to loan officers to the Frank-Dodd Act. Of course they didn't actually "cut" or "limit" loan officers pay, they just did as government always does and write the law in such a way so that was the desired effect. In restricts lending further as well. What is this but revenge or punishment from legislator's perceptions? How is it not un-Constitutional with a 5th Amendment violation of ". . . nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; . . ."? Who's next that isn't screaming on our behalf?

These are not all the issues, nor all the details. Many benefited from the bad loans made 03-07 and many are in great pain from foreclosures to lost jobs/indictments to closed companies. There is plenty of blame to go around to all parties from borrowers to Realtors to Loan Officers to Lenders to Wall Street to Rating Agencies to Congress to the last three Presidents. We need to fix it but let's not let the "fix" destroy the system.

Please spread the word every chance you can.

Two quotes:

James Madison: "In another point of view, great injury results from an unstable government. The want of confidence in the public councils damps every useful undertaking, the success and profit of which may depend on a continuance of existing arrangements. What prudent merchant will hazard his fortunes in any new branch of commerce when he knows not but that his plans may be rendered unlawful before they can be executed? What farmer or manufacturer will lay himself out for the encouragement given to any particular cultivation or establishment, when he can have no assurance that his preparatory labors and advances will not render him a victim to an inconstant government? In a word, no great improvement or laudable enterprise can go forward which requires the auspices of a steady system of national policy."

Ronald Reagan: "There are no easy answers' but there are simple answers. We must have the courage to do what we know is morally right."

Steve Emory

Sr. Mortgage Banker

Chairman Ethics Committee '99-'03, Oregon Association of Mortgage Professionals

Distinguished Service Award '02, Presidents Choice Award '99

Mortgage Loans since 1989

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.22.2011

Commentary: Traders are simply marking time as they await the 12:30 p.m. ET release of the Federal Open Market Committee's post-meeting statement and the 2:15 p.m. start of Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's press conference.

The general consensus among Fed watchers suggest policymakers will probably affirm a decision to end bond purchases and will repeat their long standing pledge (first made in 2008) to hold their benchmark short-term interest rates near zero percent for an "extended period."

Later this afternoon, in his second-ever news conference, Fed Chairman Bernanke is expected to reconfirm the Fed's forecast for a pick up in economic growth in the second-half of the year. He is almost sure to confirm the likelihood of further quantitative easing in the form of "QE3" remains very low. Bernanke will likely face tough questions about Greece and the impact of Europe's debt crisis on the U.S. economy. Look for his answers on this subject to be short on specifics and generally deflective overall.

Most observers believe today's post-meeting statement from the Federal Open Market Committee and Bernanke's press conference will exert little, if any noticeable influence on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates.

As they do every Wednesday, the Mortgage Bankers of America have released their Mortgage Application Survey for the week ended June 17th. Overall loan demand slipped 5.9% lower during the week. The number of refinance applications fell 7.2% (even with this pullback - it is still near its best level of the year). The number of purchase applications fell by 2.3% from the prior week.

The average contract rate for 30-year fixed rate mortgages finished at 4.57%, 6 basis points higher than the week ago mark, 12 basis points lower that four weeks ago, and 18 basis points below the year ago level. Refinance request represented seven out of every ten loan applications taken last week.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.21.2011

Commentary: Traders are simply marking time as they await this afternoon's (5:00 p.m. ET) vote by the Greek parliament to determine whether Prime Minister George Papandreou's socialist party remains in power.

As I write, it appears most market participants are confident that Papandreou will overcome the "no-confidence" vote and support for unpopular but necessary austerity measures will survive - a requisite condition that must be met before euro-zone countries will fund a "bail out" for the financially strapped Greeks.

Should the current Greek government fail after tonight's vote, the fear of a major meltdown in the world's banking system precipitated by an almost certain sovereign debt default by Greece will sweep the globe -- driving massive amounts of capital into the relative safe-haven of dollar-denominated assets like Treasury debt obligations and mortgage-backed securities. This is a scenario, if it comes to be, almost certain to prove supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates from your investors. I'll keep you posted as this story continues to unfold.

Here at home, this morning's news from the National Association of Realtors indicating May Existing Home Sales slipped 3.8% lower on a month-over-month basis drew nothing but a passing glance from mortgage investors. A soft Existing Home Sales number has been priced into the market for sometime. Most analysts believe last month's sales pace will prove to be the low point of the year. If job creation improves over the course of the next six months as expected -- the May sales pace bottom projection will likely wind-up "pin-point" accurate.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.20.2011

Commentary: New day - same old story.

