Archive for June, 2008

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Rates on 30-year mortgages rise to 6.45 percent

June 28, 2008

WASHINGTON (AP) — Rates on 30-year mortgages rose again this week, climbing to the highest level in more than nine months, reflecting more concerns about how the Federal Reserve will respond to higher inflation pressures.

Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported Thursday that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.45 percent this week. That was up from 6.42 percent last week.

It was the highest level for 30-year mortgages since they averaged 6.46 percent for the week of Sept. 9. It marked the fifth consecutive weekly increase and the fifth week that they have been above 6 percent.

Frank Nothaft, chief economist at Freddie Mac, said financial markets are uncertain about what the Fed will do in response to rising inflation pressures. On Wednesday, the central bank brought its aggressive campaign of interest rate cuts to a halt, leaving the federal funds rate unchanged at 2 percent.

Fed officials expressed heightened concern about inflation and signaled that their next move would likely be a rate increase.

Financial markets are debating about when Fed rate increases might begin, with some worried about a possible hike this fall but others believing that any rate increases will not occur until after the November election.

In a speech earlier this month, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that the Fed would “strongly resist” any tendency for Americans’ expectations about price increases to become unsettled.

Other types of mortgages showed increases this week, according to the Freddie Mac survey.

Rates on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages rose to 6.04 percent, up from 6.02 percent last week.

The five-year adjustable-rate mortgage rose to 5.99 percent, up from 5.89 percent last week. The rate on a one-year adjustable-rate mortgage rose to 5.27 percent, compared to 5.19 percent last week.

The housing market is facing numerous headwinds, from slumping prices, which are keeping potential buyers on the fence, to rising mortgage defaults, which are dumping more homes on an already glutted market.

The mortgage rates do not include add-on fees known as points. The nationwide fee for 30-year, 15-year and one-year mortgages averaged 0.6 point. The fee on five-year mortgages averaged 0.7 point.

A year ago, rates on 30-year mortgages stood at 6.67 percent, 15-year mortgage rates averaged 6.34 percent, five-year adjustable-rate mortgages were at 6.30 percent and one-year adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 5.65 percent

 source: ap.org

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Sales of existing home show slight gain in May

June 28, 2008

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sales of existing homes rose slightly in May, only the second increase in the past 10 months. Prices, however, kept plunging and analysts said the large number of unsold homes indicated the prolonged slump in housing was far from over.

The National Association of Realtors reported Thursday that sales of existing single-family homes and condominiums edged up by 2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.99 million units in May. Even with the small gain, it was still 15.9 percent below the depressed levels of a year ago.

The median price of an existing home sold in May dropped to $208,600, 6.3 percent lower than a year ago. That is the point where half sell for more and half sell for less. It was the fifth biggest year-over-year price decline in records that go back to 1999.

Existing homes sales account for the bulk of the housing market. The report followed news Wednesday that sales of new single-family homes fell by 2.5 percent in May. That was the sixth drop in the past seven months and pushed the annual sales pace down to 512,000 units.

The two-year slump in housing has dragged down the economy and rising levels of foreclosures are dumping even more unsold homes on the market.

Given the weak economy, many analysts said they were not looking for a turnaround in housing for many more months. “Plunging prices and massive inventory are huge disincentives to home buying,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.

Economists said that falling consumer confidence, rising job layoffs and higher mortgage rates were standing in the way of a housing rebound. Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported on Thursday that mortgage rates rose across the board in the past week. The 30-year mortgage climbed to 6.45 percent, the highest since last September.

“We do not expect residential real estate markets to turn around soon,” said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services. “In a sea of weak data, home sales will remain an anchor, not a life boat.”

The existing homes report found a 5.5 percent increase in the Midwest, followed by gains of 4.6 percent in the Northeast and 2 percent in the West. Sales in the South dropped of 0.5 percent.

Economists with the Realtors noted that for the past few months sales have rebounded in areas hit hardest by the housing bust. Examples included Sacramento, the San Fernando Valley and Monterey in California; Sarasota, Fla.; and Battle Creek, Mich.

“Stabilization in home prices can only occur with buyers returning to the market, so we are encouraged by rising home sales, particularly in distressed markets,” said Lawrence Yun, the Realtors’ chief economist.

Yun said foreclosures and short sales, when a home is sold for less than the value of the mortgage, are a larger portion of the current housing market, particularly in California, and are depressing home prices.

The inventory of unsold homes dropped by 1.4 percent to 4.49 million units in May. That is a 10.8-months supply at the May sales pace, down from 11.2-months in April. That still exceeds the seven-month inventory that is typical.

Source: ap.org

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SW Florida real estate agent indicted

June 28, 2008

The indictment and arrest of former Fort Myers real estate agent Samir Cabrera is part of Operation Malicious Mortgage, a nationwide crackdown on mortgage fraud.

More than 400 real estate industry players have been indicted since March, including dozens over the last two days. Sixty people were arrested on Wednesday alone as part of the operation.

Internal Revenue Service special agent Norm Meadows of Tampa said Cabrera’s case is part of the national sting, an operation between the IRS, FBI and other law enforcement agencies.

“We’re there to support the overall mission,” Meadows said. “Just because we are there doesn’t mean there are tax charges pending.”

Cabrera was indicted on four counts of wire fraud as part of allegations of a multi-million dollar real estate scheme. There are no charges of tax fraud, according to the indictment.

In Cabrera’s case, the allegations of wire fraud go back to early 2006. Meadows said these cases take a long time to develop because of their complicated nature and the time it takes to find and interview alleged victims.

“Now, those cases are coming to fruition,” he said. “It does take time.”

