Thursday, December 13, 2007

Falling home prices squeeze consumers

NEW YORK - Homeowners started losing hold of their homes years before spiking foreclosures and the housing slump slammed the economy.

Piece by piece, some gave away their homes by tapping equity to take cash out to pay for cars, weddings and vacations. Others never owned one brick. During the country's most recent housing boom, the term "homeowner" became a misnomer as lenders offered 100 percent or more home financing to some buyers.

Now, slipping home prices threaten to further erode the value of many Americans' single largest asset, curbing consumer spending and jeopardizing retirement assets.

Thanks in large part to mortgage-related tax deductions and a drumbeat of advice that everyone should own their home, the U.S. homeownership rate rose steadily in recent decades. It peaked at 69.2 percent in 2004 before backing down to 68.2 percent at the end of the third quarter, according to the Census Bureau, which has collected the data since 1965.

But that small decline masks a much larger plunge in the amount of equity homeowners hold. This figure, equal to the percentage of a home's market value minus mortgage-related debt, fell to an average of 51.7 percent at the end of the second quarter, down from 62 percent at the end of 1990, the Federal Reserve reported, even as the average home value surged 139 percent during that period.

Some economists believe the home equity number will drop below 50 percent by the end of next year, marking the first time homeowners will owe more than they own since the Fed started recording the data in 1945. The central bank is set to release the third-quarter equity figure Thursday.

"Although homes increased hugely in value, homeowners were borrowing against them as fast if not faster than the appreciation," said Dean Baker, co-director for the Center for Economic and Policy Research. "And when people were buying new homes, they were getting them with as a little as 5 percent, 2 percent down, even nothing at all."

Thirteen percent of first mortgages originated in 2005 and 2006 had down payments of less than 10 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Another 1 percent of the mortgages surpassed the value of the property.

"How much people put down on the home has always been an important variable for the performance of a loan," said Thomas Lawler, a former official at mortgage lender Fannie Mae who is now a private housing and finance consultant.

"Mortgage lenders lost sight of its importance because most of the loan level data they used came from the latter 1990s to the early 2000s when very few places in the country weren't seeing house appreciation," he said.

A recent report from online real estate information company Zillow Inc. showed home values declining 5.7 percent year-over-year in 83 metropolitan areas. A 20 percent down payment would have provided a cushion from these price declines.

The drop in average value is particularly bad news for homeowners who treated their homes as piggy banks instead of as savings accounts. They drained $468.7 billion out of their homes in 2004 through home equity loans or cash-out refinancings, according to a report this year from former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan and Fed senior economist James Kennedy. Fifty-eight percent of that cash went to home improvements and personal spending, while another 27 percent paid off credit-card debt.

They felt confident that housing prices would continue to rise, replenishing the equity they took out.

"To deal with your single biggest asset like that is risky," said Jim Gaines, research economist at The Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University. "Those things should be paid for by current earnings, not savings, which is what your house is."



Thirty percent of the home equity loans issued in 2005 and 2006 left homeowners with less than 10 percent of equity in their homes, the MBA said. Another 3 percent now owe more than the value of the house.

No type of national bailout will replace that lost equity. Those who depended on it will have to rely on meager savings and other investments. Younger homeowners have more time to replenish the equity. But for Baby Boomers who took out cash from their homes every time home prices went up, their retirement income may not cut it.

"For lower- to middle-income homeowners who are relying on their homes as a source of savings, this will be very tough with declining home values," said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Economy.com. "Particularly in context of reining in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. It's one more financial problem on top of mounting ones as they approach retirement."

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source: sun-sentinel.com

Realtors group lifts outlook

WASHINGTON - Bucking conventional wisdom, a trade group for real estate agents Monday said the battered housing market is on the verge of stabilizing and inched up its outlook for 2007 and 2008 home sales.

The revised monthly forecast from the National Association of Realtors, which followed nine consecutive months of downward revisions, calls for U.S. existing home sales to fall 12.5 percent this year to 5.67 million — the lowest level since 2002.

Last month, the association predicted 5.66 million existing homes would be sold this year, down from 6.48 million last year.

The Realtors' group also forecast sales will rise slightly in 2008 to 5.7 million, up from last month's prediction of 5.69 million.

Numerous other economists, however, are far less optimistic than the trade group.

They predict weak sales and falling prices through next year and beyond, and emphasize that those problems could worsen if the economy sinks into a recession.

Patrick Newport, an economist at Global Insight, forecasts that home sales will drop from 5.66 million this year to 4.7 million in 2008 — 1 million fewer home sales than the real estate group's forecast.

"With the economy and job growth slowing ... it is hard to believe that we have hit bottom," Newport said in a note to clients Monday. "Our view is that prices need to drop further, and that housing activity will hit bottom about the middle of 2008."

