by Calculated Risk on 10/18/2007 11:48:00 AM
Thursday, October 18, 2007
WaMu: "Most challenging cycle for housing"
Quotes of the day from WaMu (via Seattle Times):
"This is perhaps the most challenging cycle for housing that we've seen in many decades," WaMu Chief Executive Kerry Killinger said in an interview. He and other WaMu executives said they don't see any improvement in the near term.And from the WaMu CFO:
"I have never seen housing credit conditions change so significantly over such a short period of time, nor can I remember a period when there was less clarity about near-term housing and credit trends," [Chief Financial Officer Tom] Casey said
BofA Visits the Confessional
by Calculated Risk on 10/18/2007 10:15:00 AM
From MarketWatch: Bank of America's quarterly profit falls 32%
Bank of America Corp.'s third-quarter net income fell 32% from a year ago as trading losses, write-downs on a wide variety of loans and soaring reserves for likely future loan losses undermined profit, financial results showed Thursday.
The last of the nation's top three banks to report results this week, the Charlotte, N.C.-based company chalked up big charges due to credit-related turmoil, suggesting that the problems in the credit market may yet be closer to the beginning than to the end.
...
"The company also added reserves for its home equity and homebuilder loan portfolios in view of the impact of the weakened U.S. housing market," [from BofA statement] emphasis added
The American Dream Strikes Back
by Anonymous on 10/18/2007 09:38:00 AM
Shall we start a pool on whether Congress caves in or not? National Mortgage News via absnet.com:
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has stuck to its guns regarding seller-funded downpayment assistance on Federal Housing Administration-insured mortgages. But third-party conduits which funnel financial aid from buyers to sellers are not going away without a fight.
Practically before the ink was dry last week on the final rule prohibiting anyone except family members, employers, government entities or true charitable organizations from giving would-be buyers money to cover the 3% downpayment required on FHA loans, the two largest DPA providers filed separate suits in Federal Court seeking to overturn the controversial rule.
Scott Syphax, president of the Nehemiah Corp., Sacramento, Calif., called the rule "outrageous," saying it removes practically the only "lifeline" left for working families to achieve ownership.
"Privately funded downpayment assistance programs have helped over 600,000 families become home owners and have been credited not only for helping people buy homes, but also stabilizing neighborhoods and cities and creating stronger families," he said.
AmeriDream, Gaithersburg, Md., another major DPA provider, expressed "great confidence" on its website that HUD will be overturned in court. "HUD's action makes no sense," said chair Ann Ashburn.
Several lawmakers also cried foul, as did the Mortgage Bankers Association and the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
In an interview with Bloomberg News, Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, said the program "could have been fixed and need not have been nixed." Reps. Gary Miller, R-Calif., and Maxine Waters, D-Calif., joined Rep. Green in registering their disapproval and calling on HUD to correct whatever problems exist in the program rather than simply can it.
"If there are concerns with certain downpayment assistance providers, HUD should address these individual providers, and put the controls in place to weed out the bad actors, rather than completely eliminating a program that has successfully expanded homeownership opportunities for millions of families," the three congressmen said.
They also vowed "to fight every effort to eliminate rather than reform this important tool that has built financial strength and formed lasting communities."
Nevertheless, unless the court or Congress goes against HUD - the House-passed FHA reform bill sets new standards for DPA providers but the Senate Finance Committee's version prohibits such assistance - the prohibition that bans anyone who has a stake in the transaction from providing buyers with cash for a downpayment takes effect Nov. 1. . . .
Mr. Montgomery told reporters during an unusual conference call set up by HUD - "We wanted to give you folks a little advance notice," he said at the outset - that nonprofits can still provide downpayment assistance in the form of a gift "so long as they don't collect 'donations' from sellers."
And therein lies the rub, the FHA commissioner said, for in most cases, there is "a clear quid pro quo" between the purchase of a house and the seller's "contribution."