Traders continued to be mesmerized by the swirl of activity, political as well as financial, surrounding the 11th hour efforts by euro zone countries to prevent a sovereign Greek debt default. The financial rope by which Greece is hanging is frayed and fragile -- a minor swing in the wrong direction has the strong potential of sending their economy tumbling into the abyss of disaster. The fear in the global credit market is that a failure by Greece to pay its debt holders (which include major European Banks and some big U.S. banks) will create a run on the global banking system reminiscent of the panic created by the collapse of Lehman Brothers. If the Greeks outright default on their sovereign debt -- look for a tidal wave of capital from European banking centers to wash into the relative safe-harbor of dollar denominated assets like Treasury obligations and mortgage-backed securities. This is a scenario, should it develop, sure to be supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates. Even if the Greeks get a major infusion of capital to keep the financial wolf from the door for the near term - many doubt the government and the people of Greece have the will to live by the draconian measures necessary to overcome the country's massive deficit -- so this issue will continue to overshadow the credit markets for some time yet to come. I'll keep you posted as each chapter of this story unfolds.

Also worth watching -- trading activity in the stock markets will likely exert some strong directional influence on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates this week. Higher stock prices will tend to nudge mortgage rates higher while falling stock prices will likely prove supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Friday, June 17, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.17.2011

Commentary: It is a very slow day in the mortgage market.

Traders are continuing to watch the swirl of activity, political as well as financial, surrounding the 11th hour efforts by euro zone countries to prevent a sovereign Greek debt default. As I write, the chances are highest that a default will occur. If so, an outright Greek sovereign debt default will likely create a flood of capital fleeing the expanding euro-land debt crisis to flow into the relative safe-harbor of dollar denominated assets like Treasury obligations and mortgage-backed securities. That is a condition, should it develop, sure to be supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates. I'll keep you posted as this story unfolds.

Trading activity in the stock markets will also exert influence on the direction of mortgage interest rates not only for the balance of the day - but during the majority of the coming week as well. Higher stock prices will tend to nudge mortgage rates higher while lower stock prices will tend to support steady to perhaps fractionally lower rates. For what is worth - my models are suggesting stock prices will likely move grudgingly higher next week.

Speaking of next week, not much is scheduled in terms of economic news -- with the exception of Tuesday's Existing Home Sales report and Thursday's New Home sales figures. Neither of these two measures of activity in the residential housing market will likely exert any noticeable influence on the direction of mortgage rates. The Federal Open Market Committee will hold two-days of monetary policy deliberations on Tuesday and Wednesday. The probabilities are extremely high nothing new will be forthcoming from Fed Chairman Bernanke and friends this time around. All-in-all a pretty boring week in terms of scheduled news and events.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.15.2011

Commentary: A closely watched measure of inflation pressure at the consumer level posted its biggest rise in nearly three years in May. The Labor Department said this morning that the headline Consumer Price Index posted a month-over-month gain of 0.2% last month. Investors shrugged, assuming most of the increase was the result of sharply higher energy cost during the period. Investors weren't nearly so nonchalant when they noticed the core rate of inflation, a value which excludes the more volatile food and energy prices, increased a surprising 0.3%, the largest gain since July 2008. Most observers had expected the core CPI, which is closely watched by the Federal Reserve, to rise a more modest 0.2%.

The mortgage market swooned immediately following the stronger-than-expected inflation news. This early selling pressure faded quickly as a weak New York area manufacturing report, inline May Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization figures and rising worries Europe won't agree on a new aid package in time for Greece to avoid a sovereign debt default ignited a "flight-to-quality" buying spree that is driving capital out of riskier assets into the perceived safe-haven of Treasury debt obligations and mortgage-backed securities.

As they do every Wednesday, the Mortgage Bankers of America have release their Mortgage Application Survey for the week ended June 10th. According to the MBA, overall demand for single-family mortgage financing was up 13% from the prior week. The purchase index rose 4.5% while the refinance index posted a week-over-week gain of 16.5%.

The average contract rate for 30-year fixed rate mortgages finished at 4.51%, down 3 basis points from the week ago mark, down 9 basis points from four weeks ago, and down 31 basis points from the a year ago. Seven out of every ten applications taken last week were refinance requests.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.14.2011

Commentary: Retail sales fell in May for the first time in 11 months as auto sales dropped sharply, but the decline was less than expected, offering a hope of a pick-up in economic activity as the second half of 2011 gets underway. Overall retail sales for May were 0.2% lower while the component of the report that excludes auto sales was up a reasonable 0.3%.

