Friday, December 28, 2007

Home buyers wait for better deals

Affordability remains low even as unsold housing hits record high

Friday, December 28, 2007

J.W. Elphinstone / Associated Press

NEW YORK -- The upside to a housing slump is cheaper homes. But many prospective buyers don't see bargains yet, especially as stricter lending standards qualify only the cream of the credit crop.

While some markets like south Florida, Las Vegas and the central valley of California have seen sharp declines in home prices -- up to 20 percent by some measures -- overall national statistics show a much less dramatic drop so far.

Home prices fell 0.4 percent nationally in the third quarter, according to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight. That's the first decline after 50 straight quarters of appreciation averaging 1.62 percent per quarter. On Wednesday, the U.S. Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index, another home price tracker, said prices dropped a record 6.7 percent in October from a year ago.

While the supply of unsold homes is at a record high and forecasts of further price depreciation and swelling inventories bode well for buyers, housing affordability still remains low. The decrease in housing prices has only begun to eat into the nearly 13 years of quarterly price gains.

The National Association of Home Builders said in November that only 42 percent of all homes sold in the third quarter were priced low enough to be affordable for families earning the national median income of $59,000. That's down from 61.5 percent in the third quarter of 2001, when incomes and, more importantly, home prices were lower during this decade's recession.

Colorado Springs, Colo., real estate agent Terry Shattuck said only those who need to move are motivated buyers these days.

"The apartment dwellers and those just looking for a change are holding back, either afraid to buy right now, or are waiting for prices to drop," he said. "Few are looking to upgrade until this whole thing shakes out."

Renters Italo and Alexandra Subbarao are biding their time in what they call a pricey Chicago market. They want to buy a two-bedroom condo close to downtown by next summer, but are torn about what to do.

"If the prices came down a little bit more we'd certainly be more apt to go for it without hesitation," said Italo, a physician. "But we know it's a significant investment. There is uncertainty in the market and that gives us uncertainty."

Consumers don't want to buy a house until they know the market's hit bottom, said Bernard Baumohl, managing director of the Economic Outlook Group based in Princeton, N.J.

"There's certainly no incentive to buy if in a month or two from now that same house will be cheaper," he said.

Most forecasters say that's a good bet. Moody's Economy.com and Banc of America Securities predict prices will tumble 15 percent from peak to trough, which they forecast won't occur until early 2009.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

October home prices fall by record 6.7 percent

Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Stephen Bernard / Associated Press

NEW YORK -- U.S. home prices fell in October for the 10th consecutive month, declining a record 6.7 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index.

"No matter how you look at these data, it is obvious that the current state of the single-family housing market remains grim," said Robert Shiller, who helped create the index, in a statement today.

The previous record decline was a drop of 6.3 percent, recorded in April 1991.

Home prices fell 1.4 percent in October compared with the previous month.

The S&P/Case-Shiller home price index tracks prices of existing single-family homes in 10 metropolitan areas compared with a year earlier. A broader index of 20 metropolitan areas fell 6.1 percent. Among the 20 metropolitan areas used in the broader index, 11 posted record monthly declines.

Miami posted the largest loss among the 20 markets reviewed. Home prices in the Miami metropolitan area declined 12.4 percent in October compared with the same month last year.

Only three areas -- Charlotte, N.C., Portland, Ore. and Seattle -- posted year-over-year home price appreciation in October, with Charlotte posting the largest gains at 4.3 percent.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Bill lifts taxes on forgiven mortgage

Thursday, December 20, 2007
Deb Price / The Detroit News

WASHINGTON -- President Bush will sign a bill today that will help struggling homeowners by no longer requiring them to pay taxes when their lender forgives part of their mortgage.

The change, says U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Lansing, means more Michigan families will be able to keep their homes during difficult times.

"This guarantees that someone who loses their home in foreclosure or is forced to refinance at a rate below their mortgage does not have insult to injury added by getting another tax bill," said Stabenow, who authored the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act and will attend the signing ceremony.

"In Michigan, we have many middle-class families who are holding on for dear life. And we need to do everything we can to help them," she said.

But Gerald O'Driscoll, a banking expert at the Cato Institute, says that the change could have unintended ramifications of rewarding homeowners for risky behaviors.

"It may seem innocent enough to try to help people in these kinds of jams," he said. "But you can end up with lenders feeling pressure to cut deals they wouldn't have otherwise, and homeowners feeling like they'll get bailed out of risky decisions."

This year, Stabenow said, Michigan has recorded more than 135,000 foreclosures.

In the third quarter of this year, Metro Detroit saw 1 of every 33 households in foreclosure, the second highest level in the country.

Falling home prices and the high jobless rate in Michigan have made it difficult for many homeowners to keep up with their monthly mortgage payments.

If their lender allowed them to refinance a home from a $200,000 loan to a $175,000 loan, for example, they would be hit with a tax bill as if the $25,000 were income.

"Lenders want you to be able to keep your home and pay your payments," Stabenow said. "It's common for lenders to forgive a portion of a loan in refinancing if it's above what they believe the house could sell for."

Couple challenge lender

They file suit to stop auction of their West Bloomfield home

Thursday, December 20, 2007
Mike Martindale / The Detroit News

PONTIAC -- An Oakland County Circuit judge is to decide today whether to stop a mortgage lender from foreclosing on a West Bloomfield Township couple and allowing their home to be sold at a sheriff's auction.

