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Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Treasury: Millions More Foreclosures Coming

by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2009 10:58:00 AM

From Teasury: Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions Michael S. Barr Written Testimony on Stabilizing the Housing Market before the House Financial Services Committee, Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity

... I want to highlight some key points of success:

We have signed contracts with over 45 servicers, including the five largest. Between loans covered by these servicers and loans owned or guaranteed by the GSEs, more than 85 percent of all mortgage loans in the country are now covered by the program.

Over 570,000 trial modifications have been offered under the program. Over 360,000 trial modifications are underway.
...
[W]e recognize that any modification program seeking to avoid preventable foreclosures has limits, HAMP included. Even before the current crisis, when home prices were climbing, there were still many hundreds of thousands of foreclosures. Therefore, even if HAMP is a total success, we should still expect millions of foreclosures, as President Obama noted when he launched the program in February.

Some of these foreclosures will result from borrowers who, as investors, do not qualify for the program. Others will occur because borrowers do not respond to our outreach. Still others will be the product of borrowers who bought homes well beyond what they could afford and so would be unable to make the monthly payment even on a modified loan.
emphasis added
It is that third category that is key - that is all the homeowners far underwater who bought homes they could never really afford.

Bankruptcies: Movin' on Up!

by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2009 09:04:00 AM

From Bloomberg: Wealthy Families Succumb to Bankruptcy as Real Estate Crashes

Wealthy individuals’ Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings jumped 73 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, according to the National Bankruptcy Research Center, a research firm in Burlingame, California.

More individuals or families with at least $1,010,650 in secured debt and $336,900 unsecured are using Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code typically associated with business reorganizations. Falling U.S. home prices leave them unable to refinance or sell properties when they drop below the value of the mortgage, said Chicago bankruptcy attorney Joseph Baldi.

... Wealthier people filing for bankruptcy typically have large homes, two car payments and children in private schools, said Leslie Linfield, executive director of the Institute for Financial Literacy in Portland, Maine ...

“There are a lot of people with real estate, and they can’t afford it,” said Baldi ... “They can’t make the payments, and they can’t sell the house.”
emphasis added
Overall personal bankruptcies were up 36% in Q2 2009 compared to Q2 2008 - so high end bankruptcies are increasing twice as fast as the average.

This fits with the articles yesterday on Option ARMs and Interest Only loans that were used predominantly in mid-to-high end areas.

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Interest Only Loans: Another Time Bomb

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 11:12:00 PM

From David Streitfeld at the NY Times: The House Trap

An analysis for The New York Times by the real estate information company First American CoreLogic shows there are 2.8 million active interest-only home loans worth a combined total of $908 billion.

The interest-only periods, which put off the principal payments for five, seven or 10 years, are now beginning to expire. In the next 12 months, $71 billion of interest-only loans will reset. The year after, another $100 billion will reset. After mid-2011, another $400 billion will reset.
There are a several fascinating anecdotes in the article, including a professor who teaches real estate finance. Here is one:
“I understand I took a risk,” said [Dean Janis, a Southern California lawyer who bought a $950,000 home in 2004] “But I did not anticipate that the real estate market would go down 30 percent.” He talked with Wells Fargo about his options, and the lender said he had none.
IOs. Another wonderful affordability product.

FHA Lenders with High Default Rates

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 10:22:00 PM

HUD has a great tool to track FHA lender performance: Neighborhood Watch Early Warning System (ht TL)

Although the overall FHA default rate is 4.63%, the following lenders had 2 year default rates of 15% or more (only lenders with 100+ originations included). (Added: these are the two year default rates).

There are ten lenders with "perfect" records (100% default), but they only have one or two originations each.

And the winner is Mortgage Depot Inc. with a 48.65% default rate!

Note that Countrywide Home Loans Inc. is not Countrywide Bank FSB.

For a full screen version of the table click here.

The table is wide - use scroll bars to see all information!

NOTE: Columns are sortable - click on column header to sore

Fitch on Option ARM Recasts

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 05:58:00 PM

From Fitch: $134B of U.S. Option ARM RMBS To Recast by 2011

Of the $189 billion securitized Option ARM loans outstanding, 88% have yet to experience a recast event ... Of these loans that have not yet recast, 94% have utilized the minimum monthly payment to allow their loans to negatively amortize.
...
Further evidence of option ARM underperformance in the last year lies in the number of outstanding securitized Option ARMs either 90 days or more delinquent, in foreclosure or real estate-owned proceedings, which has increased from 16% to 37%. Total 30+ day delinquencies are now 46%, despite the fact that only 12% have recast and experienced an associated payment shock. Instead, negative and declining equity has presented a larger problem: due to high concentrations in California, Florida, and other states with rapidly declining home prices, average loan-to-value ratios have increased from 79% at origination to 126% today. 'Negative equity and payment shocks will continue as Option ARM loans recast in large numbers in the coming years,' said Somerville.
Fitch is just looking at securitized Option ARMs, not loans in bank portfolios like Wells Fargo with all the 10 year Pick-a-Pay recast periods.

The second paragraph is key - many of these borrowers are defaulting before the loans recast! From Bloomberg on a Barclays report in July: Option ARM Defaults Shrink Recast Wave, Barclays Says
The wave of “option” adjustable- rate mortgages recasting to higher payments, projected by some economists to represent a looming source of foreclosures that will hurt housing markets over the next few years, will be smaller “than feared” because many borrowers will default before their bills change, Barclays Capital analysts said.
...
About 40 percent of borrowers with option ARMs are already delinquent, and “many” of the others will start missing payments before their obligations change, the Barclays mortgage- bond analysts wrote in a July 24 report. ...

