by Calculated Risk on 9/28/2011 09:31:00 PM
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Treasury: Mortgage loan fraud suspicious activity reports increased in Q2, Most occurred during bubble
From Treasury: Second Quarter Mortgage Loan Fraud Suspicious Activity Persists
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) today reported in its Second Quarter 2011 Analysis of mortgage loan fraud suspicious activity reports (MLF SARs) that financial institutions filed 29,558 MLF SARs in the second quarter of 2011 up from 15,727 MLF SARs reported in the same quarter of 2010.The most common mortgage loan fraud suspicious activity was the misrepresentation of income, occupancy, debts, or assets (about 30%). Some of the more current frauds are related to debt elimination and short sale fraud (unfortunately attempted short sale fraud is very common).
A large majority of the MLF SARs examined in the second quarter involved mortgages closed during the height of the real estate bubble. The upward spike in second quarter MLF SAR numbers is directly attributable to mortgage repurchase demands and special filings generated by several institutions. For instance, FinCEN noted that 81 percent of the MLF SARs filed during the quarter involved suspicious activities that occurred before 2008; 63 percent involved suspicious activities that occurred four or more years ago.
"We're continuing to see a large number of SARs filed on activity that occurred more than two years ago, an indication that financial institutions are uncovering fraud as they sift through defaulted mortgages," said FinCEN Director James H. Freis, Jr.
FinCEN has some Mortgage Fraud SAR Datasets breaking down the data by state, MSA and county. California was #1 in Q2 (Nevada or Florida have usually been #1). San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA was the #1 MSA.
And in a related story from the AP: Santa Rosa Hells Angels leaders indicted on loan fraud. This involved a mortgage broker and false statement of income and assets to buy marijuana "grow houses". Oh my ...
Lawler: Best Guess for August Pending Home Sales
by Calculated Risk on 9/28/2011 05:31:00 PM
From economist Tom Lawler:
It is difficult to “work up” an estimate of the NAR’s Pending Home Sales Index from local Realtor associations/boards/MLS, for several reasons. First, many of these A/B/M’s don’t release “new” pending sales data (that is, data on contracts signed in a month). Indeed, many don’t track such data at all, and as a result the NAR’s PHSI is based on a sample size about half as large as that used to estimate closed existing home sales. And second, some publicly-released A/B/M reports are run early in the month, and have preliminary pending sales that are often revised by a lot in subsequent months.
As such, my estimate of the NAR’s PHSI is subject to far more uncertainty than are my estimates for closed existing home sales.
Based on the data I do have, however, I estimate that the NAR’s August Pending Home Sales Index will probably come in about 3.5% higher than the July PHSI on a seasonally adjusted basis. While, as always, reported YOY gains vary massively across various A/B/M’s, almost all showed YOY gains and many – including but not limited to several in the Midwest – showed hefty YOY increases. Of course, July’s PHSI on a seasonally adjusted basis was 9% higher than last August’s, and this August had one more business day than last August. As such, a national YOY gain in unadjusted pending sales for August of close to 12% would produce a flat seasonally adjusted reading versus July.
In looking at various regional reports, only a handful showed YOY declines (including a few but not even close to all Florida markets), several showed modest single-digit gains (including several in the Northeast), but quite a few showed YOY gains of 20% or more (and a few by a LOT more).
A 3.5% gain would be well above the “consensus” forecast of a moderate decline.
CR Note: The NAR is scheduled to release Pending Home sales for August tomorrow (Thursday) at 10 AM ET. The consensus is for a 2% decrease in the index.
Europe Update
by Calculated Risk on 9/28/2011 03:54:00 PM
From the WSJ: Euro-Zone Bailout Plan Progresses
The euro zone is on track to expand its bailout fund ... But the debate ... has already moved on to two thornier issues: a more radical increase in the scope of bailouts, and possible debt restructuring for Greece.And a roundup of events from the Financial Times: Rolling blog: the eurozone crisis
Greece's failure to close its budget shortfall is prompting some European governments, led by Germany, to push for a re-examination of the international bailout program for Athens ... In return, Germany is under pressure to agree to "leverage" the euro-zone bailout fund ...
• José Manual Barroso, president of the European Commission, gave his annual State of the Union address ... in which he insisted Greece would remain a member of the euro, and formally approved proposals for a tax on financial transactions ...The Greek 2 year yield is at 70%. The Greek 1 year yield is at 131%.
