Real Estate News 1.16.2014

Trulia set to serve up sellers as ‘leads’ to real estate agents
Selling the contact information of prospective homebuyers to real estate agents as buyer “leads” has long been the bread and butter of listing portals like Zillow, Trulia and realtor.com.”

Trulia’s housing indicator shows mixed market (VIDEO)
“It’s going to be an uneven recovery, says Sean Aggarwal, Chief Financial Officer at Trulia, sharing his thoughts on the outlook on housing. We¿ve seen a very sustained recovery in 2014, says Aggarwal.”

Foreclosures hit six-year low in 2013
“Last year was a banner year in the fight against foreclosures, with filings hitting their lowest level since 2007.”

World economy on recovery road, but weak inflation threatens: Reuters poll
“(Reuters) – A much better year lies in store for most of the world’s major developed economies, although weak inflation will persist, complicating central banks’ ability to get interest rates back to normal, Reuters polls forecast on Thursday.”

Why banks aren’t lending to homebuyers
“‘Despite the confluence of promising signs,” write Peter Eavis and Jessica Silver-Greenberg today, “little in the vast system that provides Americans with mortgages has returned to normal since the 2008 financial crisis, leaving a large swath of people virtually shut out of the market.'”

Some banks made to pay cities for foreclosing on properties
“Canton officials say they have found a way to hold banks accountable for foreclosed and vacant properties in the northeastern Ohio city.”

FHA: The incredible, shrinking mortgage resource
“Is FHA sending its most profitable, lowest-risk customers — homebuyers who have very good to excellent credit — to Fannie and Freddie for their mortgages, thereby losing significant market share?”

‘Worst of all worlds’ for mortgage lending in fourth quarter
“The country’s top three mortgage lenders confirmed this week that new home loans dropped last year as mortgage rates rose, with earnings results Wednesday from Bank of America showing a 46% year-over-year drop in the fourth quarter.”

The bear and bull cases for mortgage REITs in 2014
“WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Shareholders of real estate investment trusts that invest in mortgage-backed securities had a rough 2013, and while rising rates continue to pose a risk, there could also be buying opportunities, analysts say.”

Did Fannie Mae run afoul of California’s short sale laws?
“Fannie Mae and its servicers maybe broke the law in California when collecting contributions from borrowers on short sales, the office of the inspector general for the Federal Housing Finance Agency claims in a new report. The government-sponsored entity, while not admitting culpability, said a data error may be to blame.”

BofA Says Profit Quadruples as Mortgage Costs Ebb
“Bank of America Corp., the second-biggest U.S. lender, quadrupled its quarterly profit and beat Wall Street estimates as the company quelled claims tied to defective mortgages. The stock reached its highest level in more than three years.”

Freddie Mac: Mortgage rates hit monthly low

“Mortgage rates took a step back due to signs of a weakening economic recovery, according to the latest Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey.”

Collapse in refis drive Citi earnings miss
“Citigroup (C) drove a 21% increase in fourth quarter earnings, but that wasn’t enough to reach analyst expectations as a weakening mortgage business proved too tough a headwind to overcome.”

Goldman Sachs sets aside plenty of cash for mortgage lawsuits
“Goldman Sachs (GS) reported fourth-quarter revenues and profit topping Wall Street estimates, bouyed by a resurgent IPO market that boosted investment banking revenue.”

Citi sells Fannie Mae MSRs … to Fannie Mae
“Fannie Mae has purchased mortgage servicing rights on about 64,000 of its own loans from Citigroup (C), as the nation’s 3rd largest lender looks to shed future liabilities tied to its servicing practices.”

Jobless claims fall by 2,000 filings
“Jobless claims pulled back slightly for the week ending Jan. 11, and fell by 2,000 filings to 328,0000, the U.S. Department of Labor said.”

Why Mortgage REITs Deserve Some Love in 2014
“There’s nothing sexy about mortgage real estate investment trusts. They can’t talk to you like Siri or deliver packages with drones like Amazon envisions. But they currently yield 13 percent while Treasury bonds yield only 3.8 percent.”

REAL ESTATE: Bailing out of PMI
“Home prices rose so significantly across Inland Southern California in 2013 that consumers who have been paying private mortgage insurance on their home loans for years not only may be emerging from underwater home equity positions.”

REAL ESTATE: Earthquake coverage rumblings follow 4.4-magnitude temblor
“Twenty years after the Northridge quake of January 1994, the earth that rumbled and roared in Fontana on Wednesday, Jan. 15, gave many in the Inland region more than a 4.4-magnitude wake-up call.”

OBAMA ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCES SEVEN ADDITIONAL CITIES
PARTICIPATING IN THE STRONG CITIES, STRONG COMMUNITIES INITIATIVE

“WASHINGTON – Today the Obama Administration announced it is expanding the Strong Cities, Strong Communities (SC2) Initiative to include Brownsville, TX; Flint, MI; Gary, IN; Macon, GA; Rockford, IL; St. Louis, MO; and Rocky Mount, NC. President Obama established SC2 in 2011 as an innovative and flexible program designed to strengthen local capacity, coordinate federal investments, and spark growth in economically distressed communities.”