Sheryl and Jeffrey Fox were slated for a sheriff's sale Dec. 10 but obtained a temporary restraining order against Homecomings Financial, a Dallas-based lender being sued along with GMAC and The Bank of New York Trust Co. under the Michigan Consumer Protection Act.

In a lawsuit before Oakland Circuit Judge Nanci Grant, the Foxes allege that despite their efforts, they were not permitted to restructure their adjustable rate mortgage and make affordable payments. The Foxes seek a preliminary injunction against foreclosure or sale until the lawsuit is resolved.

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"If Shakespeare was alive today, he wouldn't write how 'First we kill all the lawyers,' " said attorney Marilyn Kohn, representing the Foxes. "He'd say: 'First we kill all the subprime lenders.' "

The Detroit News has reported how the troubled economy has hit especially hard in Metro Detroit, where more than 70,000 homes have been subject to foreclosure filings since January 2006. The legal challenge comes as several ambitious plans have been unveiled to help people facing foreclosure, including restructuring debts and rolling back interest rates.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has said direct government assistance should be provided to homeowners facing foreclosure.

Among proposed new regulations to take effect after a 90-day period, in which the public can comment, is a requirement that lenders qualify adjustable mortgages at both the lowest and the highest possible interest rates. That would eliminate borrowers being approved strictly on introductory "low" rates only to see them later spike out of reach.

Kohn told Grant how the Foxes obtained their mortgage in 2003 and saw payments go from less than $1,400 a month to more than $2,600 a month. They could not keep pace, tried to restructure the loan and haven't made any payments since June.

Kohn said risks of losing the three-bedroom ranch were never disclosed. She said her law firm has attempted since April to restructure the loan -- which jumped from 7.5 percent to 12.6 percent within the past year -- and even submitted financial records requested by Homecomings. Instead of a new contract, they received a foreclosure notice last month.

GMAC attorney Stephen King countered that "everything" was in the couple's agreement and said the lenders are being demonized.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Sensible, voluntary pacts should ease mortgage ills

Friday, December 7, 2007
The Detroit News

Voluntary agreements between lenders and borrowers -- helped by government when possible -- should be the key to working out the mortgage crisis afflicting the nation. Arbitrary decrees changing the terms of contracts and taxpayer bailouts of either borrowers or lenders would severely damage the U.S. credit market.

The program worked out in legislation that has passed the Michigan House seems ideal in this regard. Under the legislation, the Michigan State Housing Development Authority would be authorized to sell bonds to support the refinancing of adjustable-rate mortgages to 30-year, fixed-rate housing loans.

Under the House proposal, the Michigan agency wouldn't directly handle individual mortgage refinance deals, but instead buy them from lending institutions. The legislation would encourage such institutions to refinance the adjustable-rate mortgages, which are slated to re-set to higher rates early next year from lower "teaser" rates.

The housing authority would sell primarily revenue bonds -- which would be supported by the mortgage payments -- to private investors. The refinanced mortgages would be insured by private insurers.

The state treasury and state taxpayers would be insulated from the risk of refinancing the mortgages, since public, tax-backed bonds would not be used to finance the loans. But financially stressed borrowers could get some certainty with fixed rate home loans.

Legislation is required to lift the housing agency's cap on outstanding bonds and allow it to purchase the refinanced mortgages. Currently, it is restricted to dealing with original mortgages for lower-income home buyers.

The program wouldn't help everyone in trouble with their mortgages, including people already in foreclosure proceedings. But, as Mary Townley of the housing authority notes, it might help forestall a new round of foreclosures for many homeowners.

President Bush Thursday announced a plan, worked out with lenders, to freeze some adjustable-rate mortgages for five years and help other homeowners refinance to fixed rate loans. Many would be eligible for refinancing, since they would have qualified for prime interest rates even though they are paying down subprime mortgages -- which probably explains why four out of five homeowners with subprime mortgages are still making their payments.

It is in the interest of lenders or those who hold the mortgages to retain them as paying assets rather than have a glut of homes in foreclosure, likely to be sold at a loss. But this should be a voluntary process, and taxpayers should not be on the hook for bailouts either of improvident lenders or unwise borrowers. Government bonds backed by taxpayers should not be used to pay for bailouts of either.

Tightened regulations registering bank loan officers in Congress and licensing mortgage brokers in Michigan should be adopted, but Congress should be wary of bills introduced in committees headed by U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., and U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill.

The House's anti-predatory lending package, critics contend, would wrap banks in so much potential for litigation that it would result in credit drying up for many customers and impose new costs on lending institutions when they need it least.

Durbin's bill would allow bankruptcy referees to simply change the rates on mortgages arbitrarily.

That would reduce the incentive of homeowners to work out a livable payment program with their lenders.

There is still going to be hardship for overstretched homeowners and problems for lenders. But sensible programs should help limit the damage.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Mortgage Pain Hits Prudent Borrowers

Fannie Adds More Fees on Loans -- Even for Home Buyers
With Good Credit; 'Jumbo' Rates Resume Upward Trend

By JAMES R. HAGERTY and RUTH SIMON
December 11, 2007; WSJ

Some of the costs of cleaning up the nation's mortgage crisis are beginning to hit innocent bystanders: people who pay their bills on time and avoid excessive debt.

