Thursday, January 23, 2014

New Loan Safeguards Leave Path for Higher-Risk Borrowers

Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg
A "For Sale" sign stands in the yard of a single family home in Denver, Colorado. The... Read More
Nick Wormald, a 29-year-old plumber with good credit, said he was shut out of the housing rebound until he asked the government for help.
Wormald, who bought a three-bedroom home in Haverhill, Massachusetts, for $215,000 in December, was required to provide a down payment of only 3 percent. That’s far below the standard 20 percent down, which he couldn’t afford. And he was spared the burden of buying mortgage insurance. The plumber got the fixed-rate deal through MassHousing, his state’s housing-finance agency, or HFA.
“It’s good that I didn’t have to exhaust all my funds,” said Wormald, who had to spend about 40 percent of his retirement savings for the down payment. “My family helped me out with bed sheets and things for the house. They’re great people but nobody has got $10,000 kicking around to give.”
Every state has one of these little-known agencies, which legislatures set up in the 1960s and 1970s to promote affordable housing. Now, as regulators tighten mortgage rules and big banks resist lending to riskier middle-income Americans, HFAs across the U.S. are rapidly expanding to restore the fading dream of homeownership. The state agencies got a boost from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which exempted them from stricter mortgage regulations that it rolled out this month.
Related:
Some groups like MassHousing buy mortgages from lenders and send them to government-sponsored Fannie Mae to package into securities that the HFAs then sell to investors. The Boston-based group more than doubled its mortgage volume to an all-time high of $1.25 billion in the year ending in June, fueled by the introduction of mortgages that require no insurance.

Record Lending

HFAs in states including California, Idaho, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey, Texas and Virginia also are expanding. The Illinois Housing Development Authority funded more than 3,000 mortgages in 2013, a record, up 60 percent from the prior year. In California, loans with down payment assistance increased 29 percent to a record 6,311 in fiscal 2013 from a year earlier.
“We believe that housing-finance agencies will be able to play a bigger role in whatever the restructured mortgage market looks like in the future,” MassHousing Executive Director Tom Gleason said. “HFAs have already demonstrated that they’re ready to step up to the plate to absorb the risk associated with low down payment borrowers.”
The growth in lending may also help bolster the housing recovery, which hasn’t included many first-time buyers like Wormald. The homeownership rate for U.S. families earning less than the median income -- about $51,000 -- was 48.5 percent in the third quarter. That compares with 53 percent during the peak of the housing boom in 2006, according to Census Bureau.

Escapes Regulations

“First-time buyers have not been participating in the market recovery,” Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, said. “Housing-finance agencies could provide a channel for these buyers.”
HFAs are growing even as the White House and Congress vow to reduce the government’s role in the housing market. In early 2011, according to data firm Black Knight Financial Services, the government backed about 93 percent of new home loans though agencies and companies including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were rescued by taxpayers. The government guaranteed about 84 percent in mid-2013.
The financial protection bureau’s new qualified mortgage rules are designed to prevent a return of the loose lending practices that spurred the housing crash of 2008. The regulations provide a measure of legal protection to lenders that meet guidelines and expose them to legal liabilities if their loans fail certain tests, like charging high fees or requiring payments that, when combined with other debts, exceed 43 percent of the borrower’s income. Exempt HFAs can make any type of loan without exposing themselves to liability under the CFPB’s rules.

Wells Fargo

As stricter regulations make giving mortgages to some lower income borrowers more difficult, banks may increase their lending through HFAs, said Ben Olson, who helped write the CFPB guidelines before leaving the bureau in May. Olson said the loans also would help the banks meet their affordable housing obligations under the federal Community Reinvestment Act.
“One of the things being discussed is taking advantage of the exemption for housing-finance agency loans,” said Olson, an attorney who now represents lenders for BuckleySandler LLP inWashington.
Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), the biggest U.S. home lender, already is doing business with the state groups, spokesman Tom Goyda said. Quicken Loans Inc., the fourth-largest originator last year, is looking to build relationships with HFAs, Bob Walters, vice president of Quicken’s capital markets group in Detroit, said. The agencies have become far more attractive since getting the exemption, he said.

Enormous Risk

“The question is, if the industry gets really interested in this and wants to expand lending, are the HFAs ready for this influx?” Olson said.
Anthony Sanders, a professor of real estate finance at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, said the HFA loans may fail if home prices fall again.
“There are still enormous risks to low down payment loans,” Sanders said. “You’re putting borderline borrowers into risky products again. We’re going to repeat the same experiment, this time at the state level.”
The state groups can expand without a jump in defaults if they maintain their focus on loan servicing, said Stephanie Moulton, an associate professor of public policy at Ohio State University. The agencies have kept defaults relatively low by screening applicants diligently, underwriting loans at affordable terms, requiring borrowers to go through homeownership counseling and contacting them as soon as they fall behind on payments, she said.

