by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2011 07:05:00 PM
Tuesday, May 03, 2011
Housing: Another Price Reduction for Rhode Island Governor's Home
Ted Nesi at WPRI.com has been following the price reductions on Gov. Lincoln Chafee's house in Rhode Island: Chafee drops asking price for Providence home by $30,000
[T]he governor and his wife reduced the asking price for their 3,900-square-foot home on Providence’s East Side by another $30,000.When this house was first listed, I argued we'd see a price reduction. Although Case-Shiller doesn't (edit) provide a publicly available index for Providence, house prices have fallen about 15% in Boston and 23% in New York - and that would suggest a selling price in the $700s for the Chafees' home. So many homeowners are unwilling to price their homes realistically - at least the Chafees have been willing to reduce the price.
The Chafees are now seeking $799,000 ... That’s down 10% from the initial listing price of $889,000 they sought in mid-February. The Chafees had already reduced the price to $829,000 last month.
The Chafees bought the house for $939,000 in 2006
Update: There are Case-Shiller MSA indexes for 139 metro areas, but this data is quarterly and not publicly available. Fiserv was kind enough to provide me the MSA data for Providence-New Bedford-Fall River, RI-MA Metropolitan Statistical Area - and this shows prices were down 22.4% from Q4 2005 thourgh Q4 2010, and down 16.1% from Q4 2007 through Q4 2010. A 22.4% decline would put the Chafees home price around $729,000.
U.S. Light Vehicle Sales 13.2 million SAAR in April
by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2011 04:10:00 PM
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.
Based on an estimate from Autodata Corp, light vehicle sales were at a 13.17 million SAAR in April. That is up 17% from April 2010, and up 0.8% from the sales rate last month (March 2011).
This graph shows the historical light vehicle sales (seasonally adjusted annual rate) from the BEA (blue) and an estimate for April (red, light vehicle sales of 13.17 million SAAR from Autodata Corp).
The second graph shows light vehicle sales since the BEA started keeping data in 1967.
Note: dashed line is current estimated sales rate.
This was above the consensus estimate of 13.0 million SAAR.
Note: The Japanese supply chain disruptions will impact sales over the next several months and I expect sales to be below this level for the next 6 months or so.
Lawler: Monthly Report to Commissioner Suggests Serious REO Inventory Problem at FHA
by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2011 02:32:00 PM
Note: The FHA released the February Monthly Report. The report shows the FHA REO inventory was at 68,801 at the end of February, up 54.2% from February 2010! From economist Tom Lawler:
HUD finally got around to releasing the February Monthly Report to the FHA Commissioner, and while the report clearly continued to have “data reporting” problems, the REO section of the report – IF correct – suggests that FHA has some serious REO inventory management problems.
Here are data from various monthly reports on FHA-insured SF property “conveyances,” property sales, and SF REO properties.
| FHA SF Property Sales, Conveyances, and REO Inventory | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|   | Sales | Conveyances | REO Inventory |
| 9-Dec | 6,748 | 7,393 | 41,166 |
| 10-Jan | 5,827 | 7,440 | 42,971 |
| 10-Feb | 6,091 | 7,835 | 44,605 |
| 10-Mar | 8,307 | 9,538 | 45,680 |
| 10-Apr | 7,826 | 7,745 | 45,795 |
| 10-May | 7,719 | 6,878 | 45,215 |
| 10-Jun | 8,893 | 8,487 | 44,850 |
| 10-Jul | 8,508 | 8,341 | 44,944 |
| 10-Aug | 7,686 | 9,810 | 47,007 |
| 10-Sep | 7,439 | 11,411 | 51,487 |
| 10-Oct | 7,289 | 9,908 | 54,609 |
| 10-Nov | 5,817 | 6,752 | 55,488 |
| 10-Dec | 2,749 | 7,728 | 60,739 |
| 11-Jan | 2,632 | 7,709 | 65,639 |
| 11-Feb | 4,221 | 7,383 | 68,801 |
Recall that the above table does not appear to be stock/flow consistent, mainly because there are occasionally “adjustments,” which I am not showing.
According to this report, the pace of FHA property sales began to slow significantly last November, was virtually at a crawl in December and January, and remained shockingly low given the inventory levels in February. As a result, the reported inventory of FHA REO has exploded upward to 68,801 at the end of February from 54,609 at the end of October and 44,605 at the end of last February.
I can’t recall any time in recent history when the FHA has “let” REO inventories jump at the pace observed since last summer, and if the numbers in the commissioner report are correct, it suggests that there may be a FHA REO property management “issue.” Last August HUD announced that it was launching the third generation of its REO Management and Marketing program, with new contracts that would “streamline HUD's operations, capitalize on the expertise of its potential vendors, and provide flexibility to meet changing market conditions in the REO industry.” Under “M&M III” the functions of the maintenance of REO properties and the marketing of REO properties was separated. I have no idea if this change has been responsible for the alarmingly slow sales pace of FHA REO, but someone should look into this.
General Motors: April U.S. April sales increase 26.4% year-over-year
by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2011 11:00:00 AM
Note: The real key is the seasonally adjusted annual sales rate (SAAR) compared to the last few months, not the year-over-year comparison provided by the automakers.
From MarketWatch: General Motors U.S. April sales rise 26.4%
[GM] said Tuesday that U.S. April sales rose 26.4% to 232,538 vehicles from 183,997 in the year-ago period.Once all the reports are released, I'll post a graph of the estimated total April light vehicle sales (SAAR) - usually around 4 PM ET.
Most estimates are for a decrease to 13.0 million SAAR in April from the 13.1 million SAAR in March. Sales in April 2010 were at a 11.25 million SAAR.
Update: From MarketWatch: Ford U.S. April sales increase by 16.4%
I'll add the reports from the other major auto companies as updates to this post. Even if sales in April were solid, the next several months will probably see weaker sales due to supply disruption issues related to the events in Japan.
The Debt Ceiling Farce
by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2011 08:50:00 AM
First some details from Bloomberg: Geithner Extends Debt-Ceiling Deadline to August
The U.S. can borrow until Aug. 2 after reaching the $14.29 trillion limit because of “stronger-than-expected tax receipts” and by taking “extraordinary measures” such as suspending the sale of bonds to finance state and local infrastructure projects, Geithner said in a letter to congressional leaders yesterday. He previously said the deadline would be July 8. Without such measures, the legal limit will be reached May 16 ...Ezra Klein writes: The debt-ceiling drama begins
[T]here’s always the chance that the spectacle of Congress bickering towards a default will cause the market to freak out even though we technically have a couple of weeks left. This is the Clint Eastwood theory of money management, in which Congress needs to ask itself, day after day, week after week, whether it feels lucky. And it’s totally reckless and unnecessary.There is very little drama; the debt ceiling will be raised. I suppose this is entertaining for anyone who enjoys watching politicians preen, posture and generally make fools of themselves.
Udpate: from Stan Collender Debt Ceiling Questions in the House
[G]iven recent polls that show seven of 10 Americans do not want the debt ceiling raised, will most or all House Members have to vote against the bill at least once so they can show their constituents that they were against it before they were for it? Will Wall Street — especially foreign investors — get spooked if a debt ceiling increase bill goes down in the House, or will it recognize that an initial “no” vote is needed to make it easier for a bill to be enacted?Expect a "no" vote before a "yes" vote. Oh, the drama :-)