Fannie Mae, the giant government-sponsored mortgage investor, last week raised costs for many borrowers by quietly adding a 0.25% up-front charge on all new mortgages that it buys or guarantees. On a $400,000 mortgage, that would mean an extra $1,000 in fees, almost certain to be passed on to the consumer. Freddie Mac, the other big government-sponsored mortgage investor, is expected to impose a similar fee soon, according to a person familiar with the situation.


The new charge from Fannie Mae adds to the general gloom over the housing market. It comes as mortgage interest rates are heading up again after a recent dip -- as well as increases in mortgage-insurance costs, tougher requirements on down payments and other moves by lenders to ration credit. And last month, Fannie and Freddie imposed surcharges for mortgage borrowers with lower credit scores.

Loan applications have been so slow lately, says Lou Barnes, a mortgage banker in Boulder, Colo., that it feels like "our client base today is limited to people who don't read the newspaper or watch television."

Still, mortgage loans remain available for many people at rates that are attractive by historical standards. People with good credit scores and enough savings to pay a substantial down payment can still get 30-year fixed-rate mortgages of as much as $417,000 for 6.14% on average, according to HSH Associates, a financial-publishing firm in Pompton Plains, N.J.

But so-called jumbo loans -- those above $417,000, the ceiling on mortgages that can be bought or guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie -- have become much more expensive in relation to smaller mortgages.

The average rate for a fixed-rate jumbo loan is 7.13%, according to HSH. That is down from a recent high of 7.46% but remains lofty in comparison with "conforming" loans, those that can be sold to Fannie or Freddie. The premium paid for jumbo loans ballooned in August, when many loan investors began shunning mortgages lacking a guarantee from Fannie or Freddie.

Fannie said its new 0.25% fee will apply to loans sold by lenders to Fannie or placed into pools of guaranteed loans backing mortgage securities as of March 1, 2008. Lenders are likely to start adding that fee over the next few weeks because there is often a delay of several months between loan terms being offered to consumers and the sale of a completed loan to Fannie.

In a statement, Fannie said the new fee is needed "to ensure that what we charge aligns with the risk we bear." The National Association of Home Builders labeled the fee "a broad tax on homeownership." More than 40% of all mortgages outstanding are owned or guaranteed by Fannie or Freddie.

The fee is the latest in a series of moves by Fannie and Freddie that raise the cost of credit for some borrowers. Late last month, they imposed surcharges that affect mortgage borrowers who have credit scores below 680, on a standard scale of 300 to 850, and who are borrowing more than 70% of a property's value. For example, someone with a credit score of 650 would pay a surcharge of 1.25% of the loan amount for a mortgage to be sold to Fannie. On a $300,000 loan, that would mean extra fees of $3,750. The fee could be paid in cash or in the form of a higher interest rate than would normally apply.

Fannie also is raising down-payment requirements for loans it purchases or guarantees in places where house prices are falling, which by some measures is most of the country. In these declining markets, lenders will need to cut by five percentage points the maximum percentage of the home's estimated value that can be financed. For instance, for types of loans that Fannie normally would allow to cover up to 100% of the estimated value, the ceiling now is 95% in declining markets.

Standards continue to tighten in other areas. Lenders that make the largest loans and offer the best rates to borrowers seeking jumbo mortgages want borrowers to show not only a good credit score but also enough reserves to cover as much as three years of mortgage payments and carrying costs, says Melissa Cohn, a mortgage broker in New York. Borrowers taking out interest-only loans are being qualified based on their ability to make the full payment once the interest-only period ends and not just the lower initial payment, she says.

Lenders in recent months have sharply scaled back on loans that don't require the borrower to make a down payment or provide proof of income and savings. The bar for credit scores is rising, too. "Historically, lenders would consider top-tier credit [a score of] 680," says David Soleymani, a mortgage broker in Los Angeles. "Now, many of those lenders want to see a 720," but are rewarding such borrowers with better rates, he says.

Mortgage insurers are also raising their prices and tightening their standards. Mortgage insurance is typically required when a borrower finances more than 80% of a home's value. During the peak of the housing boom, many borrowers got around this requirement by taking out a so-called piggyback mortgage, which combined a mortgage with a home-equity loan or line of credit. But demand for mortgage insurance has climbed as most lenders have stopped promoting piggyback loans.

Triad Guaranty Insurance Corp., Winston-Salem, N.C., this month stopped providing mortgage insurance on option adjustable-rate mortgages, which carry low introductory rates but can lead to a rising loan balance. Triad also said it would no longer provide mortgage insurance for loans that exceed 97% of a home's value. It set a 90% threshold for loans in four states where home prices have been dropping fast: Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada. "We want to look for people who have more equity rather than less equity" in their homes, says Triad Vice President Jerry Schwartz.

PMI Group Inc., a Walnut Creek, Calif., mortgage insurer, this fall stopped writing mortgage insurance for borrowers with credit scores below 620 who are financing more than 95% of their home's value. PMI also has boosted prices for most borrowers who have credit scores of 620 and higher with loan-to-value ratios above 95%. Borrowers with credit scores between 620 and 659 who are financing more than 97% of their home's value face the biggest increase. The monthly premium for a $200,000 mortgage will increase by $123 to $283.

