In Depth Analysis: CalculatedRisk Newsletter on Real Estate (Ad Free) Read it here.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

MBA: Mortgage Applications Increase Slightly, Rates Fall

by Calculated Risk on 1/20/2010 10:12:00 AM

The MBA reports: Refinance Applications Increase as Mortgage Rates Fall in Latest MBA Weekly Survey

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 9.1 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. ...

The Refinance Index increased 10.7 percent from the previous week and the seasonally adjusted Purchase Index increased 4.4 percent from one week earlier. ...

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 5.00 percent from 5.13 percent, with points decreasing to 1.05 from 1.17 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio loans.
MBA Purchase Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the MBA Purchase Index and four week moving average since 1990.

The four week moving average has declined sharply since October, and is slightly above the 12 year low set last week.

Housing Starts Decline in December

by Calculated Risk on 1/20/2010 08:30:00 AM

Total Housing Starts and Single Family Housing Starts Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Total housing starts were at 557 thousand (SAAR) in December, down 4.0% from the revised November rate, and up 16% from the all time record low in April of 479 thousand (the lowest level since the Census Bureau began tracking housing starts in 1959). Starts had rebounded to 590 thousand in June, and have moved mostly sideways for seven months.

Single-family starts were at 456 thousand (SAAR) in December, down 6.9% from the revised November rate, and 28 percent above the record low in January and February (357 thousand). Just like for total starts, single-family starts have been at around this level for seven months.

Here is the Census Bureau report on housing Permits, Starts and Completions.

Housing Starts:
Privately-owned housing starts in December were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 557,000. This is 4.0 percent (±9.3%)* below the revised November estimate of580,000, but is 0.2 percent (±11.5%)* above the December 2008 rate of 556,000.

Single-family housing starts in December were at a rate of 456,000; this is 6.9 percent (±8.5%)* below the revised November figure of 490,000.

Housing Completions:
Privately-owned housing completions in December were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 768,000. This is 11.2 percent (±13.6%)* below the revised November estimate of 865,000 and is 25.3 percent (±8.6%) below the December 2008 rate of 1,028,000.

Single-family housing completions in December were at a rate of 503,000; this is 11.1 percent (±10.2%) below the revised November rate of 566,000.
As I've noted before, this is both good news and bad news. The good news is the low level of starts means the excess housing inventory is being absorbed - a necessary step for housing (and the economy) to recover.

The bad news is economic growth will probably be sluggish - and unemployment elevated - until residential investment picks up.

Investors Flipping Out

by Calculated Risk on 1/20/2010 01:20:00 AM

Robert Selna at the San Francisco Chronicle discusses the surge in investor buying at the Court House steps, and the changes to the FHA rules that allow the resale of homes in less than 90 days (see HUD Changes FHA Rule for Flipping).

From the Chronicle: Investors dominate home flipping, auctions

House flipping, a quick-buck scheme pursued by amateurs and professionals alike during the real estate boom, now is dominated by investors willing to pay all cash, who troll auctions for foreclosures that banks are gradually trying to siphon off their books.
...
The figures, from research firm ForeclosureRadar.com in Discovery Bay, ... indicate that at December Bay Area auctions, about 2o percent of the sales went to investors rather than back to foreclosing lenders. In December 2008, that number was 3.2 percent.
...
Previously, the FHA refused to provide mortgage insurance for homes resold within 90 days to prevent fraud. A common scam was for investors to purchase a house, make minor repairs and sell it to a straw buyer who never planned to pay off their loan.

That kind of ploy artificially ramped up housing prices, left the FHA with inflated insurance claims, and made for vacant and blighted housing.

The FHA rule reversal is scheduled to last for one year starting Feb. 1 and includes some limited safeguards.
Flipping to FHA buyers - all the cool kids are doing it!

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

NY Times: FHA Expected to Announce New Standards Wednesday

by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 09:15:00 PM

From David Streitfeld at the NY Times: F.H.A. to Raise Standards for Mortgage Insurance

The Federal Housing Administration ... is expected to announce on Wednesday that it is tightening standards.

Borrowers who get an F.H.A.-insured loan will soon have to pay a higher initial insurance premium. The new premium will be 2.25 percent of the value of the loan, up from 1.75 percent.

... The maximum amount of assistance will drop to 3 percent of the value of the property, from the current 6 percent.

