by Calculated Risk on 5/13/2009 12:12:00 AM
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
RealtyTrac: Record Foreclosure Activity in April
From RealtyTrac: Foreclosure Activity Remains at Record Levels in April
RealtyTrac ... today released its April 2009 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report(TM), which shows foreclosure filings - default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions - were reported on 342,038 U.S. properties during the month, an increase of less than 1 percent from the previous month and an increase of 32 percent from April 2008. The report also shows that one in every 374 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing in April, the highest monthly foreclosure rate ever posted since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in January 2005.
"Total foreclosure activity in April ended up slightly above the previous month, once again hitting a record-high level," said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. "Much of this activity is at the initial stages of foreclosure - the default and auction stages - while bank repossessions, or REOs, were down on a monthly and annual basis to their lowest level since March 2008. This suggests that many lenders and servicers are beginning foreclosure proceedings on delinquent loans that had been delayed by legislative and industry moratoria. It's likely that we'll see a corresponding spike in REOs as these loans move through the foreclosure process over the next few months."
emphasis added
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
BKUNA Needs $1 Billion in Capital
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 09:04:00 PM
BankUnited filed a Notification of Late Filing with the SEC today (ht Brian). Here are a few excerpts:
We are not able to file a timely Second Quarter 2009 Form 10-Q because we have not completed the preparation of our financial results for either the fiscal year ended September 30, 2008 (the “fiscal 2008”) or the fiscal quarters ended March 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008. This delay results from the continuing adverse market conditions, the complexity of accounting and disclosure issues, which increased the need for additional review and analysis of our business including, without limitation, regulatory issues, liquidity and capital and the material weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting discussed below.And the bank needs approximately $1 billion in capital:
Most recently, on April 14, 2009, the Board of Directors of the Bank entered into a Stipulation and Consent to Prompt Corrective Action Directive (the “PCA Agreements”) with the OTS. ... The PCA Agreements further required the Bank to achieve and maintain, at a minimum, the following ratios: (i) Total Risk Based Capital Ratio of 8%; (ii) Tier I Core Risk Based Capital Ratio of 4%; and (iii) Leverage Ratio of 4% within twenty days of the effective date of the PCA Agreements. Based on our March 31, 2009 reported capital levels, we would need to raise approximately $1.0 billion to meet the Total Risk Based Capital Ratio of 8%, approximately $706 million to meet the Tier I Core Risk Based Capital Ratio of 4% and approximately $937 million to meet the Leverage Ratio of 4%. The twenty-day period to raise capital and achieve the mandatory minimum capital requirements under the PCA Agreements expired on May 4, 2009 without compliance by the Bank.It was reported in the Miami Herald that BKUNA was granted an extension until Thursday May 14th:
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. allowed a two-week extension and extended the deadline until May 14 for prospective buyers or investors to submit their bids ...I couldn't find mention of the extension in BKUNA's NT 10-Q filing.
Something to watch this Friday.
Freddie Mac: Falling Prices "significantly affecting behavior" of Borrowers
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 06:25:00 PM
From MarketWatch: Freddie reports quarterly net loss of $9.9 billion
Freddie's first-quarter loss widened to $9.85 billion ... Freddie set aside $8.8 billion in provisions to cover credit losses during the first quarter. That's up from $7 billion in the final three months of 2008. The rise was driven by increases in the number and rate of delinquent mortgages and the rising severity of losses from foreclosures, Freddie explained.From the SEC filing:
Freddie also invests in mortgage-backed securities and is suffering as rising delinquencies and foreclosures cut into the value of these holdings. The company recorded $7.1 billion in impairments on securities that are available for sale.
...
Freddie Mac said its conservator asked for $6.1 billion in extra funding from the Treasury Department.
Home prices nationwide declined an estimated 1.4% in the first quarter of 2009 based on our own internal index, which is based on properties underlying our single-family mortgage portfolio. The percentage decline in home prices in the last twelve months has been particularly large in the states of California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada, where we have significant concentrations of mortgage loans.There are several key points:
...