In a separate report, the Labor Department said the May Producer Price Index, a measure on inflation pressures at the factory gates, rose by 0.2%. The core rate of inflation, a value that excludes the more volatile food and energy components, rose a matching 0.2%. There are signs that faster price inflation at the intermediate stages of production is beginning to rise - nothing threatening yet - but strong enough economists and investors will be keeping a close eye on this report in coming months.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Monday, June 13, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.13.2011

Commentary: Mortgage investors are bracing for the end of the flood of Federal Reserve money that has supported Wall Street, the credit markets, and the rest of economy for 2 ½ years. The Federal Reserve will purchase about $62 billion of Treasury debt obligations in 16 operations from June 13 through July 11th in a final flurry that brings the last phase of the $600 billion “QE2” program it launched in November 2010 to avoid another recession.

Once the current fiscal stimulus program ends the credit markets will receive only a fraction of the roughly $100 billion a month it was getting from the Fed. The Fed is expected to reinvest proceeds from maturing securities (mainly mortgage-related debt) – a process that will probably inject $12 billion to $16 billion per month back into the credit markets.

The approaching end of “QE2” is already well priced into the mortgage market. The event itself should have little immediate influence on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates.

Investor uncertainty is expected to support rates at, or near current levels into mid-July or so.

Should forthcoming data show economic activity stirring back to life to confirm the idea that the second-quarter was nothing more than a “soft-patch” – mortgage interest rates will begin to creep higher. Believe it or not – rising rates will be particularly good news for the housing and mortgage markets since economic growth will almost certainly necessitate a resurgence in job creation.

On the other hand -- if forthcoming economic data suggest the economy is turning over for another dive into the recessionary bottoms -- the Fed will return aggressively with additional fiscal stimulus. To save face the new program will probably not be called “QE3” -- but whatever it is called it will be designed to prop-up the economy until it grows strong enough to support itself. This is a scenario virtually certain to prove supportive of steady to fractionally lower mortgage interest rates. Refinance opportunities will benefit -- but the prospects for growth in the demand for mortgage loans for home purchases will likely dim yet further.

Keep your fingers crossed that further stimulus from the Fed proves unnecessary because overall economic growth has finally achieved a self-sustaining upward trajectory.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! … YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Weekly Update by Bill Fisher

These words are intended primarily for the edification of those clients who are trying to understand the ups and downs of interest rates:

The average rate for a garden-variety Freddie Mac loan fell to 4.49% last week, down six basis points from the prior week. And rates are likely to continue edging down. (The broader index computed by HSH Associates, which also includes jumbo mortgage rates, likewise fell 6 basis points, reaching 4.75%.)

Why? For several years we’ve seen rates fall whenever the prospects of the economic recovery were in doubt. Conversely, they rise when investors become more confident that the recovery is firming—something that hasn’t been happening much of late.

Let’s look at this through a real estate lens for a moment. The number of new applications for purchase money mortgages for the week ending June 3—as confidence in the economy was continuing to decline—fell by 4.4%. At the same time, applications for refinancing loans—as interest rates edged down further—grew by 1.3%. Refinancing homeowners aren’t looking for a powerful economy, after all; they want to nail down the lowest possible interest rates.

There is activity, in other words, in many areas where consumers recognize the benefits of acting –such as refinancing—but the economy still seems to have stalled for the moment. This can confuse us. Beneath the stall lurks a set of fears that, if anything, seem to be worsening.

There is, for example, a growing concern that Greece will soon default on its debt. Though this will most likely be given a bit of cosmetic surgery so that it looks as if no default actually took place, most of the market will not be fooled. Other nations are likely to want similar treatment…and Europe will move another step closer to the possible collapse of the euro as the currency for almost all European countries.

This would excite a bit of chaos in European markets and, by extension, in the rest of the world. When the butterfly exercises its wings in Athens, says Confucius, a wind storm often results in distant lands. That is how closely related world markets have become.

Intriguingly, about two years ago when I was writing commentaries for a very large corporation, one of the vice presidents who vetted anything I wrote sent an article back to me. I had suggested that the course of events in Greece would prove very important even to American investors. “Not likely,” he said. “Greece’s economy is too small to affect us very much.” You could sense the veins bulging in his forehead.

Was the relative size of the Greek economy the reason? Or was it that the giant corporation didn’t want to call attention to the fact that it had loaned a great deal of money to Greece and had much at risk in this and many other parts of the world?

