by Calculated Risk on 10/19/2011 08:30:00 AM
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Housing Starts increased in September
From the Census Bureau: Permits, Starts and Completions
Housing Starts:
Privately-owned housing starts in September were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 658,000. This is 15.0 percent (±13.7%) above the revised August estimate of 572,000 and is 10.2 percent (±13.3%)* above the September 2010 rate of 597,000.
Single-family housing starts in September were at a rate of 425,000; this is 1.7 percent (±9.4%)* above the revised August figure of 418,000. The September rate for units in buildings with five units or more was 227,000.
Building Permits:
Privately-owned housing units authorized by building permits in September were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 594,000. This is 5.0 percent (±1.3%) below the revised August rate of 625,000, but is 5.7 percent (±2.6%) above the September 2010 estimate of 562,000.
Single-family authorizations in September were at a rate of 417,000; this is 0.2 percent (±1.0%)* below the revised August figure of 418,000. Authorizations of units in buildings with five units or more were at a rate of 158,000 in September.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.Total housing starts were at 658 thousand (SAAR) in September, up 15.0% from the revised August rate of 572 thousand. Most of the increase was for multi-family starts.
Single-family starts increased 1.7% to 425 thousand in September.
The second graph shows total and single unit starts since 1968.
This shows the huge collapse following the housing bubble, and that housing starts have been mostly moving sideways for about two years and a half years - with slight ups and downs due to the home buyer tax credit.Multi-family starts are increasing in 2011 - although from a very low level. This was well above expectations of 590 thousand starts in September.
Single family starts are still "moving sideways".
MBA: Mortgage Purchase Application Index at Lowest Level Since 1996
by Calculated Risk on 10/19/2011 07:25:00 AM
The MBA reports: Mortgage Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey
The Refinance Index decreased 16.6 percent from the previous week. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 8.8 percent from one week earlier and is at the lowest level in the survey since December 1996.The following graph shows the MBA Purchase Index and four week moving average since 1990.
...
The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($417,500 or less) increased to 4.33 percent from 4.25 percent, with points increasing to 0.48 from 0.47(including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio loans. ...
The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with jumbo loan balances (greater than $417,500) increased to 4.64 percent from 4.59 percent, with points decreasing to 0.45 from 0.49 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio loans.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.This was a sharp decrease in the purchase index, and the index is now at the lowest level since December 1996. This does not include cash buyers, but this suggests weaker home sales in November and December.
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Countdown to Euroday Oct 23rd: Another wild day
by Calculated Risk on 10/18/2011 10:38:00 PM
Another wild day in Euroland ...
Early today, the Guardian reported: France and Germany ready to agree €2tn euro rescue fund
But later in the day, right before the close, Dow Jones reported: EU Source: No EFSF Deal Til Friday, EUR2 Trillion Number 'Simplistic'
European officials are still debating the size of the bailout fund for the euro zone and reports that an agreement has been reached to leverage it to EUR2 trillion are "totally wrong," an official familiar with the negotiations said.There are discussions concern insuring debt so the EFSF would take the first losses. If the first 20% was insured, the €440 billion EFSF could insure close to €2tn in debt - except it isn't that simple. First, the EFSF only has about €300 that can be deployed, and second, the amount of insurance will vary by country. So the €2tn was "simplistic".
Also Moody's downgraded Spain. From Bloomberg: Spain’s Rating Cut to A1 by Moody’s
Moody’s yesterday reduced its ranking to its fifth-highest investment grade, cutting it by two levels to A1 from Aa2, with the outlook remaining negative. ... Moody’s, in a statement, cited the “continued vulnerability of Spain to market stress” that is driving up the cost of borrowing, as well as weaker growth prospects.And from the NY Times: France Defends Its Credit Rating After Moody’s Warning
The discussions have taken on greater urgency since Moody’s warned late Monday of a possible downgrade to France’s flawless credit rating.And from the Financial Times: French warning to euro summit
President Nicolas Sarkozy said that “an unprecedented financial crisis will lead us to take important, very important decisions in the coming days”.The clock is ticking and the rumors are flying.
Raising the sense of urgency, the French president added: “Allowing the destruction of the euro is to take the risk of the destruction of Europe. Those who destroy Europe and the euro will bear responsiblity for resurgence of conflict and division on our continent.”
excerpt with permission
Housing: A comment on Shadow Inventory
by Calculated Risk on 10/18/2011 06:10:00 PM
Several readers have sent me an article by Toluse Olorunnipa at McClatchy Newspapers: Millions of homes lurk on bank inventories, casting doubts of rebound
This article is decent if you understand the numbers (ignore the headline). Unfortunately some commentary about this article is wrong.
First, what is "shadow inventory"? There are different definitions for shadow inventory, but this is usually considered inventory that will be coming on the market soon, but is NOT currently listed for sale. Inventory that is listed for sale is "visible inventory".
An all encompassing definition of shadow inventory would probably include bank owned property (Real Estate Owned), properties in the foreclosure process, other properties with delinquent mortgages (both serious delinquencies of over 90+ days, and less serious), condos that were converted to apartments (and will be converted back), investor owned rental properties, and homeowners "waiting for a better market", and a few other categories - as long as the properties were not currently listed for sale. But many of these properties will not come on the market for several years, and that isn't exactly "soon".