The so-called gift often functions as an incentive to buy the house, the FHA contends, but the gift is ultimately paid for by the buyer through a higher mortgage amount because sellers tend to raise their asking prices to cover the amount they are giving away.
Mr. Montgomery said in the current slow housing market, sellers are "more willing than ever to participate" in these programs, even though they "circumvent our restrictions" and buyers "are often unaware that the gift is something they end up paying for and not a gift at all."
The FHA also maintains that loans to those who rely on seller-funded don't perform nearly as well as they should. Indeed, the agency says they are almost two and a half times more likely to fail than other FHA-insured mortgages.
Earning the BS at Subprime U
by Anonymous on 10/18/2007 09:15:00 AM
Michelle Singletary goes after college-sponsored programs to load students up with credit cards:
In a 2004 study of credit card usage by undergraduates, 56 percent of freshmen reported that they had obtained their first card at the age of 18. The student loan lender Nellie Mae, which conducted the study, said that as students progress through school, their credit card usage swells.Giving a college student one low-balance card as a form of "starter credit" is, possibly, defensible. Giving a college student four cards? That's the kind of extra credit that prepares them to be subprime borrowers for the rest of their lives.
By the time they reach their senior year, 56 percent of students carry four or more cards, with an average balance of $2,864. Of course, some have much more than that. . . .
Not surprisingly, in the Nellie Mae report, only 21 percent of undergraduates with credit cards reported that they paid off all cards each month, and 11 percent said they made less than the minimum required payment each month.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Cheyne Finance SIV Won't Pay Debt
by Calculated Risk on 10/17/2007 09:41:00 PM
From Bloomberg: Cheyne Finance SIV Won't Pay Debt as It Falls Due
Cheyne Finance Plc, the structured investment vehicle managed by hedge fund Cheyne Capital Management Ltd., will stop paying its debts, a receiver from Deloitte & Touche LLP said.Borrow short, lend long, go broke; one of the oldest stories in lending, but somehow rediscovered by every generation. The new wrinkle here was to make some especially bad loans too.
... Cheyne Finance's debt with different maturities will now be pooled together, rather than shorter term debt being repaid sooner, Neville Kahn, a receiver from Deloitte said today in a telephone interview.
``It doesn't mean we have to go out and fire-sell any assets, quite the opposite in fact,'' Kahn said. ``The paper that falls due today or tomorrow won't be paid as it falls due.''
Cheyne Finance appointed receivers in September to oversee the management of its assets after the SIV was forced to liquidate assets to repay maturing commercial paper.
...
Cheyne issued $8 billion of short-term debt to buy securities linked to home loans, according Moody's Investors Service.
The receivers declared an ``insolvency event,'' Deloitte said. That means the SIV is unable to pay its debts when they are due, according to its prospectus.
WaMu Visits Confessional
by Calculated Risk on 10/17/2007 06:19:00 PM
From the WSJ: Washington Mutual Net Dives 72%
Washington Mutual Inc. third-quarter net income plummeted 72%, as the company took a bruising hit to cover home-loan losses.And from Reuters: Washington Mutual CEO sees no end to housing slump
...
"We're disappointed with our third quarter results but they reflect the increasingly difficult market conditions that are challenging the banking industry," said WaMu Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Kerry Killinger.
...
WaMu also had a $147 million write-down on mortgage loans it planned to sell but were instead were moved to the company's investment portfolio due to the summer's credit-market seizure that essentially dried up demand for mortgage-related securities.
In addition, the firm recorded $153 million in trading losses and losses of $104 million on investment-grade mortgage-backed securities that are available for sale.
"We were going through an orderly correction in the housing market until the middle of the year, when there was a significant falloff," [Washington Mutual Chief Executive Kerry Killinger] said in an interview. "That has continued in the fourth quarter, accelerated by the lack of liquidity in the capital markets.The losses keep piling up with no end in sight.
"We are not making projections as to when the market will stabilize," he added. "At this point, we have not seen signs of stabilization."
