The brief period of stabilization in housing appears to be over and the  next leg-down has begun. Mortgage rates are edging higher, foreclosures  are on the rise, and the government programs that supported the sector,  are being phased out. The uptick in bank-owned properties (REO) is  adding to surplus inventory and pushing down prices. A recently released  report from First American CoreLogic shows that "distressed sales  accounted for 29 per cent of all sales nationwide." Nearly one-third of  all home sales are distressed REOs. Also, according to a report from  Clear Capital, "Home prices nationally have dropped 3.9 percent quarter  to quarter, the first quarterly drop in nine months. (Thanks to Diana  Olick, Realty Check, CNBC) Bottom line: More people are being forced  from their homes, the banks are facing bigger losses, and the housing  market is on the skids.
"Two major banks are expecting major increases in foreclosures, by the  end of 2010. " According to the Irvine Housing blog, Bank of America, which currently  forecloses on 7,500 homes every month will see that number rise to  45,000 by December 2010.....
“JPMorgan Chase is forecasting bigger foreclosure numbers in the coming  months. According to a presentation at the end of February, JPMorgan  expects the amount of real estate owned (REO) properties in its  portfolio to reach between 33,000 to 45,000 in Q410. By comparison, in  Q409, REO inventories were at 23,100."
Bank of America's 6X increase in projected foreclosures is a real  eye-popper. It suggests that housing prices (particularly in California)  have quite a bit further to tumble. This will effect everything from  private consumption to state revenues. It's a disaster.
8 million homeowners are behind on their payments! And, that's not  all; mortgage applications dropped 9.6 per cent last week while the  Refinance Index (refis) fell 9 per cent in the same period. So, mortgage  apps are down even though the Firsttime Homebuyer Tax Credit is still in  effect (it ends in two weeks) and, even though this is the "peak season"  for home sales.
Because the banks have been withholding supply to keep prices  artificially high. There may have been an understanding between the  banks and the Fed (a quid pro quo?) to keep inventory low so it looked  like Bernanke's $1.25 trillion Quantitative Easing (QE) program was  actually stabilizing the market. But now that the banks are stuffed with  reserves, there's no need to continue the charade. So the dumping of  backlog homes has begun. That will cause inventories to rise and prices  to fall. More homeowners will slip into negative equity which will lead  to even more foreclosures. It's a vicious circle. If the coming wave of  foreclosures is anything close to Bank of America's projections, there's  a world of pain ahead.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
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