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		<title>Highlights as of March 2012</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[CoreLogic &#8211; less than 1% decrease in housing prices CoreLogic today released its March Home Price Index (HPI) report which shows that nationally home prices, including distressed sales, declined on a year-over-year basis by 0.6% in March 2012 compared to March 2011. On a month-over-month basis, home prices, including distressed sales, increased by 0.6% in March [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CoreLogic &#8211; less than 1% decrease in housing prices</p>
<p>CoreLogic today released its March Home Price Index (HPI) report which shows that nationally home prices, including distressed sales, declined on a year-over-year basis by 0.6% in March 2012 compared to March 2011. On a month-over-month basis, home prices, including distressed sales, increased by 0.6% in March 2012 compared to February 2012, the first month-over-month increase since July 2011.  Excluding distressed sales, month-over-month prices increased for the third month in a row. The CoreLogic HPI also shows that year-over-year prices, excluding distressed sales, rose by 0.9% in March 2012 compared to March 2011. Distressed sales include short sales and real estate owned (REO) transactions.  “This spring the housing market is responding to an improving balance between real estate supply and demand which is causing stabilization in house prices,” said Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic. “Although this has been the case in each of the last two years, the difference this year is that stabilization is occurring without the support of tax credits and in spite of a declining share of REO sales.”  “While housing prices remain flat nationally, in many markets tighter inventories are beginning to lift home prices,” said Anand Nallathambi, president and chief executive officer of CoreLogic. “This is true in Phoenix, New York and Washington, for example, which all reflect higher home price values than a year ago. A continuation of this trend will be good for our industry across US markets.”</p>
<p>Highlights as of March 2012</p>
<p><strong>-  </strong>Including distressed sales, the five states with the highest appreciation were:  Wyoming (+5.9%), West Virginia (+5.3%), Arizona (+5.1%), North Dakota (+4.7%) and Florida (+4.5%).</p>
<p>-  Including distressed sales, the five states with the greatest depreciation were: Delaware (-10.6%), Illinois (-8.3%), Alabama (-8.0%), Georgia (-7.3%) and Nevada (-5.8%).</p>
<p>-  Excluding distressed sales, the five states with the highest appreciation were: Idaho (+5.4%), North Dakota (+5.1%), South Carolina (+4.7%), Montana (+3.5%) and Kansas (+3.4%).</p>
<p>-  Excluding distressed sales, the five states with the greatest <em>depreciation</em> were: Delaware (-7.6%), Alabama (-4.1%), Nevada (-3.9%), Vermont (-3.9%) and Rhode Island (-2.9%).</p>
<p>-  Including distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the national HPI (from April 2006 to March 2012) was -33.7%. Excluding distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the HPI for the same period was -24.5%.</p>
<p>-  The five states with the largest peak-to-current declines including distressed transactions are Nevada (-59.9%), Arizona (-48.6%), Florida (-48.1%), Michigan (-45.1%) and California (-42.7%).</p>
<p>-  Of the top 100 Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) measured by population, 57 are showing year-over-year declines in March, eight fewer than in February.</p>
<p>Business confidence lackluster</p>
<p>While the National Federation of Independent Business’ Small Business Optimism Index rose two points in April to 94.5, the index is back to the same level it had been in February 2011.  “It’s positive from last month,” said NFIB chief economist William Dunkelberg. “But we’re in the same place as a year ago, so a whole year has gone by and we don’t go anywhere.”  In areas like capital outlays, indications are that while things are slowly improving, it’s “nothing to write home about,” said Dunkelberg. The Index now stands at 54%, far above the 44% in August 2010, but below the average rate of 60%.  “In the smallest businesses, we’re seeing improvement,” said Dunkelberg, “but it’s going on under the government’s radar. It will take a while before it registers” in the national picture, he said, pointing to the job creation number in particular. “Hopefully this time they will not deteriorate again.” and that’s pretty much the hope for all 10 categories in the index, many of which have, over the course of the past few years, seen ups and downs.  “We keep getting these head fakes, like last year, and we’re wondering if [the index] will do it again,” said Dunkelberg, referring to March 2011, when the survey took a dip, and then continued a downward trend throughout the spring and summer, only starting to rise again last October. “Last year, it kept getting worse; this time March took a dive, then came back.”</p>
<p>Regulations stifle mortgage market</p>
<p>Rulemakings will dominate the mortgage industry this year as the sector continues its &#8220;slow, bumpy road to recovery,&#8221; keynote speakers said as the Mortgage Bankers Association&#8217;s (MBA) secondary conference got into full swing Monday in New York City.  The rulemaking surrounding the Qualified Mortgage — or QM, repurchase requests, national servicing settlements and government-sponsored enterprise reform will dominate the year, said David Stevens, president and CEO of the MBA. But despite the attention to those four key areas, the MBA is tracking some 100 rulemakings in the Dodd-Frank Act.  Monday&#8217;s opening session was part feel-good, part dire warning as speakers struck a balance between the good and the bad in the current marketplace.  An opening video, for example, provided the feel-good atmosphere. It showed an MBA member&#8217;s recollections of his immigrant father buying a tract home in the New York burrough of Queens after World World II.</p>
<p>Mitch Kider, with Washington, D.C.-based law firm Weiner Brodsky Sidman Kider PC, recounted the reverence his father felt for the bank that provided the Federal Housing Administration loan that made it all possible.  &#8220;The people that work in this industry are working there because their heads and their hearts are in the right place,&#8221; he said. &#8220;As mortgage bankers, you are doing wonderful things for society.&#8221;  Stevens brought things back to earth by voicing borrower trepidation to buy homes, lender concern over burdensome regulations and investor mistrust of the process.  Borrowers, especially those on the margins, could be negatively impacted if the qualified mortgage rule — what he called &#8220;the holy grail of who gets access to a mortgage&#8221; — is too narrowly defined.  The need for more clarity in the system, for borrowers, lenders, mortgage servicers and investors, was a recurring theme from opening speakers.  On GSE reform, Stevens urged the industry do what it can without Congress, where he predicted a continued logjam.  &#8220;We need to take control of our own destiny,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>Lewis Ranieri, chairman and founding partner of Ranieri Parnters, widely considered a pioneer of modern mortgage finance, said the industry must be aware of those would not be content to fix the capital market but who believe the capital markets &#8220;are not simply broken … but are profoundly the wrong thing to do.&#8221;  If it doesn&#8217;t stay aware, the industry may end of with a fundamental rewrite of the way it does business, where everything resides on the balance sheet, he said.  Two mortgage businesses came to him recently about a possible sale due to the tough regulatory environment, Ranieri said.  &#8220;I truly believe the future of our industry is decided in the next eight months,&#8221; he said. &#8220;There is a regulatory movement that isn&#8217;t just trying to fix, it&#8217;s trying to change.&#8221;  Richard Dorfman, managing director of the Securities Industry and Financial Market Association, or SIFMA, said it falls on the industry to define the issues in ways that resonate with consumers.  Instead of complaining that Dodd-Frank is a burden to the banks, regulations should be defined in ways that show how they limit mortgage access to potential homebuyers, for example, he said.  &#8220;Consumers must be served, and they can and will be served by this industry,&#8221; he said. &#8220;There is no doubt in my mind.&#8221;</p>
<p>Krugman&#8217;s ideas &#8220;reckless&#8221; and &#8220;silly&#8221;</p>
<p>The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Richard Fisher, rejected the idea that higher inflation would spur the economy on Monday.  Saying the last thing businesses needed in this economy was uncertainty, Fisher sided with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in his public feud with Paul Krugman, the leftwing economist and New York Times columnist.  Called “The Battle of the Beards” by The Washington Post, the back-and-forth between the two economists began when Krugman called on the Fed to raise inflation targets, a move Bernanke called “reckless.”  “I would say that Ben Bernanke’s guilty of understatement. It would be more than reckless. It’s a silly thing to recommend,” Fisher said.  “I understand the argumentation from Krugman’s standpoint, from his perspective. He’s just trying to broaden the window to try to make things normal if we were to go below the 2% rate. That’s our long-term target. I believe we’re going to stick with it. I personally feel that this is something that is ultra-critical for our credibility.”</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; $150,000 off?</p>
<p>&#8220;A select group of struggling mortgage borrowers are about to get an offer that sounds too good to be true. Executives at Bank of America say they will begin mailing 200,000 letters offering certain customers mortgage principal reduction.  &#8216;If people get these things and toss them, they won’t be eligible,&#8217; says Ron Sturzenegger, the Bank of America executive charged with providing solutions to borrowers in need of mortgage assistance.  But the offer is real, and eligible borrowers could get as much as $150,000 knocked off the balance of their mortgages. It is all part of the $25 billion settlement reached this year between federal and state agencies and the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers over fraudulent foreclosure document processing (so-called &#8216;robo-signing&#8217;).  Bank of America, in a deal with state attorneys general and the US Department of Justice, committed $11 billion to mortgage principal reduction, but executives say they will go beyond that if enough borrowers respond to their offer. Five thousand borrowers have already received a collective $700 million in principal reduction through a pilot program for those already in a modification negotiation. The 200,000 borrowers being targeted now may have already exhausted modification options or may have yet to contact the lender.</p>
<p>Executives say borrowers receiving the letters are eligible, but they still have to prove they qualify. In order to be eligible, a borrower must be 60 days late on the mortgage payment as of Jan. 31, 2012. The borrower has to owe more on the mortgage than the home is currently worth, commonly known as being &#8216;underwater&#8217; on the mortgage, and the borrower’s loan must either be owned by Bank of America or serviced by Bank of America for an investor who is allowing the modifications.  In order to qualify for the modification, the borrower must answer the letter with full documentation of income, showing that under the terms of the modification they can still make the monthly payment. A borrower with no income would therefore not qualify. A borrower’s current monthly payment must be  more than 25% of gross income, and the borrower must show they are unable to afford that.  &#8216;If you can afford to make your monthly payment and are choosing not to, you will not get this principal modification,&#8217; says Sturzenegger.  If the borrower qualifies, Bank of America will bring the monthly mortgage payment down to 25% of the borrower’s gross income. That could mean principal forgiveness well over $100,000, as there is no limit to the amount of the mortgage. If enough borrowers respond, it could cost Bank of America far more than it committed to in the settlement.  &#8216;Yes, we have the capability to go well beyond the $11 billion,&#8217; adds Sturzenegger.</p>
<p>If the borrower qualifies, Bank of America will bring the monthly mortgage payment down to 25% of the borrower’s gross income. That could mean principal forgiveness well over $100,000, as there is no limit to the amount of the mortgage. If enough borrowers respond, it could cost Bank of America far more than it committed to in the settlement.  &#8216;Yes, we have the capability to go well beyond the $11 billion,&#8217; adds Sturzenegger.  Bank executives say that before choosing which borrowers will get the offer, they performed a net present value test on each loan, making sure that the principal reduction modification would net Bank of America or the investor who owns the loan more than foreclosing on the home. &#8216;It has to be fair to the investor as well,&#8217; says Sturzenegger.  Not all of the 200,000 borrowers who receive the letters are expected to respond. Executives say there is a level of fatigue among delinquent borrowers who have already received several notices or who may have gone through a failed modification process already. Some borrowers simply don’t want to stay in their homes, while others may think the offer is a scam.  &#8216;They have been contacted by a lot of other people, and this offer may appear too good to be true,&#8217; says Sturzenegger.</p>
<p>That’s why Bank of America is sending the letters by certified mail and trying to make the language as simple as possible. A sample letter obtained by CNBC shows a bring red box in the top corner labeled, &#8216;IMPORTANT&#8217; and simple language stating, &#8216;Qualifying customers may reduce their monthly payment by an average of 35%.&#8217;  Some 6,500 letters should be arriving in mailboxes across the country this week, with a wave of new letters going out every week until the end of the summer, when all 200,000 should have been mailed. Bank of America is staggering the mailings in order to handle the expected response. The bank has staffed up to handle the task, with 50,000 employees manning servicing desks, but the process will clearly take a lot of time. That’s why Bank of America has suspended any foreclosure actions against these 200,000 borrowers until the process is complete. There are currently 5.59 million US loans that are either delinquent or in the foreclosure process, according to Lender Processing Services. Bank of America services one million of those loans, but many of them are owned by Fannie Mae<strong> </strong>and Freddie Mac. Their regulator, Edward DeMarco of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has yet to agree to principal reduction in loan modifications, despite harsh criticism from some lawmakers on Capitol Hill and increasing pressure from the White House.&#8221;</p>
