by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2009 02:02:00 PM
Monday, July 06, 2009
The Booming Repo Business
From Jim Wasserman at the SacBee: Repo business soars as Sacramento area home sales slump
... As the U.S. foreclosure crisis grinds on, the detailed work of processing, repairing and selling thousands of homes repossessed by banks is real estate's new gold. In the past year, repo-related business has rapidly grown to national scale, fueling job growth in Colorado, Texas, Ohio and elsewhere to service the meltdown in markets like Sacramento and the Central Valley along with Phoenix, Las Vegas and Florida.I've spoken with a number of real estate agents that are really busy, and conversely some agents (mostly high end) that having nothing to do but count their listings. The low-to-mid end business is tough though - many homes receive multiple offers (Jeff Collins at the O.C. Register reports on one home with 135 offers). And even if a transaction is completed, the deals are frequently 'one and done' as opposed to the chain reaction of a more normal market.
... [Austin-based Field Asset Services], which repairs, cleans and maintains repos right down to mowing the lawns weekly, has almost tripled its hiring in the past 18 months. Austin business publications gush over the firm's "hiring spree," its 550 employees and third expansion into larger offices in a year.
Clearly, the housing distress that has overwhelmed states like California has become big business.
BTW, Wasserman also writes a blog (with Dale Kasler) at the SacBee, the Home Front.
TALF CMBS Update
by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2009 11:54:00 AM
Just a quick update on the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) for Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities (CMBS).
At the end of last week, the NY Fed announced a TALF CMBS auction on July 16th. The details are here.
Many market participants expected the Fed to include CMBS "originally rated AAA" because S&P has recently placed a large number of CMBS on watch for downgrade. This did not happen and is apparently a shock to many participants.
The Fed updated the terms and conditions. The Fed is really restricting legacy eligibility:
TALF loans for legacy CMBS will beOne participant told me that all potential trades are being heavily scrutinized too:usedrequired to fund recent secondary market transactions between unaffiliated parties that are executed on an arm’s length basis.
"[Y]ou cannot leverage a bond you already own, and you can't sell and buyback a bond you already own to create a trade. That's an interesting twist."Clarification: July 16 is the first operation for Legacy TALF, which provides loans against Legacy CMBS securities. Legacy securities were issued before January 1 2009.
The new issue CMBS program, for securities issued after January 1 2009, started in June.
The first TALF CMBS auction on June 16th attracted no interest.
ISM Non-Manufacturing Index Shows Contraction in June
by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2009 10:03:00 AM
From the Institute for Supply Management: June 2009 Non-Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®
Economic activity in the non-manufacturing sector contracted in June, say the nation's purchasing and supply executives in the latest Non-Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®.The service sector is still contracting but at a slightly slower pace than in May. Not exactly a green shoot.
"The NMI (Non-Manufacturing Index) registered 47 percent in June, 3 percentage points higher than the 44 percent registered in May, indicating contraction in the non-manufacturing sector for the ninth consecutive month, but at a slower rate. The Non-Manufacturing Business Activity Index increased 7.4 percentage points to 49.8 percent. The New Orders Index increased 4.2 percentage points to 48.6 percent, and the Employment Index increased 4.4 percentage points to 43.4 percent. The Prices Index increased 6.8 percentage points to 53.7 percent in June, indicating an increase in prices paid from May. This is the first time the index has registered above 50 percent since October 2008. According to the NMI, six non-manufacturing industries reported growth in June. Respondents' comments continue to be mixed and tend to be industry- and company-specific about business conditions."
GM Bankruptcy Plan Approved
by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2009 09:03:00 AM
From the NY Times: Court Ruling Clears Path for G.M. to Restructure
A federal judge approved a plan by General Motors late on Sunday to sell its best assets to a new, government-backed company ...The ruling is being appealed.
In his 95-page opinion, Judge Gerber wrote that he agreed with G.M.’s main contention: that the asset sale was needed to preserve its business in the face of steep losses and government financing that is scheduled to run out by the end of the week.
“Bankruptcy courts have the power to authorize sales of assets at a time when there still is value to preserve — to prevent the death of the patient on the operating table,” Judge Gerber wrote.
...
Other groups, including those representing product liability claims and asbestos litigants, ... fought against G.M.’s plan. Under the terms of the sale, most of those claims would remain with the remnants of G.M. in bankruptcy, meaning they were likely to recover little, if anything.
This was quick - GM filed for bankruptcy on June 1st.
Loan Mod Frauds
by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2009 12:27:00 AM
The scamsters are thriving ...
