Real Estate News 1.7.2014

Losing jobless benefits hurts people, local economies
“That’s how much the economy will slow down as a result of 1.3 million people losing their federal jobless benefits on Dec. 28, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics.”

Senate Confirms Yellen as Fed Chair
“The United States Senate voted Monday to confirm Janet Yellen as chair of the Federal Reserve following Ben Bernanke’s departure at the end of January. She will be the first woman to take the job in the Fed’s history.”

Are ‘Tortoise’ Markets Beating ‘Hares’ In Home Price Recovery?
“After observing a “first in, first out” recovery over the past year in which markets hardest hit during the housing downturn experienced the fastest-paced recovery, Clear Capital is now examining whether the housing market, in fact, follows the allegory of “The Tortoise and the Hare.” The analytics firm observed price movement and offered its predictions for the new year in its Home Data Index released Monday.”

Regulator Reports Improving Loan Performance for 4th Straight Quarter
“The performance of first-lien mortgages serviced by large national and federal savings banks continued to improve in the third quarter of 2013, reports the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). It marked the fourth consecutive quarter the agency has recorded greater loan performance among regulated entities.”

United Wholesale Ranks No. 1 Among Wholesale Lenders in Q3
“United Wholesale Mortgage (UWM), one of the nation’s fastest-growing wholesale lenders, has good reason to celebrate going into 2014: The company was ranked on MortgageStats.com as the No. 1 wholesale lender in the country for the third quarter of 2013.”

Homes’ Days-on-Market Remain Low in November
“Following a post-summer slowdown in the market, homebuyers across the nation put a little more force on the accelerator in November.”

Housing Recovery Remains on Firm Footing as Americans’ Housing Sentiment Bounces Back From an Autumn Dip
“WASHINGTON, DC – Year-over-year gains in Americans’ attitudes toward homeownership demonstrate that the housing recovery continues to move forward on firm footing despite a drop in housing sentiment during the fall, according to Fannie Mae’s December National Housing Survey results.”

Renewal of jobless benefits clears Senate hurdle
“(Reuters) – A White House-backed bill to renew jobless benefits for 1.3 million Americans narrowly cleared a U.S. Senate Republican procedural roadblock on Tuesday.”

MBA: Mortgage Credit Availability Essentially Flat in December
“Mortgage credit availability increased slightly in December, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported this morning in its Mortgage Credit Availability Index.”

QM Fails to Deter Bank from Offering IO Loans
“Bank of the West will keep originating and holding in portfolio the interest-only loans that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new rules assign more liability to starting Friday.”

Home prices increase 11.8%
“Home prices, including distressed sales, escalated 11.8% in November 2013 when compared to a year earlier, representing the 21st consecutive monthly year-over-year increase in home prices nationally.”

Mortgage credit loosens a bit
“Accessing mortgage credit is getting a bit easier, a new report from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) says.”

Failure to launch generation: Why household formation for younger Americans continues to lag while home prices soar. 46 percent of younger Americans living with older family members.
“Many are giddy about the rise in home prices.  Yet gains in home prices with no subsequent gain in income are merely a repeat of the previous bubble with a different tune.  In the last bubble, the memory has seemed to faded, the impetus for funky loan products came because incomes were not rising and products that offered additional leverage were taken up to mask the growing decline of wages.  In the last couple of years, the tinder that lit this latest run came from the Fed’s artificially low rate eco-system.  The difference this time is that the gains in home prices largely went to big investors that now dominate the market.  In the midst of all this trading, the homeownership rate has fallen.  Household formation for younger Americans is dismal.  The economy officially exited the recession back in the summer of 2009 (half a decade ago this summer).  So why is housing formation so weak when it comes to younger households if the economy is supposedly booming?”

US dominates list for foreign real estate investors
“Global real estate investors are flocking to the U.S.”