“The additional risk really will only be for borrowers who manage to stay current over the next couple of years and might default due to a payment shock,” the New York-based analysts including Sandeep Bordian and Jasraj Vaidya wrote.
...
More than $750 billion of option ARMs were originated between 2004 and 2008 ...
The real problem for Option ARMs is negative equity, and the surge in defaults is happening before the loans recast. As Fitch notes, modifications haven't been helpful for Option ARM borrowers because many are too far underwater:
To date, 3.5% of the approximately one million 2004-2007 vintage securitized Option ARM loans have been modified, in an attempt to mitigate effects from the payment shock. Modification types have included term extension, conversion to interest only loans, interest rate cuts, and others. These modifications have been somewhat successful, with 24% of modified Option ARM loans being 90+ days delinquent, compared with 37% of the overall Option ARM universe. However ... Fitch expects a high default percentage for modified Option ARM loans.
This is a somewhat confusing press release. The recasts will probably lead to higher defaults, but negative equity is the real problem.

Consumer Credit Declines Sharply in July

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 03:10:00 PM

From MarketWatch: U.S. consumer credit down record amount in July

UU.S. consumers reduced their credit burden by a record amount in July, the Federal Reserve reported Tuesday. Total seasonally adjusted consumer debt fell $21.55 billion, or at a 10.4% annual rate, in July to $2.47 trillion. This is the sixth straight monthly drop in consumer credit. ... This is the record 11th straight monthly drop in credit card debt.
Consumer Credit Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the year-over-year (YoY) change in consumer credit. Consumer credit is off 4.2% over the last 12 months. The previous record YoY decline was 1.9% in 1991.

Here is the Fed report: Consumer Credit

Consumer credit declined from $2,493.6 billion in June to $2,472.1 in July. Note: The Fed reports a simple annual rate (multiplies change in month by 12) as opposed to a compounded annual rate.

Note: Consumer credit does not include real estate debt.

Seasonal Retail Hiring

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 02:33:00 PM

Typically retail companies start hiring for the holiday season in October, and really increase hiring in November. Here is a graph that shows the historical net retail jobs added for October, November and December by year.

Seasonal Retail Hiring Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This really shows the collapse in retail hiring in 2008. This also shows how the season has changed over time - back in the '80s, retailers hired mostly in December. Now the peak month is November, and many retailers start hiring seasonal workers in October.

Here is a story from Bloomberg: Retail Hiring Shift May Show Growing Confidence in Recovery (ht Brian, Mike)

U.S. discount, grocery and restaurant chains are hiring a larger percentage of job applicants than seven months ago, signaling confidence the economy may be improving, software maker Kronos Inc. said.

Kronos analyzed the 8.9 million job applications received by 68 retailers in the first seven months of the year. In July, 2.99 of every 100 applications resulted in a hire, compared with 2.75 in January, a three-year low, the Chelmsford, Massachusetts-based company said today in a statement.

“We are seeing a turnaround that reflects an increase in confidence by individual managers,” Robert Yerex, Kronos’s chief economist ... “It may take quite a bit longer to come back than it did to drop off.” This is the first time Kronos has publicly issued a monthly retail labor index.
Unfortunately this data is new and the season hasn't started yet. This hiring will be watched closely, and I suspect seasonal hiring will be stronger than in 2008, but not as strong as the 700+ thousand jobs in 2004 through 2007.

Google Domestic Trends

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 12:46:00 PM

Here is an interesting resource from Google: Domestic Trends. (ht Brian) Google is tracking search trends for several specific sectors of the economy.

As an example, below is a screen capture of the Auto Buyers Index.

Google Auto Buyers Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This shows the seasonality of car buying, plus the Cash-for-clunkers surge in searches. Click on link for interactive graph - you can also plot the data YoY.

I also recommend real estate, rental (still weak) and unemployment.

U.K.: End of Recession, Not "return to normal"

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 11:09:00 AM

From The Times: Recession is over but stagnation may follow

Britain’s economy grew for the first time over a three-month period since May last year, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) said today but warned that the end of recession could turn to a period of stagnation. ...

"This is the first time our GDP indicator has been higher over a three-month average since May of 2008 and reinforces our view that the recession ended in May of this year." ... However, NIESR added: "There may well be a period of stagnation now, with output rising in some months and falling in others; the end of the recession should not be confused with a return to normal economic conditions."
emphasis added
And from Bloomberg: German Industrial Output Fell in July After June Gain
German industrial output fell in July after rising in June, suggesting the recovery from recession may be gradual.

Production declined 0.9 percent from June, when it rose a revised 0.8 percent, the Economy Ministry in Berlin said today.

U.S. Hiring Intentions "Sluggish"

by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2009 08:53:00 AM

From Manpower: Manpower Employment Outlook Survey Projects a Weak Hiring Pace for Q4 2009

"The hiring intentions of U.S. companies continue to be sluggish," said Manpower Inc. Chairman and CEO Jeff Joerres. "While there are areas within the U.S. which are showing an uptick, we have yet to see the robust hiring intentions that would indicate a full labor market recovery."

Of the more than 28,000 employers surveyed, a significant 69% expect no change in their October – December hiring plans. Twelve percent anticipate an increase in staff levels, while 14% expect a decrease in payrolls, resulting in a Net Employment Outlook of -2%. After seasonal adjustment, the Net Employment Outlook becomes -3%, the weakest in the history of the survey, which began in 1962. The final 5% of employers indicated they were undecided about their hiring intentions.

“Despite some moderating signs, such as the considerable number of employers that plan to maintain or increase staff levels, there will continue to be challenges for both job seekers and employers in the coming months,” said Jonas Prising, Manpower president of the Americas. “Hiring in the Wholesale & Retail Trade sector, for instance, is expected to be down in the fourth quarter, suggesting that employers will not be adding the quantity of holiday hires they have in the past.”
emphasis added