The vice president and I no longer correspond these days, but we are still hearing about Greece—and Portugal, and Ireland, and Spain, and so forth. And we will continue to hear about them for years to come. Perhaps, in fact, the euro won’t survive more than five more years.

When we talk about confidence among investors, therefore, we need to watch seemingly distant issues like the Greek sovereign debt. As long as it is threatening to create a windstorm, it is creating worries, and as a result, we’re that much further from the kind of confidence in our economic recovery that will allow more homes to sell, their prices firming at last. At which point, as we keep reminding ourselves, interest rates start rising again.

In short, now is the time for borrowers to arrange whatever financing is within their reach. It may get slightly cheaper to do so for a brief period of time, but in the longer run, it’s bound to get significantly more expensive. The winds will rise.



by: Bill Fisher

Friday, June 10, 2011

FHA is no longer the only option for low down payment buyers!

FHA is no longer the only option for well qualified borrowers. We now have risk based single premium mortgage insurance available that can save well qualified borrowers thousands of dollars! Risk based mortgage insurance calculates a premium that is unique to each situation, so well qualified borrowers can save a lot of money. Click here to view a brief video showing an example comparing risk based mortgage insurance with FHA insurance for a $200,000 purchase.

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.10.2011

Commentary: Mortgage interest rates are moving sideways today – supported in large part by continuing weakness in the stock markets. Capital fleeing the equity market sell-off is finding its way into the safer-haven of Treasury obligations and mortgage-backed securities – a condition likely to support steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates into the weekend.

Mortgage investors remain focused on the interest rate friendly combination of a weak labor and housing market, a slowing manufacturing sector, and the seemingly perpetual European debt crisis.

The coming week brings the latest readings of inflation pressure from both the factory gate as well as from consumers’ front porch. The Labor Department is scheduled to release the May Producer Price Index figures at 8:30 a.m. ET on Tuesday, June 14th followed by the May Consumer Price Index at 8:30 a.m. ET on Wednesday, June 15th. The headline values for both reports are expected to show relief created by the recent markdowns of prices at the pump while the core rate of inflation (a value that excludes the more volatile food and energy prices) is expected to be well behaved across the board. If economists’ expectations prove accurate, look for mortgage interest rates to skate through both reports with little, if any threat of upward pressure.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! … YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.8.2011

Commentary: As a direct reflection of investors’ concerns regarding the sputtering economic recovery mortgage interest rates are sliding sideways as rate sheet prices tick slightly higher in today’s early going.

Yesterday afternoon, in a speech to the attendees of the International Monetary Conference in Atlanta, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke made it abundantly clear that the Fed’s current accommodative monetary policy stance would remain intact for some time. While the Chairman and other members of the Fed’s Open Market Committee admit to being surprised by how weak the economy appears, none have yet called for additional stimulus in the form of “QE3.” The Fed’s current $600 billion round of government note and bond buying, known as “QE2”, is set to expire at the end of this month. The bottom line – the Fed has no immediate plans to do anything other than their level best to keep interest rates in general – and mortgage interest rates specifically – at, or near, historically low levels through the balance of year.

Uncle Sam will wade into the credit markets this afternoon looking to sell $21 billion of 10-year notes. As I write, all indications suggest demand will be decent but not “barn-burning” for this offering. If my assessment proves accurate, look for the event to be mortgage market neutral. I’ll post the auction results on my website as soon as possible once the final gavel falls at 1:00 p.m. ET.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! … YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.7.2011

Commentary: Mortgage investors are busy this morning putting the finishing touches on their risk management strategies in front of this week’s $66 billion three-part Treasury auction. Uncle Sam is scheduled to sell $32 billion of 3-year notes today, $21 billion of 10-year notes on Wednesday, and $13 billion of 30-year bonds on Thursday. Each of this week’s three auctions will conclude at 1:00 p.m. ET – and I’ll post the results on my website as soon as possible once the final gavel falls.

A two-month rally in the credit market has pushed the yields on most U.S. government debt instruments to their lowest levels in six-months. Investors are almost evenly split between those who believe conditions are ripe for interest rates to move yet lower on weakness in the stock markets and continuing European debt concerns – and those who believe the U.S. stock market is poised to begin a summer rally within the next week or two -- and that credit rating agencies will soon be forced to downgrade U.S. securities as the government debt ceiling approaches critical mass on August 2nd. I’m not sure which of these two views of the future market conditions will prevail. There are certainly convincing arguments being made by each side. I do see a number of signals suggesting one of these two camps will take dominance over the other before the month draws to a close. In my opinion -- a notable shift in the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates will probably occur by the week ended Friday, June 17th. Consider using the strategies outlined above as you structure your risk management tactics for the balance of the month and beyond.