Delinquency Rates

The average proportion of loans 90 or more days delinquent was 3.1 percent on June 30, 2012, according to a survey of 30 housing agencies in an October paper by Moulton and University of North Carolina’s Roberto Quercia. That’s lower than the 4.8 percent produced by the FHA, the mortgage insurer that permits down payments as low as 3.5 percent, and the 9.2 percent for subprime loans. The rate was only 1.86 percent for prime borrowers, who tend to have higher incomes and bigger down payments.
“Right now we can tell a story and stand by it that says HFA loans perform better than the same loan made through a non-HFA lender with the same demographic profile,” MassHousing’s Gleason said. “The challenge is how to maintain quality as we get bigger.”

Avoiding Insurance

Wormald, the plumber, makes about $80,000-a-year, $4,000 more than the average income of MassHousing borrowers. His credit score of 720 is below the average of 741. In rare cases the agency makes loans to people with scores below 660, the industry standard for subprime mortgages.
MassHousing’s mortgages are backed by Fannie Mae, which raised its minimum down payment to 5 percent in November. Fannie Mae guarantees 3 percent down mortgages from the state agencies because of their low default rate.
MassHousing and other HFAs also benefit from Fannie Mae’s risk-sharing program, which allows them to avoid requiring mortgage insurance. The program, which Fannie Mae limited to less than a total of $3 billion in mortgages last year, saves borrowers hundreds of dollars in monthly payments.
Agencies that participate in the program -- including those in Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming -- must repurchase loans that become delinquent within the first year. Gleason said MassHousing has only had to buy back one loan.

First-Time Buyers

The Illinois HFA goes further than MassHousing, providing borrowers up to $10,000 in down payment and closing cost assistance. Borrowers bring as little as $1,000 to table. The group’s average credit score is 695.
“Obviously somebody with a lower score is deemed to be more risky,” Mary R. Kenney, the executive director of the Illinois group, said. “With the right loan product and proper underwriting and education for the borrower, that risk can be managed.”
The Idaho HFA, which didn’t pull back from first-time buyers during the housing bust, completed a record $727.9 million of mortgages in fiscal 2013, up 53 percent from a year earlier. The Idaho group gave about 80 percent of loans to first-time buyers, said Gerald M. Hunter, the agency president.
“They can benefit from a lot of the services we offer, and lacking that support, many of those people are not going to become homeowners,” Hunter said.

National Product

HFAs supply only a small fraction of mortgages today. They have funded 3 million mortgages since the early 1970s through the sale of tax-exempt revenue bonds -- and more recently -- mortgage-backed securities, according to an analysis by associate professor Moulton. After peaking at 126,611 loans in 2007, volumes fell to 41,857 in 2009 before rising to 87,848 in 2012, the most recent data available from the National Council of State Housing Agencies.
“These laboratories will get bigger and there’s a potential here to innovate and find a responsible path to homeownership,” said Christopher Mayer, real estate professor at Columbia Business School in New York. “Over time, others will learn and develop best practices.”
Gleason said HFAs across the country are talking about creating a national mortgage product that would be more attractive to large lenders, which tend to shy away from niche state offerings. A national product would also allow for bonds with more geographic diversity and better hedging of credit risk, he said.
Wormald considers his home, a fixer-upper built in 1910, his most valuable asset. He recently finished a five-year plumbing apprenticeship and hasn’t been able to save much money.
“I’m working my way up to having more money,” Wormald said. “I want to get ahead in life. This loan gave me the chance I needed.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Prashant Gopal in Boston at pgopal2@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kara Wetzel at kwetzel@bloomberg.net

Friday, January 17, 2014

Real Estate News And Housing Trends For December 2013

Angela Yglesias

Levesque Realty Westlake Village 
Westlake Village, CA 91362

Cell: 805-490-4944  
Phone: 805-490-4944 

Housing Trends

Dec2013


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National market update

Existing-Home Sales Decline in November, but Strong Price Gains Continue

WASHINGTON (December 19, 2013) – Existing-home sales fell in November, although median prices continue to show strong year-over-year growth, according to the National Association of Realtors®. Read more

Housing Equity 2013

With the end of 2013 closing in, it is time to take stock of the impact from the strong 2013 housing market. Home price growth was robust in 2013 compared to 2012 and is currently forecast by NAR Research to finish the year 11.3% stronger.
Read more

National housing indicators

Existing home sales (November)

4.90*

Existing home median price (November)

$196,300

Housing Starts (November)

1091000*

New home sales (November)

444000*
*Seasonally adjusted annual rate. Source: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.

National economic indicators

Home ownership

3rd Qtr 2012

65.5%

3rd Qtr 2013

65.3%
The homeownership rate in the third quarter 2013 was 65.3 percent, down 0.2 (+/- 0.4)* percentage points from the third quarter 2012 rate of 65.5 percent. The homeownership rates in the Northeast, Midwest, South, and West were not statistically different from the rates a year ago.

