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Showing posts with label Markets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Markets. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Housing Market Continues To Collapse


HOUSING - REAL ESTATE / HOUSING MARKET CONTINUES TO COLLAPSE - POSSIBLE FINANCIAL MELTDOWN FORESEEN



The Washington Times



Communist Democrat's Socialist Economics 101 ...

Smiley Flag Waver

Despite the growing dangers, substantial risks to the economy and financial markets from the deepening recession in the housing market, and possible mortgage-finance crisis, Democrat Rep. Barney Frank, incoming chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, welcomes the housing market crisis, indicating that recent large drops in home prices make housing more affordable for young people and minority buyers.

"... If a few speculators get burned, that's just icing on the cake," says Frank.



Risky Mortgages Imperil Market


~ By Patrice Hill
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
December 12, 2006


The risk of a financial crisis is growing as home prices continue to fall and questionable mortgages made in the past two years go into default, finance officials warned yesterday.

Banks and mortgage brokers have been passing along to unwary investors as much as $600 billion a year in risky mortgages they made through untested channels in the junk-bond market. That raises the threat of a financial crisis beyond the ability of the Federal Reserve to remedy, said Lewis Ranieri, the Wall Street guru who is widely credited with creating the multitrillion-dollar market for mortgage-backed securities in the 1980s and 1990s.

Bank regulators told the National Housing Forum here yesterday that they have found major banks punting to investors questionable mortgages they could not legally keep in their own loan portfolios. Mr. Ranieri said brokers on Wall Street have raised the risks by repackaging the mortgages in deceptive and opaque ways so that the small investors and foreigners who buy them are unable to understand the risks.

"No securities market can stand if we do not have true disclosure, and we do not have true disclosure" of the growing risks of exotic mortgages whose payments can double overnight and force buyers into default, said Mr. Ranieri. "This stuff doesn't just get sold to [professional] money managers. It gets sold to the public and to foreign investors who don't have a clue what to look for."

Allen Sinai, chief global economist at Decision Economics; Richard A. Brown, chief economist at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.; and several other economists and regulators attending the forum also emphasized the substantial risks to the economy and financial markets from the deepening recession in the housing market and possible mortgage-finance crisis.

Despite the growing dangers, Rep. Barney Frank, incoming chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, indicated he saw no reason for federal legislation to better regulate the mortgage markets to prevent a possible financial meltdown.

He said he welcomes recent large drops in home prices because it makes housing more affordable for young people and minority buyers.

"Housing suffered from irrational exuberance" during the first part of the decade, though it fell short of being a full-blown bubble, the Massachusetts Democrat said. "The end result of a 10 percent drop in many parts of the country will be a more rational housing market. ... If a few speculators get burned, that's just icing on the cake."

Mr. Frank noted that a few years ago, consumers were expected to devote about 25 percent of their income to house payments. Today, however, consumers expect their homes to contribute 25 percent to their income -- through cash-out refinancings and other techniques that have come into vogue, he said. "Let's get back to the normal situation."

A top national bank regulator said many banks are continuing to offer consumers loans they cannot afford when their teaser interest rates expire and payments rise to reflect market conditions. Some banks are selling the questionable loans to investors to avoid keeping them in their portfolios, where they would be unacceptable to regulators, said Kathryn Dick, deputy comptroller at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

Consumers also may be unaware of the risks inherent in these adjustable-payment loans, she said, because they are not getting full disclosure or are getting information too late to prevent them from closing on the loans.

Mr. Ranieri said the riskiest loans were made in the past two years as banks and brokers strived to help consumers qualify for high-priced homes that were beyond their reach. Loan innovations and loose lending standards have continued despite efforts by a group of five federal banking regulators to limit such loans, he said.

"We have a tremendously powerful mortgage-backed securities market. This market is unfettered in its enthusiasm and unchecked by regulation," Mr. Ranieri said. "The interagency task force can't touch it. The capital is coming from international markets."

Mr. Ranieri said that brokers are even bypassing the traditional market for mortgage-backed securities that he helped create. Instead, they are bundling the riskiest mortgages together and offering them as "collateralized debt obligations" on the corporate bond market. The offering documents often do not explain the serious risks involved with the mortgages in a declining housing market, he said.

One recent offering failed to disclose to investors that the homeowners not only were faced with high adjustable payments that they might have difficulty paying, but they had financed 100 percent of their purchase and had no equity in their houses -- something that greatly increases their likelihood of default.