Other changes will try to hold lenders who participate in the F.H.A. program more accountable by publicly reporting their performance rankings.
...
As of December, the F.H.A. was insuring 5.8 million single-family residences that had a total loan balance of $750 billion. More than half a million of the loans were seriously delinquent and heading toward foreclosure.
There is much more in the article.

These are small changes and what HUD has been signaling for some time. But they will make a difference at the margin.

Bernanke Asks for GAO review of AIG Aid

by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 07:48:00 PM

Here is the letter from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to the GAO.

[T]o afford the public the most complete possible understanding of our decisions and actions in this matter, and to provide a comprehensive response to questions that have been raised by members of Congress, the Federal Reserve would welcome a full review by GAO of all aspects of our involvement in the extension of credit to AIG. GAO is authorized to conduct this review under its current authority (31 USC 714(e)).

The Federal Reserve will make available to the GAO all records and personnel necessary to conduct this review.
From Sudeep Reddy at the WSJ: Bernanke Invites GAO to Audit AIG Bailout
In a bid to soften congressional criticism, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Monday invited the Government Accountability Office to audit the central bank’s involvement in the U.S. rescue of American International Group Inc. In a letter to Acting Comptroller General Gene Dodaro, Bernanke said the Fed would provide “all records and personnel necessary” for the auditing arm of Congress to review the rescue. ...

The invitation from Bernanke does not change existing policies about congressional reviews of the Fed. The GAO already has authority to review the central bank’s involvement in the AIG bailout, along with other company-specific rescues by the Fed and Treasury Department.
And more from Bloomberg: Bernanke Seeks ‘Full Review’ by GAO of Fed’s AIG Aid
Bernanke’s letter coincides with efforts by lawmakers to obtain more details on the Fed’s oversight of AIG after e-mails released this month showed that the New York Fed asked the company to withhold information from the public about payments to banks.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform last week subpoenaed all documents related to the New York Fed decision to fully reimburse banks that bought protection from AIG and efforts to persuade AIG to keep information about the payments from the public.

The New York Fed said today it delivered 250,000 pages of documents to the House panel. The materials show that the New York Fed’s actions “assisted AIG in ensuring the accuracy of its disclosures and protected important U.S. taxpayer interests,” the bank said. The New York Fed reiterated that its former president and now-Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner had no role or knowledge of the disclosure matters.
Mark Thoma adds:
Most people won't realize Bernanke is asking for something the GAO could have done on its own (though perhaps with less cooperation) ... so the politics work in the Fed's favor. And it does send the message that the Fed doesn't think it has anything to hide.
This is both good politics and good policy.

Note: I added the section from Bloomberg on Geithner too - he is being attacked for something that happened apparently after he left the NY Fed.

Short Sale 'Fraud', SoCal Home Sales, FHA to Tighten Standards

by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 04:30:00 PM

A few articles of interest ...

  • From Diana Olick at CNBC: Short Sale 'Fraud' Follow. This is a followup to her earlier article: Big Banks Accused of Short Sale Fraud

    This alleged activity by banks - paying 2nd lien holders without proper disclosure - appears outrageous. Based on Olick's reporting, this practice appears to be widespread. Kudos to Olick and hopefully the regulators are reading.

  • From DataQuick: Southland home sales, median price up over last year. As DataQuick notes the median price increase was due to a change in mix - as always I recommend ignoring the median price.
    Southern California home sales in December remained above year-ago levels for the 18th consecutive month, bolstered by gains in many mid- to high-end communities. \
    ...
    The December sales tally was the highest for that month since 24,209 homes sold in December 2006, but it was still 11.2 percent below the average for a December – 25,143 sales – over the past 22 years.
    ...
    December’s foreclosure resales remained well below peak levels but were still a large force in the market, edging higher than the prior month for the first time since last February. Foreclosure resales – houses and condos sold in December that had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months – were 39.6 percent of resales, up from 39.0 percent in November but down from 53.5 percent in December 2008. They hit a high of 56.7 percent last February, then tapered or leveled off month-to-month until last month’s uptick.
    ...
    Government-insured FHA loans, a popular choice among first-time buyers, accounted for 39.6 percent of all home purchase mortgages in December.

    Absentee buyers – mostly investors and some second-home purchasers – bought 19.2 percent of the homes sold in December. Buyers who appeared to have paid all cash – meaning there was no indication that a corresponding purchase loan was recorded – accounted for 24.9 percent of December sales, based on an analysis of public records.
    The market is still mostly first time homebuyers and investors.

