California Mortgage News
Monday, June 19, 2006
ARMS - Driving up foreclosures!
This is a pretty good article which comes the AP via Yahoo. The article is surprisingly good and highlights what loose credit standards combined with ARMS leads to. All the examples cited in the article are on the margins, ie lower value homes, sub prime loans and in markets not nearly as hot as California. Overall according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, foreclosures fell in all categories except sub prime loans. My gut tells me that the numbers will be way up for sub prime loans as these are people who cannot get credit elsewhere and very often cannot re-finance into a fixed loan because of poor credit.

""ARMs are a ticking time bomb," said Brad Geisen, president and chief executive of property tracker Foreclosure.com. "Through 2006 and 2007, I'm pretty sure we'll see a high volume of foreclosures."

Last year, foreclosures hit a historical low nationwide at about 50,000. But that number has more than doubled since then, according to Foreclosure.com.


Let's keep in mind something. The number has doubled it's only JUNE! That means we are on pace to having four times the number of foreclosures in 2006 than we did in 2005. That's a huge spike and pretty frightening.

This won't have as much of an effect on California just yet,

"Gaines pointed out that although California's default notices are rising by the thousands, actual foreclosure sales remain in the hundreds. Because of California's still-active housing market, homeowners there can sell their properties before going into foreclosure.

On the flip side, in less active markets like Texas and Georgia, homeowners can't find a buyer in time and are forced into foreclosure."


A bit of statistics manipulation and things don't seem as bad as things really are in the Golden State

California, where the median home price reached $468,000 in April, leads the nation in the percentage of homes purchased with adjustable rate mortgages. Nationwide, ARMs account for 24 percent of all home loans.

"In our zeal to make mortgage lending more available to a greater number of people, it's normal to expect the foreclosure rate to go up," Gaines said.

The problem with this number is that it takes all mortgages and lumps together. So my father in law who purchased his home in 1977 for $77,000 (now worth well over $750,00 0) is lumped in. This hides and understates the real problems that ARMs are going to be in California. As I covered in a recent post 61% of new mortgages in 2005 are interest only! So people buying at the very top of the market with financial instruments set to reset in 2007 and 2008. 2008 is going to be a very tough year for anyone who bought with an ARM.

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Thursday, June 15, 2006
Report Attempts To Soothe Housing Bubble Fears
Report Attempts To Soothe Housing Bubble Fears

Freddie Mac's monthly Economic Outlook for June was released last week. In what has become a mantra, the corporations Office of the Chief Economist, quoting Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke's recent remarks, is predicting an "orderly and moderate cooling of the housing sector."



You say tomato, I say tomatoe! One man's "orderly and moderate cooling" is another's catastophic drop in price! When you have 6-7 months of price declines is that an orderly cooling? For those owners who bought at the top of the market with no money done, their entire house of cards comes tumbling down. As home values continue to decline, depending on your situation and how stretched you are it certainly might become catastrophic.

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Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Two New Reports Show Housing Exuberance Is Waning

Two New Reports Show Housing Exuberance Is Waning

Further evidence that the real estate boom is moderating came from the National Association of Realtors last week.

Quarterly figures on existing home sales which include single family houses and condominium units trended downward for the second straight quarter during the first three months of 2006.



This downward trend is natural given the rise in prices and the expectations of customer's minds that the market is cooling. If you can get a better deal by waiting a few months then you will, especially on a purchase as large as a house. Rates are already lower now then they were last year at this time so it's not the prime mortgage rates.
 
Thursday, June 01, 2006
Mortgage Rates Drop
USA Today has a great article mentioning the recent drop in mortgage applications. The old standard 30 year fixed is currently 6.66%. Remarkably despite all the media coverage of the real danger of ARMs,

The ARM share of activity edged up to 30.7% of total applications last week from 30.5% the previous week. It was the highest ARM share since late January


People seem to be using them - largely because the interest rates still trail 30 fixed but by less than a percentage point. Seems to me the market certainly in California is still frothy.
 
Covering the mortgage and real estate market in California. Find information on real estate, mortgage vendors and mortgage brokers.

Name: Brian DeSpain
Location: Las Vegas, New Mexico, United States

Writer, open source geek and general rastabout.

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