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Wall Street Journal – October 15, 2011
U.S. house prices have plunged by nearly a third since 2006, and homeownership rates are falling at the fastest pace since the Great Depression.
The good news? Two key measures now suggest it’s an excellent time to buy a house, either to live in for the long term or for investment income (but not for a quick flip). First, the nation’s ratio of house prices to yearly rents is nearly restored to its prebubble average. Second, when mortgage rates are taken into consideration, houses are the most affordable they have been in decades.
Two of the silliest mantras during the real-estate bubble were that a house is the best investment you will ever make and that a renter “throws money down the drain.” Whether buying is a better deal than renting isn’t a stagnant fact but a changing condition that depends on the relationship between prices and rents, the cost of financing and other factors.
But the math is turning in buyers’ favor. Stock-oriented folks can think of a house’s price/rent ratio as akin to a stock’s price/earnings ratio, in that it compares the cost of an asset with the money the asset is capable of generating. For investors, a lower ratio suggests more income for the price. For prospective homeowners, a lower ratio makes owning more attractive than renting, all else equal.
Nationwide, the ratio of home prices to yearly rents is 11.3, down from 18.5 at the peak of the bubble, according to Moody’s Analytics. The average from 1989 to 2003 was about 10, so valuations aren’t quite back to normal.
But for most home buyers, mortgage rates are a key determinant of their total costs. Rates are so low now that houses in many markets look like bargains, even if price/rent ratios aren’t hitting new lows. The 30-year mortgage rate rose to 4.12% this week from a record low of 3.94% last week, Freddie Mac said Thursday. (The rates assume 0.8% in prepaid interest, or “points.”) The latest rate is still less than half the average since 1971.
As a result, house payments are more affordable than they have been in decades. The National Association of Realtors Housing Affordability Index hit 183.7 in August, near its record high in data going back to 1970. The index’s historic average is roughly 120. A reading of 100 would mean that a median-income family with a 20% down payment can afford a mortgage on a median-price home. So today’s buyers can afford handsome houses—but prudent ones might opt for moderate houses with skimpy payments.
For example, the median home in the greater Phoenix market, including houses, condos and co-ops, costs $121,700, according to Zillow.com. With a 20% down payment and a 4.12% mortgage rate, a buyer’s monthly payment would be about $470. Rent for a comparable house would be more than $1,100 a month, according to data provided by Zillow.com.
Of course, all of this assumes mortgages are available—no given now that lending standards have tightened. But long-term data on down payments and credit scores suggest conditions are more normal than many buyers think, according to Stan Humphries, chief economist at Zillow. “If you have good credit, a job and a down payment, you can get a mortgage,” Mr. Humphries says. “There’s more paperwork and scrutiny than five years ago, but things are pretty much like they were in the ’80s and ’90s.”
Not all housing markets are bargains. Mr. Humphries says Zillow has developed a new price/rent ratio that uses estimates for each individual property rather than city medians, to better reflect the choices facing typical buyers. A fresh look at the numbers suggests Detroit and Miami are plenty cheap for buyers, with price/rent ratios of 5.6 and 7.7, respectively. New York and San Francisco are more expensive, with ratios of 17.6 and 17.2, respectively. The median ratio for 169 markets is 10.7.
For investors seeking income, one back-of-the-envelope way of seeing how these numbers stack up against yields for other assets is to divide 1 by the price/rent ratio, resulting in a rent “yield.” The median market’s rent yield is 9.3% and Detroit’s is 17.9%.
Investors would then subtract for taxes, insurance, upkeep and other expenses—costs that vary widely. But suppose total costs were 4% of the purchase price. That would still leave a 5.3% rent yield in the typical market. With the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.2% and the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index carrying a dividend yield of 2.1%, rents for residential housing in many markets look attractive.
A few caveats are in order. First, not all transactions are average ones. Even in low-priced markets, buyers should shop carefully. Second, prices could fall further. Celia Chen, a senior director at Moody’s Analytics, expects prices to drop 3% before bottoming early next year and rising slowly thereafter. “If the economy slips back into recession, however, we could easily see a 10% drop,” Ms. Chen says.
And property “flipping” can be dangerous even when prices are rising. That is because, absent a real-estate boom, house price gains simply aren’t that exciting. Research by Yale economist Robert Shiller suggests houses more or less track the rate of inflation over long time periods.
Houses aren’t the magic wealth creators they were made out to be during the bubble. But when prices are low, loans are cheap and plump investment yields are scarce, buyers should jump.