• The European Commission confirmed that the troika would return to Athens on Thursday ... and said an additional ‘eurogroup meeting’ (where European finance ministers meet up) would be held in October to “consider the disbursement of the next tranche” of bailout money
• Finland voted to approve expanding the powers of the [EFSF]
• German inflation hit a 3-year high
• French president Nicolas Sarkozy pledged to [reduce the French] budget deficit to 3 per cent of gross domestic product in 2013
The Portuguese 2 year yield is up to 18% and the Irish 2 year yield was down sharply to 7.6%. Here are the links for bond yields for several countries (source: Bloomberg):
| Greece | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Portugal | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Ireland | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Spain | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Italy | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Belgium | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| France | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Germany | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
Fed's Rosengren: Housing and Economic Recovery
by Calculated Risk on 9/28/2011 01:43:00 PM
From Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren: Housing and Economic Recovery
A few excepts and couple of graphs that highlight two topics we've discussed for years:
[E]even though residential investment is a small share of GDP (today only 2.2 percent), it is quite interest-sensitive – it can decline quite dramatically as interest rates rise, and expand quickly when interest rates are relatively low. So it has been a disproportionally important part of the monetary policy transmission mechanism.
In the current situation, however, U.S. mortgage rates are quite low but residential investment has not been the engine of growth that it normally is in economic recoveries. As shown in Figure 4, exports have been a source of strength in the first two years of the U.S. recovery, and business fixed investment has grown at approximately the same rate in this recovery as in the previous three. Yet the household sector has been particularly weak. Consumption, which accounts for approximately 70 percent of U.S. GDP, has grown only about half as much in the first two years of the recovery as it did in the previous three recoveries. And the shortfall for residential investment is even more striking. In the previous three recoveries, residential investment grew over 30 percent on average in the first years of the recovery – but has actually decreased in the first two years of this recovery. ...
CR Note: Residential investment (RI) is usually an engine of recovery, but with the huge overhang of existing vacant housing units, RI didn't contribute during the first two years this time. This is exactly what we've expected.
The weak housing sector also has an impact on employment. Figure 9 shows that far fewer jobs have been created in the first two years of this recovery (the left bar in each pair) than in previous recoveries (the right bar in the pair). In fact, construction jobs have continued to decline during the first two years of this recovery – we have lost over a half a million construction jobs since the recovery began. While construction employment is typically volatile during a recovery, on average the sector adds roughly 150,000 jobs.
Indeed, ... employment in construction has declined by 9 percent in the first two years of this recovery compared to growth over 4 percent during the previous three recoveries. And weak construction employment and activity also reduces the demand for labor in sectors that support construction.
CR Note: Employment is been especially weak in this recovery, and construction employment was especially hard hit. In addition to the excess housing inventory, there is excess capacity in most industries - and households have too much debt and are deleveraging.
The little bit of good news is that Residential Investment will make a positive contribution to growth this year (mostly from multi-family and home improvement), and construction employment will probably increase this year (not much).
Existing Home Inventory continues to decline year-over-year in September
by Calculated Risk on 9/28/2011 10:24:00 AM
In June, Tom Lawler posted on how the NAR estimates existing home inventory. The NAR does NOT aggregate data from the local boards (see Tom's post for how the NAR estimates inventory).
In a few months the NAR will revise down their estimates fpr inventory and sales of existing homes for the last few years. Also the NAR methodology for estimating sales and inventory will be changed.
I think the HousingTracker / DeptofNumbers data that Tom mentioned provides a timely estimate of changes in inventory. Ben at deptofnumbers.com is tracking the aggregate monthly inventory for 54 metro areas.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.
This graph shows the NAR estimate of existing home inventory through August (left axis) and the HousingTracker data for the 54 metro areas through September. The HousingTracker data shows a steeper decline in inventory over the last few years (as mentioned above, the NAR will probably revise down their inventory estimates this fall).
The second graph shows the year-over-year change in inventory for both the NAR and HousingTracker.
HousingTracker reported that the September listings - for the 54 metro areas - declined 16.7% from last year.
Of course there is a large percentage of distressed inventory, and various categories of "shadow inventory" too. But the decline in listed or "visible" inventory is a key story in 2011 - and listed inventory for September is probably down to the lowest level since September 2005.
Note: inventory surged in the late 2005 and early 2006 - a key sign that the housing bubble was bursting.