    And the high percentage of FHA buyers is a good lead into the third story ...

  • From Nick Timiraos at the WSJ: Souring Mortgages, Weak Market Force FHA to Walk a Tightrope
    Souring FHA-insured mortgages are threatening the agency's finances. Congress is pressuring [FHA commissioner, Mr. Stevens] to tighten the easy-money standards that once helped people like him, and he is expected to announce revisions as early as this week.

  • AIA: Architecture Billings Index Shows Contraction in December

    by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 02:53:00 PM

    Note: The NAHB housing market index (HMI) release is for residential, and the Architecture Billings Index (ABI) is for non-residential with a nine to twelve month lead.

    The WSJ reports that the American Institute of Architects’ Architecture Billings Index increased slightly to 43.4 in December from 42.8 in November. It was at 46.1 in October. Any reading below 50 indicates contraction.

    The ABI press release is not online yet.

    AIA Architecture Billing Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the Architecture Billings Index since 1996. The index has remained below 50, indicating falling demand, since January 2008.

    Historically there is an "approximate nine to twelve month lag time between architecture billings and construction spending" on non-residential construction. This suggests further significant declines in CRE investment through 2010, and probably longer.

    Note: Nonresidential construction includes commercial and industrial facilities like hotels and office buildings, as well as schools, hospitals and other institutions.

    NAHB: Builder Confidence Declines in January

    by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 01:00:00 PM

    Residential NAHB Housing Market Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the builder confidence index from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

    The housing market index (HMI) was at 15 in January. This is a decrease from 16 in December and 17 in November

    The record low was 8 set in January. This is still very low - and this is what I've expected - a long period of builder depression. The HMI has been in the 15 to 19 range since May.

    Note: any number under 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as poor than good.

    HMI and Starts Correlation This second graph compares the NAHB HMI (left scale) with single family housing starts (right scale). This includes the January release for the HMI and the November data for starts (December starts will be released Wednesday Jan 19th).

    This shows that the HMI and single family starts mostly move in the same direction - although there is plenty of noise month-to-month.

    And right now they are moving sideways - at best.

    Press release from the NAHB: (added) Builder Confidence Declines in January

    The January HMI fell one point to 15, its lowest point since June of 2009. Two of its three component indexes registered one-point declines, with the index gauging current sales conditions and the index gauging traffic of prospective buyers falling to 15 and 12, respectively. The index gauging sales expectations in the next six months held even, at 26.

    The HMI edged down by a single point in three regions, with the Northeast falling to 22, the Midwest down to 11 and the South declining to 16. The HMI fell three points in the West, to 16. 

    NY Budget "Slashes services, Raises fees"

    by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 10:31:00 AM

    New York has the earliest start to the new fiscal year, and other states will soon follow, see: Illinois: "state of insolvency"

    From CNNMoney: New York budget plan a sign of things to come for the states (ht energyecon)

    New York's governor unveiled a painful budget plan Tuesday that slashes services, raises fees and implements some creative actions to close a yawning $7.4 billion fiscal gap.
    ...
    "There are no more easy answers. We cannot keep spending money that we do not have," Paterson said in a written statement.
    ...
    The state's woes are a bellwether of what others around the nation are facing. New York's fiscal year starts in April, the earliest of any state.

    Citigroup: Fourth Quarter Net Loss of $7.6 Billion

    by Calculated Risk on 1/19/2010 08:10:00 AM

    Press Release: Fourth Quarter Net Loss of $7.6 Billion

    Citigroup today reported a full year 2009 net loss of $1.6 billion ... Managed revenues were $91.1 billion for the year. The fourth quarter 2009 net loss was $7.6 billion ...

    "We ... cut costs by over $13 billion annually, reduced headcount by 100,000, and reduced assets by $500 billion from peak levels." [said Vikram Pandit, Chief Executive Officer of Citigroup]
    More from Eric Dash at the NY Times: Citigroup Reports a $1.6 Billion Loss for Year
    [L]osses in Citigroup’s domestic mortgages and credit units overwhelmed gains from investment banking, a trend that is likely to continue. Bank executives set aside another $700 million to cover consumer losses in the fourth quarter, bringing the total amount of reserves to about $36 billion at year’s end.
    The confessional is still open.