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September 2011 property sales in the Sarasota real estate market were ahead of last September, with 570 this year compared to only 547 at the same time last year. This represents a small drop in transactions compared to August 2011, when 601 sales were recorded. But historically, the early fall is one of the slower sales seasons.
A recent article in Realtor® Magazine Daily News noted that of the top 15 U.S. cities showing signs of year-over-year increases in list prices, ten are in Florida, and the Sarasota-Bradenton area came in 6th, with list prices up 15.9 percent. Listing price increases generally reflect optimism among sellers that a market is ready to head upwards.
The inventory of available properties for sale in Sarasota has been dropping for the past nine months, and was up only slightly in September to 4,430 after hitting a 10-year low of 4,408 the previous month.
The latest monthly figures in September showed a median price of $165,000 for single family homes, the same as August, and $140,000 for condos. The condo figure has been fluctuating for several months, hitting $185,000 in June, then dropping to $145,000 in July before climbing back up to $165,000 in August. These variations can be explained by the fact that certain months have seen the buying public focusing on smaller, bargain priced units, while other months have seen a higher concentration of luxury condo sales.
“In 2011, we’ve seen an acceleration of the market recovery, but we still have a distressed market that is weighing down on the median sales prices,” said SAR President Michael Bruno. “Overall, we had distressed sales at 43 percent of the total, which was a little higher than in August, but is still far below the 51 percent total in November 2010, almost a year ago. So we’re hopeful that the worst is over for foreclosures and short sales.”
The months of inventory rose slightly to 6.7 months for single family homes, from last month’s figure of 6.3 months. For condos, the months of inventory also rose to 11.1 months from 10.2 months in August. In September 2010, the figures were 9.9 months and 15.1 months, respectively. Both figures again remained far below the highs of 25.3 months for single family (in early 2009) and 41.7 months for condos (in late 2008). This statistic represents the time it would take to sell the existing inventory at the current month’s rate of sales. The 6 month level is traditionally a point which represents equilibrium in the market between buyers and sellers.
In September 2011, pending sales were down slightly from last September – 723 to 744 – and also down from August, when there were 813 pending sales. Last month there were 547 single family homes and 176 condos that went under contract.
“The September market is normally a slower time of the year, so there were no real surprises this year,” said Bruno. “The word of mouth among agents and brokers has been very positive, and I’m expecting a good season surge as we welcome back our winter residents and visitors. When it cools off up north, the market usually heats up in Sarasota.”
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Housing inventories across Southwest Florida continued at levels that are considered a market in equilibrium.
The largest decline on a percentage basis was in Lakewood Ranch, which is proving to be one of the epicenters of the housing recovery in Southwest Florida. There were 321 homes for sale in the master-planned community last month, down 8 percent from August and nearly 34 percent from a year ago.
That inventory is a six-month supply at the current sales pace, a level that is considered indicative of a market in equilibrium.
The Sarasota real estate market had a six-month supply of homes during September. In the Sarasota real estate market, the 6,305 homes for sale compared with 8,800 a year ago.
Besides Lakewood Ranch, another large drop in inventory occurred on Siesta Key, which saw the total number of homes for sale fall 6 percent from August to 536 homes. That also was a 22.4 percent decline from a year ago.
Bradenton, Sarasota and Longboat Key all saw declines topping 5 percent, while the smallest drops were in Venice at 3.8 percent and Englewood at 1.6 percent from August.
Anna Maria Island, another strong point in the real estate rebound, saw a decline of 5.4 percent to 403 homes. But it continues to have fairly high inventory, with a 16 month supply.
Longboat Key, another barrier island, also still has a 12.4 month supply.
This information is from the Sarasota Herald Tribune.
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Rate on 30-year mortgage falls to record 4.01%
Fixed mortgage rates have fallen to historic new lows for a fourth straight week and are likely to fall further.
The average on a 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 4.01 percent from 4.09 percent this week, Freddie Mac said Thursday. That’s the lowest rate since the mortgage buyer began keeping records in 1971. The last time long-term rates were lower was in 1951, when most long-term home loans lasted just 20 or 25 years.
The average on a 15-year fixed mortgage, a popular refinancing option, ticked down to 3.28 percent. Economists say that’s the lowest rate ever for the loan.
Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. The 10-year yield has risen this week to around 2 percent. A week ago, it touched 1.74 percent – the lowest level since the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis started keeping daily records in 1962. As recently as July, the 10-year yield exceeded 3 percent.
