Monday, July 28, 2008

Fitch Updates Ratings Model; Projects Steep Housing Price Declines (25% and more). San Diego and San Francisco to decline by more than 30%.

http://www.housingwire.com/2008/07/24/fitch-updates-ratings-model-projects-steep-price-declines/

Fitch Ratings said Thursday that it had enhanced its U.S. residential mortgage loss model, called ResiLogic, a key component of the agency's overall approach to assessing U.S. RMBS new-issue ratings. While the new-issue market has been essentially dead for all of 2008, Fitch's revisions suggest that the agency is preparing for where the market might be headed next: seasoned mortgage issuance.

They also suggest a very bearish take on housing prices over the next five years: Fitch said in its report that it is expecting home prices to decline by an average of 25 percent in real terms at the national level over the next five years, starting from the second quarter of 2008.

And that's the base case scenario.

Seasoned securitizations?

In face of those sort of expectations for housing, more than a few market participants have suggested to HW as of late that in order for the battered securitization market to regain its footing, it may have to revert back to issuing deals only for mortgages that have already been "seasoned."

Seasoning refers to the usual pattern of increasing defaults during the first 24 months of a deal's life; so-called "seasoned deals" typically exhibit much more stable and predictable default patterns.

While the updates to ResiLogic cover other areas, it's Fitch's addition of the ability to analyze seasoned loans and to take into account loan payment history and house price changes since loan origination that are probably the most telling, at least in terms of where the securitization market is headed next.

"The ability to look at seasoned loans through ResiLogic is significant because the dearth of new mortgage origination has placed emphasis on the securitization of seasoned loans," said Huxley Somerville, group managing director and head of Fitch's U.S. RMBS group. "To rate transactions with seasoned loans, it is imperative to understand how they are performing in the current environment."

Fitch will also roll out new 25 MSA-level risk factors influencing frequency of foreclosure and loss severity estimates, the agency said; the 25 MSAs chosen are those that have exhibited strong non-conforming mortgage lending activity in the past.

"Some MSAs such as San Diego and San Francisco, CA are expected to experience home price declines by as much as 47 percent and 33 percent over the next five years, while home prices in MSAs such as San Antonio, TX are expected to appreciate by 7 percent," Somerville said.

"The home price forecasts are embedded in the state and MSA level risk indicators and will be updated quarterly."

For many investors, the updates come too late to salvage existing deals; but it's clear that the agency has become much more bearish on prospects in the primary housing market.


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Thursday, July 10, 2008

10 Stocks To Watch, Only Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae looks Interesting

If by 'interesting' this joker means FAIL


10 Stocks To Watch, Only Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae looks Interesting
istockAnalyst.com - 2 hours ago
You really gotta understand how slaughtered people are getting right now - illiquid positions , leverage and a lack of joke of an industry transparency have combined to create the perfect storm ...



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Freddie "absolutely" has enough capital: spokeswoman

Poor spokeswoman! She is just reciting from the script.


Freddie "absolutely" has enough capital: spokeswoman
Reuters - 1 hour ago
NEW YORK ( Reuters ) - Freddie Mac , the second - largest source of US home funding , " absolutely " has enough capital , a spokeswoman told Reuters on Thursday.The company is also committed ...
Freddie Mac leads financial-services stocks lower - MarketWatch
UBS Cuts Freddie Mac Price Target to $10 as Credit Losses Grow - Bloomberg



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Lehman Shares Sink as Fannie, Freddie Plunge Further (Update1)

This stinks..


Lehman Shares Sink as Fannie, Freddie Plunge Further (Update1)
Bloomberg - 33 minutes ago
July 10 ( Bloomberg ) - - Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc . , once the largest US underwriter of mortgage - backed bonds , fell to an eight - year low in New York trading as home - loan financing ...



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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Real Estate Commonsense RIP 2002

Moreover, the authors suggest that homeownership is not always an effective way to accumulate wealth, and they blame economists and policy professionals for not recognizing the housing bubble that they claim could be seen as far back as 2002.
"Unfortunately, we had this huge cohort of baby boomers and they really weren't paying attention," Baker said. "People who should have been saving for their own retirement weren't."

Drama unfolds..

whatever in thousand cuts..




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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Death of American suburban dream. Bill Bonner a**hole is laughing his way to bank

What goes around, comes around...

Every country in the world has had to put up with finger wagging and scolding from U.S. officials. The U.S. economy was the world's best for so many years – and American experts, government officials, professors and consultants never got tired of saying so.
But now...as the Rolling Stones put it... "Tables turn and now her turn to cry." Now, the tears are coming from the United States; the foreigners are doing the scolding.
Bloomberg reports that U.S. housing starts are at their lowest level in 17 years. Housing prices are going down too, while consumer prices go up – both apparently at a faster and faster rate.

Producer prices in the United States rose 1.4% last month, following an increase of 0.2% the month before...annualizing the two months gives us a rate just shy of 10%.
Meanwhile, prices paid by producers were 7.2% higher than a year ago.
Worldwide inflation is about 7%, says Bill Gross of PIMCO. And since price inflation has now been globalized, there is no escaping. Here in Britain, consumer price inflation, officially, is running at its highest rate in 10 years.