From earlier today

Real estate agent Samir Cabrera appeared in court today on bank and wire fraud charges that could get him $1 million in fines and 80 years in prison.

Cabrera, who formerly worked at D’Alessandro & Woodyard in Fort Myers, sat quietly in handcuffs with his defense attorney, John Mills, and walked out of the courtroom after U.S. Magistrate Sheri Polster Chappell set unsecured bond at $100,000. His wife, NBC-2 anchor Jessica Stilwell, was named by the judge as his custodian and he had to give up his passport.

If convicted, Cabrera would have to forfeit all of his interest in any property constituting or derived from proceeds as a result of these violations.

Chief Assistant U.S. Attorney Douglas Molloy said the charges stem from several deals Cabrera made.

“This is the first in a series of indictments” involving Southwest Florida real estate deals, Molloy said after the hearing. “This is not the end; it’s the start.”

This is a new era of tough enforcement of fraud laws, he warned. “If you’re in real estate in Southwest Florida, there’s no room for fraud.”

Mills said the charges characterize Cabrera falsely — he is a businessman who, like many in the real estate market, lost money.

“He’s very upset at these allegations,” Mills said. “There’s a good defense to it. We look forward to the day we can present it.”

Cabrera, who surrendered himself to federal custody this morning, will have to undergo random drug testing because federal pre-trial services tested him as positive for cocaine, although he denied using the drug — he did admit using marijuana.

He’s scheduled for arraignment in front of U.S. Magisrate Douglas Frazier next Thursday afternoon.

According to the state Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Cabrera still has his Florida real estate license, Sam Farkas deputy press secretary for the department said today.

“Just because another agency or in this case the federal government has accused a licensee of something does not mean we would immediately follow suit with anything about his license,” Farkas said.

Any actions against Cabrera’s license would come as a result of a DPBR investigation and would not involve criminal charges, he said. “We’re not a prosecuting agency.”

According to the four-count indictment:

• Cabrera was involved in a scheme to defraud investors in at least two land-flipping deals involving property along Fiddlesticks Boulevard in south Fort Myers.

• The U.S. Attorney’s Office alleges that Cabrera did “knowingly and willfully devise and intend to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud certain persons and entitles, namely the Preferred Members … by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises.’’

• On Jan. 30, 2006, Samir’s company, STR & Associates bought property at 13701 Fiddlesticks Blvd. for $3.9 million. On the same day, the company sold the property to another, named Samir Cabrera, 13701 Fiddlesticks Blvd, LLC for $4.8 million.

• Cabrera allegedly concealed from the investors his prior ownership in the property.

• On March 30, 2006, STR & Associates bought another piece of property at 13800 Fiddlesticks Blvd. for $3.015 million and sold it the same day to Samir Cabrera, 13800 Fiddlesticks Blvd LLC for $4.915 million.

• Cabrera received a share of the proceeds from the flip, which Cabrera and his investors allegedly called “kicker fees,’’ and then tried to disguise them as loan payments on cash flow ledgers provided to investors. He collected $3 million in “kicker fees’’ for his own use and the use of others.

• He embezzled and/or stole approximately $20,100 from one of the companies, Samir Cabrera, 13701 Fiddlesticks Blvd, LLC.

• The wire fraud involves the investors sending money via a wire transfer from Michigan, Ohio and Minnesota.

On Tuesday, Cabrera sold his home off McGregor Boulevard in south Fort Myers to Jan Baillargeon as personal representative of the estate of Frank D’Alessandro for $100, according to Lee Clerk of the Court records.

He said in court today that he is moving to a new residence in Fort Myers.

The sale was part of a civil lawsuit in which the late D’Alessandro — who had been Cabrera’s broker at real estate company D’Alessandro & Woodyard — was suing Cabrera.

D’Alessandro died last September in a kayaking accident in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of New Jersey.

Source: Nbc-2.com

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Where home prices are headed next

June 28, 2008

Where home prices are headed next

Want to know what your home will be worth this time next year? Check out these home price forecasts for the 100 largest U.S. markets, from Money Magazine.

(Money Magazine) — The housing implosion is nowhere near over. In 75 of the 100 top U.S. cities, prices are expected to fall in the next 12 months according to Fiserv Lending Solutions.

The S&P Case/Shiller Home Price Index, which tracks 20 of the largest housing markets, showed prices plummeting by 12.7% in the 12 months ending February. That’s the biggest fall since the index began tracking prices in 2000.

Meanwhile, foreclosure filings more than doubled in the first three months of 2008, spiking 112%. So far this year 156,463 families have lost their homes to repossessions. Many markets won’t hit bottom till late 2009 or even 2010.

Pity the residents of Stockton, Calif., whose homes are likely to lose more than half of their 2006 value. But if you happen to live in Texas, congratulations: The housing tornado passed you by.