Starting next month, MGIC Investment Corp. will no longer insure loans when income and assets aren't fully documented unless borrowers can show they are self-employed and are either buying a home they intend to live in or are refinancing the mortgage on their home without pulling cash out. MGIC also will no longer insure loans in California and Florida where the borrower has less than 5% equity and is raising premiums for certain borrowers. "This is the first significant price change since the mid-1980s," says Michael Zimmerman, MGIC's vice president of investor relations.

With standards tightening, some borrowers who might previously have looked for a subprime mortgage or 100% financing are turning to loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration, which for a fee insures mortgages as much as $362,790. Peter Lansing, a mortgage banker in Denver, says that FHA loans accounted for more than half of his business last month, compared with less than 10% a year ago.

Friday, December 07, 2007

Battle Lines Form Over Mortgage Plan

By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS, SERENA NG and JOHN D. MCKINNON
December 7, 2007; Wall Street Journal

WASHINGTON -- In unveiling a plan to help more than one million struggling homeowners, the Bush administration and the mortgage industry have embarked on a controversial project: picking winners and losers from the rubble of the subprime-mortgage meltdown.

Under the deal, formally released yesterday, the industry would voluntarily help as many as 1.2 million homeowners who are heading for trouble paying their subprime mortgages but aren't yet lost causes. For some homeowners, loan-servicing companies will agree to freeze mortgages at their low introductory rates. In other cases, credit counselors or loan servicers will walk mortgage holders through refinancing processes.

The deal won't provide relief to many subprime-mortgage holders: These include borrowers who are now in foreclosure, have already refinanced their homes or are more than 60 days delinquent on more than one payment over the past year. In some cases, people with good credit scores will be excluded. Also left out are those deemed able to afford the higher interest rates scheduled to replace their introductory rates over the next two years.

The initiative could help stabilize falling home prices and rising foreclosure rates, buoy the mortgage market and provide a modicum of comfort to investors watching the housing crisis bleed into the broader economy.

But it also sets what promises to become a battle line as the subprime crisis plays out over the coming election year. Some critics, especially Democrats, say the plan doesn't go far enough to protect vulnerable homeowners against foreclosure. Others, including some homeowners, as well as those who have watched from the sidelines as home prices have soared in recent years, charge that the plan amounts to a bailout for financially reckless borrowers.

The agreement covers homeowners who have taken out subprime mortgages, those offered typically to high-risk borrowers. About 1.8 million subprime loans are adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, that carry low introductory rates that are set to expire in the next two years and adjust upward. These ballooning mortgage payments would threaten to produce a wave of foreclosures and a spiral of lower home prices and tightening credit.

The housing crisis is spreading beyond this relatively small subprime universe, causing turmoil on Wall Street and raising the specter of an economic slowdown. In the third quarter, home foreclosures hit their highest rate since at least 1972, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Prime adjustable-rate loans -- not covered in the industry's rescue plan -- accounted for 18.7% of mortgages starting foreclosure, the second-highest proportion behind subprime adjustable-rate loans. The overall delinquency rate is the highest since 1986, with some 2.64 million borrowers nationwide behind on payments for their first-lien mortgages for residences.

Nouriel Roubini, an economist at New York University and chairman of research firm Roubini Global Economics, calls the plan "a step in the right direction." But Mr. Roubini says the plan won't turn things around. "Over the next three years, we're still going to see a housing recession that leads to defaults and foreclosures," he predicts. "Anything we do now is on the margins."

The agreement, which was hammered out with investors and mortgage companies under the auspices of the Treasury Department, is the centerpiece of the Bush administration's free-market approach to the mortgage crisis and may be as far as it is willing to go in the direction of a full bailout. But pressure is likely to increase as housing and the economy move to the top of the presidential-election agenda. Candidates such as Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards have come out with their own plans, all of which go further than the White House is willing to go so far.

Rep. Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat and chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said he is concerned that the plan sends the wrong message by not helping borrowers who have maintained good credit scores. These scores can run from 300 (bad) to 850 (ideal). According to the plan, homeowners scoring 660 or above will be considered fit to pay their mortgages. Such a rule would punish people who have tried to avoid taking on debt they couldn't handle, Mr. Frank said. He called the decision a "grave error."

Under the new plan, Humberto Goncalves would be on the cusp. The electrician took out an adjustable-rate mortgage when he bought a home in Cranston, R.I., in 2005. He is current on his mortgage and thinks his credit score is about 660. Mr. Goncalves says he is already paying about $2,000 a month. "Anything to keep it from going up would be very helpful," he says. "There's no room for it to go higher."

Gladys and Robert Edmonds believe they should be offered a lifeline as well. The retirees in Tiverton, R.I., aren't eligible for government help because they don't have a subprime loan. Instead, the Edmondses, who live on a fixed income, say they refinanced their home in 2005 by taking out an option ARM, which lets borrowers pay small amounts early but that risks sharp payment increases later.

The couple has run up credit cards trying to keep current on their home payments, which have climbed from $1,480 to about $1,800 and will rise again to more than $2,000 in January. They say they were approached to refinance by a telephone solicitor and that the loan's terms weren't properly explained. "We're not the kind of people to neglect our debts," says Ms. Edmonds.

At its most basic level, the Bush-supported proposal is aimed at stopping and reversing the real-estate market's spreading turmoil. As foreclosures have increased, they have added to the number of houses for sale, depressing prices. Falling prices encourage more people to stop paying their mortgages and go into default, because their homes are worth less than their loans. More homes go into foreclosure.