A more conservative estimate would just be the number of 90+ day delinquencies, properties in-foreclosure and REOs not currently listed for sale. That is CoreLogic's approach - they compare the addresses of REO and delinquent properties with current listings and at the end of Q2 CoreLogic reported:
Of the 1.6 million properties currently in the shadow inventory, 770,000 units are seriously delinquent, 430,000 are in some stage of foreclosure and 390,000 are already in REO.Now compare those numbers to the McClatchy article:
Calculating the size of the shadow market has proved difficult, and estimates range from 1.6 million to 7 million homes.The first number appears to come from RealtyTrac. This number is too high. The total REO is probably lower and a number of those are listed for sale. As the McClatchy article notes:
...
The McClatchy analysis found the following shadow inventory:
* 644,000 houses already owned by lenders but not yet for sale.
* 2.2 million homes whose owners have received initial foreclosure notices or notices of default but haven't yet been foreclosed on.
* 1.9 million properties whose owners are 90 days or more behind on their payments but haven't yet been served with foreclosure notices.
... Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration hold about 250,000 homes. ... at least 100,000 of those aren't yet on the marketThat suggests close to 150,000 are listed for sale for just Fannie, Freddie and the FHA. The 250,000 is based on the same sources I use, and we can see how CoreLogic came up with the 390,000 REO not listed for sale.
The in-foreclosure and seriously delinquent numbers come from LPS Applied Analytics most recent report for August. LPS reported in August that there were:
• 1.87 million loans 90+ days delinquent.
• 2.15 million loans in foreclosure process.
That is just over 4 million loans, but many of these are listed for sale and are not "shadow inventory". The McClatchy article incorrectly stated they were all "shadown inventory".
CoreLogic estimated that 430,000 of the in-foreclosure properties are not listed for sale, and 770,000 of the 90+ day delinquent properties are not listed for sale. Note: CoreLogic compares addresses of delinquent properties with listed properties.
CoreLogic's estimate might be low (their estimate seems reasonable based on their definition), but the range given in the article of "1.6 million to 7 million homes" of shadow inventory is absurd. The only way to get to 7 million is to add the 'less than' 90 day delinquencies (2.38 million loans), 90+ day delinquencies (1.87 million loans), in-foreclosure (2.15 million loans) and total REO (and their estimate for REO is too high). And that ignores the visible inventory and that a certain percentage of loans will cure - especially for the shorter delinquency loans.
Although this article is a decent overview of several housing issues, it is unfortunately misleading and contains obvious errors. The "644,000 houses already owned by lenders but not yet for sale" appears too high. And the article incorrectly includes all of the properties in-foreclosure and with seriously delinquent loans as "shadow inventory" even though many are listed for sale.
Housing: A comment on Builder Confidence
by Calculated Risk on 10/18/2011 03:55:00 PM
A few comments ... We have to remember that the increase in October builder confidence, released this morning by the NAHB, is just one month of survey responses and could be noise.
Also, a reading of 18 is still very low. Before the current housing bust, the record low for the builder confidence survey was 20 in 1991 - and that was considered very depressed.
But we also to have remember that housing will not be depressed forever. As the excess supply of vacant housing units is absorbed, the home builders will start building more homes. The excess vacant supply isn't spread evenly geographically. Some areas have a large supply; other areas are probably getting close to exhausting the local excess supply.
Earlier this year, economist Tom Lawler estimated the national excess vacant supply was "in the 1.6 to 1.7 million range" as of April 1, 2010 (using the Census 2010 data). I came up with a similar estimate on a state by state basis: The Excess Vacant Housing Supply (see post for table).
These estimates were for April 1, 2010; about 18 months ago. The population is still growing and the economy is adding jobs (slowly), and the U.S. is adding households. At the same time, the builders delivered a record low number of housing units last year - and will probably break that record again this year. With more households, and few units being added, the excess supply is probably declining fairly rapidly.
Unfortunately there is no timely estimate of household formation. Note: the Freddie Mac chief economist put out an esimtate yesterday for household formation, but that was based on the HVS - and that is not an accurate survey for household formation.
So at some point we'd expect pockets of improvement. As I noted, the increase in October might just be noise, but it also might indicate some areas are improving slightly. If the latter, the survey should show further increases - and housing starts should begin to pick up too (the builder survey was for October, so we will have to wait until the October housing starts are released to see if there is any related increase in starts, seasonally adjusted).
Finally, it is important to distinguish between the large number of houses with seriously delinquent mortgages and the excess vacant housing supply. Some people might assume that new home sales will not pick up until the number of delinquent mortgages declines to normal. That is not correct. Most of the houses with seriously delinquent mortgages are occupied, and the units that are vacant are included in the above estimates of the excess supply. The large number of delinquent loans - and loans in the foreclosure process - will keep pressure on house prices for some time, but that is a different issue. Building will pick up as the excess supply is exhausted in each area.
So maybe the increase in confidence indicates the excess supply has been absorbed in a few areas - or maybe it was just noise. We will have to watch and see.


