Saturday, March 1, 2008

Banking Karma: California Foreclosures Outpace Sales

Bankers who once pined to sell real estate are getting what they asked for, but probably not in the way they imagined. Be careful what you wish for.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Deadline Newsroom - Be careful what you wish for.

Early this decade, banks lobbied heavily for a right to sell real estate.

Right now those same bankers are likely squirming to get the heck out of real estate and back to the once-profitable business of mortgage banking.

In at least one instance, and probably many more, lenders held more foreclosures than the number of homes sold on the open market during the same period.

The month of January marked the first time ever that the number homes sold at foreclosure auctions exceeded the combined number of resale single-family homes and condos sold in California.

It's a chilling trend.

ForeclosureRadar.com reported 19,821 homes were sold at foreclosure auctions in California in January. That's an astounding increase of 454 percent in the past year.

Meanwhile, DataQuick Information Services, for the same month, recorded 19,145 single-family and condo resale home sales -- the lowest monthly sales number since DataQuick began recording in 1988.

Sean O'Toole of ForeclosureRadar said there likely has ever been another time when the number of foreclosures exceeded the number of sales in a given month.

The trend is chilling because auctioned home prices tend to be less than heavily marketed resale homes on the open market. A greater share of foreclosure properties really lowers the boom on home values in general.

It gets worse.

Interest rate adjustments on adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) and the mortgage credit squeeze are exacerbated in California by the still relatively high-cost of housing. With some of the most expensive housing in the nation, the state isn't a hotbed of affordable pricing.

There is only a thin silver lining in the Golden State's housing market.

With ballooning foreclosures and deflated sales putting heavy downward pressure on prices, there are more opportunities for buyers who can get past stiff underwriting.

In January, sales fell nearly 30 percent and the median price of a single-family home, about $430,370, was a whopping 22 percent less than the $551,220 median a year ago, according to the California Association of Realtors (CAR).

“This most recent decrease in the median price is yet another result of the liquidity crunch, which has choked off sales in recent months for nearly half of California's housing market," said CAR President William E. Brown.

However, CAR said the percentage of households that can afford to buy their first home in California was 33 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007, up from 25 percent a year earlier.

The minimum household income needed to purchase an entry-level home at $411,170 in California in the fourth quarter of 2007 was $82,200, based on an adjustable interest rate of 6.21 percent and assuming a 10 percent down payment, according to CAR's First-time Buyer Housing Affordability Index.

First-time buyers typically purchase a home equal to 85 percent of the prevailing median price. That would put the monthly payment including taxes and insurance was $2,740 for the fourth quarter of 2007.

"Sales do appear to be edging up, but recent declines in the median price have been due to a lack of sales in the over $500,000 range, where funds are extremely scarce and jumbo loan rates are at near-record margins compared to conforming loan rates," said Brown.

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© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service, and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's new backshop. In both cases, it's where all the news really hits home.



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Selling Strategies That Ease The Squeeze

To help get the housing market rolling again, you might have to get on the bus, hold an auction, lease back a model home or consider equity sharing, among the growing number of existing, new or lesser-known marketing strategies.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Deadline Newsroom - Looking to buy a bargain or make a hard sell?

Take the bus and make it the "F" Line.

The "F" is for the growing number of foreclosure properties that have become bus stops along motor tour routes designed to put home sales on the fast track.

The Keenan Carter Group in Pismo Beach, CA became the darling of the bus tour set when its version was featured on "Good Morning America" on ABC-TV and a segment with Neal Cavuto on Fox News.

At $20 a seat, the tour bus also becomes a school bus between stops, serving up information packages on each property. Riders get spreadsheets on mortgage payment options, potential rental income properties could yield and refreshments.

The special focus on marketing foreclosures is not surprising, especially in California where the number of foreclosures exceeded the number of sales in January, according to foreclosure figures from ForeclosureRadar.com and sales numbers from DataQuick Information Services.

Other bus tours are driving into Florida, Las Vegas and other hard hit housing markets that have been flooded with foreclosures.

Driving a bargain on a bus isn't new, but using the strategy as a vehicle to move foreclosures is part of a current trend in special marketing, designed to help turn the housing market around.

Auctions are hot too.

• The fastest growing segment of the auction industry's real estate sector, residential real estate auctions, on or off line, experienced a gross revenue growth of 5.3 percent from 2006 to 2007, according to the Overland Park, KS-based National Auctioneers Association. In 2007 the association created NAARealEstateAuctions.com, a real estate auction multiple listing service (MLS) to handle the volume. Many, but not all, auctions are listed there.

Coordinated open house events are big.

• In Silicon Valley, April 13 will become "The Biggest Open House Day Of The Year," as sellers queue up to offer incentives and accommodate -- on the spot -- buyers who make an offer that day.

Second home marketing is getting a renewed spin too.

• Elisabeth Miller-Fox, president of PrivateCommunities.com says little is known about "model sale lease backs," a spin on lease options typically found in master planned communities.

The tight market is giving this tactic a higher profile.

"In second home communities the developer builds a model home which is fully furnished and beautifully appointed. The developer sells the model home to a buyer who is not yet ready to have a second home, but will be in a few years. The developer then leases the model back from the buyer for 'X' amount of time and continues using the model to generate more sales for the community. It's a win-win for both parties," says Miller-Fox.

Bozeman, Montana's Black Bull Golf Community; Quechee, Vermont's Quechee Lakes; and Ocala, Florida's SummerGlen adult community are just a few communities offering model home lease back deals.

"This is a very different segment of the market and not well understood by the media or the average buyer. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) & HGTV have done a great job of helping people understand the general real estate market and how it works, but there has not been a good conduit for information for the second home buyer in a private, master-planned community. This is a very different animal and a different type of purchase," she added.

• Home shoppers should also be on the look out for some financing flash to give savings-poor but income-rich buyers an edge.

Quincy Virgilio, president elect of the Santa Clara County association, says expect to see a return to equity sharing.

The creative financing strategy includes two parties -- one who occupies the home, another, an investor, who foots the bill for the down payment.

The symbiotic relationship has flourished during past periods of buyer-seller separation in the housing market.

Las Vegas-based Creative Real Estate Online publisher, J. P. Vaughan, also a trial lawyer and real estate investor says everyone can benefit from the strategy.

One person becomes a homeowner with little if any money down, the investor, with the down payment, can get a joint venture-like return on his or her money and a seller, in a slow market, could become the investor or otherwise use the technique to quickly seal a deal, says Vaughan.

Read more creative buying, selling and financing stories.

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© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service, and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's new backshop. In both cases, it's where all the news really hits home.



DeadlineNews.Com's Editorial Content Is Intellectual Property • Unauthorized Use Is A Federal Crime


Read more!