The program aims to assist borrowers able to keep up with payments at their introductory rates but who will likely fall behind and face foreclosure if their rates go up as scheduled.

According to the plan, homeowners would contact credit counselors or their loan-servicing companies, who would sort them by their credit and payment history and ability to pay. Those 60 days behind on more than one mortgage payment over the past year would most likely receive no assistance, other than credit counseling to talk them through the loss of their homes. In the triage of the mortgage industry, they are considered largely beyond help.

"If the sheriff is at your door hauling out your furniture, and that's the first time you call your lenders, then you're probably too late," said Steve Bartlett, president of the Financial Services Roundtable, a trade association of the country's 100 largest banks, mortgage servicers, insurance companies and mutual-fund companies. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson asked the group to coordinate the industry negotiations, in a forum called the Hope Now Alliance.

The alliance estimates that 600,000 of the subprime borrowers whose rates will reset in the next two years fall into this category. They are likely to lose their homes, or, in Mr. Paulson's words, "become renters."

The 1.2 million borrowers relatively current in their mortgages will be considered for the government-endorsed program. They will pass through the next set of screening to determine whether they can refinance at more-favorable mortgage rates. Some 600,000 borrowers are expected to qualify. These borrowers are expected to be offered counseling and a fast track to secure refinanced mortgages.

The remaining 600,000 won't qualify to refinance their existing mortgage, the alliance estimates. Such borrowers' loan servicers or counselors would determine whether they can afford to pay the higher interest rates once their introductory rates expire. The servicers will assume that those with better credit scores and more equity can afford to pay when their existing loans adjust upward. They would receive no special assistance.

Those who can't afford the higher payments, and who have credit scores below 660 and less than 3% equity in their homes, will get the biggest break from the lenders. They receive a five-year extension on their introductory interest rates, with the possibility that the grace period will be extended. Such a rate freeze would be available only to people who live in the mortgaged properties.

A middle group, who may or may not struggle with the increased interest rates, will have to negotiate individually with their loan-servicing companies to secure a rate freeze, repayment holiday or other relief.

Mortgage-industry officials say they aren't sure how many subprime borrowers will ultimately see their rates frozen.

Mr. Bush, speaking in front of a White House fireplace mantel festooned with greenery and gold ornaments, sought mainly to calm homeowners. "The holidays are fast approaching, and unfortunately, this will be a time of anxiety for Americans worried about their mortgages and their homes," he said.

He said the initiative was focused squarely on borrowers, not on investors. "We should not bail out lenders, real-estate speculators or those who made the reckless decision to buy a home they knew they could never afford," Mr. Bush said. "Yet there are some responsible homeowners who could avoid foreclosure with some assistance."

Treasury Secretary Paulson addressed some of the criticism about the plan's scope. "The approach announced today is not a silver bullet," he told reporters yesterday. "We face a difficult problem for which there is no perfect solution."

The program will be closely watched in markets around the world, where subprime defaults have triggered steep write-downs and constrictions in credit markets. Many banks and investment funds invested in complex securities backed by subprime mortgages, which promised high returns but are now battered and difficult to value.

The rescue package suggests that most investors prefer to give up some interest revenue rather than carry out expensive foreclosures of thousands of homes. But the plan won't reduce their losses by much. Analysts at Barclays Capital Research said in a report that the Treasury's plan could reduce cumulative losses from subprime loans by 0.6 to 1 percentage point, "which is not much relief when losses could reach 13% to 15%."

Investors who hold mortgages, meanwhile, would still bear the risk of the loans under the plan, said Doug Dachille, chief executive of First Principles Capital Management in New York, which invests in some mortgage-backed securities. Creditors would also bear the pain of forgone income from mortgages that under normal market conditions would have brought higher interest income.

"There ought to be costs to both the borrowers and lenders, but right now you're just giving a freebie to homeowners," he says. "They still get to live in their house and benefit from any appreciation in the value of the house over the next few years."

Milton Ezrati, market strategist with money-management firm Lord Abbett & Co., says the plan could undermine the market for mortgage-backed securities. Investors may say, "if you can interrupt my cash flow today, you can do it tomorrow," says Mr. Ezrati.

Another question concerns mortgage servicers, the companies that collect payments on behalf of the eventual debt holder: Can they change the terms of mortgages without being sued by the investors who purchased them?

Jordan Schwartz, a structured-finance partner at law firm Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP, says agreements that govern mortgage securities generally give servicers discretion to modify loans if they consider it to be in the best interest of investors who hold the securities. But any plan that emerges from Washington "won't have the force of law," he says.

George P. Miller, executive director of the American Securitization Forum, a trade association of investors, servicers and other securitization players, said servicers won't receive a guarantee against being sued. But because the plan was created by major industry players, including his group, and was endorsed by the Treasury Department, it offers a substantial shield against lawsuits.

Alan Gulick, a spokesman for Washington Mutual Inc., Seattle, the sixth-largest subprime servicer, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, said the bank is "supportive of the proposal." Mike Heid, co-president of home mortgages at Wells Fargo & Co., the eighth-largest servicer, said his bank played a key role in developing the plan to help consumers who have managed their mortgages well but are "caught in the current whirlwind of market forces."