Metro Area

Home Price
(median)

Price Change
(5 years)

Forecast (May ‘09)

% change in foreclosure rate (1 year)

McAllen, TX

$109,000

23.3%

4.0%

23%

Rochester, NY

$121,000

20.1%

2.7%

5%

Birmingham

$156,000

29.4%

2.7%

20%

Syracuse

$126,000

29.5%

2.6%

27%

Buffalo/Niagara Falls

$105,000

24.5%

2.4%

14%

New Orleans

$158,000

43.7%

2.2%

49%

Scranton

$128,000

41.1%

2.2%

8%

Baton Rouge

$170,000

38.3%

1.9%

14%

Grand Rapids

$124,000

8.3%

1.9%

37%

El Paso

$134,000

51.9%

1.8%

32%

Wichita

$114,000

17.8%

1.5%

9%

Tulsa

$128,000

18.8%

1.4%

5%

Fort Worth/Arlington

$134,000

17.4%

1.4%

16%

Indianapolis

$114,000

12.0%

1.3%

11%

Houston

$150,000

25.1%

1.2%

11%

Dallas

$161,000

15.8%

1.2%

14%

Gary, IN

$125,000

25.6%

1.1%

12%

Albany, NY

$200,000

64.1%

0.9%

10%

San Antonio

$152,000

39.6%

0.8%

22%

Greensboro, NC

$151,000

17.8%

0.6%

256%

Omaha

$136,000

17.7%

0.6%

71%

Little Rock

$128,000

28.4%

0.5%

405%

Louisville

$133,000

20.7%

0.5%

17%

Columbia, SC

$145,000

28.1%

0.3%

16%

Oklahoma City

$134,000

29.8%

0.3%

16%

Austin

$186,000

28.9%

-0.1%

-6%

Raleigh/Cary, NC

$236,000

26.4%

-0.2%

62%

Charlotte, NC

$205,000

27.8%

-0.5%

15%

Kansas City

$148,000

19.4%

-0.6%

22%

St. Louis

$134,000

31.7%

-0.8%

22%

Lake County, IL

$260,000

30.4%

-0.8%

N.A.

Pittsburgh

$144,000

18.1%

-1.3%

1%

Memphis

$124,000

8.7%

-1.5%

28%

Richmond

$226,000

61.4%

-1.8%

72%

Milwaukee

$220,000

35.7%

-1.8%

53%

Atlanta

$205,000

16.0%

-2.3%

52%

Youngstown, OH

$87,000

2.8%

-3.0%

3%

Nashville

$154,000

34.8%

-3.3%

28%

Allentown, PA

$247,000

58.9%

-3.3%

52%

Akron

$143,000

5.2%

-3.8%

15%

Toledo

$122,000

1.9%

-4.0%

12%

Cincinnati

$166,000

7.4%

-4.2%

9%

Cleveland

$145,000

1.2%

-4.3%

11%

Columbus, OH

$155,000

5.7%

-4.4%

17%

Dayton

$125,000

7.7%

-4.4%

10%

Knoxville

$144,000

35.6%

-5.2%

39%

Minneapolis/St. Paul

$235,000

15.9%

-5.6%

71%

Farmington Hills, MI

$175,000

-7.5%

-5.9%

N.A.

Poughkeepsie, NY

$260,000

50.8%

-6.8%

35%

Chicago

$279,000

29.2%

-6.8%

9%

Virginia Beach

$236,000

90.1%

-7.1%

33%

Cambridge, MA

$417,000

10.7%

-8.5%

57%

Detroit

$120,000

-6.3%

-8.6%

41%

Peabody, MA

$365,000

10.4%

-8.8%

9%

Sacramento

$330,000

23.3%

-8.9%

210%

Seattle

$430,000

61.9%

-9.0%

58%

Worcester, MA

$257,000

13.5%

-9.2%

102%

Springfield, MA

$195,000

33.6%

-9.5%

241%

Jacksonville

$197,000

47.7%

-9.6%

130%

San Diego

$522,000

31.3%

-9.7%

175%

Salt Lake City

$229,000

59.9%

-9.8%

18%

San Francisco

$840,000

40.7%

-10.1%

175%

Wilmington, DE

$259,000

50.9%

-10.3%

145%

Boston

$363,000

13.4%

-10.5%

57%

Albuquerque

$174,000

50.7%

-10.5%

23%

Denver

$254,000

4.5%

-10.8%

23%

Philadelphia

$200,000

50.0%

-11.1%

29%

Providence

$275,000

32.0%

-11.6%

107%

Oakland

$595,000

27.7%

-11.7%

266%

Baltimore

$264,000

64.7%

-12.5%

92%

San Jose

$750,000

38.7%

-12.5%

347%

Hartford, CT

$249,000

29.1%

-12.6%

51%

Bethesda, MD

$460,000

54.9%

-12.9%

118%

Ventura County, CA

$577,000

42.7%

-13.1%

240%

Tacoma

$283,000

64.3%

-13.2%

68%

Washington, DC

$408,000

49.2%

-13.2%

42%

New York City

$471,000

43.5%

-13.2%

3%

Bakersfield, CA

$255,000

73.0%

-13.6%

391%

Stamford, CT

$562,000

32.8%

-13.9%

66%

New Haven

$260,000

36.3%

-14.2%

83%

Fresno

$276,000

62.1%

-14.3%

285%

Nassau/Suffolk, NY

$465,000

40.2%

-14.4%

N.A.

Portland, OR

$306,000

62.3%

-14.7%

100%

Camden, NJ

$220,000

50.9%

-14.9%

11%

Santa Ana, CA

$669,000

52.4%

-15.2%

290%

Newark

$419,000

38.1%

-15.4%

-5%

Sarasota

$230,000

38.0%

-15.5%

458%

Edison, NJ

$358,000

36.0%

-15.8%

0%

Honolulu

$625,000

95.3%

-16.2%

129%

Los Angeles

$528,000

67.7%

-16.8%

261%

Stockton, CA

$341,000

17.8%

-16.8%

379%

Tucson

$217,000

54.5%

-16.9%

14%

Riverside, CA

$340,000

49.9%

-16.9%

299%

Tampa

$200,000

52.1%

-17.1%

281%

West Palm Beach, FL

$305,000

46.1%

-17.6%

435%

Las Vegas

$277,000

60.8%

-18.3%

2%

Phoenix

$237,000

60.9%

-18.3%

9%

Orlando

$245,000

62.5%

-21.0%

399%

Fort Lauderdale

$309,000

56.1%

-22.2%

450%

Miami

$329,000

94.8%

-24.9%

370%

USA

$206,000

32.7%

-9.7%

65%

 source: money.cnn.com

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Rates on 30-year mortgages rise for fourth straight week to highest level in nearly 9 months

June 19, 2008

 

This information is posted by www.FloridaLoanSpecialist.com for your convenience. Need Financing? Call Christina Felgenhauer @ 239-699-1462 or email Christina@FLS-Service.com  Professional, Fast, Reliable!!