In the absence of top-tier economic data today and before the results of the three-note auction are posted -- look for investors to take directional cues for mortgage interest rates from trading action in the stock markets. Higher stock prices will tend to push mortgage rates fractionally higher while lower stock prices will likely prove supportive of steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! … YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Monday, June 6, 2011

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 6.6.2011

Mortgage investors are busy this morning putting the finishing touches on their risk management strategies in front of this week’s $66 billion three-part Treasury auction. Uncle Sam is scheduled to sell $32 billion of 3-year notes tomorrow, $21 billion of 10-year notes on Wednesday, and $13 billion of 30-year bonds on Thursday.

An article by Daniel Kruger, columnist for Bloomberg.com, points out that owning U.S. government debt is as great as any time since the 1950’s. The a survey of 70 economist and strategist by Bloomberg News shows a consensus estimate calling for the yield on the 10-year note to rise to 3.8% by year-end. If those projections prove reasonably accurate, investors in the 10-year security would lose 4.63%. That is certainly not the “stuff” that makes for well bid auctions of 10-year notes and 30-year bonds.

The “so what” factor here is straightforward. If demand proves lackluster for one or any combination of this week’s three debt offering from Uncle Sam – look for mortgage investors to quickly become stingier than normal with their money – a condition almost sure to increase the upward pressure on mortgage interest rates.

Each of these week’s three auctions will conclude at 1:00 p.m. ET – and I’ll post the results on my website as soon as possible once the final gavel falls.

THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! … YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME

Why It's Time To Buy

The Clouds Haven't Quite Parted, But the Long-Term Case for Home Ownership Is Looking Stronger
Back in June 2006, when the housing market peaked, the prospect of a five-year national housing bust seemed unimaginable to most people. And yet here we are, with the latest Standard & Poor's Case-Shiller index showing that prices hit new bear-market lows, falling back to 2002 levels nationally and to 1990s levels in some battered regions.

Despite all the gloom, however, there are growing indications that it is a good time to buy. Mortgage rates, which fell to 4.55% for the week ending June 2, according to Freddie Mac, are near 50-year lows. Homes have become more affordable than they have been in years: According to Moody's Analytics, the ratio of home prices to income is now 20.9% lower than the 15-year average through 2010, and 12.5% lower than the 1989-2004 average. A historic glut of homes, meanwhile, has created a buyer's market: There were about 15 million vacant homes in the U.S. last year, according to John Burns Real Estate ConsultingInc.—some 3.1 million more than normal.


Such conditions might not last long. Moody's Analytics predicts that the number of distressed sales will begin to fall in 2013, and that prices will begin to edge upward then. Home building is at a virtual standstill, so the supply overhang isn't likely to get much worse. Meanwhile, demographic indicators such as "household formation"—the number of new households each year—are on the rise, and promise to take a bite out of the glut in coming years.

The upshot: "While we might not see rapid growth in the next couple of years, there are a tremendous number of positive signs that could lead to a rebound," says Anthony Sanders, a real-estate finance professor at George Mason University.

The short-term outlook isn't encouraging. Job growth remains weak, foreclosure sales are making up more of the market, and economists are predicting that home prices will fall more in the coming months.

But the long-term benefits of homeownership remain very much intact. For now, at least, you can deduct the mortgage interest on your taxes—a big perk for people in higher tax brackets. You get to paint your walls any color you wish, without having to clear it with a landlord. And assuming you can buy a home for about the same price as you can rent one, buying will give you the ability one day to live rent-free. Come retirement time, a paid-off mortgage means your monthly expenses are significantly reduced, and you have a chunk of equity to play with.

So what might the next five years look like? Once the foreclosure mess begins to clear up, say housing economists, the traditional drivers of the housing market—demographics, affordability, loan availability, employment and psychology—should take over.

Here is a glimmer of what the future may hold: While overall home prices fell by 7.5% in April over the same period a year earlier, according to CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif., provider of real-estate data and analytics, if you exclude distressed sales, prices were off just 0.5%. So if you are in a market that isn't battered by foreclosures, you may be close to a bottom already.

"The regular marketplace is hanging tough," says CoreLogic chief economist Mark Fleming.

Here is a look at five key factors that will govern local markets over the next several years:

Demographics

Household formation fell during the economic downturn as a weak economy led some people to stay in school, double up with roommates or move in with family members. According to Moody's Analytics, the number of new households renting or owning a home dropped to 578,000 in 2008 from nearly 2 million in 2005, just before the peak of the housing boom.

