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Saturday, May 03, 2008

Credit Crisis: In the Eye of the Hurricane

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2008 03:37:00 PM

From Reuters: JPMorgan says no near end to financial crisis: report

"We can only speculate how deep and how long the recession in the United States will really be and how that in turn will impact banks," [JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO] James Dimon told "Welt am Sonntag".

"But we are not done with the crisis for a long time," Dimon said ...
And from Goldman Sachs: Eye of the Storm (research report no link). Goldman argues there is a "gaping hole in the side of the U.S. economy" from falling house prices (significantly more price declines to come in their view) and too much supply.
[Fiancial market] relaxation is unlikely to mark the start of a sustainable recovery.

... the evidence for spillover effects from housing via the credit crunch, wealth effects, and multiplier effects in the broader economy is mounting, particularly as far as consumption is concerned. ... In an absolute sense, the data this week were clearly quite poor.
And from the WSJ: Downgrades Show Storm Isn't Over
ResCap's credit rating was cut deep into "junk" territory after it unveiled plans to restructure $14 billion of debt and possibly borrow billions more from its parent, GMAC LLC.

Countrywide's debt rating was slashed to junk from investment grade by Standard & Poor's after Bank of America Corp. said it isn't sure it will stand behind roughly $38 billion of Countrywide debt.

Credit markets have become substantially calmer since the Federal Reserve helped avert a complete collapse by Bear Stearns Cos. in March. Friday's downgrades were a reminder that other big financial institutions are still struggling under the weight of problem mortgages.
Being in the eye of the hurricane can lead some people into thinking the storm has passed. Maybe. But probably not.

With falling house prices, less mortgage equity extraction, less consumption, and falling business investment (especially for non-residential structures), there is more storm damage to come.

Treasury Committee: Record Deficit Forecast

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2008 10:24:00 AM

Report to The Secretary of the Treasury from The Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry And Financial Markets Association

The Federal government's budget balance is deteriorating in fiscal year 2008. Weaker economic activity has dampened the pace of revenue collection and lifted growth in economically sensitive spending. A recent survey of primary dealers estimates that the deficit for the 2008 fiscal year ending in September will exceed $400 billion with some economists expecting a deficit of more than $500 billion--a significant deterioration from fiscal 2007's deficit of $163 billion. Economic stimulus measures will complement the forces widening the budget deficit. This year's shortfall may surpass fiscal year 2004 as the largest on record in nominal dollars.

Friday, May 02, 2008

Hotel Financing: 55% LTV

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 09:37:00 PM

This week I spoke with Jim Butler of the law firm Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro about the state of hotel financing. Jim hosts a conference every year called Meet the Money® devoted to hotel finance that brings together hotel developers/investors and providers of debt and equity capital.

On the recent change in lending standards, Jim told me:

The liquidity crunch has greatly reduced capital availability for hospitality projects, but money still is available from more traditional (portfolio lending) sources, where the projects make sense and there is great sponsorship. But capital providers and consumers are having greater difficulty finding one another, and underwriting criteria are much tougher. LTVs have come down from 85-90% last summer to something closer to 50-55%, with mezz debt adding a little more leverage but at much greater cost than last year.
emphasis added
Imagine the housing market with 55% LTV for homes!

Non-Residential Investment vs. Lodging Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows the strong growth in lodging in recent years (from the BEA supplemental tables)

With these tighter lending standards (and lower LTV loans), 2008 will probably be a tough year for hospitality development domestically.

Jim also told me that international growth is much stronger than domestic right now. This is similar to many other industries, and this raises the question of decoupling and recoupling of the U.S. and global economies - right now growth internationally is cushioning the U.S. slowdown.

For anyone interested, Jim writes a blog on hotel legal issues with the original title: Hotel Law Blog

Stuff of Memories: From Front Page (in 2005) to Short Sale

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 05:36:00 PM

The following image is of the front page of the O.C. Register from July 19, 2005. The featured house sold for $600K in July 2005, and is now listed on RedFin as a short sale for $559K (good luck!). (hat tip ID)

OC Register, Front Page Click on photo for larger image.