From Jessica Garrison at the LA Times: In California, mortgage scammers find easy pickings
Maricela Castellanos sat at her desk, the telephone pressed to her ear, a chill running through her body.These scamsters pretended to be from Castellanos bank. They offered her an attractive loan modification that lowered her monthly payments, and instructed her to send the payments to a "Payment Processing Department" at a P.O. Box. They even had a 1-800 number. Amazing.
A representative from her mortgage company was on the line with troubling information about the loan on Castellanos' Hesperia home.
No one at the company had previously been in contact with her, Castellanos recalled the man saying. The bank had no record of a new loan agreement with her, he said, nor had it received cashier's checks for $2,260 and $1,408.23 she said she had sent.
Castellanos had been a victim of an alleged loan modification swindle -- a financial crime in which scammers pretend to help distressed borrowers renegotiate their mortgages with their banks but instead pocket the money and leave the homeowners in worse straits than before.
Law enforcement officials say the scams are becoming increasingly prevalent, especially in California, where the Department of Real Estate has reported an explosion from 10 open cases a year ago to more than 750 this spring. Nationally, U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric Holder has said that the FBI's "rescue scam" caseload is up 400% from five years ago.
Sunday, July 05, 2009
Gordon Brown Sounds "Second-wake up call for the world economy"
by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2009 10:13:00 PM
"There are many voices saying that the worst of the downturn is over, but there is no room for complacency."Gordon Brown, July 6, 2009
...
If we do not take the necessary action now to strengthen the world economy and put in place the conditions for sustainable world growth, we will be confronted with avoidable unemployment for years to come."
From The Times: Recession may get worse, Gordon Brown warns world leaders
The worst of the recession may be yet to come and world leaders are in danger of hampering the recovery, Gordon Brown will say today.Maybe Brown was reading Roubini!
As he begins a week of meetings with world leaders, the Prime Minister will strike an unexpectedly gloomy note about the prospects of an upturn and will demand that fellow heads of government “sound a second-wake up call for the world economy”.
...
Mr Brown will also say that although public finances need to be sustainable in the long term, “now is not the time for fiscal contraction”.
A Second Stimulus Plan?
by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2009 07:03:00 PM
From ABC's This Week, George Stephanopoulos interviews Vice President Joe Biden:
STEPHANOPOULOS: While we've been here, some pretty grim job numbers back at home -- 9.5 percent unemployment in June, the worst numbers in 26 years.Here is the January forecast with the BLS reported data ...
How do you explain that? Because when the president and you all were selling the stimulus package, you predicted at the beginning that, to get this package in place, unemployment will peak at about 8 percent. So, either you misread the economy, or the stimulus package is too slow and to small.
BIDEN: The truth is, we and everyone else misread the economy. The figures we worked off of in January were the consensus figures and most of the blue chip indexes out there.
...
BIDEN: ... So the second question becomes, did the economic package we put in place, including the Recovery Act, is it the right package given the circumstances we're in? And we believe it is the right package given the circumstances we're in.
We misread how bad the economy was, but we are now only about 120 days into the recovery package. The truth of the matter was, no one anticipated, no one expected that that recovery package would in fact be in a position at this point of having to distribute the bulk of money.
STEPHANOPOULOS: No, but a lot of people were saying that you needed to do something bigger and bolder then, including the economist Paul Krugman. He's saying -- right now he's saying the same thing again -- don't wait. You need a second stimulus, you need it now.
BIDEN: Look, what we have to do now is we have to properly, adequately, transparently and effectively spend out the $787 billion.
...
The question is, how do you now -- do we -- what we have to do, George, is we have to, as this rolls out, put more pace on the ball. The second hundred days you're going to see a lot more jobs created.
And the reason you are is now all of these contracts for the over several thousand highway projects that have approved.
...
STEPHANOPOULOS: ? today are going to run out of unemployment in September. That means for a lot of those people, if there is not a second stimulus, they're going to be out in the cold.
BIDEN: Well, look, we have increased the amount of money unemployed -- those on unemployment rolls have gotten, 12 million are getting more money because of the stimulus package.
We've increased the number of people eligible by 2 million people. We've given a tax cut to 95 percent of the people who get a pay stub. They have somewhere -- $60 bucks a month out there that's going into the economy.
There is a lot going on, George. And I think it's premature to make the judgment?
STEPHANOPOULOS: So no second stimulus?