<p>Consumer credit on the rise</p>
<p>US consumer credit shot up during March at the fastest rate since late 2001 as credit-card use, and student and car loans ballooned, data from the Federal Reserve showed yesterday.  Total consumer credit grew by $21.36 billion — more than twice the $9.8 billion rise that Wall Street economists surveyed by Reuters had forecast. That followed a revised $9.27 billion increase in outstanding credit February.  It was the largest surge in consumer credit for any month since November 2001, when it climbed by $28 billion, according to the Fed&#8217;s statistics.  The increase in March was concentrated in nonrevolving credit, which includes student and car loans. It climbed by $16.17 billion following a revised $11.62-billion gain in February.  Concern about student-loan levels has increased in an environment where newly graduating students face difficulty finding a job and keeping up on payments.  Congress is currently considering how to prevent a low interest rate for student loans from doubling on July 1 and is expected to find a way to do so, if only to avoid irritating young voters ahead of November&#8217;s presidential elections.  But so-called revolving, or credit-card debt, also gained strongly in March. It rose $5.18 billion in a sharp reversal from February when this category of credit use contracted by $2.35 billion.</p>
<p>NAHB &#8211; 100 markets on the improving list</p>
<p>The list of housing markets showing measurable and sustained improvement held virtually unchanged in May at 100, down from 101 in April, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/First American Improving Markets Index (IMI), released yesterday. The number of states represented on the list also held firm from the previous month, at 35 (including the District of Columbia).  The index identifies metropolitan areas that have shown improvement from their respective troughs in housing permits, employment and house prices for at least six consecutive months. While 83 metros held onto their previous places on the IMI and 17 new ones were added to the list in May, 18 metros dropped from the list, for a net loss of one. Metros newly added to the list in May include such geographically diverse places as Phoenix, Ariz.; Bowling Green, Ky.; Bend, Ore.; and Lubbock, Texas.  “The fact that there are 100 markets in 34 states and the District of Columbia represented on the improving list illustrates that all housing markets are local, and that the national headlines often don’t apply to what’s happening in a specific metropolitan area,” said NAHB Chairman Barry Rutenberg, a home builder from Gainesville, Fla. “In places where employment is firming up along with demand for new homes, the main factors weighing down the housing market continue to be access to credit (for both builders and buyers) and the difficulty of obtaining accurate appraisals on new construction.”</p>
<p>“The overall number of markets on the IMI continued to plateau this month, with more than a quarter of all US metros still showing signs of improvement,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “Many of these are relatively small markets in terms of their population and building volume, which is why their improvement is barely registering on the national scale as of yet. Moreover, we are seeing some shifting of markets on and off the list primarily due to small seasonal house price changes in areas that have had flat, stable prices rather than a boom-and-bust cycle.”  “The fact that the number of improving metros continued to hold its own with 100 entries in May shows that there are many places across the country where confidence and consumers are returning to the housing market,” observed Kurt Pfotenhauer, vice chairman of First American Title Insurance Company.  The IMI is designed to track housing markets throughout the country that are showing signs of improving economic health. The index measures three sets of independent monthly data to get a mark on the top improving Metropolitan Statistical Areas. The three indicators that are analyzed are employment growth from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, house price appreciation from Freddie Mac, and single-family housing permit growth from the US Census Bureau. NAHB uses the latest available data from these sources to generate a list of improving markets. A metropolitan area must see improvement in all three areas for at least six months following their respective troughs before being included on the improving markets list.</p>
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		<title>Understanding the Multifamily Applicant Risk Index (MAR Index)</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 14:07:51 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Foreclosure backlog looms RealtyStore has completed a new study of the foreclosure status in three major housing markets, finding the amount of pending listings exceeds the amount of active foreclosures listed for sale by a margin of over 2 to 1. This shadow inventory of foreclosed homes illustrates the significant overhang of foreclosure listings that are anticipated [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Foreclosure backlog looms</p>
<p>RealtyStore has completed a new study of the foreclosure status in three major housing markets, finding the amount of pending listings exceeds the amount of active foreclosures listed for sale by a margin of over 2 to 1. This shadow inventory of foreclosed homes illustrates the significant overhang of foreclosure listings that are anticipated to be unleashed on the housing in the wake of resolving the so-called foreclosure robo-signing situation in late 2010. The study was conducted for Cook County, IL (including metro Chicago), Miami-Dade County, FL (including metro Miami) and Maricopa County, AZ (including metro Phoenix).  Foreclosure counts in each location were tabulated by owner, including bank or lender owned homes, foreclosures owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, and HUD homes. Although Arizona had previously been one of the hardest hit areas for foreclosure activity, Cook County, IL shows a near equal total amount of foreclosed homes. Miami-Dade foreclosures number at roughly half the count of either other market.</p>
<p>The breakdown of active foreclosure listings vs pending, or shadow inventory, foreclosures listings was consistent across each market surveyed. On average, 29% of total foreclosures across the counties are currently listed for sale. Cook County, IL foreclosures were most heavily represented with active listings, with 32% of its foreclosures presently being marketed to buyers, and 68% of foreclosures pending listing. Maricopa County, AZ foreclosure listings for sale represent only 25% of recorded foreclosures in the county, with 75% of local foreclosures yet to be listed for re-sale. Miami-Dade, FL currently offers 29% of its total foreclosures on the market for re-sale, with 71% of its foreclosure inventory awaiting listing on the market.  According to RealtyStore, median list prices of foreclosures for sale in Cook, Maricopa and Miami-Dade counties continue to run below average home prices. Cook County foreclosures are listed at a median price of just $72,650 and an average price of $95,997. Miami-Dade foreclosures list at a median price of $106,900 and average $145,059, while Maricopa lists foreclosed homes slightly higher with a median of $109,900 and the average foreclosure listed at a price of $168,744.</p>
<p>The foreclosure median list prices come in at 56% and 42% below the median sales prices of single-family homes selling in metro-Chicago and Miami, respectively, as reported by the NAR in Q4, 2011. Metro-Phoenix posts a smaller price gap at 7%, suggesting foreclosure saturation may be peaking in Maricopa County.  Individual foreclosure listings continue to cover all portions of the pricing spectrum, ranging from as low as $5,900 for a single family foreclosed home in Chicago, IL to as high as a foreclosed estate in Paradise Valley, AZ listed at $5,700,000.</p>
<p>Jobless claims up</p>
<p>Initial claims for state <strong>unemployment</strong><strong> </strong>benefits slipped 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 386,000, the Labor Department said. But the prior week&#8217;s figure was revised up to 388,000 from the previously reported 380,000.  The four-week moving average for new claims, considered a better measure of labor market trends, rose 5,500 to 374,750.  Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims falling to 370,000 last week.  The claims data covered the week for April&#8217;s nonfarm payrolls survey. The four-week average of new applications rose marginally between the March and April survey periods, suggesting not much change in labor market conditions.  Employers added 120,000 new jobs to their payrolls in March, the least since October, after averaging 246,000 jobs per month over the prior three months. Most economists have viewed the pull-back in job growth as payback after the weather-induced gains in the previous months.  The number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid rose 26,000 to 3.30 million in the week ended April 7.  The number of Americans on emergency unemployment benefits fell 19,419 to 2.78 million in the week ended March 31, the latest week for which data is available.  A total of 6.77 million people were claiming unemployment benefits during that period under all programs, down 187,807 from the prior week.</p>
<p>CoreLogic &#8211; First Quarter 2012 Multifamily Applicant Risk Index Report</p>
<p>CoreLogic today announced that CoreLogic SafeRent, provider of the nation&#8217;s leading suite of screening and risk management services designed for the multifamily housing industry, released its first quarter 2012 multifamily applicant risk (MAR) index report. The first quarter MAR Index value increased one point from the fourth quarter 2011 and three points from a year ago, indicating an increase in national renter credit quality and slightly better applicant pool.  The MAR Index for first quarter 2012 is based exclusively on applicant traffic credit quality scores from the CoreLogic SafeRent statistical lease screening model (Registry ScorePLUS) and is updated quarterly to provide property owners and managers with a benchmark against which to evaluate their applicant credit quality trends against market based MAR Index trends. This comparison indicates the relative strength of their property portfolio to attract and secure applicants with higher credit quality and an increased likelihood of fulfilling lease obligations.</p>
<p>When comparing applicants for one- versus two-bedroom units, the first quarter 2012 MAR Index is slightly higher for one-bedroom units at 102, compared with 101 for two-bedroom units.  Regionally, the South and Midwest reflected the lowest MAR Index, each with values of 98, a one point increase from the fourth quarter 2011. The Northeast continues to maintain the highest MAR Index with a value of 111.  The three Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA) with the steepest decreases in the MAR Index were Cincinnati-Middletown, Ohio, Ky., Ind.; Columbus, Ohio; and Birmingham-Hoover, Ala.; each with decreases of three points. The three MSAs with the greatest increases in the MAR Index were Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, Ill., Ind., Wis.; Denver-Aurora, Colo.; and Salt Lake City, Utah; each with increases of four points. </p>
<p>Understanding the Multifamily Applicant Risk Index (MAR Index)</p>
<p>The MAR Index is published quarterly by CoreLogic SafeRent. It provides trends of national and regional traffic credit quality scores whereby a lower index value indicates an applicant pool with a higher risk of not fulfilling lease obligations. A MAR Index value of 100 indicates that market conditions are equal to the national mean for the index&#8217;s base period of 2004. A MAR Index value greater than 100 indicates market conditions with reduced average risk of default relative to the index&#8217;s base period mean. A value less than 100 indicates market conditions with increased average risk of default relative to the index&#8217;s base period mean. The MAR Index is derived from the statistical screening model from CoreLogic SafeRent, which is the multifamily industry’s only screening model that is both empirically derived and statistically validated. The statistical screening model was developed from historical resident lease performance data to specifically evaluate the potential risk of a resident’s future lease performance. The model generates scores for each applicant indicating the relative risk of the applicant not fulfilling lease obligations. A lower score indicates a more risky applicant.</p>
<p>BOA tops estimates</p>
<p><strong>Bank of America</strong> (BOA) reported lower first-quarter profit as the second-largest US bank took accounting charges related to its debt, but results topped analysts&#8217; estimates as credit quality improved.  The bank reported charges of $4.8 billion related to changes in the value of its debt, partially offset by gains of $3.4 billion from equity investments and debt-related transactions.  Excluding debt valuation adjustments, it earned 31 cents a share.  First-quarter net income was $653 million, or 3 cents a share, down from $2.05 billion, or 17 cents per share, a year earlier.  Revenue declined to $22.3 billion from $26.9 billion.  The Charlotte, N.C.-based bank took a loan-loss provision of $2.4 billion, compared with $3.8 billion a year ago.  In its capital markets operations, Bank of America reported sales and trading revenue of $3.8 billion, up from $1.5 billion in the fourth quarter but down from $4.6 billion a year ago.</p>
<p>California foreclosure reform moves forward</p>