Click here for PDF of entire front page. The caption read:

SOLD: Sergio and Monica Anaya and their two children left their rental and bought this three-bedroom Costa Mesa home after signing two loans (including an interest-only mortgage) and taking on two boarders who occupy one of the bedrooms.
Anyone surprised that didn't work out? The house previously sold in September 1994 for $177,500.

Using the Case-Shiller Home Price Indices for Los Angeles and San Diego (there is no index for Orange County), with typical appreciation for the area, the house should have sold for $567K to $592K in July 2005 based on the Sept '94 price. Pretty close.

Using the February 2008 Case-Shiller HPI, the house should now sell for $455K to $494K, well below the short sale asking price (once again based on the 1994 price).

One of the headlines in the Register is "Stuff of Memories", hence the title for this post. Another headline is "Expert expects $1 million median". Very funny.

Note that the 405 Freeway is directly behind the house (see freeway sign in photo).


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Quote of the Day: "Mortgages + Insurance Policies = Flames"

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 03:42:00 PM

Markel Corp. (insurance company) Q1 2008 Earnings Call Transcript: (hat tip CT)

Elizabeth Malone - KeyBanc: "Now, have you seen ... some companies have indicated that the increase in fire losses or the severity of fire losses is goes along with a slower economic environment? Have you seen that kind of pattern?"

Thomas S. Gayner - Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer: "I don't know that we've directly seen that yet, but I would agree with the idea that the friction caused by mortgages rubbing up against insurance policies causes flames."
Funny quote, but they haven't seen any evidence yet.

REO / Short Sale Prevalence Reaches 63% in San Diego

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 01:39:00 PM

According to San Diego REO broker Ramsey Su, the percent of REOs and Short Sales reached 63% of all pending sales in San Diego in April.

REO Prevalence, San Diego Click on graph for larger image.

From Ramsey:

"I do not have historical data, [but] it would be reasonable to assume the percentage of REOs and SSs is unprecedented. ... Short sales are typically still occupied by sellers, enjoying their “free rent” period. That explains why vacant listings are not moving up."
The percent of listings vacant has been steady for the last 6 months at about 38% - historically a very high level.

Update: Note that only a few of the pending short sales actually close. (hat tip Schahrzad)

Ramsey has just started tracking the percentage of Notice of Defaults (NODs) for higher priced homes (with original loan amounts above $500K in San Diego). In April, 21.3% of NODs were for homes with these larger loans. Ah yes, we're all subprime now!

Flawed House Price Indices, Flawed Reporting

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 11:57:00 AM

In the comments, Jerome asks about this article at MarketWatch discussing the various measures of house prices: Home-price data has its flaws

The S&P/Case-Shiller index, which Tuesday posted a 12.7% decline for February, is skewed for two reasons of its own -- it tracks just 20 major markets, many among the hardest hit, and its "repeat sales" survey by design pulls in individual homes both bought and sold in the last few years.
This is flawed reporting.

First, the article is referring to the S&P/Case-Shiller Composite 20 Index, not the S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index (released quarterly). The media constantly confuses these indices. The National Index starts in 1987, and has a 20 year history of tracking price changes. The second part of the argument - that the price survey uses "repeat sales" and is capturing "homes both bought and sold in the last few years" - is a strength, and does not "skew" the data.

The following graph shows the year-over-year change for the S&P/Case-Shiller National Home Price Index, the Composite 20 (twenty large cities), the Composite 10 (10 large cities), and the OFHEO HPI (seasonally adjusted / purchase only).

Case-Shiller YoY Change Click on graph for larger image.

The composite 10 and 20 indices saw the most appreciation because they are only tracking large cities, mostly in "bubble" areas. Now that prices are falling, the declines are larger in these two indices.

The National Index is only released quarterly, and the data for Q1 will be released in late May. The Case-Shiller national index will probably be off close to 12% YoY. Currently (as of Q4) the national index is off 10.1% from the peak.

Instead of correcting each point in the article, let me excerpt from our March Newsletter with a discussion on the different house price methods: A Question of Price.
Probably the two most frequently asked questions about the housing market are 1) How far have prices fallen? And 2) how much further will prices fall?

