by Calculated Risk on 1/08/2015 07:49:00 PM
Thursday, January 08, 2015
Friday: Jobs
First an important point from Tim Duy: Volatile Week Ahead of Employment Report
I tend agree that the net impact [from the decline in oil prices] will be positive, but note that the negative impacts will be fairly concentrated and easy for the media to sensationalize, while the positive impacts will be fairly dispersed. We all know what is going to happen to rig counts, high-yield energy debt, and the economies of North Dakota and at least parts of Texas. "Kablooey," I think, is the technical term. Easy media fodder. Much more difficult to see the positive impact spread across the real incomes of millions of households, with particularly solid gains at the lower ends of the income distribution. This will be most likely revealed in the aggregate data and be much less newsworthy.We are already seeing stories about layoffs in oil related industries (and suppliers). However, since the US is a large net importer of oil, the overall impact of lower oil prices should be positive for the US economy. The negative stories are newsworthy, but it is worth remembering - as Tim Duy notes - that the positive stories will be hidden in the aggregate data.
emphasis added
Here was an employment preview I posted earlier: Preview: Employment Report for December
Friday:
• At 8:30 AM ET, the Employment Report for December. The consensus is for an increase of 240,000 non-farm payroll jobs added in December, down from the 321,000 non-farm payroll jobs added in November. The consensus is for the unemployment rate to decline to 5.7% in December from 5.8% the previous month.
• At 10:00 AM, Monthly Wholesale Trade: Sales and Inventories for November. The consensus is for a 0.3% increase in inventories.
Clarification: Current FHA-insured borrowers WILL need to Refinance to obtain lower MIP
by Calculated Risk on 1/08/2015 04:33:00 PM
Just to be clear, current FHA-insured borrowers will need to refinance to obtain the 0.85% annual Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP).
New borrowers will obtain the lower MIP automatically.
HUD will send out a letter very soon clarifying what this means for borrowers currently in the process of obtaining an FHA-insured loan.
HUD estimates that approximately 100,000 to 200,000 FHA-insured borrowers will refinance in the next year.
FHA Insured Loans: HUD Corrects wording on lower Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP)
by Calculated Risk on 1/08/2015 03:04:00 PM
Update2: Clarification: Current FHA-insured borrowers WILL need to Refinance to obtain lower MIP
I was thinking there would be a refinance boom for FHA loans. The HUD press release read:
"FHA’s new annual premium prices will take effect for all new FHA-insured mortgages endorsed toward the end of January 2015. FHA will publish a mortgagee letter detailing its new pricing structure shortly."That sounded like people would need to refinance to obtain the lower MIP.
emphasis added
This would be a significant number of borrowers because the annual MIP was increased to 1.15% in April 2011, to 1.25% in April 2012, and to 1.35% in April 2013 (for borrowers with less than 5% down). Looking at the mortgage rates available at those times, it appeared a large number of FHA insured borrowers would consider refinancing now.
However HUD just corrected their press release to read:
"FHA’s new annual premium prices are expected to take effect towards the end of the month. FHA will publish a mortgagee letter detailing its new pricing structure shortly."The "new FHA-insured" was removed. Update: Or this change could mean that loans currently in the process will receive the old MIP, and loans originated after January will receive the new MIP. It is difficult to lower the MIP for current borrowers ...
So I'm expecting an FHA refi boom.
Trulia: "What Falling Oil Prices Mean for Home Prices"
by Calculated Risk on 1/08/2015 01:37:00 PM
From Trulia chief economist Jed Kolko: What Falling Oil Prices Mean for Home Prices
Nationwide, asking prices on for-sale homes were up 0.5% month-over-month in December, seasonally adjusted — a slowdown after larger increases in September, October, and November. Year-over-year, asking prices rose 7.7%, down from the 9.5% year-over-year increase in December 2013. Asking prices increased year-over-year in 97 of the 100 largest U.S. metros.Note: These asking prices are SA (Seasonally Adjusted) - and adjusted for the mix of homes - and although year-over-year price increases had been slowing, the year-over-year change increased in November.
Four of the five markets where asking prices rose most year-over-year are in the South, including Atlanta, Cape Coral-Fort Myers, North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, and Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach. Of the top 10, four are in the Midwest, including Cincinnati, Detroit, Lake-Kenosha Counties, and Indianapolis. Among markets with the largest asking price increases, Houston stands out for having a large local oil industry, accounting for 5.6% of jobs there.
Only Bakersfield and Baton Rouge have an even higher employment share in oil-related industries than Houston. Oklahoma City, Tulsa, New Orleans, and Fort Worth round out the seven large metros where oil-related industries account for at least 2% of employment. It’s not until you look at smaller metros that you find oil-related industries representing a larger employment share. In Williston, ND, and Midland, TX, they account for almost 30% of local jobs. [see graph of percent oil jobs at article]
This history offers three lessons for today’s housing market. First, any negative impact of falling oil prices on home prices should be concentrated in oil-producing markets in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and other places with large oil-related industries. Second, in these markets, oil prices won’t tank home prices immediately. Rather, falling oil prices in the second half of 2014 might not have their biggest impact on home prices until late 2015 or in 2016. Third, falling oil prices will probably help local economies and home prices in markets that lack oil-related industries.