<p>Seven bills reforming some foreclosure rules passed committees in the California state legislature this week.  The bills were introduced in February. One set of bills extends protections to tenants, giving them 90 days before eviction after the foreclosure sale of the property. Another increases penalties to banks that fail to maintain blighted homes.  Servicers would be required to provide documentation to the borrower establishing its right to foreclose before the filing first step in the process, under other passed bills. Evidence of ownership and chain of title must also be shown to the borrower.  Two other bills charge servicers a $25 fee for every notice of default recording. The money will fund investigations for California AG Kamala Harris. Another piece of legislation passed by committee allows Harris to convene a grand jury to investigate financial crimes in different jurisdictions.  &#8220;All Californians have been impacted by the toll the mortgage and foreclosure process has taken on our neighborhoods,&#8221; Harris said. &#8220;Our California Homeowner Bill of Rights will provide relief for homeowners, tenants and communities. I thank the authors and supporters of these important bills.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Report slams banks on maintenance</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2012 14:12:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[WSJ &#8211; report slams banks on maintenance A consumer-advocate group said in a report Wednesday that a study of foreclosed properties found that banks have higher standards for properties they own in wealthy, predominantly white, neighborhoods than low-income ones, raising a new civil-rights challenge against the mortgage industry.  The report by the National Fair Housing Alliance examined [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>WSJ &#8211; report slams banks on maintenance</p>
<p>A consumer-advocate group said in a report Wednesday that a study of foreclosed properties found that banks have higher standards for properties they own in wealthy, predominantly white, neighborhoods than low-income ones, raising a new civil-rights challenge against the mortgage industry.  The report by the National Fair Housing Alliance examined more than 1,000 foreclosed properties in nine cities: Atlanta; Baltimore; Dallas; Dayton, Ohio; Miami; Oakland, Calif., Philadelphia; Phoenix and Washington, D.C.  “This report offers evidence that banks responsible for peddling unsustainable loans to communities of color and triggering our current foreclosure crisis are continuing to damage those communities by failing to properly maintain and market the properties they own,” Shanna L. Smith, the housing alliance’s chief executive, said in a statement. The group said it is planning legal action against two banks, which it didn’t name.  The group and four of its members scrutinized foreclosed properties for problems like broken windows, trash, water damage and unkempt lawns.  The report found that properties in minority neighborhoods were 42% more likely to have shoddy maintenance than those in majority-white neighborhoods. Trash and other debris were 34% more likely to be found in foreclosures in minority neighborhoods than in white ones.</p>
<p>Jobless claims down this week</p>
<p>Initial claims for state unemployment<strong> </strong>benefits fell 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 357,000, the lowest level since April 2008, the Labor Department said today.  The prior week&#8217;s figure was revised up to 363,000 from the previously reported 359,000. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a claims reading of 355,000 for last week.  The four-week moving average for new claims, a measure of labor market trends, declined 4,250 to 361,750.  The number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid fell 16,000 to 3.338 million in the week ended March 24, the lowest since August 2008.  A total of 7.05 million people were claiming unemployment benefits during the week ended March 17 under all programs, down 107,760 from the prior week.</p>
<p>WSJ &#8211; ownership gains appeal</p>
<p>Climbing rents for apartments are combining with a continued decline in home prices to push once-reluctant home buyers into finally taking the plunge, say economists and real-estate agents, helping what appears to be a good start to the housing industry&#8217;s all-important spring selling season.  Average apartment rents rose by 2.7% last year while the national vacancy rate dropped below 5% for the first time since 2001, according to a quarterly survey to be released Wednesday by Reis Inc., a real-estate research firm.  The broad and sustained growth of the apartment market contrasts sharply with an uneven and tentative housing recovery. During the first quarter, average apartment rents rose and vacancy rates fell in all 82 metropolitan areas tracked by Reis, when compared with a year ago.  The largest rent increases came in San Francisco and San Jose, Calif., which saw increases of 5.9% and 4.9%, respectively. Even boom-to-bust Las Vegas, which has struggled with falling rents in previous quarters, saw average rent rise 1.8% from a year earlier.  Such increases are one reason why analysts at Zelman &amp; Associates believe 2012 will be the first year since 2005 when the share of apartment renters that moves out to buy a house increases from the previous year. &#8220;The equation of renting versus owning is becoming much more favorable for owning,&#8221; said Ivy Zelman, the firm&#8217;s chief executive. Unless the economy worsens, there is little sign that rent growth will slow until hundreds of thousands of new apartment units currently under construction hit the market over the next few years.</p>
<p>Easier to pay down debt</p>
<p>Timely repayments improved on all 11 of the consumer loan categories tracked by the American Bankers Association (ABA) in the final quarter of last year, the first time that has happened since 2004, according to the organization&#8217;s chief economist.  The ABA said delinquency rates still remain high as the economy slowly recovers but the fourth quarter showed a marked improvement from the prior quarter in consumers&#8217; ability to make payments on auto loans, credit cards and other debts.  It does not, however, track delinquency rates for traditional mortgage payments.  The broad delinquency category that tracks eight types of loans fell to 2.49% from 2.59%.  Delinquencies on payments for credit cards provided by a bank fell to 3.17% from 3.25%.  The delinquency rate for home equity loans fell to 4.08% from 4.12%.</p>
<p>FHFA to decide on write downs in April</p>
<p>Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) head Edward DeMarco said the agency will likely make a decision regarding mortgage principal forgiveness sometime in April.  DeMarco, in a speech Wednesday before the Boston Security Analysts Society, said the FHFA continues to evaluate added incentives from the Treasury Department<strong> </strong>to write down loan principal under the Home Affordable Modification Program.  The Treasury announced in January that it would triple those incentive payments for mortgage investors, and Freddie Mac<strong> </strong>CEO Charles “Ed” Haldeman signaled the change could push the government-sponsored enterprises to cut mortgage principal.  But DeMarco continued his wary stance toward write-downs Wednesday, and said principal forbearance “produces the same, lower monthly payment.” That’s the main reason to modify a loan, he said.  More than three in four “deeply underwater” borrowers on the GSEs&#8217; books are current on their loans, DeMarco said.  “Indeed, we have found that payment reduction, not loan-to-value, is the key indicator of success in loan modification,” DeMarco said in prepared remarks. “If the borrower remains successful in this modified loan, this approach preserves for taxpayers an ultimate recovery on the debt.”</p>
<p>Others, including many House and Senate Democrats, want DeMarco to go forward with write-downs, while the less patient have called for his ouster.  Thirty senators, in a letter Wednesday, asked DeMarco to revise how the FHFA conducts its principal reduction analysis. The FHFA&#8217;s previous report, which said write-downs would cost the GSEs $100 billion, had “several critical flaws,&#8221; they said.  “We seek an accurate analysis, but not a particular result,” the senators said in the letter. “Conducting an accurate analysis of this issue is not only part of your responsibility as conservator to conserve taxpayer assets, but also part of your statutory responsibility to maximize assistance for homeowners to minimize foreclosures.”  Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., who is the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, came out in defense of DeMarco, questioning Democrats’ own efforts.  “Democrats should stop blaming FHFA for their failure to craft bipartisan legislation to address the housing crisis,” Shelby said in an emailed statement. “FHFA has refinanced over 10 million mortgages since 2009. What have the Senate Democrats accomplished during that same time frame?”</p>
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		<title>Only 3% of eligible home owners apply for foreclosure review</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2012 14:29:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Corelogic &#8211; home prices down CoreLogic released its February Home Price Index (HPI) report, the most current and comprehensive source of home prices available today. Excluding distressed sales, month-over-month prices increased 0.7% in February from January.  The CoreLogic HPI also showed that year-over-year prices declined by 0.8% in February 2012 compared to February 2011. Distressed sales include [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Corelogic &#8211; home prices down</p>
<p>CoreLogic released its February Home Price Index (HPI) report, the most current and comprehensive source of home prices available today. Excluding distressed sales, month-over-month prices increased 0.7% in February from January.  The CoreLogic HPI also showed that year-over-year prices declined by 0.8% in February 2012 compared to February 2011. Distressed sales include short sales and real estate owned (REO) transactions.  The report also shows national home prices, including distressed sales, declined on a year-over-year basis by 2.0% in February 2012 and by 0.8% compared to January 2012, the seventh consecutive monthly decline. </p>
<p><strong>Highlights as of February 2012:</strong></p>
<p><strong>-  </strong>Including distressed sales, the five states with the highest <em>appreciation</em> were:  West Virginia (+8.6%), Michigan (+5.8%), Florida (+4.7%), Arizona (+4.5%) and South Dakota (+4.1%).</p>
<p>-  Including distressed sales, the five states with the greatest <em>depreciation</em> were: Delaware (-11.2%), Connecticut (-7.9%), Rhode Island (-7.8%), Illinois (-7.1%) and Georgia (-6.6%).</p>
<p>-  Excluding distressed sales, the five states with the highest <em>appreciation</em> were: South Dakota (+5.9%), West Virginia (+5.6%), Maine (+4.5%), Utah (+3.7%) and Montana (+3.6%).</p>
<p>-  Excluding distressed sales, the five states with the greatest <em>depreciation</em> were: Delaware (-8.7%), Connecticut (-4.9%), Nevada (-4.6%), Vermont (-4.0%) and Minnesota (-3.3%).</p>
<p>-  Including distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the national HPI (from April 2006 to February 2012) was -34.4%.  Excluding distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the HPI for the same period was -24.6%.</p>
<p>-  The five states with the largest peak-to-current declines including distressed transactions are Nevada (-60.2%), Arizona (-49.8%), Florida (-48.6%), Michigan (-44.0%) and California (-43.7%).</p>
<p>-  Of the top 100 Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) measured by population, 67 are showing year-over-year declines in February, nine fewer than in January.</p>
<p>Private sector adds 209,000 jobs</p>
<p>The private sector created 209,000 jobs in March, continuing the slow but steady rise in employment that has characterized the employment market for months.  Services again led the job creation, according to a report from ADP and Macroeconomic Advisors.  The service sector increased 164,000 in March, though the rate of job creation slowed a big from the upwardly revised 183,000 in February.  Job creation in goods-producing businesses rose 45,000 for the month, while manufacturing rose 23,000 and construction grew 13,000.  The financial sector added 8,000 positions for the month.  Small businesses —defined has having fewer than 50 employees — led the way in job creation, adding 100,000 positions. Medium-sized firms added 87,000, while large businesses with 500 or more employees lagged with 22,000 new positions added.  Financial markets reacted modestly to the report, with stock market futures edging up a bit from their lows of the morning, while Treasurys cut a bit of their price gains. The ADP release traditionally sets the stage for the government&#8217;s nonfarm payrolls report to be released Friday. Economists expect the payrolls number to grow by about 207,000 and the unemployment rate to hold steady at 8.3%.  ADP&#8217;s numbers were a shade below consensus though unlikely to generate any substantial revisions to the nonfarm number.  The March numbers could be tricky in that unseasonably warm weather this winter may have played havoc with the usual seasonal adjustments government economists use to gauge employment trends.</p>
<p>MBA &#8211; mortgage applications up</p>
<p>The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, rose 4.8% in the week ended March 30.  The MBA&#8217;s seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications climbed 4%, while the gauge of loan requests for home purchases jumped 7.2%.  &#8220;Applications to buy a home picked up last week, and are running more than two% above the level reported at this time last year,&#8221; Michael Fratantoni, MBA&#8217;s vice president of research and economics, said in a statement. &#8220;Home purchase applications for conventional loans are now about 10% above last year&#8217;s level.&#8221;  The refinance share of total mortgage activity slipped to 71.2% of applications from 71.9% the week before.</p>
<p>Paul Ryan strikes back &#8211; &#8220;we need a new president&#8221;</p>
<p>Following a hyperbolic criticism of his federal budget proposal by President Obama, Republican Congressman <strong>Paul Ryan</strong> lashed back yesterday.  “Disguised as deficit-reduction plans, it is really an attempt to impose a radical vision on our country. It is thinly veiled social Darwinism,” Obama said earlier in the day, calling the Ryan budget “a Trojan horse” that would increase inequality.  “You would think that after the results of this experiment in trickle-down economics, after the results were made painfully clear, that the proponents of this theory might show some humility, might moderate their views a bit,” Obama said. “Instead of moderating their views – even slightly – the Republicans running Congress right now have doubled down and have proposed a budget so far to the right, it makes the Contract With America look like the New Deal.”</p>