E-Trade: Home Equity Lines "Underperforming"
by Calculated Risk on 10/17/2007 05:54:00 PM
From MarketWatch: Mortgage meltdown leads E-Trade to $58 million loss
"A lot of people think that sub-prime loans is where the problems center," [Jarrett Lilien, E-Trade's president] said. "But that's not our problem. Our issue is that the value of high quality loans is underperforming."And from the conference call (hat tip Brian):
E-Trade says its issues in the quarter were with home equity lines and home installment loans. "That's where we're seeing worse performance," Lilien said.
...
E-Trade also wrote down about $200 million in asset-backed securities. "That pretty much took the most risky types of assets off the table," Lilien said.
“ As a part of our guidance release last month, with respect to securities impairments, we forecasted we could see up to $100 million in the second half of 2007 and an additional 50 to 100 million in 2008 for a total of up to $200 million over six quarters. These impairments were primarily related to two categories within our asset backed securities portfolio which we identified to have the highest risk. Specifically, these were collateralized debt obligations or CDOs, and securities collateralized by second lien mortgages. Since the September guidance release, upon evaluation and refinement of our forecast, we determine that had certain writedowns needed to be taken in the third quarter. Additionally, we decided to accelerate the sale of the highest risk portions of these portfolios, writing down securities rated lower than double A by more than an average of $0.50 on the dollar. By changing the intent and designation to no longer hold these securities to recovery. The combined effect is that we recorded an impairment charge of approximately $197 million in the third quarter” emphasis addedNote that they haven't yet sold the CDOs and the 2nd lien RMBS'; they just moved them from "held to maturity" portfolio to "available for sale".
S&P Downgrades 1,713 classes of U.S. RMBS
by Calculated Risk on 10/17/2007 01:07:00 PM
S&P: Review Of 1H07 US RMBS Yields Downgrades, Watch Placement (hat tip Brian)
Oct. 17, 2007--Standard & Poor's Ratings Services today lowered its ratings on 1,713 classes of U.S. RMBS backed by first-lien subprime mortgage loans, first-lien Alternative-A (Alt-A) mortgage loans, and closed-end second-lien mortgage loans issued from Jan. 1, 2007, through June 30, 2007. These classes are from 136 subprime transactions, 128 Alt-A transactions, and 19 closed-end second-lien transactions. The downgraded classes represent approximately $23.35 billion of original par amount, which is 6.28% of the $371.9 billion original par amount of these three types of U.S. RMBS rated by Standard & Poor's between Jan. 1, 2007, and June 30, 2007, and 4.71% of the approximately $495 billion original par amount of all
U.S. RMBS rated during this period.
In addition, we placed the ratings on 646 other classes from 109 transactions backed by U.S. RMBS first-lien subprime mortgage loans and U.S. RMBS first-lien Alt-A mortgage loans issued during the same period on CreditWatch with negative implications.
MGIC Investment Reports
by Calculated Risk on 10/17/2007 10:21:00 AM
Quote of the day from MGIC Investment Chief Executive Curt Culver during the conference call:
"The books of business written in 2005, 2006 and most of 2007 will be difficult books financially. These books feature weaker underwriting, and will play out in an environment of deteriorating real estate values. In fact, we modeled an approximate 10% nationwide decline impacting these books. The declines are even more extreme in various MSAs. Frankly, the loss side has hit us much harder and more quickly than we could have ever anticipated. From the loss guidance estimates, we have seen revised from our industry, as well as a number of mortgage originators who are no longer in business, it was not anticipated by many. The ramp-up of loss performance relative to delinquencies, the severity and the cure rate deterioration in California and Florida has been at speeds not seen in previous books of business.” emphasis addedFrom MarketWatch: MGIC posts loss on C-Bass investment
MGIC Investment Corp. Wednesday reported a third-quarter net loss of $372.5 million, or $4.60 a share, compared with net income of $130 million, or $1.55 a share the previous year. The company said its quarterly results included a $303 million write-down related to the impairment of its investment in Credit Based Asset Servicing and Securitization LLC, known as C-Bass, a joint venture owned by MGIC and Radian Group Inc. ... MGIC said "unless the cure rate and loss severity improves, the company does not foresee net income for the fourth quarter of 2007 and the full year 2008."