New home sales

September 2013

-6.6%

October 2013

+25.4%
Sales of new single-family houses in October 2013 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 444,000. This is 25.4 percent (+/- 19.2%) above the September 2013 estimate of 354,000.
Source: U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

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Regional market updates

View market statistics for your region.

Click on the links below to view data from two different industry sources. Choose information on local prices & state sales from any of 150 metropolitan housing markets prepared by the National Association of REALTORS® or information on sales & price activity from local area markets in 25 states prepared by Clarus MarketMetrics.

Home Ownership matters…to people, to communities, and to America. Why? • For every two homes sold, one job is created in the U.S. • Each purchase generates as much as $60,000 in economic activity over time. Read more
Buying is now cheaper than renting in 74 percent of the nation’s largest cities. Low home prices and “rock-bottom” interest rates as well as tax advantages of homeownership are the reasons why it’s now cheaper to BUY a 2-bdrm home than to rent one. Check out this CNN Money article with the details. Read more
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Consumer tips & hot properties

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Boost Your Credit Score to Buy a Home

Promises of loans for bad credit borrowers, while common amid the housing boom in the early 2000s, are now rare. If you’re interested in buying a home today, know that lenders will carefully check your credit and will rarely approve a loan for someone with seriously bad credit.


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Odd Moving Tips That Really Work

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How Much Mortgage Can I Afford?

When you buy a home, the amount you can spend depends on how much you have in cash to use for a down payment and how much you can borrow. A mortgage lender can prequalify you for a loan, which essentially means the lender will ask you a few questions about your income, credit profile and debt, and give you an estimate of what you can borrow based on those facts. Read more
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Experts Predict 2014 Housing Market

The U.S. real estate market made a robust comeback in 2013, surpassing expectations of many economists, as the combination of low inventories and historically low interest rates caused home prices to rise and even helped fuel bidding wars in some markets, surpassing the expectations of many economists. While positive trends, such as increasing home values, are expected to continue into 2014, mortgage rates are also expected to rise in the coming year and could put a damper on home buyers’ abilities to afford new homes.
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2014 Remodeling Trends

Home remodeling may have taken a backseat during the recession, but not anymore. According to a 2013 Hanley Wood survey, remodeling sales were up 10 percent compared to 2012, and 45 percent of remodelers surveyed expected another 10 percent growth in 2014.Read more

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

FHFA Recovers Nearly $8B from Banking Institutions in 2013

 
As conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, theFederal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), recovered nearly $8 billion on behalf of taxpayers in 2013 through settlements with financial institutions.
FHFA sued 18 financial institutions in 2011 alleging violations of the federal Securities Act of 1933 and in some cases, alleging fraudulent activity, related to sales of private-label mortgage-backed securities to Fannie and Freddie between 2005 and 2007.
The GSEs’ regulator reached settlements with six institutions named in the 2011 suits last year, the largest of which was J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. for $4 billion.
FHFA settled with Deutsche Bank AG for $1.925 billion,UBS Americas (Union Bank of Switzerland) for $885 million, Ally Financial for $475 million, CitiGroup for $250 million, and General Electric Co. for $6.25 million. A non-litigation agreement was also struck outside of court with Wells Fargo Bank in October for $335.23 million.
Of the 18 lawsuits filed by FHFA, 12 are still pending a resolution. Named as defendants in these are: Barclays Bank, Bank of America, Credit Suisse Holdings (USA), First Horizon National Corp., Goldman Sachs & Co., HSBC North America Holdings (Hong Kong Shanghai Banking Corp.), Merrill Lynch & Co., Morgan Stanley, Nomura Holding America, SG Americas (Societe Generale), the Royal Bank of Scotland, and Countrywide Financial.

FHFA remains committed to satisfactory resolution of the remaining actions,” the agency said in a separate statement released last month.
When FHFA stepped in as conservator of the nation’s two largest mortgage financiers in September 2008, the agency was charged with “preserving and conserving” the GSEs’ assets on behalf of taxpayers since Treasury pumped $187 billion of taxpayer dollars into the two companies over the last five years.
In line with this mandate, FHFA has aggressively pursued repurchase claims made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to recoup GSE losses on bad loans sold to them by financial institutions in the private sector in the run-up to the housing crash. After a review of loans purchased by the GSEs during the 2005-2007 timeframe, FHFA determined the loans had different and more risky characteristics than was relayed in the marketing and sales materials used to sell the securities to the enterprises.
FHFA said the complaints filed in 2011 reflected its conclusion that some portion of the losses Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac incurred on these private-label mortgage-backed securities were attributable to misrepresentations and other improper actions by the firms and individuals named as defendants

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

What Buyers And Sellers Need To Know About The End Of Year Housing Market

Source: The Washington Post

Dynamics of the real estate market are always changing, so understanding your housing and financial position, and where you stand in the buying/selling cycle, will allow you to make the best decisions.


Read the full story

Realtor in Thousand Oaks, Conejo Valley

I help people selling their homes get them sold quickly and almost always at 100% asking, even over in some markets. I save my real estate b...