Today’s Real Estate News 10.30.2013

Summary:

In today’s news, CNN Money reports private sector hiring lowest in 6 months. Reuters shares Janet Yellen, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, was concerned over the housing bust but chose not to go public. Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid, stated Yellen’s confirmation for head of the Federal Reserve should go smooth. Freddie Mac claims to have securitized $1 Billion of HAMP Performing Mortgage Loans. DS News reports serious delinquencies hit a five-year milestone. The MBAA reports an increase of mortgage applications this week. Since 2010, “foreclosure rescue schemes” have more than doubled according to the Housing Wire. Housing Wire also reported more uncertainty among mortgage servicers, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency called for banks to practice effective risk management whether the banks chose to do it themselves or seek outside assistance and banks & business trade groups called for more “checks and balances” for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Wells Fargo plans to donate $6 Million to 67 different nonprofits for the “2013 Leading the Way Home Program Priority Markets Initiative” which will help to revive heavily distressed neighborhoods. Multi-family loan provider, Greystone, introduces an affordable multi-family loan program. San Diego’s local newspaper shares La Jolla resident sentenced to five years in prison and fined $1.4 million in restitution for deceiving homeowners around the nation he could help modify their home loans. MSN shares a story of an oddly small & narrow house built on a lot out of spite, you have to see the pictures to appreciate this story!

Private sector hiring slowest in 6 months

“Private sector employers added just 130,000 jobs in October — their lowest level of job growth since April, according to a report by payroll processor ADP. The pace of hiring has been slowing since June, but the government shutdown earlier this month appears to be a main reason for the sluggish hiring in October.”

INSIGHT-Yellen feared housing bust but did not raise public alarm

“Oct 30 (Reuters) – When Janet Yellen became president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco in June 2004, a massive real estate bubble was building in the vast nine-state area that it oversees.”

Reid expects Yellen to be ‘easily’ confirmed as Fed chair

“Oct 29 (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama’s nomination of Janet Yellen to head the Federal Reserve appears headed toward a smooth confirmation by the Democratic-led Senate, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said on Tuesday.”

Freddie Mac Securitizes $1 Billion of HAMP Performing Mortgage Loans

“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Oct 30, 2013) – Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) announced today that it has begun securitizing performing Home Affordable Modification Program (“HAMP”) modified mortgage loans held in the company’s mortgage-related investments portfolio. These loans were modified to assist borrowers who were at risk of foreclosure, thereby assisting them with keeping their homes. Since the US Treasury launched the program in March 2009, 229,000 borrowers have received permanent HAMP modifications on Freddie Mac-owned loans.”

Serious Delinquencies Hit Five-Year Milestone

“Mortgage delinquencies are on the decline, according to a report from Equifax. Home finance write-offs so far this year total $96.3 billion, down 22 percent compared to the same time period last year, the company says.”

Mortgage Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey

“WASHINGTON, D.C. (October 30, 2013) — Mortgage applications increased 6.4 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending October 25, 2013.”

Foreclosure rescue scheme complaints more than doubled

“Foreclosure rescue schemes have more than doubled since 2010, according to data collected by federal regulatory agencies.”

Uncertainty about the future plagues servicers

“Mortgage servicers flourished during the financial crisis and have exponentially grown their businesses, largely through acquisitions of credit-impaired residential mortgage servicing portfolios. But all of this is about to change, according to a recent report from Moody’s Investors Corp. (MCO).”

OCC sounds alarm on risk management of third parties

“Banks need to practice effective risk management regardless of whether the bank performs the activity internally or through a third party, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said Wednesday.”

Banks, business trade groups push for CFPB reform

“The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau lacks the check and balances, the financial accountability and the transparency that is generally found at other financial regulators operating out of Washington D.C., experts told the House Financial Services Committee on Tuesday.”

Wells Fargo donates $6 million to revitalize communities

“Wells Fargo (WFC) will donate $6 million across 67 nonprofits through the 2013 Leading the Way Home Program Priority Markets Initiative to help revitalize and stabilize neighborhoods.”

Greystone premieres affordable loan program

“Greystone, a provider of multifamily loans, premiered its Greystone Affordable Loan Program, which provides long-term, fixed, forward rate-lock financing for affordable multifamily housing.”

La Jolla man popped for sham loan mods

“A La Jolla man has been sentenced to five years in prison and ordered to pay $1.4 million in restitution for defrauding homeowners around the country who had turned to his sham company for help modifying their loans.”

This weird, tiny house in Seattle was built out of spite, locals say

“A house this small and strange-looking would be interesting on its own, but local legend says the reason it exists is pure spite. Known as the Montlake Spite House, this pie-shaped Seattle house is only 830 square feet and was recently for sale for $397,500. Why would anybody build a house like this? The widely accepted story is that a neighbor offered to buy the small corner lot from the property owner. The lowball offer he made was so insulting that the owner built this house on the lot just to annoy his cheap neighbor. Is that what actually happened? There’s some debate there, but why let that get in the way of a good story?”