What everyone else on Redmol is talking about!
Wow! Good news!
Fannie Mae is updating the policy that pertains to multiple mortgages to the same borrower.Fannie Mae’s current policy limits the number of one- to four-unit financed properties in which the
borrower may have an individual or joint ownership interest to four financed properties when the mortgage being delivered to Fannie Mae is secured by an investment property or second home. The limitation on the number of mortgages currently being financed applies to the total number of properties financed, not just the number of mortgages sold to Fannie Mae. Fannie Mae is modifying this policy to allow investor and second home borrowers to own five to ten financed properties if they meet certain eligibility and underwriting and delivery requirements as outlined in this Announcement. Unless otherwise stated, these requirements apply to all mortgage loans whether underwritten manually or through Desktop Underwriter® (DU®).
This is HOT! BUY BUY BUY!
Has the real estate bubble bottomed out? Are we in for a bright new future? Well, if you listen to the media, you have basically two answers - "yes, and we are close to the bottom" and "hell no".
Some media companies that cover real estate like Inman and Internal Herald Tribune (among a plethora of others) are championing the renewed surge of buyer enthusiasm in the market.
Huffington Post, on the other hand, are saying that the bottom is yet to be seen and that we should prepare for the worst. In fact, the real blood is yet to be spilled, according to this blog post:
Existing Home Sales rose month-over-month in Dec. Everyone is giddy over the possible implications –signs of a robust reversal in the housing market leading the consumer and banks out of the devastating asset valuation nose dive. Of course, this will lead to asset price mark-ups and a ‘v’-shaped, full-blown economic recovery. That would be nice.
But it can’t happen this way and accepting the existing home sales data without looking inside the numbers will lead to incorrect assumptions about the housing market and subsequent losses if you make bets according to the faulty data.
Yes, on a national basis existing home sales were up 6.5 over November but also down 3.5% from Dec of last year. This is just one blip up like four or five others we have seen in the past year - they are always greeted the same way. A large percentage of this came from CA so let’s focus there because other bubble states are very similar. The overall month-over-month rise was a function of crashing prices, lower rates and the CA law SB1137 keeping a flood of REO inventory off of the market. This is all good stuff…or is it.
It’s All About Organic Sales
Organic sales - me selling a home to you - gauges to true health of the housing and mortgage markets and are at record lows. Two years ago organic sales were 95% of all sales and in Dec they made up 42.5% of all sales in CA. Foreclosure-related sales make up the rest. Nationally in December, only 55% of all sales were organic. The foreclosure market is now the housing market crowding out Ma and Pa Homeowner who can’t compete against banks and servicers ‘dumping’ properties.
Organic sales plummeting means that home owners are not freely able to transact. This tells me a few things a) that home owners are stuck upside down in their home and can’t sell b) the all-important move up buyer is non-existent and can’t even afford to buy the home they presently live in given present-day sensible lending guidelines c) home owners with equity can’t sell their home in order to get the down payment for the new home. Organic sales plummeting is a leading indicator to foreclosures that most have not put together yet.
Are Falling Values Good for Housing?
The pundits preach that falling values are great for housing because more people can buy. That is not the whole story. In this market after such a devastating past year and a half for home prices, lower prices are a leading indicator of two things – more loan defaults and more zombie home owners ‘stuck’ in their home unable to sell or refi.
Both of these are a leading indicator of future home price depreciation. Thus, the negative feedback loop in housing that has devastated the sector.
Show me a month where a) organic sales rise b) values stay flat or rise and c) new loan defaults and foreclosures stay flat or drop d) foreclosure related sales rise - that would be a positive. At present, ‘d)’ is the only factor in place.
Those citing a drop in inventories as the ‘mustard seed of hope’ forget that from Dec through Feb many that had no luck selling the prior year keep their homes from the MLS awaiting the Spring selling season. Inventory always surged from Mar to May. Additionally, they also forget about ’shadow inventory’ in the form of REO that is not listed. Realty Trac said in a recent story that they show that only about a third of all REO is listed and trackable as inventory. The rest is sitting rotting at the banks/servicers. These numbers are very close to numbers I have quoted in the past through independent research.
A Flood of REO Properties About to Hit
Looking forward a few months, the REO inventory ‘wave’ that has built up in the past 12-months is about to hit hard. In CA, the SB1137 law exacted on Sept 5th forced a 60-day moratorium on Notice-of-Defaults and Notice-of-Trustee Sales. A Notice-of-Trustee Sale is needed before an insti can take a home to foreclosure. The law essentially kicked the can down the road where all of the inventory will hit as the Spring/Summer selling season kick off. In this respect, the plan worked.
Where do we stand on sales?

So who do we believe? There's so much jitter and fritter that everyone and anyone's an expert. If you have enough fear in the market, speak up and people will listen.
And people thought that the last real estate boom caused by the low interest rate (i.e. cheap money) was bad. This is like throwing gas gas truck into a wildfire in hopes of extinguishing it:
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Lobbyists are pushing the Treasury Department to consider a plan to purchase mortgage-backed securities in the hopes of driving mortgage rates to as low as 4.5%, an industry source said.
Last week's Fed move drove mortgage rates down to 5.5%, from 6.06% a week earlier. The Fed said on Nov. 26 that it would purchase up to $500 billion in mortgage-backed securities from Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie Mae, and that it would buy another $100 billion in direct debt issued by those firms.
What's next? Maybe the Feds will decide to sell human eggs that they farm from homeless women to rich couples whose wives are infertile.
I do not know what the long term repercussion of such large government intervention in the economy. Just like the multi-billion dollar bailout of the Big 3 auto makers is doomed to fail, this might be another one of those "oops" moments in economic history.
Politicians fail to realize correction almost ALWAYS follows any type of economic boom. The only way that the economy will heal itself is to let it! That's the key. Let it heal on its own.
No goverment intervention will do any good in the long run. Let nature take its course. If people need to burn for their financial mistakes, then let it be.
Wow. Talk about deal gone bad:
EL CAJON – A Lakeside man should be convicted of killing his real estate agent in February 2007 over a condominium deal, both a defense lawyer and prosecutor told a jury Friday.
I know there are a lot of bad agents out there, especially those who claim to serve the buyer's best interest. I wouldn't be surprised if this was a flip deal where the buyer was stuck on top of the market. Probably upside down with huge negative cashflow.
Ok, but if that happened to me, i'd probably go postal too.