WASHINGTON (AP) — Rates on 30-year mortgages kept surging this week, rising to the highest level in nearly nine months, reflecting more concerns about what the Federal Reserve will do to combat a growing inflation threat.

Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported Thursday that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.42 percent this week. That was up sharply from 6.32 percent last week.

It was the highest level for 30-year mortgages since they averaged 6.42 percent for the week of Sept. 27 and marked the fourth straight week that they have been above 6 percent.

Frank Nothaft, chief economist at Freddie Mac, said the increased concerns about inflation were fueled by reports in the past week showing that both consumer prices and wholesale prices rose by significant amounts in May. This spurred further increases in the futures market where investors place bets on future Fed actions. That market is pointing to a Fed rate increase in September.

In a speech earlier this month, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled deepening worries about inflation and said the Fed would “strongly resist” any tendency for Americans’ expectations about price increases to become unsettled.

From last September through April, the central bank aggressively cut rates to try to keep the economy from falling into a recession, but now the Fed’s focus has shifted to worries about inflation.

Other types of mortgages showed increases this week, according to the Freddie Mac survey.

Rates on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages rose to 6.02 percent, up from 5.93 percent last week.

The five-year adjustable-rate mortgage rose to 5.89 percent, up from 5.70 percent last week. The rate on a one-year adjustable-rate mortgage rose to 5.19 percent, compared to 5.09 percent last week.

The housing market is facing numerous headwinds – from slumping prices to rising mortgage defaults that are dumping more homes on an already glutted market.

The mortgage rates do not include add-on fees known as points. The nationwide fee for 30-year and 15-year mortgages averaged 0.7 point. The fee on five-year and one-year mortgages averaged 0.6 point.

A year ago, rates on 30-year mortgages stood at 6.42 percent, 15-year mortgage rates averaged 6.08 percent, five-year adjustable-rate mortgages were at 5.90 percent and one-year adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 5.66 percent.

Source: ap.org

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Real estate fund investors build house of rising returns

June 11, 2008

This information is posted by www.FloridaLoanSpecialist.com for your convenience. Need Financing? Call Christina Felgenhauer @ 239-699-1462 or email Christina@FLS-Service.com  Professional, Fast, Reliable!!


MIAMI – June 10, 2008 – You’ve been mocked. You’ve been humiliated. You’ve been insulted.

If it’s any comfort, lots of other people are trying to sell their homes, too.

But real estate mutual funds are faring surprisingly well in the worst real estate market in decades. One reason: Real estate funds invest in commercial properties, which march to a different drummer than the residential market. Will the commercial real estate rally continue? Probably – but it wouldn’t hurt to move in slowly.

Real estate funds invest primarily in real estate investment trusts, or REITs – which, in turn, invest in apartments, offices, storage facilities and other commercial real estate. Real estate funds have gained an average 6 percent this year, vs. a 5.3 percent loss for the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index with dividends reinvested.

REITs have high dividend yields, which make them popular in uncertain markets – like, say, this one. The average REIT yields 5.17 percent, according to the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts, a trade organization. In contrast, 10-year Treasury notes yield 4.04 percent, and the S&P 500 yields just 2.01 percent.

Dividends help cushion your portfolio in market downturns. And REITs, by nature, are dividend machines. REITs must pay out at least 90 percent of their taxable income to investors through dividends.

Inflation fears help REITs, too. The consumer price index, the government’s main gauge of inflation, has gained 3.9 percent for the 12 months through April. Food and energy prices have soared far more, raising fears of a burst of persistent inflation.

People tend to buy real estate, gold and other tangible assets when the value of paper money declines. “In the long term, physical property has offered a hedge against inflation,” says Joe Rodriguez, lead manager of the AIM Global Real Estate fund.

Finally, REITs are also doing well because Wall Street hit them with a wrecking ball last year. The average REIT fund fell 14.7 percent in 2007, according to Morningstar, the mutual fund tracker. “The REITs’ elastic band got stretched so far in one direction last year that there was nowhere to go but up,” says Alec Young, strategist for S&P.

Apartment REITs have fared best this year. As banks have tightened their lending standards, more people have had to rent instead of buying their own home – and that helps apartment REITs. Continually falling home prices also spur rentals: People figure they can buy later at a lower price. And, with foreclosures going up, former homeowners have to rent. “They have to live somewhere,” Rodriguez says.

Associated Estates Realty Corp. (ticker: AEC), is one of the top-performing REITs this year. The apartment REIT has soared 46 percent this year, including reinvested dividends. AEC’s net rent rose 3.1 percent in the 12 months ended March, and 4.1 percent for its Midwest holdings.

The biggest problem with REITs is that they’re economically sensitive – that is, they fare best when the economy is roaring, office buildings are filled, and shopping centers hum. Unfortunately, the economy is barely meowing at the moment, which is why Rodriguez likes health care REITs. “Whether the economy is anemic or boring, you still have to go to the doctor or the dentist,” he says.