<p>On “The Kudlow Report,” Ryan defended against the president’s claims.  “Virtually none of the claims he makes about our budget are actually true,” the Wisconsin Republican said. “He’s distorting the truth, he’s dividing the country, and he’s becoming more bitter and partisan by the day. Frankly, it’s kind of sad to see.”  Ryan took Obama to task for what he characterized as wavering on the Simpson-Bowles plan.  “Our tax reform plan goes in the same exact direction that Simpson-Bowles goes, which is: Broaden the base, lower the rates. Get rid of loopholes and tax shelters so we can lower everybody’s tax rates,” Ryan said.  The congressman also criticized what he saw as a lack of action in the face of an economic cliff that the United States is facing.  “We need somebody in the White House who’ll actually see this problem for what it is and get this debt under our control before it gets out of our control,” he said. “And that’s why I’m just saying we need a new president.”</p>
<p>WSJ &#8211; only 3% of eligible home owners apply for foreclosure review</p>
<p>Last April, federal banking regulators cracked down on alleged foreclosure abuses by announcing enforcement actions against 14 major financial companies and promising widespread reforms.  A year later, borrowers haven&#8217;t received any compensation from banks, officials haven&#8217;t agreed on penalties for errors ranging from incorrect credit-bureau reporting to wrongful foreclosure, and millions of invitations to start foreclosure reviews have received no response.  The Federal Reserve and another federal banking regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, also haven&#8217;t agreed on whether some of those receiving aid in exchange should relinquish their right to sue the banks, people familiar with the discussions said.  Regulators say they are working to ensure that the review process is rigorous and effective, while banks have said they don&#8217;t expect the process to uncover significant evidence of financial harm to borrowers. But the hiccups point to the pitfalls facing government efforts to address alleged foreclosure abuses. In February, five major lenders agreed to a $25 billion foreclosure-abuse settlement with state attorneys general and federal officials.</p>
<p>So far, just 3% of borrowers have applied for the foreclosure reviews specified in last April&#8217;s consent orders. The post office has returned the banks&#8217; own foreclosure-related mailings as undeliverable at almost twice that rate. At least one bank is struggling to get systems in place for handling and testing borrower responses.  Some people familiar with the process said the amount being spent on foreclosure reviews could far outweigh the amount provided to consumers in compensation. Three major banks are spending close to $50 million a month each on auditors, attorneys and other costs related to the review process, said one person familiar with the banks&#8217; efforts.  One major consultant, Promontory Financial Group, has assigned more than 1,000 people to reviews for three major US banks, according to documents filed with the OCC. The fees Promontory would collect for this work are blacked out in the documents, and the company declined to say how much it is being paid.  An OCC spokesman acknowledged that the process will be costly but said it is &#8220;a necessary expense to determine whether or not there were financial injuries as a result of errors in the foreclosure process.&#8221; A Fed spokeswoman declined to comment.</p>
<p>Workers&#8217; confidence up</p>
<p>As the unemployment rate continues to drop, however slowly, employees are feeling more confident about their prospects. That creates a new dynamic for workers and their employers, says Rusty Rueff, a career and workplace expert at Glassdoor, an online job community.  Rueff says that, based on results of Glassdoor’s most recent Employment Confidence survey, there are a number of signals business owners are giving to employees to make them feel that job security is increasing.  Glassdoor has been conducting quarterly surveys since the last quarter of 2008, as the recession was hitting its peak.  “We’ve found that employee confidence is a strong economic indicator,” said Reuff. “Employee confidence is precursor to consumer confidence.” </p>
<p>The Glassdoor survey, conducted in mid-March and spanning activity in the first quarter of 2012, found that just 13% of employees worked for companies that had initiated furloughs, unpaid leave or mandatory vacations. That is down from 18% in the previous quarter.  More telling numbers: The percentage of employees who said their employers communicated bonus reductions or eliminations was down to 10%, from 17 the previous quarter. And 40% said that health or dental benefits, and pay or perks that previously were cut had been restored. That was up from 38% in the fourth quarter of 2011.  And 43% of employees said they expect a pay raise in the next 12 months, up from 38% at the end of 2011. That’s the highest number since the survey was begun in 2008.  While confidence is up, employees are not entirely convinced the recovery is in full gear. One indication: 26% of employees said that employers had reduced health or dental benefits. That number is up dramatically from 17% last quarter.  Nevertheless, Rueff says that the uncertainty caused by Obama&#8217;s Health Act is holding employers back.</p>
<p>CMBS delinquencies spike</p>
<p>Delinquencies on loans backing commercial mortgage bonds jumped 31 basis points to 9.68% in March from the previous month, according to <strong>Trepp</strong>.  It was the largest monthly increase since a 51 bps spike in July. The rate climbed above the 9.37% level in February and the 9.42% rate one year ago. Roughly $5 billion in these loans turned delinquent in March. Meanwhile, there was $1 billion in CMBS loan resolutions, dropping below levels seen in recent months. The first data for five-year loans originated in 2007 came in during the first quarter of 2012. Only 48% of the $9 billion originated paid off at or before they came due. Some of those were resolved with a loss. Of those that fell out of the CMBS pools, roughly 20% suffered some sort of loss, Trepp said, though in many cases the loss was less than 2%.  The half of that specific vintage are either categorized as nonperforming or placed in foreclosure with a special servicer.  The highest delinquency rate jump occurred in multifamily properties, which increased 74 bps to 15.39% in March.  Delinquencies on offices (9.41%) climbed 37 bps, and retail delinquencies (8.24%) increased by 24 bps from the previous month.</p>
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		<title>Short sales up in 2011</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Apr 2012 14:14:34 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Short sales up in 2011 Short sale volumes may not have experienced the boom many predicted, but they&#8217;re certainly moving up.  Late last week, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued a report on year-end loss mitigation activity for most of the mortgages serviced by the nation&#8217;s largest banks.  The 227,570 new short sales completed in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Short sales up in 2011</p>
<p><strong>Short sale volumes may not have experienced</strong> the boom many predicted, but they&#8217;re certainly moving up.  Late last week, the <strong>Office of the Comptroller of the Currency </strong>issued a report on year-end loss mitigation activity for most of the mortgages serviced by the nation&#8217;s largest banks.  The 227,570 new short sales completed in 2011 was a 12% increase from one year ago and more than double the 112,000 measured in 2009, according to the report.  As the robo-signing freeze thaws, and new requirements under the attorneys general settlement are enforced, short sales may continue upward in 2012.</p>
<p>Eurozone unemployment hits new record</p>
<p><strong>Unemployment</strong> in the 17 nation euro zone rose to 10.8% in February — as expected by economists&#8217; polled by Reuters — and compared to 10.7% in January, the European Union&#8217;s statistics office Eurostat said on Monday.  <strong>Joblessness</strong><strong> </strong>last reached February&#8217;s levels in May and June 1997 and was only slightly higher in April 1997 at 10.9%.  In February, unemployment was 10.2% of the working population in the wider, 27-nation EU, or some 24.5 million people, rising from 10.1% in January, Eurostat said.  Europe&#8217;s debt crisis has forced governments to drastically cut spending, while business confidence collapsed late last year, leaving many Europeans struggling to find work at a time when the euro zone heads into a <strong>recession</strong>.  The European Commission expects the euro zone&#8217;s output to shrink 0.3% in 2012, and data released separately on Monday showed that the bloc&#8217;s <strong>manufacturing activity contracted</strong><strong> </strong>for an eighth successive month in March.</p>
<p>Detroit razing houses</p>
<p>More than a quarter of homes in Detroit whose loans failed at the height of the foreclosure crisis in 2006 and 2007 have already been razed or are on the demolition list, becoming a huge obstacle to the city&#8217;s rebirth, a Detroit News analysis shows.  In neighborhoods on the far west side and the northeast corner of the city, as many as two-thirds of the properties that went into foreclosure just five years ago are in the city&#8217;s crosshairs or already on the ground. The worst-hit areas almost mirror perfectly parts of the city where the most subprime mortgages were issued before they helped trigger the collapse of the banking industry.  And more vacancies could be on the way: Although the rate has slowed, lenders have foreclosed on 28,000 more homes since 2007, according to records from RealtyTrac.  Mayor Dave Bing has made reshaping the city one of his top priorities, and his Detroit Works Project is focusing on fixing targeted neighborhoods. But increasing vacancy squeezes the city&#8217;s already feeble tax base, diminishes the quality of life and undercuts the city&#8217;s recovery efforts.  In parts of the city least able to absorb abandonment, evictions are almost instantly followed by strippers who can gut properties in days.</p>
<p>Detroit has struggled with abandoned homes for years, and its population fell 25% to 713,777 from 2000 to 2010. But foreclosures from 2006 and 2007 alone have added 7,600 homes to the demolition list. Now, there are an estimated 38,000 homes in some stage of demolition, a number equal to 10% of all housing units in the city.   The city has knocked down 4,200 homes since 2010 and hopes to get to 6,000 more, which could take another three years at its current pace. That doesn&#8217;t take into account the 1,800 homes the Detroit City Council has targeted for demolition, or the 26,300 homes that are in the process of being considered for demolition.  If foreclosures continue to increase vacancies, the city will be hard-pressed to keep up with demolitions. City leaders are working with banks and other institutions to find ways to preserve occupancy, said Karla Henderson, Detroit&#8217;s group executive of planning and facilities.</p>
<p>Eurozone manufacturing in trouble</p>
<p>The euro zone&#8217;s manufacturing sector shrank for an eighth month and at a faster pace in March, adding to signs the bloc is in recession as the downturn spread to core members <strong>France</strong> and Germany, a survey showed today.  Markit&#8217;s Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers&#8217; Index (PMI) dropped to 47.7 last month from 49.0 in February, in line with a preliminary reading.  It has now been below the 50 mark that divides growth from contraction since August.  Earlier data from Germany, Europe&#8217;s largest economy, showed its manufacturing sector contracted last month and it was a similar story in neighboring France.  In Spain, struggling to implement swinging austerity measures demanded by the European Union to meet tough deficit targets, the sector contracted for the 11th month.  Manufacturing in Italy shrank for an eighth month.  The economic slump will make it even harder for the 17-nation euro zone to overcome its debt crisis as it will depress tax revenues and hurt consumer spending.  Periphery countries have borne the brunt of the sharp downturn as their own austerity measures continue to hamper a return to growth, particularly Greece where the sharp decline in manufacturing continued last month.</p>
<p>Mortgage insurance slightly up</p>
<p>Members of trade group <strong>Mortgage Insurance Companies of America</strong> wrote $5.4 billion of primary new insurance in February, up from $5 billion in January and $4.2 billion from February 2011, the group reported on Friday.  The members, who include <strong>Genworth Mortgage Insurance Corporation</strong>, <strong>Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation</strong>, and <strong>Radian Guaranty Inc</strong>., posted number for primary insurance in force was $397.7 billion, which is down from $399.2 in January and down greatly from $625,764.7 the February before.  February’s cure to default ration was 113.5%, that’s up from January’s 80.9% ratio and slightly up from February of last year, when the rate sat at 112.2%, continuing the trend of February, March and April seeing cure to default ratios of above 100%, which is not so for the rest of the year. </p>
<p>In April, the <strong>Federal Housing Administration</strong> (FHA) will increase its insurance premiums.  But already, the FHA insurance premiums have risen significantly over the past 18 months, according to <strong>Genworth Financial</strong>, increasing a mortgage payment by $95 a month for borrowers at or above 95% loan-to-value ratios.  While many mortgage insurers are operating under state capital ratio waivers, some claim they are ready to take over market share from the FHA.  &#8220;Private mortgage insurance is more competitive than ever with FHA, and is well-positioned to take on new risk,&#8221; according to statement from Genworth Financial. &#8220;By contrast, the FHA is dealing with an unprecedented increase in delinquencies and defaults, and this precarious financial position suggests that FHA may continue to increase costs for FHA loans.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Remodeling on a roll</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2012 14:57:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[MBA &#8211; applications up The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of overall mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, fell 2.7% in the week ended March 23.  The MBA&#8217;s gauge of loan requests for home purchases rose 3.3%, though the measure of refinancing applications dropped 4.6%.  The decline [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MBA &#8211; applications up</p>
