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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

House Approves Housing Bill

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 06:39:00 PM

From MarketWatch: House approves housing aid, Fannie-Freddie plan

Senate is next. Bush will not veto.

San Diego Sues BofA over Foreclosures

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 05:39:00 PM

From Reuters: San Diego sues Bank of America over foreclosures

San Diego City Attorney Michael Aguirre said on Wednesday he had filed a lawsuit against Bank of America ... and its Countrywide unit to prevent the mortgage lenders from foreclosing on homes in his city, which he aims to make a "foreclosure sanctuary."
Oh my ...

Note: I'm at the Inman Real Estate conference in San Francisco. I'll have more later ...

Fiscal Deficits Worsen for States

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 01:44:00 PM

From the WSJ: States Face Threefold Increase In Budget Shortfall for 2009

A new report is projecting that the cumulative fiscal-year 2009 budget shortfall for U.S. states will more than triple to $40.3 billion as the economic slump makes it more difficult for states to collect sufficient revenues.
More ripples from the weak economy.

On Construction Loan Delinquences

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 11:30:00 AM

A few stats from the WSJ: Equal-Opportunity Crisis (hat tip Michael)

Foresight Analytics ... estimates that construction-loan delinquencies among all property types reached 9% in the quarter, up from 7.2% in the first quarter and 2.4% in the year-earlier period. ...

Among loans to single-family-housing developers, an estimated 12% of the loans were at least 30 days past due, compared with 10.8% in the previous quarter and 3.1% a year earlier.

Matthew Anderson, partner at Foresight Analytics, says that an early read on the data shows the pain is spreading to nonresidential projects. He says the weakening economy has put pressure on developers of shopping malls ...
Developers of malls, hotels, and offices are all going to get hurt.

WaPo: Housing Bill to Eliminate DAPs

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 09:47:00 AM

Note: Down Payment Assistance Programs (DAPs). Tanta and I have written extensively (and negatively) about DAPs for years.

From the WaPo: Congress Is Set to Limit Down-Payment Assistance (hat tip Bob_in_MA)

[T]he FHA said seller-funded down payments present the single biggest challenge to its solvency. Borrowers who take part in these arrangements go to foreclosure at nearly three times the rate of borrowers who put their own money down, according to the agency.

The fate of these seller-funded down-payment-assistance programs has been in limbo for weeks. The Senate version of the housing bill would have banned them. The House version would not. Negotiators crafting a compromise bill have agreed to the Senate's position, which also is supported by the Bush administration.

"We're going to yield to the Senate on that," said Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.)
Good riddance.

A few of our previous posts:

FHA Going After DAP Again? Tanta, June 10, 2008

DAP for UberNerds, Tanta, Oct 19, 2007 **** READ this one for nerdy details! ****

FHA to Ban DAPs, CR, Sept 29, 2007

Housing: IRS Raps DAPs, June 2, 2006

More on Housing, CR, Feb 24, 2005

Fannie's REOs Piling Up

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 09:07:00 AM

From Bloomberg: Fannie Mae Unsold $5 Billion Homes Bring Peril to Shareholders

Fannie Mae acquired twice as many homes through foreclosure in the first quarter as it sold, regulatory filings show. ... Late payments on the company's home loans, a harbinger of foreclosures, almost doubled in the past year.

Together, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two biggest U.S. mortgage finance companies, owned a record $6.9 billion of foreclosed homes on March 31, compared with $8.56 billion held by all 8,500 U.S. commercial banks and savings and loans.
A large percentage of existing home sales are previously foreclosed properties (41.9% of sales in California in June were previously foreclosed), and yet, REOs are still piling up at Fannie Mae and elsewhere. The problem is clearly getting worse ...

MBA: Mortgage Rates Up Sharply

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 08:40:00 AM

The MBA released their weekly survey of mortgage applications and interest rates this morning: Mortgage Applications Decrease In Latest MBA Weekly Survey

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 6.59 percent from 6.22 percent ...

The average contract interest rate for one-year ARMs remained unchanged at 7.16 percent ...
Note: this data is for the week ending July 18. Based on the WSJ and NYTimes reports last night, rates for 30 year fixed mortgages have increased more over the last few days.

Also note that purchase loan applications were off sharply.

Daily Show Video: Confessions of a Subprime Lender

by Calculated Risk on 7/23/2008 02:01:00 AM

Jon Stewart interviews Richard Bitner:

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Report: Deal Reached on Housing Legislation

by Calculated Risk on 7/22/2008 11:44:00 PM

Bloomberg: U.S. Lawmakers Reach Deal on Fannie, Freddie Bill

WSJ: Lawmakers Reach Deal On Big Housing Package

Here is an interesting detail:

The Treasury would be barred from providing aid that would cause a breach in the federal debt ceiling under the agreement, a constraint aimed at limiting any taxpayer losses. The debt limit would be raised to $10.6 trillion from the current $9.815 trillion.
My guess of $10 trillion in U.S. debt by the end of Bush's 2nd term is looking better. That is one forecast I wish I had been wrong about.

WSJ: Mortgage Rates Increase Sharply

by Calculated Risk on 7/22/2008 10:03:00 PM

UPDATE: from Vikas Bajaj at the NY Times: Woes Afflicting Mortgage Giants Raise Loan Rates

Ruth Simon and James Hagerty at the WSJ report: Mortgage Rates Near a Year High. According to the Journal - reporting data from HSH Associates - 30 year rates rose to an average of 6.71% last week, and jumbo rates have risen to an average 7.84%.

I usually track mortgage rates using Freddie Mac's weekly survey, and the MBA. The MBA reported for the week ending July 11th:

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 6.22 percent from 6.43 percent
And Freddie Mac reported 30 year rates were at 6.26% for the week ending July 17th. So rates must have really surged last week ...

This will have a negative impact on home sales, and on homeowners trying to refinance.