...
Nationwide, rents rose 6.1% year-over-year in December. The least affordable rental markets are Miami, Los Angeles, and New York, where median rent for a two-bedroom unit eats up more than half of the local average wage.
emphasis added
The month-to-month increase suggests further house price increases over the next few months on a seasonally adjusted basis.
There is much more in the article, especially on the impact of falling oil prices on housing.
Las Vegas Real Estate in December: Lowest Sales in Years, Non-contingent Inventory up 18% YoY
by Calculated Risk on 1/08/2015 11:38:00 AM
This is a key distressed market to follow since Las Vegas has seen the largest price decline of any of the Case-Shiller composite 20 cities.
The Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors reported GLVAR reports local home prices stay up through holidays
According to GLVAR, the total number of existing local homes, condominiums and townhomes sold in December was 2,734, up from 2,483 in November, but down from 2,915 one year ago. At the current sales pace, [GLVAR President Keith] Lynam said Southern Nevada continues to have less than a four-month supply of available homes. REALTORS® consider a six-month supply to be a balanced market.There are several key trends that we've been following:
For all of 2014, GLVAR reported that 36,550 total properties were sold through its MLS. Lynam noted that was the lowest number of sales in at least six years, down from 47,685 sales in 2009; 44,045 in 2010; 48,798 in 2011; 45,698 in 2012; and 41,477 in 2013.
...
GLVAR said 34.1 percent of all local properties sold in December were purchased with cash. That’s up from 31.9 percent in November, but well short of the February 2013 peak of 59.5 percent, suggesting that fewer investors have been buying homes in Southern Nevada.
...
GLVAR has been tracking a two-year trend toward fewer distressed sales and more traditional home sales, where lenders are not controlling the transaction. That continued in December, when 10 percent of all local sales were short sales – which occur when lenders allow borrowers to sell a home for less than what they owe on the mortgage. That’s up slightly from 9.6 percent in November. Another 8 percent of all December sales were bank-owned properties, down from 8.7 percent in November.
...
The total number of single-family homes listed for sale on GLVAR’s Multiple Listing Service in December was 12,377, down 7.8 percent from 13,421 in November and down 7.0 percent from one year ago. GLVAR tracked a total of 3,282 condos and townhomes listed for sale on its MLS in December, down 7.0 percent from 3,529 in November, but up 13.1 percent from December 2013.
By the end of December, GLVAR reported 7,774 single-family homes listed without any sort of offer. That’s down 5.1 percent from 8,195 such homes listed in November, but up 18.0 percent from one year ago. For condos and townhomes, the 2,309 properties listed without offers in December represented a 6.1 percent decrease from 2,458 such properties listed in November, but a 38.8 percent increase from one year ago.
emphasis added
1) Overall sales were down 6,2% year-over-year.
2) However conventional (equity, not distressed) sales were up about 9% year-over-year. In December 2013, only 70.8% of all sales were conventional equity. In December 2014, 82.0% were standard equity sales. Note: In December 2012, only 44.7% were equity! A significant change.
3) The percent of cash sales has declined year-over-year from 44.4% in December 2013 to 34.1% in December 2014. (investor buying appears to be declining).
4) Non-contingent inventory is up 18.0% year-over-year. The table below shows the year-over-year change for non-contingent inventory in Las Vegas. Inventory declined sharply through early 2013, and then inventory started increasing sharply year-over-year. It appears the inventory build is slowing (an important change in many areas).
| Las Vegas: Year-over-year Change in Non-contingent Inventory | |
|---|---|
| Month | YoY |
| Jan-13 | -58.3% |
| Feb-13 | -53.4% |
| Mar-13 | -42.1% |
| Apr-13 | -24.1% |
| May-13 | -13.2% |
| Jun-13 | 3.7% |
| Jul-13 | 9.0% |
| Aug-13 | 41.1% |
| Sep-13 | 60.5% |
| Oct-13 | 73.4% |
| Nov-13 | 77.4% |
| Dec-13 | 78.6% |
| Jan-14 | 96.2% |
| Feb-14 | 107.3% |
| Mar-14 | 127.9% |
| Apr-14 | 103.1% |
| May-14 | 100.6% |
| Jun-14 | 86.2% |
| Jul-14 | 55.2% |
| Aug-14 | 38.8% |
| Sep-14 | 29.5% |
| Oct-14 | 25.6% |
| Nov-14 | 20.0% |
| Dec-14 | 18.0% |