Rates on mortgages could fall further after the Federal Reserve announced last week that it would take further action to try to lower long-term rates.
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Effective October 1st, USDA announced new changes to their mortgage product line with regards to certain closing fees. Although USDA is still the only place you can get 100% financing, they were charging a 3% PMI fee upfront with no monthly PMI fee like FHA does. Now, you pay 2% (which is usually financed into the loan) of the total loan amount at closing, and then a fee of .3% per month based upon the amount of your 12 monthly payments. On a $100,000 loan that would amount to $25 per month. Still a great way to get into a new home if your location qualifies.
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Sellers, You Do Have Options.
For all the talk about working things out with your lender when you’re in a financially distressed situation and afraid that you might lose your home to foreclosure, there is a time when the realization sets in that you just can’t dig your way out of debt.
Some Options are Better Than Others.
Some – like going through the entire foreclosure process – will leave a black mark on your credit report for probably 10 years. Others – like simply walking away from the property – aren’t necessarily wise ways of dealing with the situation either.
Sometimes, you just run out of options! Short of filing for bankruptcy (which only delays the inevitable, and does not STOP foreclosure in its tracks), sometimes your lender just isn’t willing to negotiate a loan workout (modification), or accept a short sale (agreeing to take less money on the sale of your property than the balance due on their underlying mortgage).
Then again, the lender MIGHT be willing to accept a Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure. Depending on how severe your financial hardship is, and other factors, the Deed-in-Lieu approach would allow you to sign over legal ownership to your home for the lender’s agreement not to foreclose. You are in effect giving up all claims and rights to the property in exchange for the ability to walk away from it, without having to make another mortgage payment – and, possibly, without a mark on your credit report.
At the very most, maybe a light gray mark instead of a black mark, if any mark at all depending on whether the lender reports your mortgage as “paid in full” or not. Some lenders will report a Deed-in-Lieu as a foreclosure to the credit bureau. Be aware of this, since the point of this transaction is to avoid this designation on your credit report. Plus, once agreeing to the Deed-in-Lieu, the lender will likely have to waive its rights to any deficiency judgment, which saves you from having to pay off any deficiency amount awarded the lender by a court. However, should you find yourself in this situation where there may be a deficiency judgment involved, the best thing to do is to consult with a reputable real estate attorney about possible options. You should contact a real estate attorney anyway if you are considering a Deed-in-Lieu because it involves you giving up some legal rights.
Bottom Line About Deed-in-Lieu.
A Deed-in-Lieu is a potential way out of foreclosure for distressed homeowners who are hard pressed to find their way back to financial solvency. It may not always be the best way, but it can be much better than going all the way through the foreclosure process or filing for bankruptcy!
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Mortgage servicers started the foreclosure process on more than 78,800 properties in August, a 33% increase from the month before and the highest monthly increase in four years, according to RealtyTrac.
Still, foreclosure starts remained 18% below the level measured in August of last year, just two months before the robo-signing scandal broke. Servicers across the country to froze the process to check mishandled documentation.
Default notices, the first stage in the process in nonjudicial states, jumped 55% in California.
“The big increase in new foreclosure actions may be a signal that lenders are starting to push through some of the foreclosures delayed by robo-signing and other documentation problems,” RealtyTrac CEO James Saccacio said. “It also foreshadows more bank repossessions in the coming months as these new foreclosures make their way through the process.”
According to ForeclosureRadar, another tracker of foreclosures along the West Coast, Bank of America (BAC: 7.05 0.00%) is behind the major boost in new foreclosures.
Overall filings, including default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions, reached 228,098 in August, up 7% from the previous month but still down 33% from last year.
Lenders finished the process and repossessed more than 64,800 properties in August, down 4% from July and 32% from one year ago.
Nevada posted the nation’s highest foreclosure rate for the 56th straight month with one in every 118 properties receiving a filing. The 9,677 filings was a 3% decrease from the month before and down 28% from last year.
One in every 103 Las Vegas properties received a filing, five times the national average.
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The warm weather homebuying season has kept prices moving up, but Clear Capital says the rate of appreciation is already slowing and weak consumer confidence points to a stormy rest of the year.
The “company’s latest report shows that home prices rose 4.0 percent over the four-month period ending in August when compared to the previous three months – an assessment Clear Capital refers to as a rolling quarter.
The company notes, however, that the recent gains over the summer months have not been enough to recoup longer-term declines, with national home prices still 6.2 percent below last year’s levels.