"There is really nothing we can do about it," said an analyst at this morning's investment meeting. "We're a small island. We have to import things from overseas. Prices are rising everywhere. How can they not rise here? We're just at the beginning of this trend. It's going to get worse."
It is going to get worse everywhere. Inflation is in the pipes. Soon, it will be backing up in the bathtub drain and spilling over from the sink. Over the last 15 years, the world has seen huge inputs of 'liquidity' – cash and credit from central banks and the financial industry. Everyone was perfectly happy when this juice was going into asset prices. But one by one the bubbles have popped...and now the liquidity goes where it is unwelcome – into commodities, food, and fuel.
Consumers and central banks are both trapped. Central banks want to lower rates and increase liquidity in order to stimulate a sagging economy. But their inflation no longer swells assets prices and nourishes economic growth; now it leaks into consumer prices.

And the poor American consumer...he spent his entire career preparing for an economy that no longer exists. He has a big house...a big car...and, often, a big mortgage. America's far-flung suburbs were invented when gasoline was only about 25 cents a gallon and real U.S. incomes were rising. We remember it well. We'd drive into a gas station and tell the pump monkey: "Let me have $2 worth." Heck, 2 bucks' worth was all you needed. You got eight gallons – enough to last you all week. Now, gasoline is $4 a gallon...and real incomes are scarcely higher than they were in the late '60s. And now the typical commuter lives too far out in the suburbs to walk to work. And even if he could, this item from the
 
 
Wall Street Journal offers little comfort:

"Pain at the Other Pump: Shoe Prices Rise." The story tells us that footwear is going up too – about 10% to 15% next year, which "would be the largest single-year increase in more than 50 years."
And the poor man didn't bother to save money, because he didn't need to. His house rose in price...and there was always someone ready to lend him money when he needed it. But now...the cost of credit is going up too.
What we are looking at is big. It's an historic turnaround. In financial terms, it is the end of the era of cheap credit. In cultural terms, it's the end of the prosperous, suburban U.S.A. as we have known it...the U.S.A. that we grew up in.

The last credit expansion began, by the way, with the Reagan Revolution, in the very early '80s, with bond yields over 15%. It ended either in 2003 or 2005 or a couple weeks ago. Yields on the 10-year Treasury note fell below 4% on several occasions. But now they are rising. Investors fear rising inflation. Even at current rates, they still buy treasuries at yields below the rate of consumer price inflation. But they'll regret it, in our opinion. The trend seems to be up. It is the beginning of what probably will be a long period of higher inflation rates...higher bond yields...and tighter credit generally.

So too have we entered into a period of higher energy costs. The price of oil hit a new intraday high yesterday at nearly $140. It will probably drop back below $100...but the days of $10...$20...or even $50 oil are probably gone forever.

And the suburbs? Are they dead too? We don't know...but
hope so; we never liked them.

All this is bad news for people who organized their lives on cheap oil and cheap credit – especially those for whom it is too late to make big changes.
USA Today reports, for example, that the rate of bankruptcy is skyrocketing among old people. From 1991 to 2007, the rate went up 150%. But for those 75 to 84, the rate has exploded 433%.

The poor codgers. It's bad enough being old. Imagine being broke too.
*** A few weeks ago, the Indians were giving America a piece of their mind. This week, it's the Chinese. The subprime crisis was caused by Washington's "warped conception" of market regulation, said a Chinese banking regulator... and the Chinese media has gone so far as to compare China's decisive action in Sichuan Province after the earthquake to the Bush administration's diddling after Hurricane Katrina.

"U.S. credibility and the credibility of U.S. financial markets is zero everywhere in the world," says Joseph E. Stiglitz, a professor of economics at Columbia University.
"Anybody looking at this from the outside says, 'There's been a lot of hot air coming out of the U.S., so why should we listen to these guys when they didn't know how to manage risk?'"

The Chinese yuan has gone up 11% against the dollar so far this year.
*** When it rains, it pours. The Midwest has seen the worst flooding in 15 years...pushing up grain prices even higher.
But it could be worse. You could be in Argentina, from which our colleague Paola Pecora reports on the latest conditions (farmers are blocking roads to protest tax increases):


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Monday, June 2, 2008

Housing sector sucks but that cannot stop creativity. Buy one and get one for free.

In Escondido: Buy one (house), get one free.

Bogof_flyer1In a sign of how difficult it is to sell new homes in Southern California right now, a San Diego developer is offering a "buy one, get one free" deal, pairing million-dollar homes with less expensive homes.

"We thought, 'Why does it just have to be on Pop Tarts and restaurants? Why not buy one home, get one free,'" Dawn Berry of Michael Crews Development told 10 News in San Diego.

More: "Michael Crews Development is offering new, 2000-square foot cityscape row-homes worth $400,000 in Escondido for free -- if you buy one Royal View Estate home in San Pasqual Valley starting at $1.6 million.  'You know it's a straight-up legit deal; no prices have been increased, there are no hidden costs. Michael is just giving away a free home for people that buy at Royal View,' said Berry."

"Adam Rossman of Michael Crews Development added, 'People have been coming in saying, 'How can you do this?' Well, it's our way of dealing with current market conditions to move some inventory.' "









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