But household formation increased to nearly 950,000 last year, says Moody's, and should average 1.2 million over the next decade.

That, combined with increased obsolescence and higher demand for second homes, should begin sopping up excess inventory in much of the country over the next two years, Moody's says.

"Whatever the excess supply of housing is, it is shrinking pretty fast," says Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist.

Some of the uptick in household formation is likely to come from the leading edge of the echo baby boomers, who have been waiting for the economy to recover before striking out on their own, says William Frey, a demographer with the Brookings Institution. That is likely to fuel an increase in demand for both rental apartments and starter homes.

The portion of people moving across the country has fallen to the lowest level since World War II, he adds. That is a sign that many people have put their lives on hold because of the weak economy.

"When things do pick up, there will be this pent-up demand for everything involved with starting a household," Mr. Frey says.

Of course, when prices in healthier regions begin to rise, many would-be sellers who have sat on the sidelines could begin putting homes on the market, muting the price gains at first, says Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Even so, she expects home prices to stabilize and begin to strengthen over the next two or three years.

There also are some powerful demographic cross-currents worth considering. The first baby boomers turned 65 in January, an age when demand for new homes falls and many begin to think about downsizing. "The baby-boom generation pushed prices up as they got older," says Dowell Myers, a professor of urban planning and demography at the University of Southern California. But in the coming years, "boomers will start flooding the market on the supply side" with larger homes, while fueling new demand for smaller properties with more services and amenities.


Affordability

Rising home prices made renting cheaper than buying in many parts of the country. But that dynamic has begun to change: Housing affordability, as measured by the ratio of median home prices to median household incomes, has fallen below pre-housing bubble levels in just over two-thirds of the country, according to an analysis of more than 380 metro areas by Moody's Analytics.

Renting is still cheaper than buying in most markets, but rising rents and falling house prices mean that, in some areas, this won't be the case for long. Buying a home is already cheaper than renting in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Orlando, Fla., according to Moody's Analytics. In other markets, including Dallas, Las Vegas and Sacramento, Cailf., the equation is likely to soon turn in favor of homeownership if current trends persist, the firm says.

In Ann Arbor, Mich., where home prices fell 11.2% between 2007 and 2010, according to Fiserv Case-Shiller, housing affordability has risen well above historical levels, according to Moody's Analytics.

That is good news for home buyers such as Steven Upton, a 42-year-old photographer, who in June will close on four-bedroom brick house on 10 acres in an upscale community in Ann Arbor. Mr. Upton paid $400,000 for the home, which previously listed for $600,000. "It's a tremendous deal," he says.

Before buying a house, it is wise to compare rental prices for similar properties. To be ultraconservative, wait until the monthly outlays, including taxes and insurance, are equal. You also could factor in the tax savings of owning, which would make buying more attractive even if the gross monthly outlay is slightly higher.

Employment

The strength of the housing market depends largely on the economy. Rising incomes and increased employment tend to give more would-be buyers confidence and buying power. For now, job growth remains sluggish: On Friday the Labor Department reported that just 54,000 jobs were created in May, far below expectations.

But signs of how a stronger job market could fuel housing demand are evident in the Dallas metro area, which added 83,100 new jobs in the 12 months ending in April—the largest gain in the nation, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Dallas never had a big housing boom or bust and has benefited from trade with Mexico, a strong telecommunications sector and a central location.




Borrowers like the Elmers who are relocating for job opportunities are a big driver of home sales in nearby Plano, Texas, says Harry Ridge, a real-estate agent. He says such sales accounted for 20% of his business last year.

A similar influx of job seekers is fueling housing demand in the Washington area, where 25,700 new jobs were added in the 12 months since April 2010. Washington was the only one of the 20 cities tracked by Standard & Poor's and Case-Shiller that saw home prices rise both on a month-to-month and year-over-year basis.

Credit

Mortgage financing remains plentiful for borrowers with good credit scores and solid employment histories. But for borrowers who don't fit traditional lending standards, getting a loan can still be nearly impossible. In the first quarter, about 10% of banks tightened standards for nontraditional loans, according to the Federal Reserve. Meanwhile, higher down-payment standards are locking some would-be buyers out of the market. Just 35% of renters have the minimum 3.5% down payment needed for an FHA loan on the median-priced home in their market, according to a recent survey by Zelman Associates.

Credit is likely to remain tight for at least the next six months, says Clifford Rossi, a former Citigroup Inc. consumer-lending executive who teaches at the University of Maryland.