Housing Starts, Completions and Permits Decline in September
by Calculated Risk on 10/17/2007 08:30:00 AM
The Census Bureau reports on housing Permits, Starts and Completions.
Seasonally adjusted permits fell sharply:
Privately-owned housing units authorized by building permits in September were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,226,000. This is 7.3 percent below the revised August rate of 1,322,000 and is 25.9 percent below the revised September 2006 estimate of 1,654,000.Starts declined sharply:
Privately-owned housing starts in September were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,191,000. This is 10.2 percent below the revised August estimate of 1,327,000 and is 30.8 percent below the revised September 2006 rate of 1,721,000.And Completions declined sharply:
Privately-owned housing completions in September were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,391,000. This is 8.2 percent below the revised August estimate of 1,516,000 and is 31.1 percent below the revised September 2006 rate of 2,019,000.
Click on graph for larger image.Here is a graph of starts and completions. Completions follow starts by about 6 to 7 months.
My forecast is for starts to fall to around the 1.1 million units per year level; a substantial decline from the current level. Goldman Sachs' forecast is for 1.1 million units, and UCLA is for 1.0 million units.
Even with the declines in permits and starts, this report shows builders are still starting too many projects. Starts will probably continue to decline in coming months.
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
MBA: Mortgage Lending Going back to the "1950s and 60s"
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 04:02:00 PM
Quote of the day from the Mortgage Bankers Association's (MBA) new Chairman Kieran Quinn (no link):
"We're going back to lending the way it was in the 1950s and 60s. Mortgages will be made mostly by bankers and their employees, and compensation will be based on who's making good loans and who's not."Securitization is here to stay; Quinn is saying third party origination is mostly going away.
Bankers Sell $2.2 Billion of First Data Bonds
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 03:39:00 PM
From Bloomberg: KKR Bankers Sell $2.2 Billion of First Data Bonds
Banks for Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. sold $2.2 billion of First Data Corp. notes ...
The eight-year, 9.875 percent senior securities priced to yield 10.875 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The offering leaves banks led by Citigroup Inc. and Credit Suisse Group with $10.4 billion of debt on their books from Greenwood Village, Colorado-based First Data.
OFHEO: Conforming Loan Limit Will Not Drop
by Anonymous on 10/16/2007 02:00:00 PM
From the OFHEO Press Release:
Washington, DC – The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) announced today three actions regarding the calculation of the conforming loan limit, which establishes the maximum mortgage loan value eligible for purchase by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
OFHEO Director James Lockhart announced that, based on provisions in the proposed guidance, the current conforming loan limit will not be reduced for 2008. If the index used to calculate the maximum loan level should increase, the amount of the increase in 2008 would be reduced by the decline calculated in 2006 of 0.16%. Under no circumstance, however, would the maximum loan level for 2008 drop below the 2006 and 2007 limit of $417,000.
Background information on the conforming limit history and calculations from OFHEO is here.
DataQuick: SoCal home sales at Record Low
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 01:34:00 PM
From DataQuick: September Southland home sales lowest in more than 20 years
Home sales in Southern California plunged to the lowest level in more than two decades, as financing with "jumbo" mortgages dropped by half. The median price paid for a home dropped sharply as a result ...
A total of 12,455 new and resale houses and condos sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties in September. That was down 29.9 percent from 17,755 for the previous month, and down 48.5 percent from 24,195 for September last year, according to DataQuick Information Systems.
Last month's sales were the slowest for any month in DataQuick's statistics, which go back to 1988. The previous low was in February 1995 when 12,459 homes sold. The September sales average is 25,258.
...
