by Calculated Risk on 11/12/2009 08:17:00 PM
Thursday, November 12, 2009
TARP Inspector General: Taxpayers to suffer Losses
From Bloomberg: Barofsky Says TARP ‘Almost Certainly’ Will Bring Loss (ht jb)
Neil Barofsky ... said the [TARP] will “almost certainly” result in a loss to U.S. taxpayers.The TARP lost $2.33 billion on CIT and another $299
...
“Tens of billions of dollars are likely to be lost on the automotive bailout,” Barofsky said. In addition, some banks that received TARP money are failing, so the aid they received will be wiped out.
And there are a growing number of banks not paying their TARP dividends (33 banks as of August - not all will fail, but that is a bad sign).
And this is the quote of the day:
“When I first took office, I can’t tell you how many times I’d be having a sit-down and warning about potential fraud in the program and I would hear a response basically saying, ‘Oh, they’re bankers, and they wouldn’t put their reputations at risk by committing fraud,’” he said.
“I think we’ve done a good job of instilling a greater degree of skepticism that what comes from Wall Street isn’t necessarily the Holy Grail,” he said.
Rail Traffic Declines Slightly in October
by Calculated Risk on 11/12/2009 05:56:00 PM
Update: Title corrected to October.
From the Association of American Railroads: Rail Time Indicators
In October 2009, U.S. freight railroads originated 1,100,714 carloads, an average of 275,179 carloads per week. That’s down 15.3% from October 2008 (when the weekly average was 324,836 carloads) and down 0.3% from September 2009 (when the weekly average was 276,137 carloads). Average weekly carloads have now declined for two straight months.The following graph from the AAR shows average weekly carloads in the U.S.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.Rail traffic fell off a cliff at the end of 2008, and it appears traffic has stabilized at a lower level.
Traffic will probably decline in November and December (the normal seasonal pattern).
The second graph shows the year-over-year change for rail traffic.
This is now a two year slump (like for the hotel occupancy rate), so the year-over-year decline will be significantly less in November and December.The AAR report has a number of other graphs for various sectors like autos and housing. As an example they compare U.S. Housing Starts with U.S. and Canadian Rail Carloads
of Lumber, Wood & Forest Products.
For additional rail traffic, and a break down by carriers, see the Railfax report (ht Bob_in_MA)
FHA on DAPs: "Too many homeowners not equipped for home ownership"
by Calculated Risk on 11/12/2009 03:11:00 PM
The FHA commented on the damage caused by the Downpayment Assistance Programs (DAPs) today. These DAPs circumvented the FHA down payment requirements by having the seller funnel the "down payment" to the buyer through a "charity" (for a small fee of course). The FHA attempted to stop this practice, but thanks to Congress, the DAPs led to billions of losses:
FHA was also adversely selected from 2000 through 2008 because it was the only guarantor willing to accept loans using seller-funded downpayments. Such downpayments were channeled through nonprofit organizations in order to meet FHA requirements on direct sources of funds. Those facilities created too many homeowners in the FHA portfolio that were not equipped for the financial responsibilities of home ownership. Indeed, the FY 2009 MMI Fund actuarial study for single-family loans notes that, if FHA had not insured any loans with seller-funded downpayment assistance, the net capital ratio today would still be above the statutory required two percent. FHA’s estimated economic net worth would be $10.4 billion higher today were it not for those loans. ... Their claim rates have consistently been between 2.5 and three times those of other FHA-insured home purchase loans.This is still important today. The DAPs have been banned, but the first-time home buyer tax credit has probably created another group of "homeowners not equipped for the financial responsibilities of home ownership". Oh well ...
emphasis added
And some FHA stats ...
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the recent boom in FHA originations. The MBA estimates that there will be about $2 trillion in orginations this year, so the FHA insured loans were probably just under 20% of originations.
The second graph shows delinquencies by year.
Overall 17.71% of FHA insured loans are delinquent, and 8.52% seriously delinquent. Note: Seriously delinquent "Includes all loans 90-days past due plus all in-bankruptcy and in-foreclosure cases."The 2009 vintage is just getting started, but the FHA has tightened standards (higher FICO scores), and DAPs were banned at the end of 2008 - and that will help. Also the stabilization in house prices is helping with fewer delinquencies.
However many of these recent homebuyers probably aren't ready to be homeowners, and the delinquency rate will probably rise sharply - especially if house prices start falling again.
Hotel RevPAR off 11.8 Percent
by Calculated Risk on 11/12/2009 01:20:00 PM
From HotelNewsNow.com: Boston leads RevPAR gains in STR weekly numbers
Overall, in year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy fell 3.6 percent to 54.8 percent, average daily rate dropped 8.5 percent US$97.19, and RevPAR decreased 11.8 percent to US$53.29.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the occupancy rate by week for each of the last four years (2006 through 2009 labeled by start of month).
Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. Thanksgiving was late in 2008, so the dip doesn't line up with the previous years.
Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com
This is a two year slump for the hotel industry. Although occupancy is off 3.6% compared to 2008, occupancy is off about 17% compared to 2006 and 2007.
The occupancy rate really fell off a cliff in October 2008, and the good news is the occupancy rate for 2009 is tracking closer and closer to 2008.
Smith Travel Research is now predicting a slight uptick in occupancy rates in 2010 to 55.8% from an estimate of 55.2% in 2009. However average daily room rates (ADR), and revenue per available room (RevPAR) are expected to continue to decline slightly in 2010. The "good news" for the hotel industry is supply coming online is dropping sharply, and is expected to stay low for a few years. Of course that is bad news for construction workers ...
FHA Reserves Fall Sharply, Well Below Required Minimum
by Calculated Risk on 11/12/2009 11:08:00 AM
From David Streitfeld at the NY Times: Housing Agency Says Cash Reserves Are Down Sharply
The Federal Housing Administration said Thursday morning that its cash reserves had dwindled significantly in the last year after a record drop in home prices.From the FHA: Annual Actuarial Study Shows Capital Reserve Ratio Below Mandated Level; FHA Credit Policy Reforms Expected to Address Risk, Raise Reserve Levels
...
The results of the F.H.A.’s annual audit showed the agency’s capital reserves to be 0.53 percent, far under the 2 percent minimum mandated by Congress. A year ago, the capital reserves were 3 percent.
The independent study shows that FHA has sustained significant losses from loans made before 2009, and the capital reserve ratio has fallen below the congressionally mandated threshold, but concludes that under most economic scenarios considered FHA’s reserves would remain above zero.More links:
FHA’s capital reserve ratio, which is determined through findings from the independent actuarial study, measures reserves held in excess of those needed to cover projected losses over the next 30 years. The review projects the capital reserve ratio to be 0.53 percent of total insurance in force this year, below the two-percent statutory threshold. This capital ratio fell from 3 percent in the fall of 2008, reflecting difficult conditions in the housing market. The 0.53 percent capital ratio (which represents the funds held in the Capital Reserve Account) is in addition to the auditor’s base case estimate of the 30-year reserves needed to pay for losses on existing loans (which are held in the Financing Account). Combining those two accounts, FHA holds $31 billion in its total reserves today, or more than 4.5 percent of total insurance-in-force.
...
As part of its efforts to manage risk, FHA is modeling more extreme scenarios than those used by the actuary, including scenarios showing the reserves going below zero. FHA is committed not only to understanding its risks, but also to developing policy responses appropriate to addressing that risk.
emphasis added
Annual Report to Congress Regarding the Financial Status of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund
FHA Fiscal Year 2009 Actuarial Review Briefing