S&P REIT analyst Robert McMillan likes high-end shopping-mall REITs, which sound like an economically sensitive sector if there ever was one. He argues that retailers sign long-term leases and tend not to shutter stores lightly. His favorite: Simon Property Group (SPG), a widely diversified retail REIT.

For most people, a real estate mutual fund is the best way to invest in real estate securities. But there’s a surprising amount of variety in real estate funds. For example, CGM Realty fund, run by star manager G. Kenneth Heebner, has rocketed to a 325 percent gain the past five years. In large part, that’s because Heebner defines real estate very broadly, including companies with very large land holdings.

When stocks of home builders were soaring, Heebner loaded up on them, nimbly moving out before they collapsed. Currently, the fund has a big interest in raw materials. CGM Realty’s largest holding in December, the latest data available, was the Mosaic Company, which makes fertilizer. In fact, its four largest holdings, accounting for 44 percent of the fund’s assets, are industrial materials companies.

Morningstar classifies Pimco Real Estate Real Return as a real estate fund, although it invests in complex derivatives that match the Dow Jones Wilshire REIT Index. The rest of the fund’s assets go to inflation-indexed bonds and other bonds.

If you’re thinking about wading into REITs or real estate funds, take your time. If the economy slows dramatically, REITs will hit your portfolio like a ton of bricks. But if you start adding to real estate securities now – and reinvest the dividends – you could have concrete returns when the economy recovers.

source: USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc., John Waggoner

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How HUD mortgage policy fed the crisis

June 11, 2008

This information is posted by www.FloridaLoanSpecialist.com for your convenience. Need Financing? Call Christina Felgenhauer @ 239-699-1462 or email Christina@FLS-Service.com  Professional, Fast, Reliable!!


WASHINGTON – June 10, 2008 – In 2004, as regulators warned that subprime lenders were saddling borrowers with mortgages they could not afford, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development helped fuel more of that risky lending.

Eager to put more low-income and minority families into their own homes, the agency required that two government-chartered mortgage finance firms purchase far more “affordable” loans made to these borrowers. HUD stuck with an outdated policy that allowed Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to count billions of dollars they invested in subprime loans as a public good that would foster affordable housing.

Housing experts and some congressional leaders now view those decisions as mistakes that contributed to an escalation of subprime lending that is roiling the U.S. economy.

The agency neglected to examine whether borrowers could make the payments on the loans that Freddie and Fannie classified as affordable. From 2004 to 2006, the two purchased $434 billion in securities backed by subprime loans, creating a market for more such lending. Subprime loans are targeted toward borrowers with poor credit, and they generally carry higher interest rates than conventional loans.

Today, 3 million to 4 million families are expected to lose their homes to foreclosure because they cannot afford their high-interest subprime loans. Lower-income and minority home buyers – those who were supposed to benefit from HUD’s actions – are falling into default at a rate at least three times that of other borrowers.

“For HUD to be indifferent as to whether these loans were hurting people or helping them is really an abject failure to regulate,” said Michael Barr, a University of Michigan law professor who is advising Congress. “It was just irresponsible.”

Congress is expected to vote before its Fourth of July recess on legislation that would strip HUD of its regulatory authority over Fannie and Freddie and give it to a stronger regulator.

Fannie and Freddie finance about 40 percent of all U.S. mortgages, with $5.3 trillion in outstanding debt. Owned by private shareholders but chartered by Congress, they are exempt from state and local taxes and receive an estimated $6.5 billion-a-year federal subsidy because they can borrow money more cheaply than other investors. In return, they are expected to serve “public purposes,” including helping to make home buying more affordable.

HUD officials dispute allegations that the agency encouraged abusive lending and sloppy underwriting standards that became the hallmark of the subprime industry. Spokesman Brian Sullivan said the agency and Congress wanted to increase homeownership among underserved families and could not have predicted that subprime lending would dominate the market so quickly.

“Congress and HUD policy folks were trying to do a good thing,” he said, “and it worked.”

Since HUD became their regulator in 1992, Fannie and Freddie each year are supposed to buy a portion of “affordable” mortgages made to underserved borrowers. Every four years, HUD reviews the goals to adapt to market changes.

In 1995, President Bill Clinton’s HUD agreed to let Fannie and Freddie get affordable-housing credit for buying subprime securities that included loans to low-income borrowers. The idea was that subprime lending benefited many borrowers who did not qualify for conventional loans. HUD expected that Freddie and Fannie would impose their high lending standards on subprime lenders.

Banks typically back prime loans with customers’ deposits. But subprime lenders often rely on money from Wall Street investors, who buy packages of loans as investments called mortgage-backed securities.

In 2000, as HUD revisited its affordable-housing goals, the housing market had shifted. With escalating home prices, subprime loans were more popular. Consumer advocates warned that lenders were trapping borrowers with low “teaser” interest rates and ignoring borrowers’ qualifications.

HUD restricted Freddie and Fannie, saying it would not credit them for loans they purchased that had abusively high costs or that were granted without regard to the borrower’s ability to repay. Freddie and Fannie adopted policies not to buy some high-cost loans.

That year, Freddie bought $18.6 billion in subprime loans; Fannie did not disclose its number.

In 2001, HUD researchers warned of high foreclosure rates among subprime loans.

“Given the very high concentration of these loans in low-income and African American neighborhoods, the growth in subprime lending and resulting very high levels of foreclosure is a real cause for concern,” an agency report said.

But by 2004, when HUD next revised the goals, Freddie and Fannie’s purchases of subprime-backed securities had risen tenfold. Foreclosure rates also were rising.

