Sep 4, 2010

Jim the Realtor, the Courthouse Steps, and Insanity

Good ol' public trustee auction house bidding action at the courthouse steps courtesy of Jim the Realtor. Despite watching the back and forth bidding action driving the final sales price of this property up, the intriguing point to note here is Jim the Realtor's following acknowledgement [actual YouTube posting by Jim the Realtor]:
"I submitted an offer of $600,000 on this house on July 1st when it was listed as a short sale for $649,000. The sellers didn't respond, but I think the bank would have wanted to know about it."
Keep in mind this home sold at the courthouse steps for $540k, despite Jim the Realtor having offered $600k when the home was originally listed as a short sale. As if we needed any more examples of how flawed the short sale process is. In most instances, loan modification workouts have been as pathetically unsuccessful as well.

Awfully hard to operate under utter incompetence.



Sep 2, 2010

A Positive Spin on Housing

Tired of hearing all of the negative news on housing? I am.

There's no doubt the U.S. housing market and broader economy still face many challenges. In fact, you'd be a fool to ignore this reality. However, at a certain point, it becomes counterproductive to simply concentrate on any one aspect of any subject matter since allowing such one-sided concentration will begin to overshadow and ultimately suffocate other realities.

The discussion on many real estate and economic blogs this past week regarding the latest S&P Case-Shiller Housing Price Index report (released August 31, 2010) is a perfect example of such behavior. The S&P Case-Shiller housing report highlighted some positive numbers yet the analysis immediately shifted to warnings that these positive numbers where merely inflated by the federal tax credit incentive and the predicted second half slowdown would tell a much different, more negative, housing story. Even though I find myself in this more bearish camp, let's look at some other realities from a different perspective.

Despite it being quite apparent that prices have further to fall in many markets, U.S. housing prices have already tanked significantly. In many markets, current residential housing price points are dating back to 2000-2003 levels and you can find great buys dating back to early 1990 levels or beyond. Furthermore, mortgage interest rates are at historically low levels and may slip to even lower levels.

Keeping this in mind, there are reasons to be cautiously optimistic about what could be if you are an investor looking for cash flow opportunities, a first time home buyer looking for their first home, a vacation home hunter, or a private lender looking for strong returns on a low LTV deed of trust investment.

In an op-ed housing article titled, "A Dream House After All", Karl E. Case further illustrates these positive points:
Do the math. Four years ago, the monthly payment on a $300,000 house with 20 percent down and a mortgage rate of about 6.6 percent was $1,533. Today that $300,000 house would sell for $213,000 and a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with 20 percent down would carry a rate of about 4.2 percent and a monthly payment of $833. In addition, the down payment would be $42,600 instead of $60,000.
Does this mean you should go out and buy? Of course not, like any other investment or major purchase, you have to do your homework and weigh the pro's and con's of what you're looking to do based on the circumstances you're confronted with. Even though it's quite clear that the U.S housing market and economy will cause further pain in the lives of countless Americans, there are positive opportunities and data points to take into consideration despite the constant negativity that abounds.

Sep 1, 2010

Even Lower Interest Rates?

The 10-year Treasury note yield to fall below 2%? BofA Merrill thinks so. For those who have managed to come away unscathed from the seemingly endless and ongoing downturn in the economy, mortgage rates are truly at unreal levels.
They expect the Federal Reserve to continue to try to push long-term interest rates lower to support the economy. BofA Merrill now predicts that the benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield will fall below 2% in the first half of 2011, from the current 2.58%.
If you have cash and you're looking to buy a rental property, get a mortgage for goodness sake. With such low interest rates, endless opportunities abound for strong cash flow opportunities. While the banks are giving the money away, use it and keep your cash liquid. Why wouldn't you?

If you can't qualify for a mortgage, join the large crowd. The banks don't want to lend to you. They're doing just fine making money lending back to the government.

Regardless of what camp you're in, there's no denying that interest rates are extremely low and will ultimately trend lower if BofA Merrill's prediction is correct.

Aug 31, 2010

Real Estate and Economic Links

AgentGenius:

Inside Real Estate News:

HousingWire.com:

Calculated Risk:

S&P Case-Shiller Housing Price Index - August 31, 2010 Release

New York, August 31, 2010 – Data through June 2010, released today by Standard & Poor’s for its S&P/Case-Shiller1 Home Price Indices, the leading measure of U.S. home prices, show that the U.S. National Home Price Index rose 4.4% in the second quarter of 2010, after having fallen 2.8% in the first quarter. Nationally, home prices are 3.6% above their year-earlier levels. In June, 17 of the 20 MSAs covered by S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices and both monthly composites were up; and the two composites and 15 MSAs showed year-over-year gains. Housing prices have rebounded from crisis lows, but other recent housing indicators point to more ominous signals as tax incentives have ended and foreclosures continue.

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S & P Case Shiller Home Price Index

San Francisco, San Diego, Minneapolis, and Los Angeles led the charge for year over year gains while Las Vegas, Charlotte, Seattle, and Tampa sustained the largest losses.


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S & P Case-Shiller Home Prices

Free Home in Escondido, CA!


"The company is giving away the house for free. No down payment, no closing cost, no mortgage, no joke. You want it? It's yours.

There's just one catch. The new owner will have to pay to have it hauled away from the lot on the northeast corner of West 11th Avenue and South Escondido Boulevard, where it has been since 1922.

Tom Crowley, a senior associate with Hanson Commercial, said he has heard the move will cost more than $10,000, but less than $20,000.

The new owner also should be aware that the 800-square-foot, single-story house is a fixer-upper. It has no floor, its roof needs repairs and all its fixtures need to be replaced."


Free Home in Escondido, CA
Marketing, marketing, marketing! Despite the nice offer, this home clearly doesn't appear to be much of a deal after factoring in the real costs of getting this property renovated and that's if the house doesn't fall apart during the moving process!

Thanks, but no thanks. You can keep this one, Mr. Crowley!

In case you see it differently, check out our good "Haulin' House" friends over at HGTV to help with the move.


Aug 30, 2010

Foreclosures and the Higher-End Housing Market





No real surprise that the foreclosures are starting to have a larger impact on the higher-end housing market. If you had money in savings, investment accounts (or any other vehicle), and access to credit, you have had an opportunity to throw good money after bad. Unfortunately, even for those who have money, there's only so long you can do so waiting for the economy to turn.

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