Squeezing out the working class through higher rents: 11.3 million Americans spend more than half their income on rent in 2011, a jump of 28 percent from 2007.
“Welcome to landlord nation.  People need a place to live and a recent Harvard analysis found that more Americans are spending a larger portion of their income on housing.  More to the point, there are now 11.3 million Americans that spend half of their income on rent.  This is a significant jump of 28 percent from 2007.  Rents also went up throughout 2012 and the first half of 2013 so this figure has definitely increased.  Is this a good thing for households?  Probably not but that is simply the current trend.  This is also a reason why only 1 out of 3 households can actually afford a home in California and is a direct consequence of the massive flood of investors into the real estate market.  When properties go back into the market with artificially low supply, these owners have the ability to command higher prices.  The end result?  More money to landlords and less money in the pockets of renting households.  And with America becoming more of a renter nation, this is putting a strain on the budgets of many households.”

California AG Busts Statewide, Multi-Million Dollar Housing Scheme
“California officials on Wednesday arrested five individuals who allegedly ran a statewide housing scheme involving the fraudulent seizure of at least 23 homes in nine counties.”

Fed’s Beige Book Details Improvements in Regional Real Estate Markets
“Representatives from the Federal Reserve’s 12 districts reported moderate economic expansion across most of the country through the end of last year, with indicators pointing to more steady growth ahead.”

Taking the Temperature of the Market
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Jan 16, 2014) – Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) released today its U.S. Economic and Housing Market Outlook for January showing that four of the key housing indicators are all moving in the right direction, which bodes well for an ongoing recovery. A short preview video, and the complete January 2014 U.S. Economic and Housing Market Outlook are available here.”

Fixed Mortgage Rates Move Lower on Economic Data
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Jan 16, 2014) – Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing average fixed mortgage rates fall amid signs of a weakening economic recovery.”

Freddie Mac Multifamily Research Highlights Borrower Default Behavior
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Jan 16, 2014) – New Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) research shows that a commercial real estate borrower’s loan default decision for an underperforming property is based on several factors, including property and loan characteristics, and economic and market conditions. The research [PDF], “Default Ruthlessness: Examining Borrower Default Behavior,” analyzed and compared borrower default behavior for CMBS loans and Freddie Mac multifamily loans. The research can help debt investors better manage their investment expectations.”

Freddie Mac Prices $1 Billion Reopening of 1.75% Seven-Year Reference Notes® Security
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Jan 16, 2014) –  Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) announced today that it auctioned a $1 billion reopening of its 1.75% seven-year USD Reference Notes® security that matures on May 30, 2019. The stop yield for the issue, CUSIP 3137EADG1, was 1.947%, priced at 98.999425. The bid-to-cover ratio was 3.4 to 1.”

Freddie Mac to Issue a New Three-Year Reference Notes® Security and $1 Billion Reopening of 1.75% Reference Notes Security
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Jan 16, 2014) – Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) announced today that it plans to issue a new three-year USD Reference Notes® security, CUSIP number 3137EADT3, due on February 22, 2017. The issue will be priced on Friday, January 17, 2014, and will settle on Tuesday, January 21, 2014, at benchmark size.”

Today’s Real Estate News 11.6.2013

Home prices show smallest gain since January
“September home prices showed the smallest monthly increase since January, according to real estate data firm CoreLogic.”

Freddie Mac Prices Transaction to Share Residential Mortgage Credit Risk With Private Investors
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Nov 5, 2013) – Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) today priced a $630 million offering of the Freddie Mac Structured Agency Credit Risk (STACR®) debt notes. This offering represents the company’s second STACR offering in which private sources, and not taxpayers, predominately take the credit risk.”

Freddie Mac Receives CMBS Master and Special Servicer Ratings From Fitch
“MCLEAN, VA–(Marketwired – Nov 5, 2013) – Fitch Ratings today gave Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) Multifamily an initial commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) master servicer rating of CMS2 and affirmed the existing special servicer rating of CSS2-. The CMS2 rating is the highest initial rating ever assigned by Fitch for a master servicer.”

Does Q3 Uptick in Homeownership Reveal Good News or False Hope?
“The Census Bureau’s announcement Tuesday that the national homeownership rate ticked up slightly in the third quarter of this year has some analysts wondering if this is a turning point for homeownership and others labeling slow household formation as a persistent hindrance to a full housing market recovery.”

September Bucks Forebodings of Decelerating Price Gains
“With recent predictions forecasting a falloff in home price increases over the next year, gains nevertheless continued at a strong pace in September, CoreLogic reported Tuesday in its monthly Home Price Index (HPI) report.”

Housing Market Recovery Rate Indicates Less Volatility than Ever
“Renewed profitability in the real estate market lacks the troublesome “irrational exuberance” that caused problems in the past, according to Wade Micoley, president and CEO of WM Enterprises, Inc., and the online auction house Micoley.com.”