<p>The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of overall mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, fell 2.7% in the week ended March 23.  The MBA&#8217;s gauge of loan requests for home purchases rose 3.3%, though the measure of refinancing applications dropped 4.6%.  The decline in refinancing was driven by a 12.0% drop in government refinance activity, while conventional applications fell just 3.4%, the report said.  The refinance share of total mortgage activity slipped to its lowest level since July of last year at 71.9% of applications from 73.4%.  Fixed 30-year mortgage rates jumped to their highest level since November to average 4.23%, up 4 basis points from 4.19%.  The survey covers over 75% of US retail residential mortgage applications, according to MBA.</p>
<p>As election nears, Obama considers strategic oil</p>
<p>The United States asked France to join it for a possible emergency oil stock release, the French Energy Minister said yesterday.  Asked by reporters after the weekly ministers&#8217; meeting whether France would join a US-UK move to release strategic stocks, Eric Besson said: &#8220;It is the United States which has asked and France has welcomed favorably this hypothesis.&#8221;  Le Monde daily said on Wednesday, citing presidential sources, that France was in contact with Britain and the United States on a possible release of strategic oil stocks &#8220;in a matter of weeks&#8221; to push fuel prices down.  France is in contact with Britain and the United States on a possible release of strategic oil stocks &#8220;in a matter of weeks&#8221; to push  <strong>fuel prices</strong><strong> </strong>down, Le Monde daily said on Wednesday, citing presidential sources.  France would join a UK-US cooperation on a release of <strong>strategic oil stocks </strong>that is expected within months, two British sources said earlier this month, in a bid to prevent fuel prices choking economic growth in a <strong>US election</strong><strong> </strong>year.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; remodeling on a roll</p>
<p>&#8220;America&#8217;s housing market is still struggling to find solid footing amid millions of <strong>delinquent loans and foreclosed properties.  </strong>But as the wider economy begins to strengthen, and Americans start to feel better about their current and future finances, they are dipping their toes back into the housing waters, in the form of remodeling.  &#8216;Residential remodeling this winter is as strong as it has been in more than five years. We expect residential remodeling to continue to grow throughout 2012,&#8217; says Joe Emison of Texas-based BuildFax, a division of <strong>BUILDERRadius</strong> and creator of the BuildFax remodeling index.  Residential remodeling, as measured by building permits in January, were at an annual rate of, up 13% from December and 11% from a year ago, according to BuildFax. The index shows particular strength in the Midwest and the West.</p>
<p>Sales of foreclosed properties may be helping the numbers, as investors have swarmed the market, buying up distressed properties and turning them into rentals. Many of those properties have been either abandoned or vandalized and need at the very least basic refurbishing and at the most full renovations.  Great news for US companies that serve the remodeling market, and of course their stocks. <strong>Sherwin Williams,</strong> which gets 77% of its revenue from the US market, is trading at an all time high, going back to its IPO in 1964. <strong>Home Depot</strong><strong> </strong>is seeing the best levels since April of 2002, and shares of<strong> </strong><strong>Lowes </strong>are at a high not seen since 2007. Both get all of their revenue from US customers.  Others poised to profit: <strong>Weyerhaeuser,</strong> which takes about 65% of its revenue from US sales and of course <strong>US Gypsum,</strong> whose shares are up 103% in the last three months, <strong>United Rentals,</strong><strong> </strong>which rents construction equipment, shares up 44% this year, and <strong>MASCO</strong>, which makes all kinds of building products.  This entire sector is exceptionally well placed because it can profit off not only distress in the overall housing market, but improvements in it as well.  As homebuyers trickle back in this spring, they will fuel further renovations, and as banks work through distressed loans and sell foreclosures off to investors, there will be ever more housework to be done.&#8221;</p>
<p>Supreme Court split along ideological lines</p>
<p>Sharp questioning by the Supreme Court&#8217;s conservative justices has cast serious doubt on the survival of the individual insurance requirement at the heart of President Barack Obama&#8217;s radical health care plan.  Arguments at the high court Tuesday focused on whether the insurance requirement &#8220;is a step beyond what our cases allow,&#8221; in the words of Justice Anthony Kennedy.  He and Chief Justice John Roberts are emerging as the seemingly pivotal votes.  Justices Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito appeared likely to join with Justice Clarence Thomas to vote to strike down the key provision. The four Democratic appointees seemed ready to vote to uphold it.  &#8220;If the government can do that, what else can it&#8221; do? asked Scalia, referring to the individual mandate portion of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.  The congressional requirement to buy health care insurance is the linchpin of the law&#8217;s aim to get medical insurance to an additional 30 million people, at a reasonable cost to private insurers and state governments. Virtually every American will be affected by the court&#8217;s decision on the law&#8217;s constitutionality, due this summer in the heat of the presidential and congressional election campaigns.</p>
<p>Scalia, as well as Roberts, Alito and Kennedy, pressed Solicitor General Donald Verrilli on whether people can be forced to buy things like cars, broccoli and burial insurance if the government can make them buy health insurance.  Kennedy at one point said that allowing the government mandate would &#8220;change the relationship&#8221; between the government and its citizens.  &#8220;Do you not have a heavy burden of justification to show authority under the Constitution&#8221; for the individual mandate? asked Kennedy, who is often the swing vote on cases that divide the justices along ideological lines.  Scalia repeatedly pointed out that the federal government&#8217;s powers are limited by the Constitution, with the rest left to the states and the people. &#8220;The argument there is that the people were left to decide whether to buy health insurance,&#8221; Scalia said.  Scalia and Roberts noted that the health care overhaul law would make people get insurance for things they may not need, like heart transplants or pregnancy services. &#8220;You can&#8217;t say that everybody is going to participate in substance abuse services,&#8221; Roberts said.  One demonstrator opposing the law wore a striped prison costume and held a sign, &#8220;Obama Care is Putting the US Tax Payer in Debtors Prison.&#8221;  Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, a former Republican presidential candidate, joined a tea party press conference of opponents of the law. Calling the law &#8220;the greatest expansion of federal power in the history of the country,&#8221; she said, &#8220;We are calling on the court today: Declare this law unconstitutional.&#8221;</p>
<p>Toll CEO optimistic</p>
<p>There are &#8220;encouraging&#8221; signs the high-end housing market is recovering in many US markets, <strong>Toll Brothers</strong><strong> </strong>CEO Douglas Yearley said yesterday.  It&#8217;s been the &#8220;best spring in five years,&#8221; he said. In 2012 &#8220;our orders are up significantly and continue to be up significantly. I&#8217;m optimistic right now.&#8221;  He said that &#8220;25% of our communities have seen a price increase since Jan 1. That’s encouraging. There are places where we don’t have pricing power (but) we’re not dropping prices. We haven’t dropped prices in over a year.&#8221;  In New York, Toll has &#8220;huge pricing power. We’re raising prices every week,&#8221; he said, adding the company is diversifying into the urban high-end high-rise market including properties in parts of New York and Brooklyn and Hoboken.  In the corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C., which did not have the overhang from foreclosures and where Toll does 60% of its business, the market is strong, land is hard to find and &#8220;we have pricing power in many of those local markets.&#8221;  Phoenix is hot for housing, having gone from 14 to 16 months of supply down to four or five months. &#8220;In the last month, Phoenix is back in a big way,&#8221; Yearley said.  So is California — both the northern and southern parts of the state — where it&#8217;s also hard to find land, he said. The Carolinas, including the Raleigh area, are doing quite well as is the second-home market in Florida, which he said is &#8220;beginning to come back and we haven’t seen that in five years.&#8221;  Texas is booming, but the midwest, as well as parts of Nevada such as Las Vegas and Reno, are not, he said.  &#8220;We&#8217;re bumping along the bottom in certain locations but we&#8217;re clearly off the bottom in other locations,&#8221; Yearley said.</p>
<p>Gas prices up</p>
<p>The price of an average gallon of regular gas surpassed the $3.90 mark Wednesday, moving to within a dime of the $4 threshold.  The average price rose 1.3 cents to $3.911 in the latest daily survey conducted for the motorist group AAA. The price has risen for 19 consecutive days.  The current price compares to just below $3.70 a month ago, and just below $3.59 a year ago.  Gasoline averages more than $4 a gallon in 10 states and the District of Columbia. At $4.55 a gallon, Hawaii has the nation&#8217;s highest pump price.  Prices are less than a nickel away from $4 a gallon in Nevada and Wisconsin.  Wyoming has the nation&#8217;s lowest gas prices, averaging nearly $3.51 a gallon.  Gas prices have been rising on the back of soaring oil prices, which shot up in early 2012 amid fears that tensions with Iran could lead to an all-out war that causes a disruption in oil supplies. But the latest Lundberg Survey said gas prices may be peaking, as the price of crude oil has remained relatively steady in March.</p>
<p>WSJ &#8211; home prices fall, but at a slower pace</p>
<p>Home prices fell to new lows in January, but the rate of decline appeared to be easing, offering the latest hint that prices may be at or near a bottom.  Prices dropped 0.8% in the three-month period that ended in January, according to the Standard &amp; Poor&#8217;s/Case-Shiller index that tracks 20 US metro areas. While that lowered the index to levels not seen since the end of 2002, the monthly decline improved from a drop of 1.1% in December and 1.3% in November.  House prices tend to weaken during the winter months, when sales activity slows and the share of &#8220;distressed&#8221; home sales, such as foreclosures, rises. After adjusting for seasonal factors, prices were flat in January compared with December.  Compared with one year ago, home prices fell 3.8% in January. That also represented an improvement over the 4.1% year-over-year decline for December.</p>
<p>Yesterday&#8217;s report &#8220;adds to other evidence that the housing market is on the mend,&#8221; said Paul Dales, senior US economist for Capital Economics. &#8220;We expect that 2012 will go down in history as the year that the most severe house-price crash on record ended.&#8221;  Home prices fell to new lows in nine cities, led by Atlanta, which was down 14.8% from a year ago. But three cities posted year-over-year increases: Detroit (1.7%), Phoenix (1.3%) and Denver (0.2%).  On a seasonally adjusted basis, half of the 20 markets showed flat or increasing prices in January when compared with December. </p>
<p>Housing markets face significant headwinds. Nearly 11 million homeowners owe more on their mortgages than their houses or apartments are worth, and more than one million homes could sell out of foreclosure this year, putting pressure on prices. Credit standards are tight and show few signs of easing, leaving housing markets with fewer buyers at a time when more will be needed to soak up the excess supply.  Any stabilization in home prices, however, could offer a big boost to fragile consumer psychology.  &#8220;When you ask people why are they in the market right now they tell you, &#8216;Because home prices have stopped falling in some sickening way,&#8217;&#8221; said Glenn Kelman, chief executive of Redfin Corp., a Seattle-based brokerage. &#8220;They worry they could lose a little bit, but there was a time you really had to close your eyes before signing an offer, and hope you weren&#8217;t going to lose 10% of your equity in 12 months.&#8221;  Inventories of homes for sale are down sharply from one year ago and sales of new and existing homes for the first two months of the year have posted sizable increases compared with one year ago.  Most economists anticipate total levels of home construction and sales will increase this year, leaving home prices as the last metric that hasn&#8217;t yet reached a bottom.</p>
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		<title>Fed to fine banks</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2012 15:41:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Smart Real Estate News &#38; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 21, 2012 Forward this e-mail to your friends! Then they can subscribe directly at the following link: http://www.smartrealestatenews.com/ *** Join Chris’ Facebook Fan Page&#8211;&#62; http://www.mclaughlinchris.com *** Follow Chris on Twitter&#8211;&#62; http://www.twitter.com/mclaughlinchris ************************************************************ Fed to fine banks The Federal Reserve says that it plans to fine [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Smart Real Estate News &amp; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 21, 2012</p>