Both questions are somewhat difficult to answer. First it helps to understand the differences between the various data sources.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR), DataQuick, and others, report the median house price; they take all the recent sales, and find the median price. This can be distorted by the mix of homes sold. When the bubble first burst, the median price continued to rise because fewer lower end houses were sold (the low end portion of the market with subprime loans slowed first). Now with jumbos being limited, the high end sales volume has fallen, and the median price has fallen quickly.

There is a better method of tracking house prices based on repeat sales of the same house, an idea developed by Professors Karl Case of Wellesley College and Robert Shiller of Yale University in the 1980s. Using repeat sales, and adjusting for several factors (improvements, sales to family members, and more), gives a much better picture of price changes.

There are two main house price indices that use the Case-Shiller repeat sales method; 1) the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight House Price Index (HPI), and 2) the S&P/Case-Shiller® U.S. National Home Price Index.

But Case-Shiller and OFHEO still give very different results as shown in the following graph.
Comparing Case-Shiller and OFHEO
When comparing the national Case-Shiller and OFHEO indices, there are a number of differences: OFHEO covers more geographical territory, OFHEO is limited to GSE loans, OFHEO uses both appraisals and sales (Case-Shiller only uses sales), and some technical differences on adjusting for the time span between sales.

The above graph shows the national indices from OFHEO (purchase only, no appraisals) and Case-Shiller. The Case-Shiller index shows a more dramatic rise in prices in early 2000s, and is now showing a more dramatic decline. All data is through the end of 2007; there is strong anecdotal evidence of further declines so far in 2008.

The second graph presents the same data on a year-over-year price change basis. Once again this shows that the Case-Shiller index was indicating more price appreciation in recent years, and is now showing a larger decline.
Comparing Year-over-year Case-Shiller and OFHEO
The Case-Shiller index suggests prices are off 8.9% over the last year, and 10.1% from the peak. OFHEO’s Purchase Only index shows prices are essentially flat year-over-year, and off 2.5% from the peak.

OFHEO economist Andrew Leventis’ research suggests that the main reason for the recent price difference between the Case-Shiller and OFHEO indices was that prices for low end non-GSE homes declined significantly faster than homes with GSE loans. This was probably due to the lax underwriting standards on these non-GSE subprime loans.

Note that Leventis' research focused on the differences in the indices for the period from Q3 2006 through Q3 2007. I suspect the Case-Shiller index will continue to see larger price declines than OFHEO as lending standards have now been tightened significantly for other non-GSE loans (especially jumbo loans).

What Leventis’ research suggests is to me is that the Case-Shiller index probably provides the best available estimate of house prices for selected cities, but might overestimate the national house price decline.
Data Sources:
OFHEO
4Q 2007 Purchase-Only and Seasonally-Adjusted Purchase-Only U.S. Index
S&P: S&P/Case-Shiller® U.S. National Home Price Values

It's important to understand that even the S&P/Case-Shiller National index has limited geographical coverage. To understand the areas covered, see pages 27 through 32 of S&P/Case-Shiller® Home Price Indices Methodology. Basically the National index covers about 70% of the U.S. by value, and the missing 30% are rural areas (areas that probably had less appreciation, and prices are probably declining less now than in the major cities). As I stated in the article, the Case-Shiller index might overstate the national price declines. A reasonable approach might be to take 70% of Case-Shiller and 30% of OFHEO for national prices.

And finally, just ignore the NAR on house prices.

Fed Increases TAF, expands collateral for TSLF

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 09:08:00 AM

From the Federal Reserve:

... The Federal Reserve announced today an increase in the amounts auctioned to eligible depository institutions under its biweekly Term Auction Facility (TAF) from $50 billion to $75 billion, beginning with the auction on May 5. ...

... the Federal Open Market Committee has authorized further increases in its existing temporary reciprocal currency arrangements with the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB). These arrangements will now provide dollars in amounts of up to $50 billion and $12 billion to the ECB and the SNB, respectively, representing increases of $20 billion and $6 billion....

In addition, the Federal Open Market Committee authorized an expansion of the collateral that can be pledged in the Federal Reserve's Schedule 2 Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) auctions. Primary dealers may now pledge AAA/Aaa-rated asset-backed securities ...
The Fed is apparently still worried about the LIBOR, from the WSJ: Central Banks Ponder Dollar-Debt Rate
Central banks on both sides of the Atlantic are debating causes of the surge in interest rates on commercial banks' dollar-borrowing in money markets and considering what they can do about it.