That year, President Bush’s HUD ratcheted up the main affordable-housing goal over the next four years, from 50 percent to 56 percent. John C. Weicher, then an assistant HUD secretary, said the institutions lagged behind even the private market and “must do more.”

For Wall Street, high profits could be made from securities backed by subprime loans. Fannie and Freddie targeted the least-risky loans. Still, their purchases provided more cash for a larger subprime market.

“That was a huge, huge mistake,” said Patricia McCoy, who teaches securities law at the University of Connecticut. “That just pumped more capital into a very unregulated market that has turned out to be a disaster.”

In 2003, the two bought $81 billion in subprime securities. In 2004, they purchased $175 billion – 44 percent of the market. In 2005, they bought $169 billion, or 33 percent. In 2006, they cut back to $90 billion, or 20 percent. Generally, Freddie purchased more than Fannie and relied more heavily on the securities to meet goals.

“The market knew we needed those loans,” said Sharon McHale, a spokeswoman for Freddie Mac. The higher goals “forced us to go into that market to serve the targeted populations that HUD wanted us to serve,” she said.

But because Fannie and Freddie were buying mortgage-backed securities rather than the actual subprime loans, their involvement came too late to require stiffer standards from lenders.

Fannie and Freddie “made no progress in civilizing the market,” said Sandra Fostek, a senior regulator at HUD.

William C. Apgar Jr., who was an assistant HUD secretary under Clinton, said he regrets allowing the companies to count subprime securities as affordable.

“It was a mistake,” he said. “In hindsight, I would have done it differently.”

Allen Fishbein, who was Apgar’s adviser at HUD and is now at the Consumer Federation of America, said the agency failed to use its regulatory power by refusing to credit Fannie and Freddie for loans that were “contrary to good lending practices.”

“They chose not to put the brakes on this dangerous lending when they could have,” Fishbein said.

Fostek said the agency had no practical way to comb through the tens of millions of individual loans contained in the subprime securities.

She said that Fannie and Freddie did not overwhelmingly rely on securities to meet the goals but added that she would not disclose the amount counted because it is considered proprietary.

Fannie and Freddie spokespeople say their partners had agreed not to sell them loans with several prohibited characteristics, including credit insurance, excessively high costs and prepayment penalties that lasted longer than three years. But experts say the volume of subprime foreclosures proves they were toxic to borrowers.

Judith Kennedy, president of the National Association of Affordable Housing Lenders, said that while Fannie and Freddie nurtured unregulated subprime lenders, an estimated 30 percent of subprime borrowers could have qualified for safe, lower-cost prime loans.

“The damage to homeowners, to neighborhoods, to state and local governments as the tax base erodes, and now to all American taxpayers, is almost incalculable,” she said.

Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.), a member of the Senate banking committee who brokered some of the regulatory reform in the pending bill, said HUD’s homeownership push ignored reality.

“We need to focus on putting families in homes they can truly afford, not just on getting a sale, packaging the loan into a sophisticated financial security and walking away to the next closing,” he said. “Today, people are wondering, ‘Why weren’t the regulators and the industry probing these [loans] more deeply?’
Source: washingtonpost.com

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FHA loans emerge from the sidelines

June 11, 2008

This information is posted by www.FloridaLoanSpecialist.com for your convenience. Need Financing? Call Christina Felgenhauer @ 239-699-1462 or email Christina@FLS-Service.com Professional, Fast, Reliable!!

WASHINGTON – June 10, 2008 – For the past few months, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has backed nearly every loan that Laura Triplett has closed for customers at SunTrust Mortgage.

“I’ve got another 20 people closing in June and most of them got FHA loans, too,” said Triplett, a branch manager. “I don’t know what we’d be doing without FHA.”

Demand for these once-neglected mortgages has surged because they do not require the hefty down payments or stellar credit scores that lenders have come to expect from borrowers. In addition, the amount of money people can borrow on these loans went up dramatically this year, and many homeowners have found them attractive for refinancing.

They might not be the cheapest loans around, but they are the best fit for some borrowers – and the only option for others – as lenders continue to toughen their standards in response to the sub prime meltdown.

The number of FHA loans issued shot up 126 percent in the first quarter, compared with the same time a year ago, even though they still make up a small part of the market. They have made the biggest gains in pricey areas such as Washington, where the down payment other loans require is out of reach for many borrowers.

David H. Stevens, president of Long & Foster’s affiliated businesses, said his real estate brokerage now holds regular FHA training sessions for its agents and the loan officers at its in-house lender, Prosperity Mortgage.

“Our FHA business in the Washington area went from virtually nothing at the end of 2007 to about 30 percent today,” Stevens said. “In some spots, FHA makes up 50 percent of all our loans.”

The volume of loans at Wells Fargo, one of the nation’s largest lenders, has increased 342 percent this year from the same time in 2007, said Greg Gwizdz, the company’s national retail service manager. Helping drum up business were live simulcasts for real estate agents that the lender recently held in movie theaters nationwide touting the benefits of FHA loans.

Many attribute FHA’s growth spurt in part to federal legislation that has temporarily raised the FHA loan limits nationwide, broadening the number of people who can use these loans. In most parts of this region, the limit is now capped at $729,750, up from $362,790.

The change, which took effect in early March, came just in time for Abby and Walter Morris.

The couple had made an offer on a house in Chevy Chase. But their lender yanked the loan at the last minute, citing concerns about their finances, the couple said.

Abby Morris, a doctor, had just completed her residency. Her earning potential was huge, but her medical school loans and her lack of long-term employment made the lender squeamish.

“We didn’t have a stash of money in the bank or stocks to cash out,” Abby Morris said. “We were depending on our income potential and our history of on-time payments to help us qualify for a loan.”