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<h3>Fed to fine banks</h3>
<p>The Federal Reserve says that it plans to fine eight additional US bank holding companies for improperly foreclosing on homeowners.  The financial firms — EverBank, Goldman Sachs Group, HSBC Holdings PLC, PNC Financial Services Group, MetLife, OneWest Bank, SunTrust Banks and US Bancorp — were not part of last month&#8217;s settlement over alleged foreclosure abuses.  Suzanne G. Killian, a senior associate director at the Federal Reserve, called the fines &#8220;appropriate&#8221; during a congressional hearing in Brooklyn, New York.  Killian offered few details about the size of the fines or when they will be levied.  The nation&#8217;s five biggest lenders — Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Ally Financial — last month agreed to a $25 billion settlement with state and federal government agencies last month after a 16-month probe.  As part of that settlement, the five banks agreed to reduce mortgages for about 1 million homeowners. They also will pay into a fund that will send $2,000 to 750,000 homeowners who were improperly foreclosed upon.  Separately, government regulators last April ordered 14 mortgage lenders and servicers to reimburse homeowners who were improperly foreclosed upon. Since then, letters have been sent to 4.3 million borrowers who were at risk of foreclosure during 2009 and 2010.  The deadline for borrowers to seek money under the orders is July 31. So far, nearly 122,000 homeowners have asked for an auditor to review their foreclosures.</p>
<h4>North America the next middle east for oil?</h4>
<p>Increased production of energy from a number of sources including deepwater drilling, natural gas exploration and Canada’s oil sands could make North America the next Middle East, according to a new report from Citigroup.  The bank estimates that total North American energy production will rise from 15.4 million barrels per day in 2011 to almost 26.6 million barrels per day by 2020, boosting gross domestic product (GDP) and creating ripple effects throughout the economy.  Citigroup analysts say the US will see large gains in oil production from deepwater drilling, while Mexico will begin to reverse recent declines in output. Production of shale gas liquids will increase by 3.8 million barrels per day by 2020. The report says this new production would amount to about 7% of additional global production, &#8220;a higher growth rate than OPEC can sustain.&#8221;  That increase in energy supply will also be accompanied with a decline in demand. US consumption of oil products has fallen by 2 million barrels per day since its peak in 2005, and the Citi report says demand will fall by another 2 million barrels per day over the next decade.</p>
<p>Citgroup expects the shift in energy supply and demand to increase real GDP by between 2 and 3.3%.  It also estimates that some 550,000 new jobs will be created directly in the oil and gas extraction sector by 2020. An additional 2.2 to 2.3 million new jobs will be created from the resulting economic stimulus effects of new production by 2020.  In its analysis, Citigroup acknowledges infrastructure bottlenecks and legislation that blocks exports of crude oil of US origin. It also points out that new environmental regulations could prevent the scenario from playing out. But the analysts point out the surge in energy production could be game-changing.  &#8220;It would not only improve incomes and create jobs, but also improve national energy security and reverse perennial current account deficits.&#8221;</p>
<h4>MBA &#8211; mortgage applications down</h4>
<p>Mortgage applications decreased 7.4% from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending March 16, 2012.   The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 7.4% on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 7.1% compared with the previous week.  The Refinance Index decreased 9.3% from the previous week.  The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 1.0% from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 0.6% compared with the previous week and was 1.9% lower than the same week one year ago.  The four week moving average for the seasonally adjusted Market Index is down 2.79%.  The four week moving average is up 3.25% for the seasonally adjusted Purchase Index, while this average is down 4.31% for the Refinance Index.</p>
<p>The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 73.4% of total applications, the lowest since July 2011, from 75.1% the previous week. The adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) share of activity decreased to 5.6% from 5.8% of total applications from the previous week.  “With the rate increase last week, refinances are obviously slowing, and the refinance share at 73% is down to its lowest level since last July.    With rate/term refinances falling as we go forward, HARP will be a bigger percentage of refinances but will be more concentrated in certain states,” said Jay Brinkmann, MBA’s Senior Vice President of Research and Education.  Brinkmann continued, “Some of the largest institutions are reporting that the HARP share of their refinances remained at about 30% last week, but HARP volume is not equal across the country. The states that I started referring to years ago as the sand states that had the worst delinquencies we now should start calling the HARP states for mortgage refinances.  We saw big state-level differences in refinance applications for February over January: Florida was up 49%, Arizona was up 61%, and Nevada was up 71%.  Refinances in the rest of the country were generally flat or even down.  For example, Texas had no change, Colorado was down 3%, Connecticut was up only 2%, and Virginia was up 1%.  HARP clearly is a driving force in those states that saw the most defaults and the biggest drops in home equity.”</p>
<p>The average loan size of all loans for home purchase in the US was $225,463 in February 2012, up from $216,888 in January. The average loan size for a refinance was $222,048, down from $227,563 in January.  The largest purchase loans were made in the Pacific region at $ 324,606. The largest refinance loans were also made in the Pacific region at $ 305,949.</p>
<h4>US exempts EU from sanctions</h4>
<p>The United States on Tuesday exempted Japan and 10 EU nations from financial sanctions because they have significantly cut purchases of Iranian crude oil, but left Iran&#8217;s top customers China and India exposed to the possibility of such steps.   The decision is a victory for the 11 countries, whose banks have been given a six-month reprieve from the threat of being cut off from the US financial system under new sanctions designed to pressure Iran over its nuclear program.  The list did not, however, include China and India, Iran&#8217;s top two crude oil importers, nor US allies South Korea and Turkey, which are among the top-10 consumers of Iranian oil.  A US official held up Japan&#8217;s estimated 15-22% cut in oil purchases from Iran in the second half of last year as an example for other nations, saying it did so after the &#8220;tragedy&#8221; of the earthquake that caused the Fukushima nuclear disaster.  &#8220;Japan was a model,&#8221; State Department Special Envoy and Coordinator for International Energy Affairs Carlos Pascual told lawmakers. &#8220;If Japan was able to do what it did &#8230; that should be an example to others that they could potentially do more.&#8221;</p>
<h4>Olick &#8211; rising rates may not hurt housing</h4>
<p>&#8220;It was barely a few weeks ago that mortgage rates were sitting at record lows.  The idea of rates over 4% on the 30-year fixed seemed a distant memory.  And here they are now at 4.05% on the Bankrate.com overnight, thanks to the recent rise in Treasury yields.  The housing market, it seems, just can&#8217;t catch a break. Or can it?  As the economy improves, the job market improves, and that is a key driver for housing. But on the flip side, as the economy improves, investors finally crawl out of the Treasury bunkers, driving yields higher, and mortgage rates generally follow the 10-year Treasury.  &#8216;We will definitely see a freeze up in refi’s immediately but the decision on a purchase still won’t be impacted until rates get at least to 4.5% I believe,&#8217; says Peter Boockvar at Miller Tabak. &#8216;Assuming a $200k mortgage, going from 4 to 4.5% in mortgage rate adds about $60 per month to one’s payments, and while an extra $700 per year matters, I’m not sure if it’s a deal breaker.&#8217;</p>
<p>While rates have moved a good quarter of a% in the past few weeks, most analysts don&#8217;t think they&#8217;ll go much higher.  &#8216;Mortgage rates were too high anyway, relative to the 10-year Treasury, so I don&#8217;t think you will see a parallel shift,&#8217; says FBR&#8217;s Paul Miller, who spoke to several bankers today. They told him mortgage volume is good, which helps keep rates competitive. &#8216;But it does take time for this stuff to flow through the markets,&#8217; he adds.  And then there could be one other phenomenon, as described by Freddie Mac&#8217;s chief economist Frank Nothaft: &#8216;When rates tick up, you may see some potential home buyers who have been sitting on the sidelines, suddenly they may get up, as they are concerned that maybe this is the beginning of a trend, and they don&#8217;t want to miss out on these 60-year low mortgage rates. In the near term it can encourage buyers.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<h4>Oil up to $107 per barrel</h4>
<p>Oil prices rose to near $107 a barrel Wednesday after a report showed US crude supplies fell unexpectedly, a sign demand may be improving in the world&#8217;s largest economy.  By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark oil for May delivery was up 49 cents to $106.56 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell $2.49 to settle at $106.07 per barrel in New York on Tuesday after Saudi Arabia said it could pump more oil to cover any shortages.  In London, Brent crude for May delivery was up 27 cents at $124.39 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.  The American Petroleum Institute said late Tuesday that crude inventories fell 1.4 million barrels last week, breaking a two-month trend of growing supplies. Analysts surveyed by Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos., had predicted an increase of 2.1 million barrels.  Inventories of gasoline fell 1.4 million barrels last week while distillates rose 600,000 barrels, the API said.</p>
<p>LPS &#8211; first look report<br />
Lender Processing Services, Inc. (NYSE: LPS), a leading provider of integrated technology, data and analytics to the mortgage and real estate industries, reports the following “first look” at February 2012 month-end mortgage performance statistics derived from its loan-level database of nearly 40 million mortgage loans.</p>
<p>Total US loan delinquency rate:7.57%<br />
Month-over-month change in delinquency rate: -5.0%<br />
Year-over-year change in delinquency rate: -14.0%<br />
Total U.S foreclosure pre-sale inventory rate: 4.13%<br />
Month-over-month change in foreclosure presale inventory rate: -0.5%<br />
Year-over-year change in foreclosure presale inventory rate: -0.3%<br />
Number of properties that are 30 or more days past due, but not in foreclosure: (A) 3,781,000<br />
Number of properties that are 90 or more days delinquent, but not in foreclosure:1,722,000<br />
Number of properties in foreclosure pre-sale inventory: (B) 2,065,000<br />
Number of properties that are 30 or more days delinquent or in foreclosure:  (A+B) 5,846,000<br />
States with highest percentage of non-current* loans: FL, MS, NV, NJ, IL<br />
States with the lowest percentage of non-current* loans: MT, AK, WY, SD, ND</p>
<p>*Non-current totals combine foreclosures and delinquencies as a% of active loans in that state.<br />
Notes:<br />
(1) Totals are extrapolated based on LPS Applied Analytics’ loan-level database of mortgage assets<br />
(2) All whole numbers are rounded to the nearest thousand<br />
The company will provide a more in-depth review of this data in its monthly Mortgage Monitor report, which includes an analysis of data supplemented by in-depth charts and graphs that reflect trend and point-in-time observations.</p>
<h4>Money printing going out of style</h4>
<p>The era of quantitative easing—a process by which central banks buy assets such as government bonds to inject funds in the markets—may be coming to an end, according to a survey of fund managers.  According to a March survey by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, investors are more upbeat about the future and the prospects for growth and they no longer expect further quantitative easing measures to be taken by the Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank.  In the survey, 28% of fund managers said they expected the global economy to strengthen in the next 12 months, up from 11% in February. This was the highest reading since March last year.  But the report did find that fund managers still see sovereign debt as the biggest tail risk to the global recovery.  Investors do foresee higher inflation, with a net 13% expecting it to rise in the coming year.</p>
<h4>WSJ &#8211; housing mixed</h4>
<p>US home building fell in February, but permits for new construction reached their highest levels in nearly 3½ years, reflecting housing&#8217;s uneven and protracted recovery.  Home construction decreased 1.1% from January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 698,000, the Commerce Department said yesterday.  Construction of single-family homes, which makes up more than 70% of housing starts, fell by 9.9% &#8211; the largest drop in a year. Meanwhile, multifamily homes with at least two units, a volatile part of the market, posted a 21.1% gain.  Still, January&#8217;s figures were raised to 706,000 starts overall, a 3.7% improvement from December and the highest level since October 2008.</p>
<p>In a positive sign for future construction, the February data showed new building permits rose by 5.1% from a month earlier to an annual rate of 717,000 &#8211; also the highest level since October 2008.  The housing sector has been healing slowly after prices collapsed more than five years ago.  A National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) report on Monday showed that US home builders&#8217; confidence in the market held steady in March at the highest level since 2007.  &#8220;The level of activity still remains far short of the pace implied by the NAHB index so we look for further gains over the next few months in both sales and starts,&#8221; said Ian Shepherdson, chief US economist at High Frequency Economics. &#8220;Housing will add to growth all year, and beyond.&#8221;</p>
