BUENA PARK

May 282013
 
Fortunately, FHFA's Ed DeMarco Isn't Going Anywhere

Perhaps the news of Edward DeMarco’s ouster as head of the FHFA was premature. I wrote last month that the head of GSEs Edward DeMarco faces replacement, unfortunately. The political left hates him because he won’t let them buy votes by reducing mortgage principal on their constituent’s loans. The political right was angry with him for vigorously pursing buy-backs from financial services firms that sold the GSEs bad loans (something which DeMarco has quietly stopped.) With the opposition from the political right waning, DeMarco has started to gain favor in the eyes of Conservatives who like that he isn’t willing [Read More...]

May 232013
 
Appraisers now complicit in efforts to reflate the housing bubble

Appraisers are supposed to be impartial third-party arbiters of value. If appraisers do their job right, prices can’t get out of control and rise too rapidly. For quite a while, this system worked. However, probably on instruction from lenders, appraisers are now “hitting the number” and ceasing to be a brake on home price appreciation. Lenders want prices to go up. Appraisers are ostensibly there to protect lenders and buyers by ensuring loans and prices are in line with prevailing values. However, since lenders do want prices to go up, they aren’t coming down on appraisers when the appraised value [Read More...]

May 202013
 
The 10 biggest obstacles to reflating the housing bubble

The federal reserve in conjunction with government officials are working diligently to reflate the housing bubble. Banks are still exposed to $1 trillion in unsecured mortgage debt, so reflating the bubble is considered necessary to restore collateral backing to lender’s bad loans. Whether or not this is a good idea depends on your perspective. If you’re a renter whose tax dollars are being diverted toward this endeavor, these efforts are not particularly welcome. Renters receive no benefit from this intervention, and the resulting high home prices make it more costly for renters to become homeowners, so it’s a double whammy. [Read More...]

May 022013
 
Americans are increasingly foolish with debt

After 30 years of falling interest rates, Americans have become addicted to cheap credit and personal Ponzi schemes. People have learned they can take on large debts, consolidate them at lower and lower interest rates, and service that debt with a portion of their income. It’s a bit like learning to live with a lamprey slowly sucking your financial juices. Often it’s not enough to kill, so it’s a parasite people learn to live with. Oftentimes when people get in trouble with debt, they stop using it. As Jesus would say, “sin no more.” Through falling interest rates, loan consolidations, [Read More...]

Apr 042013
 
Banks are the largest players in the REO-to-rental space

The housing markets are abuzz about the REO-to-rental hedge funds buying up properties. The major players in private equity have committed or spent nearly $3.5 billion dollars to buy single-family homes, rent them out, and hold them for appreciation until the housing bubble reflates and they can get out at near-peak pricing. It’s a good business model. I operate the same on a small scale myself. What makes the investment really attractive is the combined weight of the federal reserve and government policy working diligently to reflate the housing bubble to ensure these REO-to-rental funds make great returns. It may [Read More...]

Mar 262013
 
New down payment requirements could crash housing again

There are two main barriers to home ownership: how much a potential buyer can borrow, and how much they have to put down. Today, I want to focus on the impact of down payment requirements. There are many more potential buyers with little or no savings than there are those with hundreds of thousands in cash in the bank. The size of the potential buyer pool rises or falls dramatically with changes in down payment requirements. A high down payment requirement greatly reduces the potential buyer pool whereas a low down payment requirement greatly increases it. This basic fact is [Read More...]

Feb 072013
 
Sometimes real estate is a ball and chain

Banks have been allowing delinquent mortgage holders to squat while prices rebound because rising prices allows them to recover more on their bad loans. In many cases, the delinquent borrower moves on with their lives and leaves the property vacant with the assumption that the bank will finally foreclose and resell the property. However, banks are under no obligation to foreclose; it’s merely a contractual right. In cases where the house is in a bad neighborhood or in need of extensive repair, it is more cost effective for banks to write the loan down to zero and leave the property [Read More...]

Jan 072013
 
'Fiscal Cliff' deal favors reflation of housing bubble

One of the many misperceptions that emerged from the housing bubble and its associated collapse is the idea that house prices during the bubble were normal and sustainable and that the lower values today represent a depressed value from which the housing market must “recover.” In the case of asset bubbles, prices become greatly elevated from fundamental values, and the price collapse merely restores prices to their fundamental values. In reality, the housing market “recovered” during 2007 and 2008 when prices crashed back down to price levels sustainable by local incomes. Since a true “recovery” with pre-bubble prices also means [Read More...]