BIDEN: No, I didn't say that. I think it's premature to make that judgment. This was set up to spend out over 18 months. ... And so this is just starting, the pace of the ball is now going to increase.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph compares the BLS reported monthly unemployment rate (in red) with the Obama economic forecast from January 10th: The Job Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan
The Obama administration underestimated the rise in unemployment (so did I last year), so the question is: does this mean a 2nd stimulus plan?
Krugman says don't wait:
But never mind the hoocoodanodes and ayatollahyaseaux. What’s important now is that we don’t compound the understimulus mistake by adopting what Biden seems to be proposing — namely, a wait and see approach. Fiscal stimulus takes time. If we wait to see whether round one did the trick, round two won’t have much chance of doing a lot of good before late 2010 or beyond.Update: as of June, almost 4.4 million people were unemployed and had exhausted their regular unemployment benefits. Most are now receiving extended benefits, but - at the least - it might be prudent to have additional extended benefits ready to go later this year.
Unemployment Rate and Part Time Employees
by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2009 05:08:00 PM
The following article suggests that the large number of part time workers will slow any labor recovery:
‘I don’t need to hire anybody new. I need to work my existing workers more.’That seems to make sense, but I wondered if it has been true in previous recessions (that a large number of part time workers - for economic reasons - became fully employed before the unemployment rate started to decline).
Here is the article from The Boston Globe: Grappling with part-time work
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are 9.1 million Americans working part time for economic reasons, more than double the 4.5 million in 2007. That compares with a 50 percent rise in the recession of 1981-82 and a 25 percent increase in the recession of 1990.The following graph shows the unemployment rate and the percent of the civilian labor force that is working part time for economic reasons.
...
For the economy as a whole, the glut of part-time workers could slow any recovery.
“At no time have we ever seen an increase of that magnitude, which is why labor markets are far weaker than the unemployment rate is telling us,’’ says Andrew Sum, director of Northeastern University’s Center for Labor Market Studies.
“When the economy turns around if you have so many people that are in slack work, you’ll say, ‘I don’t need to hire anybody new. I need to work my existing workers more.’ It’s going to be a lot harder to bring the unemployment rate down.’’
Click on graph for larger image in new window.Looking back at previous recessions, it doesn't appear that there was a decline in part time workers (for economic reasons) prior to a decline in the unemployment rate.
That doesn't mean part time workers aren't hurting - many are (as noted in the article), but it appears the the number of part time workers, and the unemployment rate, usually peak at about the same time. This time might be different, but I wouldn't count on it.
Offices: Rising Vacancies, Falling Rents
by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2009 01:27:00 PM
Rising vacancies. Falling rents. Negative absorption. The trend continues ...
From the Baltimore Business Journal: D.C. area office vacancies reach 12.3%
The Washington, D.C., area’s commercial real estate market saw a net absorption of negative 726,100 square feet in the second quarter, the third straight quarter of negative absorption ... the Washington region’s office vacancy rate has now reached 12.3 percent.From Reuters: Manhattan office vacancy hits 15-year high-report
... "we are entering into a period of steady rent declines" [said Kevin Thorpe, director of market research for Cassidy & Pinkard Colliers]
emphasis added
The vacancy rate for top quality Midtown Manhattan office buildings reached its highest level in 15 years and asking rents fell nearly 11 percent in the second quarter, a Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL.N) report said.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.For Q1, REIS reported the office vacancy rate nationwide rose to 15.2% from 14.5% in Q4 2008.
This graph shows the office vacancy rate starting 1991.
The Q2 data should be released this week.
Apartment Rents Decline in Los Angeles
by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2009 09:43:00 AM
From Lauren Beale at the Los Angeles Times: Vacancies give renters room to negotiate
The first quarter saw the largest rent decline in a decade for Los Angeles County, Reis' [Victor Calanog, director of research] said. Effective rents, those that take concessions into account, fell 1.7% in the first quarter of this year from the fourth quarter of 2008, while asking rents dropped 1%.And vacancy rates are rising:
The rate climbed to 5.3% in the first quarter from 3.8% in the first quarter of 2008, said [Reis' Calanog] ... In contrast, vacancies had been hovering between 2% and 3% for the last decade.Declining rents puts more pressure on house prices ... and rents could continue to fall through 2010.
...
The last time vacancy rates were this high in Los Angeles County was in the early 1990s, when they hit 5%.
Here are some comments from BRE (a REIT) in February:
We believe we are looking at a negative rent curve for the next two years.
We believe on a composite basis, market rents in 2009 could fall between 3 and 6% from peak levels in 2008. And the rent cuts in 2010 could be deeper ...