<p>But Joshua Shapiro, chief US economist at MFR Inc., said that so far, the home builders association&#8217;s level of confidence hasn&#8217;t been matched by actual construction. &#8220;Our view remains that single-family housing starts are in a long-term bottoming process but that an enormous overhang of existing single-family home supply will prevent sharp gains in single-family starts in the near to medium term,&#8221; Mr. Shapiro said.  NAHB said Monday that its members continue to face obstacles, including tight credit for both builders and buyers and a large inventory of inexpensive, foreclosed homes in many markets.  The Commerce Department data showed that housing starts were mixed across four US regions. The Northeast posted a 12.3% decline, while starts in the West dropped 5.9% last month. Starts rose 3% in the Midwest and 1.5% in the South.  Actual housing starts, calculated without seasonal adjustments, grew to 48,100 in February from 46,500 in January. Lumber and commodities markets watch those numbers closely to gauge demand.<br />
See you at the top!<br />
Chris McLaughlin</p>
<p>**************</p>
<p>Copyright Loss Mitigation Institute LLC 2011.<br />
All Rights Reserved.</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalesriches.com</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalescoach.com</p>
<p>http://www.sixfigurebpo.com</p>
<p>http://www.reomillionaireclub.com</p>
<p>http://www.youtube.com/shortsalesriches</p>
<p>http://www.smartrealestatenews.com</p>
<p>(subscribe to this newsletter)</p>
<p>*************************************************</p>
<p>About the author:<br />
Chris McLaughlin is widely known as America’s top<br />
Real Estate Attorney and Investment Consultant.</p>
<p>* As the top Florida foreclosure and pre-<br />
foreclosure expert, he oversees more than<br />
100 short sale &amp; REO closings each month</p>
<p>* Long-time authority on real estate investing<br />
and rapid reselling of distressed homes.  Owns<br />
portfolio of nearly 150 high-value, high-profit<br />
properties</p>
<p>* Owner of one of Florida&#8217;s largest Real Estate firms,<br />
running 4 different offices, supporting over<br />
420 agents, uniquely positioning him to help<br />
thousands of investors make money in the<br />
biggest market opportunity ever!</p>
<p>* In 2011, Chris&#8217; 4 Central Florida real estate offices<br />
closed 3,336 sides for a closed sales volume of<br />
$430,902,643!</p>
<p>* Highly sought-after speaker, consultant, and<br />
seminar leader for current trends and hot topics<br />
in Real Estate Investing, Entrepreneurship, and<br />
Wealth Building</p>
<p>* Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mclaughlinchris</p>
<p>* Join my Facebook Fan Page: http://www.mclaughlinchris.com</p>
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		<title>Christian Science Monitor &#8211; ten best cities to buy short sales</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2012 15:39:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Smart Real Estate News &#38; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 20, 2012 Forward this e-mail to your friends! Then they can subscribe directly at the following link: http://www.smartrealestatenews.com/ *** Join Chris’ Facebook Fan Page&#8211;&#62; http://www.mclaughlinchris.com *** Follow Chris on Twitter&#8211;&#62; http://www.twitter.com/mclaughlinchris ************************************************************ Christian Science Monitor &#8211; ten best cities to buy short sales 10. Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Smart Real Estate News &amp; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 20, 2012</p>
<p>Forward this e-mail to your friends!</p>
<p>Then they can subscribe directly at the following link:</p>
<p>http://www.smartrealestatenews.com/</p>
<p>*** Join Chris’ Facebook Fan Page&#8211;&gt;</p>
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<p>*** Follow Chris on Twitter&#8211;&gt;</p>
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<h3>Christian Science Monitor &#8211; ten best cities to buy short sales</h3>
<p>10. Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, Wash. (average short sale discount – 24.5%)</p>
<p>Short sales took off in the Seattle area in the fourth quarter of 2011: 925 pre-foreclosure homes were sold. That&#8217;s a whopping 46% increase from the same period a year earlier and represented 7.4% of all home sales in the area, at an average price of $245,403. Buyers of short sale homes reaped a nearly 25% discount off non-foreclosure homes. Seattle is also among the top metros to buy foreclosure properties generally, at an average discount of 43%.</p>
<p>9. Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Ariz. (24.7%)</p>
<p>Phoenix is the sixth-most populous city in the United States. Known as the Valley of the Sun, the Phoenix metropolitan area had the second-highest number of pre-foreclosure home sales on the list, with 7,112 (up 43% from the fourth quarter of 2010). Short sales made up 20.3% of all homes sold in the area, at an average price of $122,212. As a state, Arizona saw one of the largest year-over-year increases in pre-foreclosure sales, up 48%.</p>
<p>8. Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, Ore./Wash. (26.1%)</p>
<p>The Pacific Northwest is a pricier housing market that Phoenix, with fewer homes available. The area sold only 679 pre-foreclosure homes in the fourth quarter, which is the third-lowest number on the list (the minimum for inclusion is 500 homes). Still, that&#8217;s up 37.2% from 2010, and a willing buyer can get a short sale home for an average price of $190,042, which represents an average discount of 26.1% below market value.</p>
<p>7. Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, Calif. (28.0%)</p>
<p>The most populous state in the country, California saw short sales increase in the fourth quarter. Los Angeles led the charge, with the most short sale houses sold of any metro in the country, let alone the state, at an average sale price of $342,668. In terms of total home sales, Los Angeles also boasts the highest percentage of short sales on the list, at 22%.</p>
<p>6. Jacksonville, Fla.(28.8%)</p>
<p>Situated on the St. Johns river at the top of Florida&#8217;s Atlantic coast, Jacksonville is the largest metropolitan area in the country from a geographical standpoint. It&#8217;s cheap, too – 677 short sale homes were sold in the area in 2011&#8242;s fourth quarter, at an average sale price of $116,447. Jacksonville saw a 41.34% increase in short sales from 2010, with pre-foreclosures making up 12.4% of all home sales in the area.</p>
<p>5. St. Louis (29.6%)</p>
<p>The St. Louis area has by far the cheapest housing market of the short sale metros on the Top 10 list. Nearly 600 pre-foreclosure homes were sold there in the fourth quarter of 2011, at an average price tag of $96,131. Short sales made up only 5.7% of home sales in St. Louis (the lowest proportion on the list), but short sales increased 19.9% from 2010.</p>
<p>4. Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, Ga. (32.9%)</p>
<p>Georgia&#8217;s foreclosure problem has continued to worsen in recent years. Foreclosure sales made up 39% of total home sales for the state in the fourth quarter of 2011, the third-highest of any state. As a result, the Atlanta area ranks high in both short sales and foreclosure sales.  The area saw the biggest surge in short sales of all the cities on the Top 10 list, with 3,387 homes sold, up 63% since the same period in 2010. Short sales made up 14% of all home sales in the quarter, with an average price tag of $123,271.</p>
<p>3. Chicago-Naperville-Joliet Ill./Ind./Wis. (33.5%)</p>
<p>In addition to a deep average discount on short sales, the Chicago metro is one of the top places to buy foreclosed homes, with an average discount of 49.1%. Chicago sold 2,409 pre-foreclosure homes in the fourth quarter of 2011, at an average sale price of $156,349. That&#8217;s a 28.9% increase from the fourth quarter of 2010.</p>
<p>2. San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif. (37.3%)</p>
<p>Home to Silicon Valley, the San Jose metro area is located just south of San Francisco and is the third largest metro in the state. In the fourth quarter of 2011, 1,169 homes were sold in short sales at an average price of $398,413. That&#8217;s the highest price among the cities on the Top 10 list, even with one of the biggest discounts in the US. Short sales increased 34.1% from the end of 2010 and made up 18.6% of all home sales in the San Jose area.</p>
<p>1. San Francisco-Oakland-Freemont, Calif. (41.0%)</p>
<p>Discounts for short sale homes don&#8217;t come any bigger than this in major metropolitan areas: more than 40% in San Francisco. Such sales surged 50% in the San Francisco metropolitan area from the fourth quarter of 2010: Nearly 3,000 homes in pre-foreclosure were sold in 2011&#8242;s fourth quarter, at an average price of $330,733. Short sales made up 19.2% of all home sales. The city is not among the top markets  for deeply discounted foreclosure homes, indicating that lenders are taking measures to help homeowners avoid foreclosure.</p>
<h3>Goldman Sachs cut jobs</h3>
<p>Goldman Sachs has begun a new round of staff cuts in its trading and investment banking divisions, three sources familiar with the matter said, a sign of continued cutbacks on Wall Street.  The job cuts follow 2,400 positions Goldman eliminated last year, and further reductions are possible as the company continues to reduce costs to raise profitability, the sources said.  The latest round of cuts is part of Goldman&#8217;s annual employee review process.  The new job cuts are taking place in all of Goldman&#8217;s four main divisions, including sales and trading, investment banking, wealth management and investing and lending, according to one source familiar with the matter.  Many of the cuts are aimed at traders who can be replaced with new technology, or back-office, technology and operations staff who can be replaced with less expensive employees, the source said. The bank has been pushing aggressively to replace staff in high-cost areas like New York and New Jersey with less costly workers in Salt Lake City, where the company is building a sizable workforce.</p>
<h3>Housing starts down</h3>
<p>The Commerce Department said housing starts slipped 1.1% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 698,000 units. January’s starts were revised up to a 706,000-unit pace from a previously reported 699,000 unit rate.  Economists polled by Reuters had forecast housing starts little changed at a 700,000-unit rate. Compared to February last year, residential construction was up 34.7%, the biggest year-on-year rise since April 2010.  New building permits surged 5.1% to a 717,000-unit pace last month, far exceeding economists’ expectations for an advance to a 690,000-unit pace from January&#8217;s 682,000-unit rate.  Housing starts last month were pulled down by a 9.9% drop in the construction of single-family homes — which account for a large portion of the market.  Groundbreaking for multifamily housing projects soared 21.1%. This segment is benefiting from rising demand for rental apartments, as falling house prices discourage some Americans from owning a home.  Housing starts in the South rose to their highest level since October 2008.  Permits to build single-family homes jumped 4.9% to a 472,000-unit pace — the highest since April 2010. Permits for multifamily homes increased 5.6% to a 245,000-unit rate.</p>
<h3>Small cars costing more</h3>
<p>Across the board, prices for these cars are moving up along with gas prices.  KBB tracks used car prices week to week. For the week ending March 2nd, it found used car prices jumped 1.3% to $12,286. That should not come as a surprise given the way auction prices have shot up. Used car auction house Adesa says the average compact car sold for $6,942 (up 4.4%) on the wholesale market in February.  While automakers are moving as quickly as possible to ramp-up production of small cars or at least the small fuel-efficient engines to put in those cars, it won’t happen overnight. So expect the tight inventories for many small cars to continue for some time. Eventually, that could play out with small cars selling with a minimal discount to the sticker price. Perhaps even at a premium to the MSRP.  One thing is certain, we won’t see increased incentives or rebates for new cars anytime soon. Automakers don’t need to grease a market where buyers are coming into the showroom.</p>
<h3>Olick &#8211; did a warm winter steal spring housing?</h3>
<p>&#8220;As if we really needed a reminder that today’s housing market is still very fragile, the first installment in a slew of housing data to be released this week came in below expectations.  Home builder sentiment, as measured by the National Association of Home Builders’ monthly sentiment survey, was unchanged in March, and February’s reading was revised down.  This after five straight months of gains in builder confidence.  &#8216;Many of our members continue to cite obstacles on the road to recovery, including persistently tight builder and buyer credit and the ongoing inventory of distressed properties in some markets,&#8217; said NAHB chief economist David Crowe in a release.</p>
<p>Most troubling was a big drop in sentiment out West, which is where the bulk of the nation’s foreclosures and distressed properties are. Banks are really ramping up the foreclosure process now that the so-called &#8216;Robo-signing&#8217; settlement is behind them and new guidelines are in place. That means more foreclosed properties will be hitting the housing market, as the still-swelled pipeline finally begins to empty.  While the all-important South region, most meaningful for the builders, saw an increase in sentiment, it is still below the national average, and overall current sales were down and buyer traffic was flat. Only sales expectations over the next six months rose. That could have a lot to do with unseasonably warm weather.  With temperatures in most of the country hitting near record highs in January and February, it begs the question, did much of the Spring market start early, and did it steal from the historically strong months of March and April?  &#8216;We think it has pulled forward a useful amount,&#8217; says analyst Stephen East of ISI Group. &#8216;It definitely helps breaking ground and has been a big help on the jobs front.&#8217;</p>