While temporary suspensions of foreclosure transfers reduced our charge-offs and REO activity during the first quarter of 2009, our provision for credit losses includes expected losses on those foreclosures currently suspended. We also observed a continued increase in market-reported delinquency rates for mortgages serviced by financial institutions, not only for subprime and Alt-A loans but also for prime loans, and we experienced an increase in delinquency rates for all product types during the first quarter of 2009. This delinquency data suggests that continuing home price declines and growing unemployment are significantly affecting behavior by a broader segment of mortgage borrowers. Additionally, as the slump in the U.S. housing market has persisted for more than a year, increasing numbers of borrowers that began with significant equity are now “underwater,” or owing more on their mortgage loans than their homes are currently worth. Our loan loss severities, or the average amount of recognized losses per loan, also continued to increase in the first quarter of 2009, especially in the states of California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, where home price declines have been more severe and where we have significant concentrations of mortgage loans with higher average loan balances than in other states.
emphasis added
Sounds like walking away ... in prime time!
Can't Sell? Try Renting
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 04:24:00 PM
From CNBC: Homeowners Turn to Renting, Waiting for Market to Recover
Still having trouble selling your house? More homeowners are deciding to rent out their homes while they wait for the market to recover.And here is a video I took this morning in Newport Beach (note: this also fits with the Home Sales: One and Done post too. Who will buy in these more expensive beach communities when there are no move up buyers?
"I had my condo on the market for three months and I didn't have any bites," says Molly Smith, a public relations executive in Newburyport, Massachusetts. "I realized if I was going to sell it, I'd take a big loss."
So the 29-year-old Smith, who wanted a shorter commute to her job, decided to rent out her house and move into a rental herself.
Please be patient with me - I'm still working on this video stuff!
The construction noise at the beginning of the video is a new Senior Center being built (still demolishing the old structure and grading the property).
Although rentals are common in Newport Beach, the market is usually very tight. Not right now.
Immaculate Recovery?
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 02:32:00 PM
GE Chief Executive Jeff Immelt is uncertain when growth will resume ...
From Reuters: GE CEO says economy stabilized, growth a question
Improved credit markets have brought stabilization to the economy but it is still not clear when growth will resume, General Electric Co Chief Executive Jeff Immelt said on Tuesday.And from PIMCO's El-Erian:
"The credit picture, we think, is improving and that's really one of the fundamentals to getting the broader economy doing better," Immelt said in an interview with Reuters. "Things certainly have stabilized and now the goal is to see where growth goes in the second half of the year."
It was clear to us that, despite the very high hurdle that we always apply to such a statement, the world has changed in a manner that is unlikely to be reversed over the next few years. Put another way, markets are recovering from a shock that goes way, way beyond a cyclical flesh wound.And Bloomberg quotes Paul Krugman:
...
For the next 3–5 years, we expect a world of muted growth ...
“It looks to me now as if the markets are now pricing in a rapid recovery, that they’re pricing in a V-shaped recession, which I consider extremely unlikely,” Krugman said at a forum in Shanghai today. “The market seems to be looking as if this is going to be an average recession, but it’s not.”I thought a depression was unlikely, and I think an immaculate recovery is also unlikely. Something in the middle - that will feel like a recession to many - is more likely.
As I noted last week (see A Return to Trend Growth in 2010? and The Impact of Changes in the Saving Rate on PCE ), the usual engines of recovery - personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and residential investment (RI) - will both remain under pressure (even if they show some sluggish growth).
My forecast is for unemployment to stay elevated for some time, and the suggests minimal wage growth. And I also think household will increase their saving rate to repair their household balance sheet (and because of an aging population). This suggests PCE growth will probably be below trend.
And for RI, there is far too much inventory for any significant rebound in new home construction. So where will the growth come from?