The number of Soouthland homes purchased with jumbo mortgages dropped from 5,359 in August to 2,681 in September, a decline of 50.0 percent. A jumbo mortgage is a home loan for $417,000 or more. For loans below that threshold, the sales decline was 19.3 percent, from 9,237 in August to 7,459 in September. Historically, sales drop by about 10 percent from August to September.
The median price paid for a Southland home was $462,000 last month, down 7.6 percent from $500,000 in August, and down 4.0 percent from $481,000 for September last year. If the jumbo-financed portion of the market had remained stable, last month's median would have been $487,000.
...
Foreclosure activity is at record levels ... emphasis added
NAHB: Builder Confidence Falls to Record Low in October
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 01:00:00 PM
| Click on graph for larger image. The NAHB reports that builder confidence fell to 18 in October, from 20 in September. | ![]() |
Builder confidence in the market for new single-family homes was further shaken in October due to continuing problems in the mortgage market, substantial inventories of unsold units and the perceived effect that negative media coverage is having on potential buyers, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today. The HMI fell two more points to 18 in October, its lowest point since the series began in January of 1985.
“Builders in the field are reporting that, while their special sales incentives are attracting interest among consumers, many potential buyers are either holding out for even better deals or hesitating due to concerns about negative and confusing media reports on home values,” said NAHB President Brian Catalde.
“Consumers are still trying to sort out market realities and get the best deals they can,” noted NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. “Many prospective buyers may very well have unrealistic expectations regarding new-home prices as well as how much they can expect to receive for their existing homes. When the market is in proper balance, people can recognize a good deal when it comes along; at this point, they view a good deal as a moving target.”
The positive news from today’s report, said Seiders, is that builder expectations for sales conditions in the next six months held steady at 26. “Builders believe they are taking the right steps to reduce inventories and position themselves for the market recovery that lies ahead,” he said. “Indeed, NAHB’s housing forecast indicates that home sales should stabilize within the next six months and show significant improvement during the second half of next year.”
Derived from a monthly survey that NAHB has been conducting for more than 20 years, the NAHB/Wells Fargo HMI gauges builder perceptions of current single-family home sales and sales expectations for the next six months as either “good,” “fair” or “poor.” The survey also asks builders to rate traffic of prospective buyers as either “high to very high,” “average” or “low to very low.” Scores for each component are then used to calculate a seasonally adjusted index where any number over 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as good than poor.
Two out of three component indexes of the HMI declined in October. The index gauging current single-family home sales and the index gauging traffic of prospective buyers each declined two points, to 18 and 15, respectively, while the index gauging sales expectations for the next six months remained unchanged at 26.
Regionally, the West accounted for a substantial portion of the decline in builder confidence this month, with a four-point reduction in its HMI to 14. The Northeast and South each reported one-point declines to 26 and 21, respectively, while the Midwest posted a two-point gain to 15.
Survey Shows 73% of Borrowers Are Not Crazy
by Anonymous on 10/16/2007 12:46:00 PM
There has been a fair amount of reporting in the last two days on a survey of ARM borrowers commissioned by the AFL-CIO. As is often the case, what we learn seems to be more about the press's ignorance than anything else.
The clearest description of the results that I've found comes from the AFL-CIO's blog (surprised?):
The poll shows that of those homeowners whose ARMs had reset, 37 percent had interest rates at 8 percent or higher, above the current market rate for prime, fixed-rate loans, and 16 percent had interest rates at 10 percent or higher. After the reset, the average increase in monthly mortgage payments is approximately $291, a 10 percent cut in after-tax pay for a family earning $50,000 a year.Without seeing the actual survey question, I am at a loss to know what, precisely, we are to make of the fact that two thirds do not remember the lender disclosing how much the payment would rise. That implies that one third of the respondents seem to remember the lender disclosing an unknowable "fact." ARMs adjust on specified dates, and the rate (and hence payment) are adjusted to a specified formula (index plus margin, subject to caps), but since the index at adjustment is a future value, there is no "disclosure" of how much the payment will increase. If a third of respondents remember being told what their future payment would be (not, say, what it might be if the index value does not change, which is the standard disclosure), then we got some serious problems here, but I don't think it's the same problem that the press thinks it is.