But conditions should improve over time, he says: "There's no question that it will gradually get easier."

That will be welcome news to borrowers like Greg Silver. The 50-year-old real-estate developer would like to buy a second home, but hasn't been able to secure a jumbo mortgage because his income consists of capital gains from sales of the properties he develops. Mr. Silver closed three sales in the past 12 months, netting him a total of more than $25 million, but didn't record any capital gains in 2008 and 2009. Sure, he could use some of that cash to buy a home outright, but he would prefer to mortgage it, get the tax deduction and keep his cash free for business purposes.

"It's a little devastating," says Mr. Silver, who is living in Greenwich, Conn.

Psychology

The long-term case for buying over renting remains in force. Yet nowadays, "People are simply scared," says Aaron Galvin, chief executive of Luxury Living Chicago, which finds rental apartments for wealthy clients.

Mr. Galvin says he has seen a 30% increase in business in the last year, driven by would-be home buyers who can afford to purchase a property but are choosing not to do so.

The portion of Americans who believe homeownership is a safe investment dropped to 66% in the first quarter from 83% in 2006, according to Fannie Mae, the government-controlled mortgage company.

But it isn't clear whether the fear will result in a prolonged change in attitudes, as during the Great Depression, or have little long-term impact, as was the case for the housing bust that shook California and the Northeast in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Eighty-seven percent of people surveyed by Fannie Mae said they preferred owning to renting, though access to schools, control over one's environment and other quality-of-life issues now are seen as the key benefits of homeownership, with building wealth and other financial factors viewed as less important. In addition, 67% of renters surveyed by Zelman Associates said they planned to buy a home in the next five years.

Jeffrey Connor may be a bellwether for the future of the housing market. The 40-year-old finance director at a corporate law firm says he thought briefly about buying a house when he moved to Chicago from Washington in October. But he opted instead to rent a luxury two-story apartment in downtown Chicago for $3,559 a month. Mr. Connor says it will take substantial job growth and a sharp drop in foreclosures to convince him to buy.

"The market is clearly soft," he says, "especially when we consider it good news that the unemployment rate is hovering around 9% instead of 10%." Mr. Connor says he isn't worried about missing out on today's low interest rates and will consider buying once unemployment falls to 6%.

Other buyers are showing less willingness to wait for the absolute perfect time to buy. Doug Yearly, chief executive of luxury builder Toll Brothers Inc., told investors in May that "some of our clients, after waiting so long, are starting to move off the fence and into the market, motivated by attractive pricing, low interest rates and, most important, the desire to take the next step in their lives. The family with elementary-school kids and a puppy when the housing debacle began five years ago now has middle-school kids and the dog weighs 80 pounds."



Weekly Update by Bill Fisher

Contrary Voices

Moody’s has been warning that it may have to set America’s credit rating slightly lower than it now is if we can’t create a deal soon to raise the nation’s debt ceiling. I’m curious.

Rejiggering the credit rating is tantamount to messing with economic policy, and I assume we don’t want Moody’s or S&P to have much authority over our nation’s economic policy. But the very likely fact is that, should Moody’s lower our credit rating—even very slightly—our interest rates will suffer as a result. (European countries have given us lessons in how lowered ratings mean a country’s debt is less attractive to investors and therefore interest rates must climb a bit higher to attract more of those investors.)

American debt, as you know, is traditionally thought of as the safest investment play in the world—outside of, perhaps, gold. So a downgrade of our credit rating wouldn’t just affect our nation, it would cast a dizzying light on sovereign interest rates all over the world. If the safest bet is called into question, after all, where do we turn for the level of safety it used to provide?

I don’t know exactly how seriously to take all of this. It’s untried terrain. I don’t ever remember a threat to the reputation of U.S. Treasury securities in my conscious lifetime. So I suspect that I, and many like me, just watch this story unfold with a certain bemusement, not ready to get worked up by it. The fact remains, however, that there are forces out there that are very ready to push America’s interest rates higher.

This would hurt our economic recovery in outsized ways. (It would also likely push the price of gold still higher.) In short, we cannot afford to find out what would happen.

And yet, many in Congress are acting as if letting the deadline pass for raising our debt level is just the thing we need. There’s a sort of “that’ll-show-them” attitude evident in many politicians. Indeed, it may; it may show us all.

One of the most trenchant observations I’ve read recently was that our economy could slip back into recession—a double-dip—for precisely the same reasons that it went there the first time. Because we are keeping those reasons alive rather than solving the problems that still beset our economy, our financial system, and our real estate financing system.