Aug 032012
 
Rising home values will halt strategic default

Just as buying a home is an emotional decision, defaulting on the mortgage and giving up a home is too. Any borrower who is deeply underwater and making payments in excess of a comparable rental would benefit financially from strategic default. That’s the math. However, defying the logic, very few loanowners are actually defaulting. People cloak their reasons with intellectual rationalizations, but it’s an emotional decision based on the desire to keep their family home and the ethical considerations that go along with the decision. As with any emotional decision, it may be right, or it may be wrong depending [Read More...]

Jul 172012
 
OC Shadow inventory: What it really is and how large it really is

There is no commonly accepted definition of shadow inventory. This creates a great deal of confusion, and as a result, many casual observers dismiss it as an unreal bogeyman. It’s out of sight, so it’s out of mind. CoreLogic has the most widely accepted definition of shadow inventory, but it’s wrong, and their numbers under report the actual figures. CoreLogic, counts visible bank-owned inventory and borrowers who have been served notice. These properties are visible, and although they may not be on the MLS yet, they are not hiding in the shadows. The real shadow inventory is the total number [Read More...]

Jun 082012
 
Renters deserve better than to subsidize loan owners

As a renter, I find the behavior of lenders, loan owners, and politicians galling. Lenders and loan owners inflated a massive housing bubble and priced me out of home ownership for over a decade. To make matters worse, politicians decided my tax dollars should go toward bailing out both parties and subsidizing this atrocious behavior. Politicians are compelling me to pay money to the very people whose avarice made it impractical for me to obtain a family home. True homeowners, responsible buyers with equity, should also be incensed by this foolishness, but since the housing bubble folly served to increase [Read More...]

Apr 192012
 
Four years of squatting in Buena Park

Long-term homeowner went Ponzi The owner of today’s featured property bought back in 1993 for $250,000. The owner refinanced a few times but paid down his mortgage up through 2005 when he went Ponzi. On 4/6/2005 he refinanced with a $402,500 first mortgage and a $172,500 stand-alone second. The first notice of default was issued on 1/28/2008 which means the latest he made a payment was September of 2007. The house was finally auctioned on 10/6/2011 more than four years later. This owner withdrew over $400,000 in mortgage equity withdrawal and got to squat for a long time. Buena Park [Read More...]

Apr 072012
 
Current trends in the OC housing market: 4-7-2012

The OC Housing News profiles properties for sale each day and presents current market data on each city in Orange County. If you really want to know what’s happening in the OC Housing market, you need to read the OC Housing news and subscribe to the our monthly newsletter. Redfin is the most popular real estate search site in Southern California. They track the most popular listings based on the number of views each receives. Below are some of the most viewed property listings in Orange County. Check them out. 15 VIA HACIENDA Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 92688 — $520,500 [Read More...]

Apr 062012
 
Is the spring real estate price rally going to be cancelled?

Pending sales are up, and economists who use pending sales in their calculations are proclaiming a price rally is in the works. There is one inconvenient fact holding back the bulls: record cancellations. Borrowers are unable to close the deal, and properties are falling out of escrow at increasing rates. Snags leading to more real estate contract cancellations April 01, 2012|By Kenneth R. Harney WASHINGTON — What’s behind the unusually high rate of contract cancellations and settlement delays in the real estate market? With signs of recovery emerging in many parts of the country, shouldn’t deals be zipping along with [Read More...]

Mar 092012
 
realtors fighting against losing commissions on REO rentals

As most regular readers know, I believe the National Association of realtors frequently tells self-serving lies. They try to portray their actions as serving the market or the interests of loan owners, but their first priority is themselves and generating commissions. When the interests of the market are in conflict with the self-serving interests of realtors to generate commissions, the statements and policies of realtors will always favor their own interests. Today’s article is a clear example of their narrow, self-serving focus. Government Foreclosure to Rental Pilot Programs Not Needed in Most Markets, Say Realtors(R) March 1, 2012, 3:40 p.m. [Read More...]

Jan 122012
 
Federal reserve official promotes principal reduction and Ponzi borrowing

The federal reserve exists to create moral hazard. Their policies are designed to lessen the impact of the financial cycle, make booms less of an upswing and make busts less of a drag. However, the recessions at the end of a long boom are necessary. Unsustainable Ponzi-based business plans and lending programs must be purged. If these business and lending practices are allowed to continue, the improper allocation of resources becomes an even larger drag on the economy. Ponzi borrowing from mortgage equity withdrawal is one such lending practice that must be purged from the system. All Ponzi schemes are [Read More...]