Fannie Mae’s Portfolio Continues to Shrink
“Fannie Mae has released its September book of business, revealing further declines as new business acquisitions came to their lowest level in more than a year.

The mortgage behemoth’s book of business totaled $3.163 trillion as of the end of September, shrinking at a compound annual rate of 1.3 percent.”

FHFA Prohibits Servicer Reimbursement
“The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced Tuesday that it has directed the GSEs to prohibit servicers from being reimbursed for expenses associated with captive reinsurance arrangements. The announcement follows a notice that FHFA published in the Federal Register last March regarding its views on these lender-placed insurance practices and accepting public input. The notice also cited concerns that the practices expose Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to potential losses as well as litigation and reputation risks.”

Rich investors sitting on a pile of cash
“Some of the richest people around the world think the stock market will continue to go up. So why are they sitting on a big pile of cash?”

Most Metro Areas Show Strong Annual Home-Price Growth

“WASHINGTON (Nov. 6, 2013) – The majority of metropolitan areas in the third quarter experienced robust year-over-year price gains, with the national median price showing the strongest annual growth in nearly eight years, according to the latest quarterly report by the National Association of Realtors®.”

Exclusive: EU to levy record fines on Libor banks: source
“(Reuters) – EU antitrust regulators will levy a record fine of at least 1.5 billion euros on six financial institutions, including Barclays (BARC.L) and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L), for rigging the yen Libor interest rate benchmark, a banking industry source said on Wednesday.”

MBA’s Cosgrove Testifies on Housing Finance Reform
“WASHINGTON, D.C. (November 5, 2013) – Bill Cosgrove, CEO of Union Home Mortgage Corp. and Chairman-Elect of the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), testified today before the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs at a hearing titled, ‘Housing Finance Reform: Protecting Small Lenders Access to the Secondary Market.'”

Ally Profit Drops as Lender Absorbs Cost of Mortgage Accord (3)
“Ally Financial Inc. (ALLY:US), the auto finance firm majority-owned by U.S. taxpayers, said third-quarter profit fell 76 percent as the company settled U.S. claims for soured mortgages and stopped making new home loans.”

Bernanke Giving Homebuyers Second Chance With Pledge: Mortgages
“This was supposed to be the year that Herb Harrison found a newer, bigger home to replace his current house in Framingham, Massachusetts. Then, in May, mortgage rates began to rise and he put his hunt on hold.”

Fannie, Freddie Ordered to End Reimbursements for Force-Placed Insurance
“The Federal Housing Finance Agency told Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to end reimbursements to mortgage servicers for expenses related to captive reinsurance arrangements.”

As US Economy Plods and Pay Lags, Companies Profit
” Look at the U.S. economy and you’ll notice an unusual disconnect.

The economy is being slowed by a tight job market, scant pay raises and weak business investment. Yet corporate profits are reaching record highs and fueling record stock prices.”

US planned layoffs rise in October: Challenger report
“The number of planned layoffs at U.S. firms rose 13.5 percent in October on cuts in the pharmaceutical and financial sectors, a report on Wednesday showed.”

Regions Discloses HUD Subpoena Related to Mortgages
“Regions Financial Corp. (RF), Alabama’s biggest bank, received a subpoena from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development tied to the origination of mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration.”

Two heavyweight Fed papers argue for stronger policy action
“Nov 5 (Reuters) – Two of the Federal Reserve’s top staff economists make the case in new research papers for more aggressive action by the U.S. central bank to drive down unemployment by promising to hold interest rates lower for longer.”

BofA CEO: Housing Market ‘Fairly Stable’
“Bank of America Corp.BAC +0.22% Chief Executive Brian Moynihan said the U.S. housing market is “fairly stable” at a Wall Street Journal event in New York Wednesday.”

CORONA: Realtors’ home, a decoy for Nigerian rental scam
“Rental scams are mounting in the Inland region, as Heather Stevenson, a real estate broker and team leader for Prudential California Realty, can attest.”

How Federal Reserve and banking policy is accelerating income disparity: Financial obligations ratio soars for renters while declining for homeowners. Problem is, we have less homeowners.
“Current housing policy has been a major windfall for large institutions and investors.  Banks enjoyed a continuous stream of good years as rates slowly dragged down and people became serial refinancers.  Good way for banks to earn fees courtesy of the Fed’s QE maneuvering.  However the results have been negative for the large number of working and middle class Americans.  Many of you have encountered investors bidding prices up on properties here in your own backyard but this trend is nationwide.  In some areas the bidding has been more aggressive (i.e., San Francisco) but overall, the nation has seen a big jump in home values.  However new data continues to highlight how this current policy is really benefitting a small group of Americans.  While rental vacancy rates reach decade lows, homeownership rates are also reaching multi-decade lows.  Not hard to do when a large portion of the market is coming from the investor crowd.”

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?”