In real estate and beyond, it feels as if most of the reform is aimed at keeping alive the investment games—the MBSs, CDOs, and credit default swaps—that plunged us into fiscal whirlpools. There is nothing inherently wrong with MBSs, of course. We just need policies that make them safe and sturdy; we need laws and regulations that allow us to prosecute those who hurt borrowers and the entire economy by turning the MBS market into a thoroughly dangerous casino.

This past weekend, as if to play Contrarian with the week’s economic indicators, the Wall Street Journal ran a lengthy article titled “Why It’s Time to Buy,” in which veteran economic reporter Ruth Simon (with Jessica Silver-Greenberg) detail the reasons it is becoming a superb time to buy a personal residence.

We’ve seen the reasons before—many of them for years. It’s rather like watching a heavy tree branch that’s bound to fall at last. What strikes me, though, is how out of place the article seems to be in a week full of weak economic data. But that, one suspects, is the point. The market will turn. Not tomorrow, probably, but reasonably soon. At which point today’s bargain prices and rates will have vanished. This is difficult for your clients to see, but you owe it to them to point it out.

by: Bill Fisher

Thursday, June 2, 2011

U.S. housing prices at lowest point since 2006; Portland's prices drop to fall 2004 levels

Published: Tuesday, May 31, 2011, 8:13 PM Updated: Wednesday, June 01, 2011, 5:58 AM

WASHINGTON — Home prices in major areas have reached their lowest level since the housing bubble burst in 2006, driven down by foreclosures, a glut of unsold homes and the reluctance or inability of many to buy.

Prices fell from February to March in 18 of the metro areas tracked by the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city index. And prices in a dozen markets -- including in the Portland area -- have reached their lowest points since the housing crisis began. Prices in March rose only in the Seattle and Washington, D.C., metro areas.

In Portland, prices dropped 7.6 percent year-over-year. Prices in Portland are now where they were in the fall of 2004.

The nationwide index fell for the eighth straight month. Most economists think prices nationally will drop at least an additional 5 percent by year's end. They aren't likely to stop falling until the glut of foreclosures for sale is reduced, employers start hiring in greater force, banks ease lending rules and would-be buyers regain confidence that a home purchase is a wise investment.

"Folks are having so much difficulty in getting financing for a home," said Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wells Fargo. "It may be early next year before prices hit bottom."

Another obstacle to a rebound in prices: A delay in processing foreclosures. Homes in foreclosure sell for, on average, 20 percent discounts. When they do, they pull prices down further. But many foreclosure sales have been delayed while federal regulators, state attorneys general and banks review how those foreclosures were carried out over the past two years.

Once those homes are eventually foreclosed upon, they will trigger a further price drop in many markets.

Along with Portland, the 12 cities now at their lowest levels in nearly four years include Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Las Vegas, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix and Tampa.

The Case-Shiller index measures sales of select homes in the 20 largest markets compared with January 2000. For each metro area it reviews, the index provides a three-month moving average price. By measuring sales prices of the same homes over time, the index seeks to pinpoint market values and conditions.

Homes account for about a third of household wealth. So when prices fall, they have "important spillover effects on other sectors of the economy," said Yelena Shulyatyeva, an analyst at BNP Paribas. The housing sector is struggling even as the overall economy is in the midst of a steady but slow recovery.

That won't change soon. Roughly 92 percent of homeowners say it's a bad time to sell their home, according to the latest Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan index of consumer sentiment. The Conference Board today reported a sharper than expected drop in April in its monthly Consumer Confidence Index.

Some of the sharpest price declines have occurred in cities hit hardest by unemployment and foreclosures, such as Phoenix, Tampa and Las Vegas. They are flooded with homes sitting vacant, awaiting buyers. Many banks have agreed to allow homes at risk of foreclosure to be sold for less than what is owed on their mortgages. That trend has pulled down prices.

Coastal areas, such as San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, Washington and Boston, have fared comparatively better in the past two years. They have been aided by healthy local economies and low unemployment, desirable city centers and limited space for new housing.

But the damage is now spreading to areas that had long escaped the worst of the crisis. They include once-thriving markets, such as Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis and Cleveland. Economists regard them as housing bellwethers — metro areas that are reliable indicators of where national prices are headed.

Denver and Dallas are on pace to hit post-housing bust lows in the next few months.

In the seven years before its peak in July 2006, the home-price index surged 155 percent. Since then, it's fallen 33 percent.

"We look for further declines to be registered in the quarters ahead," said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at MFR Inc.

-- The Associated Press; Brent Hunsberger contributed.