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Foreclosure mess to get help

White House plan expected to freeze interest rates 5 years

December 6, 2007
BY TODD SPANGLER
FREE PRESS WASHINGTON STAFF

WASHINGTON -- Help from Washington soon could be on the way for subprime borrowers in metro Detroit, one of the hardest hit areas of the country for home foreclosures.

The Bush administration is expected to announce a plan today to freeze interest rates for five years, a person familiar with the plan told the Free Press on Wednesday.

A congressional aide speaking on condition of anonymity because the plan is not coming from Congress confirmed an Associated Press report that an agreement between lenders and the administration has been reached.

The aide could not provide details about how many borrowers would qualify or which loans -- and from what period -- would fall under the agreement.

Another aide, to Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, a Livonia Republican and a member of the House Financial Services Committee, said the congressman received confirmation of the report from the committee.

President George W. Bush's schedule indicated he would make an announcement on housing issues from the White House today followed by a news conference at the Treasury Department.

Even with many specifics unknown, reaction in metro Detroit was generally positive.

"They're doing something, and that's a good thing," said Deborah Jones, president of the Detroit Alliance for Fair Banking, a group that monitors banking practices and works to ensure credit access for underserved communities.

Jones has spent months working with families who are grappling with foreclosures and negotiating on their behalf with lenders, trying to reach deals to allow people to keep their homes and prop up neighborhoods threatened by sinking property values when homes are foreclosed.

Any plan, she said, will have to be far-reaching to help people in metro Detroit. From July 1 to Sept. 30, the region ranked second highest among the nation's largest 100 metro areas in the rate of foreclosure filings, with 1 for every 33 households. According to RealtyTrac, which tracks foreclosed properties, only Stockton, Calif., had a higher rate.

Michigan's housing problems are exacerbated by the state's 7.7% unemployment rate -- which leads the nation.

That, in itself, could be an issue for how effective the program could be: In other areas of the nation, the question is how much a person can afford to pay. For some in southeastern Michigan, it's a question of whether the person is working.

"Will this person have an income stream in the near future?" Meg Burns, director of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's Office of Single Family Program Development, said Monday. "If they have no job, how long can this person make this payment?"

McCotter said Tuesday: "The best way to stop homeowner foreclosures at this point is to make sure people have jobs."

The administration agreement with lenders is a signal that government is catching up with the problem, but it is far from the only one. In Lansing, the state House passed legislation Tuesday authorizing lower, fixed rate loans for homeowners through the Michigan State Housing Development Authority. The bill has a less certain fate in the Senate.

Capitol Hill has been increasingly interested as well. The House has passed legislation to modernize the Federal Housing Administration, raising the amounts the agency can loan for homesand strengthening laws to restrict predatory lending.

Another proposal, by Democratic Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow, would forgive the taxes a homeowner gets if he or she settles a mortgage for less than the original value of the loan.

"It's not happening fast enough," Stabenow said. "This is a fundamental issue in the economy. There needs to be quick action."

That delay is also part of the debate. While some are pushing for immediate action, others in Congress say quick fixes could lead to more problems and a new wave of foreclosures down the road.

Rep. Tim Walberg, a Tipton Republican, voted against the legislation aimed at restricting predatory lending, for instance, believing it was no more than a political move and could result in less money being made available for home lending.

That doesn't mean, however, that he's against regulating the industry; in fact, he says he believes Michigan -- one of a dozen states with no licensing program for those selling mortgages -- needs more control over agents.

"There are certain regulations even a conservative like me thinks are appropriate," he said Tuesday.

Another key measure likely to be passed soon is an appropriations bill including $200 million for nonprofits offering credit counseling, a measure that may seem modest on its face but is touted by industry experts, administration officials and lawmakers as a significant means of getting lenders and homeowners together before foreclosures begin.

Meanwhile, policy makers, lenders and fair-housing advocates like the Washington-based Center for Responsible Lending are waiting for details of Bush's plan.

On Tuesday, the president said there have to be limits: "In other words," he said, "we shouldn't be using taxpayers' money and say, 'OK, you made a lousy loan, therefore we're going to subsidize you.' "

That leaves questions about who will qualify and how investors -- who may hold securities backed by subprime loans as investments -- may react.

"On the other side, there are many low- and moderate-income homebuyers who either took out fixed rate mortgages or already saw their" adjustable rate mortgage "reset to a higher rate," said Dean Baker, codirector of the Washington-based Center for Economic Policy Research, on his blog Tuesday. "This freeze does nothing for them."

Rep. John Dingell, a Dearborn Democrat, said he wants to make sure lenders are part of the solution and is concerned the Bush plan could be a voluntary one.

"Anytime this administration says it wants something voluntary, it means something that looks good that doesn't do much," he said Tuesday.

But Democratic New York Sen. Charles Schumer, chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, said Wednesday: "The $64,000 question remains: Will investors who might balk at going along with this be able to maintain legal roadblocks and prevent the plan from going in to effect?"

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Waiting for the well-off shoppers

Some high-end retailers are already feeling the pinch

November 26, 2007 Detroit Free Press

BY SUSAN TOMPOR
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

Will the McSpending stop now that the McMansions aren't worth top dollar anymore?

This holiday season, economists and others are growing increasingly concerned about whether upper middle-class consumers will quit indulging themselves with little -- and not-so-little -- luxuries now that home values have slumped, adjustable rate mortgage payments are shooting up and SUVs are more expensive to back out of the garage.