Joel Naroff, chief economist for Commerce Bank, said the United States is 12 to 18 months away from a "normal housing market" in which sales are growing and prices are rising or stable. Furthermore, he said the trade group's 0.2 percent revision to its sales forecast should be taken with a grain of salt, given the difficulty of projecting with any certainty.

Nevertheless, the Realtors group's chief economist, Lawrence Yun, gave a positive outlook for job growth and the replacement of subprime lenders to borrowers with weak credit with government-backed loans as reasons for the improved outlook.

"Despite overexaggerated negative coverage on the housing conditions, many local markets are actually seeing price increases," Yun said. "Mortgage availability is improving."

While Yun acknowledged that housing prices soared relative to buyers' availability to afford homes in places like Miami and San Diego, he said housing "remains affordable in vast parts of the country" — particularly in the Midwest.

The trade group also said its index that forecasts near-term home sales inched upward in October.

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source: sun-sentinel.com

Realtors group lifts outlook

WASHINGTON - Bucking conventional wisdom, a trade group for real estate agents Monday said the battered housing market is on the verge of stabilizing and inched up its outlook for 2007 and 2008 home sales.

The revised monthly forecast from the National Association of Realtors, which followed nine consecutive months of downward revisions, calls for U.S. existing home sales to fall 12.5 percent this year to 5.67 million — the lowest level since 2002.

Last month, the association predicted 5.66 million existing homes would be sold this year, down from 6.48 million last year.

The Realtors' group also forecast sales will rise slightly in 2008 to 5.7 million, up from last month's prediction of 5.69 million.

Numerous other economists, however, are far less optimistic than the trade group.

They predict weak sales and falling prices through next year and beyond, and emphasize that those problems could worsen if the economy sinks into a recession.

Patrick Newport, an economist at Global Insight, forecasts that home sales will drop from 5.66 million this year to 4.7 million in 2008 — 1 million fewer home sales than the real estate group's forecast.

"With the economy and job growth slowing ... it is hard to believe that we have hit bottom," Newport said in a note to clients Monday. "Our view is that prices need to drop further, and that housing activity will hit bottom about the middle of 2008."

Joel Naroff, chief economist for Commerce Bank, said the United States is 12 to 18 months away from a "normal housing market" in which sales are growing and prices are rising or stable. Furthermore, he said the trade group's 0.2 percent revision to its sales forecast should be taken with a grain of salt, given the difficulty of projecting with any certainty.

Nevertheless, the Realtors group's chief economist, Lawrence Yun, gave a positive outlook for job growth and the replacement of subprime lenders to borrowers with weak credit with government-backed loans as reasons for the improved outlook.

"Despite overexaggerated negative coverage on the housing conditions, many local markets are actually seeing price increases," Yun said. "Mortgage availability is improving."

While Yun acknowledged that housing prices soared relative to buyers' availability to afford homes in places like Miami and San Diego, he said housing "remains affordable in vast parts of the country" — particularly in the Midwest.

The trade group also said its index that forecasts near-term home sales inched upward in October.

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source: sun-sentinel.com

Holiday Decorated Homes in Sacramento

Do you like to check out the holiday decorated homes? It’s a fun tradition to start with your children. And even more fun when they get to put their jammies on and hop in the car to check out how Sacramento home owners have decorated their houses for the holidays.

What’s even more fun is to watch the little one’s faces when they see all those twinkling lights and the awe that embraces them while they look at each and every decoration. Those are memories that you will always remember and cherish.

Some home owners who have decorated their houses have music, others have the children’s favorite story characters…there’s something for everyone. So if you’ve never driven by and checked out the holiday decorated homes, make this year your first.

Here are a few addresses of decorated houses to start you off and if you find any that you’d like to share with everyone, just comment below and I will add them to our list.

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source: sacramentorealestatevoice.com

Suitability Standards Could Open Up Lenders To a Fair Housing Can of Worms

According to Gary Lacefield, who spent a decade as a senior civil rights analyst and supervisor of lending investigations at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, lenders will “need to be very cautious” if legislators and regulators impose true suitability standards on the mortgage business.

“If we do away with automated underwriting,” he asked, “how are we going to protect ourselves from frivolous charges of discrimination?” Mr. Lacefield, who left HUD in 1999 after personally supervising or conducting more than 1,600 investigations, said automated underwriting was created in large measure in the mid 1990s to protect lenders from charges of bias. And it worked.

Once computer systems started spitting out loan approvals based solely on lenders’ underwriting criteria, without being touched by humans and their inherent biases, they all but wiped out fair housing cases against lenders, he said.

But if suitability standards are imposed as a response to abusive lending practices, Mr. Lacefield, who is now director of compliance at WR Starkey Mortgage, Plano, Texas, said automated underwriting would be little more than an exercise in futility.

“If we take out the specificity provided by automated underwriting, we leave ourselves wide open to allegations of discriminatory behavior,” he warned.

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source: consumermortgagereports.com