Two in three (64 percent) of those whose rate has reset do not recall their lender telling them how much more their payment would increase, and 32 percent don’t recall being told when their interest rate would increase. Twenty-three percent of all respondents say they had been late making a mortgage payment at least once in the past 12 months. That proportion jumps to 37 percent among those whose rate has increased.
The poll also found substantial support for government action to protect consumers. Fifty-one percent say they think the government should assist people with ARMs facing foreclosures, and 77 percent say the government should do more to regulate the mortgage industry.
Despite a general lack of understanding about their adjustable rate mortgages, 79 percent say they believe the information they received from their lenders was mainly accurate and truthful. Sixty percent say they got their ARMs from mortgage brokers, and 39 percent directly from banks. [Emphasis added]
It's also curious that 79% of people feel that the lender disclosed facts honestly, when it seems clear that a majority of borrowers aren't sure what the facts are. There are several possibilities here, one being that borrowers on the whole are likely to trust people who work in financial services and talk in numbers, whether that trust is misplaced or not. Another is that borrowers recognize that they were in fact given truthful information, they simply do not understand it. They don't even know what they're supposed to "know": you cannot, in fact, "know" what your future payment will be with an ARM. If you think you "know" that, you are confused. Similarly, if you don't remember being told when your ARM will adjust, you can actually look at your copy of the note you signed. Do people rely on memories of oral explanations because they do not know how to read these notes? Would they ever have known how to read these notes?
However, press reports don't seem to see the real problem here:
A study commissioned by the AFL-CIO shows that nearly half of homeowners with ARMs don't know how their loans will adjust, and three-quarters don't know how much their payments will increase if the loan does reset.
Nearly three quarters of homeowners (73%) with ARM's don't even know how much their monthly payment will increase the next time the rate goes up.Not a single one of these sources explains how a person with an ARM might go about finding the information and the calculator necessary to determine what the adjusted payment might be if the index value available today is the one that will be used in a future adjustment.
Is that whole process over a lot of folks' heads? Sure it is. That's why offering ARMs in the mass market to people without much financial sophistication, who probably do really need to know what their payment will be in the future to budget around it, and therefore should be put in fixed rate loans, remains a thoroughly stupid idea. I, however, remain stunned that the press can report that "only" 73% of borrowers do not claim to know the unknowable as if that's the problem.
Paulson: Housing Likely To Adversely Affect Economy
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 11:46:00 AM
From the WSJ: Paulson Says Housing Is Likely To Adversely Affect Economy
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson offered a sobering view Tuesday of the pressure the housing market was having across the country, saying the decline stood "as the most significant current risk to our economy."
Mr. Paulson even acknowledged that problems in credit, mortgage, and housing markets were much more severe than anticipated.
Click on Headlines for Larger Image. (thanks to Brian for headlines) "The ongoing housing correction is not ending as quickly as it might have appeared late last year," he said in a speech to Georgetown University Law Center, according to prepared remarks. "And it now looks like it will continue to adversely impact our economy, our capital markets, and many homeowners for some time yet." (Read the full text of Paulson's remarks.)What a change in views. Just three months ago I was asking if Paulson worked for the National Association of Realtors: Is Paulson the New Lereah?
...
"The problem today is not limited to subprime mortgages as the number of homeowners having trouble making payments on prime mortgages is also increasing," he said.
Mr. Paulson said the housing correction was having a "real impact on our economy," citing how annual housing starts have fallen off more than 40% since early 2006. "It looked like housing construction had reached a bottom in the first half of this year, but starts have declined again since June and data on permit applications and inventories of unsold homes suggest further declines lie ahead," he said.