Wealthier consumers, by their nature, spend a lot of money. So if they stop spending on things like Coach handbags, Starbucks coffee or trips to Nordstrom -- especially when the economy seems on shaky footing already -- it's a big deal.

It's a concern that could easily spell trouble for the U.S. economy.

"If those consumers pull back significantly, it adds to the recession risk," said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com.

Zandi notes that in recent years, a booming housing market and a robust stock market have meant that some higher middle-income consumers -- those with incomes of $75,000 to $150,000 -- have been able to trade up and, yes, spend more money.

Yet, this season it's getting to be more fashionable to be frugal.

"There are some preliminary signs that the higher-end retailers are starting to feel a bit of a pinch here," said Brian Bethune, U.S. economist for Global Insight in Lexington, Mass.

Other points to consider:

• Just since Sept. 19, Coach Inc.'s stock has dropped about 30% to close at $35.91 a share on Friday. Nordstrom Inc. has gotten socked, too -- down about 31% since Sept. 19. Nordstrom's stock closed at $35.72 on Friday.

Nordstrom Inc. reported a 2.4% drop in sales for October at stores open at least a year. Analysts saw this as a sign that luxury retailers are more vulnerable than many once believed when it comes to the credit crunch and the shaky housing market.

• Starbucks Corp. reported its first decline in customer visits ever. And Starbucks CEO Jim Donald said in various interviews that economic headwinds hit stronger than expected.

• Other retailers, such as Polo Ralph Lauren, are also warning about signs of more cautious discretionary spending.

"The higher-end consumer is not immune," warned David Sowerby, a Bloomfield Hills-based portfolio manager for Loomis, Sayles & Co.

Sowerby said that the mortgage mess is hitting some higher-end consumers. Some higher-income, middle-class consumers invested in speculative real estate and lost money in markets like Florida or Arizona when housing values dropped.

Other higher-end consumers lost money if they invested in stocks, too. Wall Street's jitters have led to a 10% correction in the stock market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen from 14,164.53 on Oct. 9 to 12,980.88 on Friday.

Bethune notes that it's difficult to say at this point how many well-off consumers will reduce their overall spending.

And not everyone is in a panic.

Marc Voss-Stadler, director of credit risk management for Daimler Financial Services Americas in Farmington Hills, told me that there is a strong correlation between luxury car sales and housing prices.

Rising housing prices have no doubt helped fuel luxury vehicle sales -- especially as some consumers borrowed against their home equity to finance their cars or SUVs.

But Voss-Stadler said it's difficult to say whether automakers will see things go in reverse now that home prices are pulling back. He said the launch of the C-Class for Mercedes, for example, has boosted financing of Mercedes-Benz products through the financial group.

The new 2008 Mercedes-Benz C-Class sedan will begin pricing at $31,975 for the new C300 Sport Sedan.

Voss-Stadler said the U.S. economy has shown other signs of strength. He noted that capital spending has continued for Daimler truck fleet sales.

"We don't expect deterioration beyond what we've experienced," he said.

But he acknowledged that it's unknown right now how the housing fallout will impact consumer spending overall. "Is fear going to spread?" he asked.

California, which has had its share of housing troubles, represents 30% of Mercedes-Benz Financial's loan portfolio.

Diane Swonk, chief economist for Mesirow Financial in Chicago, said the super-rich are still doing very well. "The Bentleys are selling," Swonk said.

And the really wealthy continue to buy real Prada handbags -- not knockoffs. Many Prada purses are priced at $2,000, not $200.

At the Saks Fifth Avenue Web site, for example, there's a warning next to one Prada handbag:

"Due to high demand, a customer may order no more than three units of this item every thirty days."

The item? A purse priced at $2,360. The official name is the Nappa Gaufré Convertible Satchel. There are similar warnings on other Prada products.

Yet Swonk and other economists note that the lower-end of upper income consumers are under more pressure.

Everyone is getting squeezed when gas hits $3 a gallon or higher.

Zandi is concerned that wealthier consumers will really be forced to cut back if oil hits $100 a barrel or higher -- and the price at the pump climbs to $4 a gallon early next year. "I think recession risks are very high," Zandi said.

Some industries, such as financial and brokerage services, keep cutting back and laying off more workers nationwide.

Troubles in the housing market also mean that consumers cannot easily tap into the equity in their homes to spend more.

Roger Haynes needed to take out a $30,000 loan when he wanted to sell his house.

He had found a buyer, but the buyer was only agreeing to pay far less than Haynes owed on the house.

The couple owed $266,000 on their primary mortgage and $29,000 on the second -- totaling $295,000 in mortgage debt.

The house sold for $285,000.

The couple needed $10,000 to cover that mortgage debt -- and $29,000 more to cover repairs, closing costs, taxes, the real estate commission and other costs. The Haynes used some savings and borrowed money to make sure they could sell the house.

Now, they're cutting back in order to make monthly payments on that added debt.

"I had to squeeze out spending to the tune of about $1,000 a month," said Haynes, an attorney in Wyoming, near Grand Rapids.

He had dropped out of several professional organizations to save about $750 a year in dues and switched to electronic subscriptions to save about $2,500 a year. He has put extra computers, electronic equipment and televisions on eBay. He has stopped buying brand names at the grocery store. He and his wife, Nancy, have cut back on shopping at Macy's or other higher-end department stores.

