“I suspect that we are coming to the end of the housing downturn, as applications for new mortgages, the most important series, have flattened out. I think that the worse of this may well be over.” - Alan Greenspan, October 1, 2006
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city housing index falls by a record 18%
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Lee County, Florida speeds up foreclosure cases; 25,000 backlogged
Two circuit and four senior judges will start the process with a docket of 902 foreclosure cases Thursday. A recent typical day might have about 100 or more, said Wendy McCabe, civil supervisor.
During the next three to four months, judges will try to work down the buildup caused by more than 2,000 foreclosure filings per month.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Florida’s Existing Home, Condo Sales Rise in October 2008
A total of 10,443 existing homes sold statewide last month. Florida’s median sales price for existing homes last month was $169,700; a year ago, it was $222,200 for a 24% decrease.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Northern Trust to cut 450 jobs
Northern Trust Corp. said Monday it is cutting about 4 percent of its staff to reduce costs and streamline operations amid the weakening economy.
The Chicago-based custody bank and asset manager will cut about 450 jobs. As of Sept. 30, it had about 12,100 employees.
Northern Trust will take a charge of about $20 million to $25 million, or 5 cents to 7 cents a share, during the fourth quarter to cover severance and benefit costs associated with the jobs cuts.
The job cuts are expected to eventually generate $50 million to $60 million in annualized savings for the financial services firm.
Monday, December 8, 2008
Florida Builders Nearly Idle in 3rd Quarter
Saturday, December 6, 2008
Delinquencies, foreclosures rise to 10 percent of US home loans in third quarter
The percentage of loans at least a month overdue or in foreclosure was up from 9.2 percent in the April-June quarter, and up from 7.3 percent a year earlier, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Friday.
The foreclosure crisis continued to be concentrated in states like Florida, where a stunning 7.3 percent of all loans were in foreclosure at the end of September, by far the highest in the country.
In Nevada, the number was 5.6 percent. It was 3.9 percent in California -- compared with about 3 percent nationally.
Distress in the home loan market started about two years ago as increasing numbers of adjustable-rate loans reset to higher interest rates. But the latest wave of delinquencies is coming from the surge in unemployment.
Employers slashed 533,000 jobs in November, the most in 34 years, catapulting the unemployment rate to 6.7 percent, the Labor Department said Friday. "Now it's a case of job losses hitting more across the board," Jay Brinkmann, the trade group's chief economist.
With the economy worsening, the much-anticipated bottom of the housing market likely will be pushed further into the future.
"Things are going to get worse before they get better," said Northern Virginia housing economist Thomas Lawler.
Most troubling, he said, is that the mortgage bankers' report reflects conditions before October's stock market plunge and the resulting economic fallout.
"The number of homes that are in the foreclosure process is so high -- right before the economy has fallen off a cliff," Lawler said.
The U.S. tipped into recession last December, a panel of experts declared earlier this week, and economists fear it could be the longest and most severe in decades. Since the start of the recession, the economy has lost 1.9 million jobs.
Job losses are already having an impact in rising delinquency rates for traditional 30-year fixed rate loans made to borrowers with strong credit. Total delinquencies on those loans rose to 3.35 percent in September from 3.07 percent at the end of June, the Mortgage Bankers Association said.
Lenders appear to be on track to initiate 2.25 million foreclosures this year, up from an average annual pace of less than 1 million during the pre-crisis period, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said this week. In the third quarter, there were about 575,000 new foreclosures, with about 183,000 in California and Florida combined, according to the MBA's data.
There were some modest signs of stabilization. The number of loans that entered the foreclosure process totaled 1.07 percent of all loans in the third quarter, flat from the second quarter.
That number, however, likely reflects changes in state laws that delay or extend the foreclosure process and efforts to work out or modify loans that could still fall back into foreclosure.
Also, the total delinquency rate on subprime adjustable-rate loans remained just over 21 percent, down from a peak of 22 percent in the first quarter.
Of course, roughly 30 percent of Americans own their homes outright and are not reflected in the MBA's survey of about 45.5 million loans.
But with delinquencies still accelerating on many types of loans, efforts to stabilize the U.S. housing market are accelerating. The Treasury Department is now considering a plan to provide loans at 4.5 percent as a way to revive the U.S. housing market. The plan being considered would apply to new home purchases, not refinanced loans.
But some analysts worry that the government's plan will delay a necessary deflation of the housing bubble. With the government effectively lowering mortgage rates, housing prices could be prevented from falling to a more affordable level.
Any government assistance plan should exclude homes that are out of line with rents or other measurements of affordability, said Dean Baker, an economist and co-director of the Center for Economic Policy Research in Washington.
"It's absolutely counterproductive to try and prop up prices," he said.
Meanwhile, president George W. Bush publicly acknowledged for the first time Friday that the U.S. economy is in a recession and worried aloud that Detroit's Big Three automakers may not all survive their mounting troubles.
"Our economy is in a recession," Bush said flatly, speaking to reporters on the South Lawn. "This is in large part because of severe problems in our housing, credit and financial markets, which have resulted in significant job losses."
Friday, December 5, 2008
Bernanke says more needs to be done on foreclosures
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Half-Built Housing Litters Florida Landscape
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Housing market is NOT close to bottoming out
Need to see inventory backlog drop to 8 months' supply
The reality is that even though single-family starts have dropped to 26-year lows of 531,000, they are still running 23% above the prevailing level of new home sales. The worst the inventory-sales ratio ever got in the early 1990s real estate meltdown was 9.4 months' supply. We are currently 18% above that level and almost 40% higher than the 8 months' supply we would need to see before calling an end to the housing deflation phase.
Another 15-20% decline in home prices likely from here
As we saw last week, the Case-Shiller index fell 1.85% MoM or at a 20% annual rate. All 20 cities were down both sequentially and YoY. Home prices are now down a remarkable 22% from the 2007 peaks. With the unsold inventory sitting at the third highest level of the past three decades and mortgage approvals for new home purchases falling to their lowest level in nine years, we believe the laws of supply and demand point to a further 15-20% decline from here. So, of all the things that happened last week in the market, retailing stocks up 17%, the bank stocks up 26%, tech up 9%, the one development that probably has the greatest chance of being reversed is the 60% surge we saw in the homebuilding group.
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Illinois-based Kimball Hill to shut its doors
(Crain’s) — Amid the continued decline in new-home sales, developer Kimball Hill Inc. said Tuesday it would liquidate its assets rather than try to reorganize under Chapter 11 bankruptcy and continue in business.
Four months ago, CEO Ken Love predicted that the Rolling Meadows-based company would emerge from bankruptcy, even though some observers saw that option as a long shot.
Kimball Hill, which filed for protection from creditors on April 23, cited the recession and “escalating turmoil in the credit markets” as the reasons for the decision to begin winding down its operations and focus on selling itself off.
“Given the current housing and financial market conditions, we are simply unable to conduct normal operations while the company continues its sales efforts,” Mr. Love said in a news release. The decision is supported by the company’s senior lenders and the committee of unsecured creditors, Kimball Hill says. The company said it has ample cash to complete homes that are already under construction.
As of July, the company had about 575 employees nationwide.