NY Times: As Defaults Rise, Washington Worries
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 11:10:00 AM
From VIKAS BAJAJ at the NY Times: As Defaults Rise, Washington Worries
During the summer’s credit crisis, investors concluded that the default rates on subprime mortgages made last year would probably prove to be the highest in the industry’s history.
But there now appears to be another contender for that dubious honor: loans made in the first half of this year.
Borrowers who took out loans in the first six months of 2007 are falling behind on payments faster than homeowners who took out loans last year ...It just keeps getting worse.
As of August, default rates on adjustable-rate subprime mortgages written in 2007 had reached 8.05 percent, up from 5.77 percent in July, according to Mr. Youngblood’s analysis of pools of home loans put together by Wall Street banks and sold to investors. By comparison, only 5.36 percent of such loans made last year had defaulted by August 2006. Default rates on fixed-rate subprime mortgages were lower, but were rising at a similar pace.
...
Job losses in the housing industry have put pressure on the economies of formerly fast-growing states like Arizona and Florida. And declining home prices have made it harder for borrowers to refinance loans, especially in cases where the buyers could afford the homes only with the help of the low introductory rates on adjustable mortgages.
Those borrowers are expected to encounter further strain in the months and years ahead as their loans are reset to higher variable rates.
D.R. Horton: 48% Cancellations
by Calculated Risk on 10/16/2007 10:48:00 AM
From D.R. Horton, Inc. Reports Net Sales Orders for the Fourth Quarter of Fiscal Year 2007
D.R. Horton, Inc. ... the largest homebuilder in the United States, Tuesday (October 16, 2007), reported net sales orders for the fourth quarter ended September 30, 2007 of 6,374 homes ($1.3 billion), compared to 10,430 homes ($2.5 billion) for the same quarter of fiscal year 2006. Net sales orders for fiscal year 2007 totaled 33,687 homes ($8.2 billion), compared to 51,980 homes ($13.9 billion) for fiscal year 2006. The Company's cancellation rate (sales orders cancelled divided by gross sales orders) for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2007 was 48%.emphasis added
Donald R. Horton, Chairman of the Board, said, "Market conditions for new home sales declined in our September quarter as inventory levels of both new and existing homes remained high while pricing remained very competitive. We also experienced reduced mortgage availability due to tighter lending standards, and buyers continued to approach the home buying decision cautiously. We expect the housing environment to remain challenging.
The year ago cancellaton rate was 40%. Last quarter was 39%. Horton's normal cancellation rate is in the 16% to 20% range.
Institutional Risk Analytics on MLEC
by Anonymous on 10/16/2007 09:22:00 AM
Looks like we're going to need a bigger microwave.
Orchestrating the pooling of hundreds of billions worth of illiquid assets into a single conduit strikes us as a bad move. In analytics, we call such proposals a "difference without distinction." Instead of seeking to restore the abnormal and manic market conditions that prevailed in the world of structured finance prior to Q2 2007, we think Secretary Paulson and his Street-wise colleagues should be trying to reach a more stable formulation.(For you beginners, "C" is the ticker symbol for Citicorp, not 983,571,056 feet per second.)
The subsidiary banks of C, for example, have about $112 billion in Tier One Risk Based Capital supporting 10x that in "on balance sheet" assets, assets which typically throw off 3x the charge offs of C's large bank peers. A modest haircut of C's total conduit exposure of $400 billion could leave that capital decimated, forcing C into the hands of the New York Fed and FDIC. Of note, looks like the ratio of Economic Capital to Tier One RBC for C at 3.75:1 calculated by the IRA Bank Monitor was not so severe as some Citibankers previously have suggested.
The fact that much of the debt issued by C-controlled SIV's was maturing in November seems to have prompted the Treasury to act, yet another example of "limited government" under President George W. Bush. Apparently there are some people at the Treasury who think that aggregating large bank conduit risk into a single subprime burrito will somehow draw foreign and domestic investors back to the structured asset trough. This notion would be laughable were the situation not so perilous.
Hat tip to Clyde!
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