Dr. Alex Villacorta, director of research and analytics at Clear Capital, points out that the short-term gains reported in recent months are coming off of the record lows of winter.
“With summer coming to a close and the price gains clearly starting to level off, the market is at a critical juncture as to whether it can avoid another significant downturn into the slower buying seasons of fall and winter,” Villacorta said.
According to Clear Capital, low consumer confidence and a continued high unemployment rate support the company’s projection of downward home price movement for the remainder of 2011.
“The latest readings on consumer confidence paint an ominous picture that at present, consumers are still not ready to risk jumping into the market despite very low mortgage rates and very affordable home prices,” Villacorta added.
Based on Clear Capital’s latest report, the Midwest region leads the nation with a seasonal quarterly home price gain of 7.3 percent, buoyed by solid improvement in Chicago and the Ohio markets in particular.
In the Northeast home prices rose 4.9 percent, and in the South quarterly appreciation came in at 3.5 percent.
Home prices in the Western region of the U.S. were up just 0.7 percent. Clear Capital says with economic uncertainty and significant distressed sales activity affecting the West, this small gain may potentially represent peak price growth in the region for the rest of 2011.
Home prices in all four regions came in well below their readings at this time last year, with the smallest annual dip in the Northeast at 2.0 percent.
Jacksonville, Florida replaced Detroit as the “lowest performing” major market, posting a -2.7 percent quarterly price change. Eleven of the 15 markets on the low end of the price performance spectrum reside in the western part of the country.
Cleveland’s rolling quarter price gains jumped to 19.2 percent based on data through August, pushing the market to the top of Clear Capital’s “highest performing” list. The company says Cleveland’s large gains reflect vast differences in its REO composition between the winter and the spring-summer homebuying seasons.
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Sarasota and Charlotte County recently mailed its preliminary TRIM notices to property owners. This Notice provides homeowners with the County Property Appraisers estimation of market value as of January 1, 2011, and projects the real estate 
taxes that will be due beginning November 1, 2011 based on last year’s assessment rate.
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What is a Short Sale?
A real estate Short Sale is when a Lender agrees to sell the home at a price that is less then what is owed on the property.
Buying a Short Sale
- When you purchase real estate, sometimes it can be purchased as a result of a “Short Sale” which is nothing other than the bank agreeing to sell the home at a price less than the mortgage balance.
- As a result of the home being sold as a “short sale”, people assume that they are getting a great deal. This is not always the case. Although purchasing a short sale is often a great way to purchase real estate, many times due to the real estate market going through a downturn, you can purchase a home and still experience a reduction in value.
- I feel that the key to having success when you purchase a short sale is to make sure that you do research on the market conditions and area of the home, and have an experienced agent representing you exclusively as a “Buyer’s Agent”.
Short Sale Process
- The short sale can be very confusing because it is not as common as a regular real estate transaction.
- Typically the short sale process takes longer (3-4 months average) because the Seller’s title company or attorney has to deal directly with the bank and gain their approval to sell the home.
- When a client makes an offer to purchase a real estate short sale they do not have the benefit of getting a quick response like they would from a regular seller; however, the positive aspects of waiting for an approval from the lender certainly outweighs the negative.
- The short sale process begins with the Seller having to show that they are eligible for a short sale.
- All lenders typically require 2 years of tax returns, 2 years of W2’s, most recent month of bank statements for all accounts and a hardship letter.
- The process of getting approved for a short sale is the exact opposite of what a borrower goes through when they are trying to obtain financing.
- When a borrower obtains financing they have to show that they can afford to make the mortgage payments.
- When a Seller is trying to get the bank to approve them for a short sale, they have to show the bank that they have made every attempt possible to try and make the payments.
- If a lender sees that they have other liquid assets, they will not be very likely to help a seller out and approve them for a short sale without expecting some additional form of compensation at closing
Embracing Short Sales
- Short sales are fast becoming the preferred option for buyers wanting a “great deal”, and sellers who want to try to avoid the stigma of foreclosure and its long-lasting stain on their credit worthiness.
- At the same time, buyers perceive purchasing a short sale property as one of the best guarantees of a super deal; while banks have finally realized that they are likely to recoup more of their original investment by pursuing short sales instead of foreclosures.
- That being said, a short sale remains no less frustrating or time consuming for everyone involved in the process, unless you deal with professionals such as Perin Realty & Associates, LLC…..turning negative market forces into positive opportunities for our clients.