When that didn’t happen, the couple planned to withdraw their offer until Kerry White, a loan officer at Prosperity Mortgage in the District, told them about the new FHA loan limits.

“A year ago, this couple would have had no problems getting financing,” White said. “But because of the tightening mortgage climate, their loan options dried up. … FHA became an obvious alternative.”

The FHA does not lend money directly. It provides mortgage insurance to borrowers through private lenders. That means the FHA will pick up the tab for defaulted loans using premiums it collects from all of its borrowers.

The agency lost relevance when home prices soared and borrowers turned to subprime loans with lower upfront costs. When those loans started defaulting at an alarming rate, many subprime lenders shut down and the FHA started slowly regaining its footing. Its market share is now about 10 percent, up from 2 percent in 2005, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication.

Most of FHA’s business now comes from refinancing. During the first three months of this year, nearly 60 percent of the 15,000 loans that FHA insured in Maryland and Virginia were for borrowers who were refinancing, federal data show. Some of them turned to FHA to get out of loans that were becoming too much to handle.

Among them was Petrina Chesson, who was anxious to get rid of a burdensome subprime adjustable rate loan. She got that mortgage two years ago and pulled out cash for improvements on her D.C. townhouse.

But the loan’s interest rate reset last month, and her monthly payments climbed to $3,497 from $3,069. Chesson never fell behind on her mortgage but feared she would.

“Things were getting tight, and I was getting worried,” Chesson said. “I just wanted a 30-year fixed loan, and no one would give it to me until Bank of America helped.”

Her new loan will consolidate her other debts so that her total monthly payments will be $3,290. Her mortgage makes up $3,002 of that total.

Although the FHA is starting to recapture borrowers it lost to subprime lenders, its loans do not have the features that drew borrowers to subprime loans but later turned problematic.

Only borrowers who can make at least a 3 percent down payment or have at least 3 percent equity in their homes and who can document their income can qualify for FHA loans.

By contrast, many subprime loans did not require down payments or verification of income. They also charged expensive prepayment penalties that made it tough for borrowers to refinance. FHA loans do not allow such fees. Most FHA loans have fixed interest rates; subprime ones typically have rates that can rise.

Douglas Vazquez, 30, knew none of that when he applied for an FHA loan. “I was more like, ‘FHA? What’s that?’ “ Vazquez said.

All he knew is that he could not afford the 10 to 20 percent down payment many lenders demanded as he shopped for a condo, nor could he qualify for a loan without a co-signer.

An FHA loan worked for him because of the low down payment and because it let his mother, a non-occupant, sign on his loan, something many conventional loans do not allow.

The paperwork was a hassle, said Vazquez, who purchased a D.C. condo for about $400,000. “They required pay stubs from both of my jobs. They required statements from checking accounts. They wanted tax returns. They would call my employers . . .. They called my mother,” Vasquez said. “But it was worth it.”

These glowing reviews stand in sharp contrast to past criticism of the FHA, which was previously bashed by lenders and borrowers alike as too cumbersome. Now, complaints center on whether the agency can handle its growing workload.

Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, said the FHA remains bureaucratic. “But if your choice is vanilla ice cream or no ice cream, vanilla starts looking good.”
Source: washingtonpost.com

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Florida No. 2 in failed loans as foreclosures surge

June 8, 2008

This information is posted by www.FloridaLoanSpecialist.com for your convenience. Need Financing? Call Christina Felgenhauer @ 239-699-1462 or email Christina@FLS-Service.com  Professional, Fast, Reliable!!

MIAMI – June 6, 2008 – As adjustable-rate home loans continued to reset amid falling property values, the number of homeowners succumbing to foreclosure surged in Florida in the first three months of the year to 77,000 properties.

The state ranked second in the country for failing loans, according to a report released Thursday by the Mortgage Bankers Association. California led, with 109,000 foreclosures. The next highest states were Texas, Michigan and Ohio, which each had no more than 24,000 foreclosures during the three-month period.

Florida and California represent the largest percentages of home loans in the country in markets that also saw some of the fastest home price appreciation and new construction over the past several years.

“The problems in California and Florida are extraordinary,” said Jay Brinkmann, vice president for research and economics with the MBA. “They are the main drivers of the national trend.”

Brinkmann said foreclosures still appeared to be more heavily influenced by loan type rather than other economic factors.

The foreclosure rate nationally rose to 2.47 percent of all first home loans at the end of the first quarter, compared to 1.28 percent during the same period a year ago, again the highest rate since 1979 when the MBA began compiling statistics. MBA statistics do not include foreclosures on second mortgages and home equity credit lines.

Together, California and Florida pushed up the national average to a point where 43 states fell below it, Brinkmann said. Twenty states saw their foreclosure rates decline, including Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, areas where economic decline had pushed rates for years.

Brinkmann said dips in rates in those states could be the result of efforts by the federal government and private lenders to help keep borrowers in their homes through loan modifications and programs like Hope Now, which has fashioned loan workouts from some 1.6 million borrowers since last summer.

Florida’s foreclosure rate stood at 4.61 percent of some 3.5 million loans examined in the report, compared to 1.03 percent of 3.42 million loans in the same period a year ago. More than 7 percent of borrowers in the state were past due on their mortgage payments by 30 days or more. Brinkmann said the situation in Florida would continue to worsen.

While Florida accounts for 8 percent of mortgages nationally, it represents 15 percent of loans in foreclosure. Compared with California, which represents 13 percent of outstanding loans and 21 percent of foreclosures.

Subprime loans continued to topple borrowers at a rapid-fire place. Of 548,000 subprime loans in Florida, 16 percent were in foreclosures, compared to 3.75 percent a year ago of 553,000 subprime loans.