A major source of stress has been the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, a benchmark for the rates banks pay on dollar loans in the offshore market. It remains unusually high compared with expected Federal Reserve interest rates...
The credit crisis continues.

Jobs: Nonfarm Payrolls Decline 20,000

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2008 08:44:00 AM

From the BLS: Employment Situation Summary

Nonfarm payroll employment was little changed in April (-20,000), following job losses that totaled 240,000 in the first 3 months of the year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. The unemployment rate, at 5.0 percent, also was little changed in April. Employment continued to decline in construction, manufacturing, and retail trade, while jobs were added in health care and in professional and technical services.
The first graph shows the unemployment rate and the year-over-year change in employment vs. recessions.

Employment Measures and Recessions Click on graph for larger image.

Unemployment was essentially unchanged, but the rise in unemployment, from a cycle low of 4.4% to 5.0% is a recession warning.

Also concerning is the YoY change in employment is barely positive (the economy has added only 460 thousand jobs in the last year), also suggesting a recession.

Note the current recession indicated on the graph is "probable", and is not official.

The second graph shows residential construction employment.

Residential Construction Employment Note: graph doesn't start at zero to better show the change.

Residential construction employment declined 31,100 in April, and including downward revisions to previous months, is down 478 thousand, or about 13.8%, from the peak in February 2006. (compared to housing starts off over 50%).

This is the fourth straight month of job losses.

A Real Live Walkaway

by Anonymous on 5/02/2008 07:32:00 AM

You all know I've been looking for evidence of this trend. And reader P.C. sent me a doozy.

Next up is 5015 Meadowlark Court in the Foxwood Forest neighborhood in northern Albemarle County. Here, the owner owes $500,000 on the first deed of trust. But this time there are two additional liens on the property-- $150,000 on a second deed of trust and $75,000 on a third note, a credit line, according to Albemarle County records. . . .

Lenders have allowed the owner to pile more than $725,000 in debt on a property assessed by the county at only $691,200. But the real shocker is the owner's vocation: he's Chris Prang, a mortgage broker.

"It was really bad timing for us," says Prang. "We had bought a house a Wintergreen and dumped a lot money in it. Then there was the news about mortgages--" news that affected Prang's own business.

Prang works out of his house for Carteret Mortgage; he says his mortgage consulting is geared toward the Christian community and home schoolers, which is what his wife does with their three children.

"I try to do things above-board," says Prang.

Their original loan was with American Home Mortgage, the once high-flying firm that flamed out last August with a sudden bankruptcy and put about 7,000 Americans out of work. Then things went bad for the Prangs after they used their equity-- or what they thought was their equity-- to finance another business venture: buying houses and fixing them up.

"I had another foreclosure," Prang admits. "I had perfect credit until recently."

He advises homeowners in over their heads to avoid late payments, but he admits that's easier said than done. He suggests that people unable to keep up with their payments try something called a "deed in lieu of foreclosure," in which, with approval, they simply give the house back to the bank.

"It's not as harmful to your credit as a foreclosure," he says, but concedes, "I'm in the business, and I didn't know about it." . . .

Prang is mortgage savvy, and yet he says, "There was nothing else I could have done."

He and his wife bought their house for $650,000 in 2005 and converted the garage to boost it to 5,000 square feet, the biggest house in the neighborhood. They listed it a year ago for $800,000, then $775,000, and finally, $699,000 a few weeks ago, less than what they owe on the three mortgages.

"I could have come current," confesses Prang. "I have the money. But that meant dumping a lot of money in a house losing value."

And he says if he had sufficient funds, he wouldn't pour them into buying a house now. "Why take the chance to buy something that a year from now could be worth a lot less?"

Prang isn't in favor of current plans for the government to bail people out of bad investments. He personally didn't want government help in avoiding foreclosure.

"In the long run, I'm going to be okay," he says. "I know my credit has been dinged, but I know how to repair it."
Those of you with that sort of sense of humor might be interested in Carteret Mortgage's website. I enjoyed the tagline on the bottom of each page:
"He who walks with integrity, walks securely. He who perverts his ways, will become known." -Proverbs 10:9