Mr. Ranieri said the quality of loans has fallen so much recently that his firm has stopped buying whole mortgages for repackaging into mortgage-backed securities. He recently rejected some mortgages offered to the firm. He said he asked what the broker would do with the loans, and was told they would be sold to investors in the junk-bond market.

The only federal regulator with jurisdiction over the burgeoning market for such securities is the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mr. Ranieri said. But the SEC seems to be largely unaware of what's going on in the mortgage market, he said.



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Friday, October 27, 2006

Home Prices See Largest Tumble In 35 Years


ECONOMY / HOME PRICES SEE LARGEST TUMBLE IN 35 YEARS



Money News



Smiley Flag WaverThe median home price dropped to $217,000 in September from $239,300 in August. That was the lowest median price since September 2004. The 9.7 percent plunge was the sharpest year-over-year decline since December 1970.

The plunge in new home prices follows a record plunge in existing home prices. As MoneyNews told readers yesterday, the 2.5 percent year-over-year decline in existing home prices was the biggest in the National Association of Realtor’s nearly 40-year record.

When homebuilders need to slash prices to lure a somewhat larger percentage of buyers than the month before, it really means they’ll need to slash prices even more next month to get that many more buyers to bite. In other words, when prices start falling, most people wait to see if prices will keep falling before they rush in.

The freefall in home prices is far from over.



Breaking News From MoneyNews.com

Largest Home Price Tumble in 35 Years


The median price of a new home plunged 9.7 percent in September from a year ago, the largest drop in more than 35 years, reports the Commerce Department.

The median home price dropped to $217,000 in September from $239,300 in August. That was the lowest median price since September 2004. The 9.7 percent plunge was the sharpest year-over-year decline since December 1970.

The plunge in new home prices follows a record plunge in existing home prices. As MoneyNews told readers yesterday, the 2.5 percent year-over-year decline in existing home prices was the biggest in the National Association of Realtor’s nearly 40-year record.

Clearly home prices across the board are in the midst of a serious correction, one which our sister publication, Financial Intelligence Report, told readers about months ago. Both Sir John Templeton and Yale professor and real estate expert Robert Shiller told FIR readers that they expected the housing market correction to result in prices plunging downwards of 40 percent. And, unfortunately, it looks like their predictions will be spot on.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan doesn’t agree. The chief architect of the housing bubble said Thursday that the housing market isn’t in dire straits.

"Most of the negatives in housing are probably behind us," Greenspan told a conference sponsored by the Commercial Finance Association. "The fourth quarter should be reasonably good, certainly better than the third quarter."

Greenspan retired as Fed chairman in February of this year. He slashed interest rates from 6 percent in January 2001 to 1 percent in June 2003 to avoid a recession following the bursting tech bubble. In that low interest rate environment, the housing sector surged.

"There are early signs of stabilization [in housing]," Greenspan tells his audience. But he did concede that, "It’s [the housing slump] not over."

"The evidence is that we’re beginning to see a flattening in statistics for sales of new homes," he continued. "The rate of construction is well below the rate of purchases."

He added that buyers were "beginning to dig into the inventories of unsold homes."

Greenspan’s remarks run counter to current Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who said on Oct. 5 that the housing slump is "one of the major drags causing the economy to slow now." Bernanke estimates that the "substantial correction" in housing will shave 1 percent off the nation’s economic growth in the second half of 2006.

To “dig into” those inventories, homebuilders are slashing prices on homes and boosting incentives such as free pools, wood floors, and other upgrades to attract buyers. And to some extent, buyers did come trickling in this month.

New home sales rose for the second consecutive month in September, increasing 5.3 percent. However, that follows three months of sales declines from May to July. And sales are still down 14.2 percent from a year ago. New homes on the market fell to 557,000 from 568,000 in August. That represents a still higher-than-average 6.4 months worth of inventory at the current sales pace.

Though Alan Greenspan may present the higher sales and shrinking inventories as a sign that the housing slump is stabilizing, the plunge in prices is proof that that’s not the case.

When homebuilders need to slash prices to lure a somewhat larger percentage of buyers than the month before, it really means they’ll need to slash prices even more next month to get that many more buyers to bite. In other words, when prices start falling, most people wait to see if prices will keep falling before they rush in.

The freefall in home prices is far from over.




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