Home Owners Lose in 3 Ways

Taxes can rise, values fall and services shrink

December 3, 2007 Detroit Free Press

BY JOHN WISELY, KATHLEEN GRAY, STEVE NEAVLING and CHRISTINA HALL
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS

By springtime, many homeowners in metro Detroit could face an unwelcome and seemingly improbable trifecta:

Higher taxes, lower home values and shrinking services.

Local government finance experts say Michigan's foreclosure epidemic, state budget woes and quirks in the property tax system are conspiring to wound homeowners and the bottom line of local governments, including schools.

Consider:

• Oakland County officials have projected that the county government will experience at least three consecutive years of decline in county property tax revenue totaling $27.5 million.

• In Wayne County, for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, property values declined in all 43 municipalities.

• Many communities are anticipating reduced property tax collections in 2008 because of the foreclosure crisis. Here's a sampling: Royal Oak, $760,000; Warren, between $700,000 and $1 million; Farmington Hills, $2.5 million, and Clinton Township, $1.5 million.

• The state faces an estimated loss of $125 million in property, sales and transfer tax revenues in 2008 because of increasing foreclosures. Financing for public schools could suffer.

"With the decline in values, you'll start to see even more of a stretch on communities and schools," Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano said Friday. "In addition, you've got millages for parks and rec, the jail and community colleges."

Oakland County officials, anticipating record numbers of homeowners contesting property tax assessments, are encouraging communities to provide security.

Angry reactions are likely when assessors explain to many homeowners why their taxes will increase even as housing values have plunged, said Robert Daddow, deputy Oakland County executive.

"Explaining that to people is going to be very, very hard," said Frank Audia of Plante Moran, an accounting firm that advises dozens of local governments.

People who have bought a home in recent years could see their taxes decline because their starting point for taxable value is based on the assessment the year the home was purchased.

But those who have been in the same home for many years and taken advantage of a state law (Proposal A of 1994) that kept their taxes from increasing beyond the rate of inflation when housing values were rapidly escalating will suffer the downside of the same law. Their taxes can increase at the rate of inflation until the assessed value reaches actual market value.

Oakland, Michigan's richest county, expects its overall taxable value to shrink 0.4% in 2008 after decades of growth. The reduction will mean less tax money to pay for services such as police, firefighters, parks and libraries.

The hits come after years of local government belt-tightening prompted by declining state aid and skyrocketing health insurance costs for employees. Michigan communities have cut more than 1,600 police officers and more than 2,000 firefighters since 2001, according to state estimates.

"Every community we represent in metro Detroit has contingency plans for more layoffs," said Fred Timpner, executive director of the Michigan Association of Police.

Earlier attention

Some city officials are dealing with finances sooner than usual.

"We're starting our budget sessions early. Our first one is Dec. 8," said Don Johnson, finance director in Royal Oak. "Normally we wouldn't do that until the end of January."

City officials will have to determine what to cut, but Johnson said the $760,000 revenue loss anticipated for Royal Oak is more than the entire street lighting budget. The 0.4% decline in values predicted by the county caught him off guard.

"Last spring, I was still projecting a 4% increase," Johnson said.

Audia of Plante Moran said local officials generally thought they would see an increase of at least 2% to 3%.

"If that's not there, they are going to be shocked," Audia said. "Everybody is panicked about it."

Farmington Hills Finance Director Robert Spaman plans to cut about $2.5 million out of the city's $54-million budget because of lower property values. That could mean leaving city positions unfilled and tapping a rainy-day account.

In Clinton Township, where residential property values are expected to fall 5% to 6%, Supervisor Robert Cannon said the township will lose $1.5 million in property tax revenue. He is to present options for possible cuts to township officials Tuesday.

"We've pared things to the bone and now we're looking at what part of the bone to pare," Cannon said. "There's nothing that we won't be looking at."

That includes not filling vacant positions, delaying capital expenditures and eliminating township-owned cars for some employees.

Other cities vary

In metro Detroit's second-largest city, Warren, where two-thirds of the budget comes from property taxes, the 1.5% decline in assessed values will be difficult to manage, city officials said.

"You still have to put cops and firefighters on the street. You just have fewer pennies to pay for it," said Warren Assessor Philip O. Mastin III.

In Canton, commercial development has boomed, diluting the impact of lower home values.

"The amount of commercial development we're getting is historic," said Canton Township Supervisor Thomas Yack. "It's pretty startling. I thought nobody had any money."

Still, he expects the foreclosure crisis to hit township tax collections heavily in 2009 and is making plans for it.

Contracts for all of the township's 325 employees will be up for negotiation before then and workers, who don't have co-pays on their health insurance, may be asked to, Yack said.

In Wyandotte, a significant gap between assessed and taxable values remains and the city is somewhat protected by its biggest corporate presence -- BASF -- which is expanding operations in the city.

Still, new development has been stalled or canceled, said Finance Director Todd Drysdale.

The city invested more than $1 million to buy and clean an old industrial parcel for a development of 80 homes. After putting up 12 homes and selling just three, the developer has stopped.

"We also have four to five other condo projects that have stalled," said Drysdale. "It's going to take awhile before the actual taxable value is reduced, but that doesn't mean that the housing market isn't a concern."