Copyright © 2008, The Miami Herald, Monica Hatcher. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services

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Builders: Give home buyers a tax credit

June 8, 2008

This information is posted by www.FloridaLoanSpecialist.com for your convenience. Need Financing? Call Christina Felgenhauer @ 239-699-1462 or email Christina@FLS-Service.com  Professional, Fast, Reliable!!

WASHINGTON – June 6, 2008 – Robert Toll took time out from explaining his company’s dismal earnings report on June 3 to pitch a proposal. To shore up the real estate market, and the economy in general, he said, Congress should pass a bill to give tax credits to home buyers.

Toll and other builders suffering through the downturn think that homeowners need extra incentives to get off the sidelines. Their pitch goes like this: If the government simply bails out people whose home values have dropped below their mortgage amount, or spends hundreds of billions of dollars on Federal Housing Administration loans, prices will continue to drop, and those government-subsidized loans also will end up under water. Better to urge potential home buyers off the sidelines and back into the market, so prices can stabilize.

“I believe that this is the way to stabilize the economy,” Toll, chairman and CEO of Toll Brothers (TOL), said in an interview on June 4. “Before trying to straighten out the credit market, you need to straighten out the basis of the problems in the credit market. You want to look at the asset that backs up that credit.”

Reinflate the bubble?

However, that “fix” alarms some economists and other financial experts, who think that a home-buyer subsidy will only serve to reinflate the housing bubble.

Toll said it has been done before. Congress passed a tax break for home buyers during a real estate downturn in the mid-1970s, he said, giving them a $2,000 credit for entering the market. About six months ago, Toll started to talk to lawmakers about a similar plan, although he thinks the pot needs to be sweetened to $15,000. He said he pitched the idea to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson around that time. In February, Senator Johnny Isakson [R-Ga.] introduced a bill that echoed Toll’s proposal.

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) has been pushing a tax-credit proposal since November, said Jerry Howard, chief executive of the NAHB.

Both the House and Senate versions of the Foreclosure Prevention Act include some form of tax credit for home buyers. The House bill offers buyers who have not owned a home in at least three years up to $7,500 in refundable credits if they buy a home in the next year. Single buyers with adjusted gross incomes less than $70,000 and couples making less than $140,000 are eligible for the full credit. The Senate bill gives buyers up to $7,000 if they purchase a foreclosed home.

Further tax benefits

The Senate also included other tax benefits for homebuilders, allowing them to charge current losses against the large gains they posted during the boom. House and Senate negotiators have begun meeting to resolve the differences between the bills.

Toll said targeting the tax credit only to certain buyers – such as first-time buyers or those buying foreclosed homes – is “silly” because it won’t effectively spur the entire market. “The move-up guy can’t move up,” he said.

There is no doubt homebuilders are in trouble. Toll Brothers, which builds luxury homes, reported a loss for its fiscal second quarter of $93.7 million, after $288.1 million in pretax writedowns. Hovnanian Enterprises (HOV) reported a $340.7 million loss for the same period. Lennar (LEN), the largest U.S. homebuilder, is expected to release its latest quarter’s results at the end of the month.

The earnings releases arrived on the heels of a National Association of Realtors report that showed inventories of unsold homes climbed 10.5 percent in April over March. The increase – to more than 4.5 million homes, or 11.2 months’ worth of supply – came after inventories had held relatively steady for about four months. Sales of existing homes in April were down 17.5 percent from last year. “With inventories so high, it will be difficult for the market to bottom,” said Eric Landry, an associate director at Morningstar Research (MORN) who covers the building market.

Keeping prices artificially high

But is it up to U.S. taxpayers to stop the slide? Tomasz Piskorski, an assistant professor at Columbia Business School, calls the tax-credit proposal “an implicit subsidy to homebuilders” that would keep home prices artificially high when they probably ought to be falling. If builders and sellers would drop their prices, houses would start to move again, he said. A tax credit might briefly prop up the market but ultimately may just prolong the agony until real demand and supply find equilibrium.

“Let home prices fall to a level where they become really affordable,” he said. “Once the prices are sufficiently low, there will be no problem selling homes, there will be no problem getting decent mortgages. Maybe it’s better that home prices fall faster.”

Of course, the government already subsidizes home ownership in numerous ways, to the chagrin of economists like Laurence Kotlikoff at Boston University. He calls the subsidies “distortionary.” Unlike homeowners in many other countries, Americans can take advantage of substantial tax deductions on mortgage interest. The yearly tax savings from the mortgage-interest tax deduction on a $300,000 home would come to about $4,300, for instance, assuming the home buyer put 20 percent down, took out a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage at 5.98 percent, and was in the 25 percent income tax bracket.

Uncle Sam’s helping hand

The government also encourages home buying through outfits like Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), as well as the FHA, which attempt to expand the market for housing credit. Government regulators pressure banks to make affordable loans available to home buyers.

“There’s already a very large government presence everyplace around financing housing,” said Alex Pollock, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington who opposes the tax credits. Pollock said the mortgage deduction in particular “encourages you to buy a bigger house and spend more money.”

The problem for homebuilders is that few people are buying much of anything today, and builders say they can’t cut prices much more than they already have. Toll Brothers has begun offering incentives to home buyers in distressed markets. Some developers have gone to even greater lengths: In Escondido, Calif., just north of San Diego, Michael Crews Development is offering buyers a buy-one-house, get-one-free deal.

“I think homebuilders have been lowering prices to the point where they are just trying to recapture some of the land costs,” Toll said.

Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Cos., Avi Salzman