<p>In fact ISI studied weather in all four regions and reported that while favorable economic trends and specifically job growth are the primary driver of renewed housing activity, &#8216;We believe some demand was pulled forward from the later Spring months, implying the first quarter could be above investor expectations, while the second quarter could be below expectations.&#8217;  Weather cannot be discounted in home sales, especially sales of new construction, since builders can offer potentially faster turnarounds for new orders if they’re not hampered by frozen earth. February saw a big spike in the &#8216;current sales&#8217; component of the home builder sentiment index. Buyer traffic in March was unchanged.&#8221;</p>
<h3>House GOP wants to overhaul tax code</h3>
<p>House Republicans will call for overhauling the US tax code by reducing rates as well as the number of income tax brackets as part of their 2013 budget proposal.  House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin is slated to unveil today a tax and spending plan that would shrink the number of brackets to two from six with rates set at 25% and 10%. The top rate now is 35%.  Ryan&#8217;s proposal would also eliminate the alternative minimum tax while reducing the corporate tax rate from 35% now to 25%, according to documents provided by his office.  The plan may revive Republicans&#8217; call last year for overhauling Medicare, though with a compromise Ryan has since written with Oregon Democratic Senator Ron Wyden on the health program for the elderly and disabled. It may also spur a reprise of proposals to carve big savings from other safety net programs to drive down the government&#8217;s $1.2 trillion deficit.  Though the proposals probably won&#8217;t become law anytime soon, they are certain to inflame an election year debate over what to do about government red ink.  &#8220;We&#8217;re back with a budget that offers real solutions,&#8221; Ryan said in a video posted yesterday on his website. &#8220;Americans have a choice to make &#8212; a choice that&#8217;s going to determine our country&#8217;s future.&#8221;</p>
<h3>Fast foreclosure bill may return</h3>
<p>Florida&#8217;s quickie foreclosure bill died quietly in the Senate on the last day of the 2012 legislative session, and although homeowner advocates fear it will reappear next year, sponsor Kathleen Passidomo said it may not be her pushing it.  The Naples Republican is confident the controversial bill, dubbed the Florida Fair Foreclosure Act, would have passed if it had come up for a vote by the full membership. Instead, she said it got lost in the last minute hustle to hear dozens of proposals before the end of the session March 9.  The Florida Bankers Association agrees there were enough votes in the Senate to pass the nationally watched proposal, which flew through the House in a 94-17 vote on Feb. 29.  But Anthony DiMarco, executive vice president of government affairs for the association, said it&#8217;s too early to tell what kind of expedited foreclosure plan may materialize in 2013.</p>
<p>The association said in its end-of-session newsletter that it believes &#8220;internal Senate politics&#8221; led to the bill&#8217;s demise and that it will push for similar foreclosure legislation next year.  &#8220;I think there will be a foreclosure bill filed next year if the prediction of a huge glut of foreclosures in the courts holds true, but whether I file it or not, I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Passidomo, noting that she has other interests and that this was the second time she tried and failed to streamline the state&#8217;s foreclosure logjam with legislation. &#8220;This was a missed opportunity.&#8221;  Still, it was the furthest a bill aimed at reducing Florida&#8217;s mounting foreclosure backlog has made it since the real estate crash. An estimated 368,000 foreclosure cases are in the courts statewide, with more on the way.  February foreclosure statistics released last week by the research group RealtyTrac showed a nearly 53% increase in South Florida filings compared with the same time in 2011. The spike was 40% statewide.  &#8220;I would be very surprised if the bill does not come back,&#8221; Boca Raton attorney Margery Golant said. &#8220;The industry is pushing everywhere it can to be able to move faster on foreclosures.&#8221;</p>
<h3>WSJ &#8211; Wall Street keys on rentals</h3>
<p>Some of the biggest names on Wall Street are lining up to become landlords to cash-strapped Americans by bidding on pools of foreclosed properties being sold by Fannie Mae.  The idea is that the new owners would rent out the homes at first rather than reselling &#8211; potentially aiding a housing-market recovery by reducing the number of properties clogging the market. The fact that big-name investors are interested also suggests they anticipate sizable future profits in housing.  Currently, banks selling through regular real-estate listings are getting more than 90 cents on the dollar of their asking price, according to industry analysts. They could be reluctant to unload properties in bulk if it means selling for much less.  Firms considering bids include Austin, Texas-based broker-dealer Amherst Securities Group and a fund run by mortgage-bond pioneer Lewis Ranieri. Hedge-fund manager Paulson &amp; Co. and private-equity investors Colony Capital LLC are also considering bids, according to people familiar with the process.  The sale consists of 2,500 homes divided into eight regional pools, ranging from 572 properties in Atlanta to 99 in Chicago. The total current market value is $320 million, according to an offering document prepared by Credit Suisse, which is advising Fannie.</p>
<p>Bulk sales, however, pose a trade-off. While the current approach of selling homes one-by-one has its own high costs and is sometimes inefficient, selling properties in bulk to large investors could require Fannie Mae to sell at a big discount, leading to larger initial costs. It is unclear which would be least costly ultimately to taxpayers, who are responsible for the big mortgage-finance company&#8217;s losses.  Purely in dollar terms, the sale would be small by Wall Street standards. But it could offer clues about whether investors are willing to pay prices high enough to entice Fannie Mae &#8211; along with its sibling Freddie Mac, federal agencies and banks-to do more bulk-sale deals in the future.</p>
<h3>Bernanke justifies Fed</h3>
<p>Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke returns to his roots as a university professor today, seeking to explain and justify the existence of the central bank ahead of the 100th anniversary of its founding next year.  Bernanke will deliver the first of four hour-long lectures on the history of the Fed as part of what public relations specialist Richard Dukas called a &#8220;P.R. offensive&#8221; to buff the central bank&#8217;s tarnished image. The Fed is being attacked from both the left and the right, with liberals criticizing it for not doing enough to bring down unemployment, and conservatives blaming it for doing too much and risking faster inflation.  Bernanke&#8217;s return to the milieu where he spent more than two decades will give the Fed&#8217;s top policy maker an opportunity to &#8220;set the narrative&#8221; on the central bank&#8217;s role during and after the financial meltdown, said Princeton University professor and former Fed Vice Chairman Alan Blinder. &#8220;The question of who gets to write the history is an important one.&#8221;  If Americans lose faith in the Fed&#8217;s ability to manage the economy and contain inflation, that will rob monetary policy of some of its potency, according to Dana Saporta, director of US economics research for Credit Suisse Securities in New York. Policy has &#8220;less effect the less confidence the public has in the Fed,&#8221; she said.</p>
<h3>HARP still a massive failure</h3>
<p>Fewer underwater homeowners worked through the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) in December than in any other month in more than a year, despite changes that removed previous barriers.  About 2,700 mortgages with a loan-to-value ratio between 105% and 125% received a HARP refinancing in December, down 47% from November and the lowest since October 2010. All HARP refis fell 36% monthly to 23,000 in December, hitting a low not seen since November 2009.  Total refinancings at Fannie Mae<strong> </strong>and Freddie Mac rose 5% to 376,000.  The data released by the Federal Housing Finance Agency<strong> </strong>(FHFA) included no loans with LTV ratios above 125% — now considered eligible. Those changes, dubbed HARP 2.0, took effect at the beginning of December.  Corinne Russell, a spokeswoman for the FHFA, said the agency&#8217;s data likely won&#8217;t reflect the changes until it releases numbers for the first quarter of this year. She said it typically takes 60 days to originate and close a loan and another 90 days from closing to loan delivery to Fannie and Freddie.</p>
<p>But with the changes, Russell said the agency is hearing that more lenders are refinancing loans with LTV ratios above 105%.  &#8220;Anecdotally, we know that lenders are embracing HARP 2.0, originating loans under the new terms,&#8221; Russell said in an email.  Analysts reviously predicted effects if the changes might not surface until February&#8217;s data.  HARP refinancings totaled 93,000 in the fourth quarter, bumping up the cumulative total 10% to 1.02 million over the life of the program.  Mortgage servicers closed 19,500 trials through the Home Affordable Modification Program in the fourth quarter, bringing the cumulative total to roughly 400,000. Active HAMP trials ended the fourth quarter at 36,391, down from 42,279 as of Sept. 30.  Short sales and deed-in-lieu deals increased 13% to roughly 35,000 in the fourth quarter, the highest total since the government placed Fannie and Freddie into conservatorship.  Julia Gordon, FHFA manager of single-family policy, said the agency is working to streamline policies in those programs.  &#8220;It&#8217;s not as if there&#8217;s some enormous gulf between the policies,&#8221; Gordon said. &#8220;Even small differences in policy can create frictions that are not necessary.&#8221;  Foreclosure starts at the government-sponsored enterprises declined to 218,000 from 224,000 in the third quarter, and mortgages 90-plus days delinquent dipped slight to 3.78% from 3.81% of Fannie and Freddie&#8217;s portfolio. Florida led states in those delinquencies at 11.5%, followed by Nevada and New Jersey at 8.3% and 6.3%, respectively.</p>
<p>See you at the top!<br />
Chris McLaughlin</p>
<p>**************</p>
<p>Copyright Loss Mitigation Institute LLC 2011.<br />
All Rights Reserved.</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalesriches.com</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalescoach.com</p>
<p>http://www.sixfigurebpo.com</p>
<p>http://www.reomillionaireclub.com</p>
<p>http://www.youtube.com/shortsalesriches</p>
<p>http://www.smartrealestatenews.com</p>
<p>(subscribe to this newsletter)</p>
<p>*************************************************</p>
<p>About the author:<br />
Chris McLaughlin is widely known as America’s top<br />
Real Estate Attorney and Investment Consultant.</p>
<p>* As the top Florida foreclosure and pre-<br />
foreclosure expert, he oversees more than<br />
100 short sale &amp; REO closings each month</p>
<p>* Long-time authority on real estate investing<br />
and rapid reselling of distressed homes.  Owns<br />
portfolio of nearly 150 high-value, high-profit<br />
properties</p>
<p>* Owner of one of Florida&#8217;s largest Real Estate firms,<br />
running 4 different offices, supporting over<br />
420 agents, uniquely positioning him to help<br />
thousands of investors make money in the<br />
biggest market opportunity ever!</p>
<p>* In 2011, Chris&#8217; 4 Central Florida real estate offices<br />
closed 3,336 sides for a closed sales volume of<br />
$430,902,643!</p>
<p>* Highly sought-after speaker, consultant, and<br />
seminar leader for current trends and hot topics<br />
in Real Estate Investing, Entrepreneurship, and<br />
Wealth Building</p>
<p>* Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mclaughlinchris</p>
<p>* Join my Facebook Fan Page: http://www.mclaughlinchris.com</p>
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		<title>Settlement to boost short sales</title>
		<link>http://shortsalesriches.com/blog/settlement-to-boost-short-sales</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Mar 2012 18:06:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Smart Real Estate News &#38; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 13, 2012 Forward this e-mail to your friends! Then they can subscribe directly at the following link: http://www.smartrealestatenews.com/ *** Join Chris’ Facebook Fan Page&#8211;&#62; http://www.mclaughlinchris.com *** Follow Chris on Twitter&#8211;&#62; http://www.twitter.com/mclaughlinchris ************************************************************ Settlement to boost short sales The government&#8217;s $25 billion settlement with the nation&#8217;s five [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Smart Real Estate News &amp; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 13, 2012</p>
<p>Forward this e-mail to your friends!</p>
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<h3>Settlement to boost short sales</h3>
<p>The government&#8217;s <strong>$25 billion settlement</strong> with the nation&#8217;s five biggest mortgage servicers over so-called &#8220;robo-signing&#8221; practices could boost short sales, as loan servicers will receive credit when they approve sales that include forgiveness of a portion of underwater homeowners&#8217; debt.  Although the settlement is only expected to help a fraction of homeowners who owe more their properties are worth &#8212; perhaps one in 20, according to one estimate &#8212; it will also help bring certainty back to housing markets by removing some of the obstacles that have been keeping homes stuck in the foreclosure pipeline.  Announced last month, detailed terms of the agreement between mortgage servicers and a coalition of state attorneys general and federal agencies were filed today.</p>
<p>Broadly, the settlement calls for mortgage servicers to pay $5 billion in fines and commit to a minimum of $17 billion in homeowner relief, including principal reductions. Another $3 billion is earmarked for helping underwater borrowers refinance. &#8220;We will see an increase in short sales, because lenders and loan servicers will get the same credit for doing a short sale, as if they did a loan modification or principal reduction,&#8221; said Rick Sharga, executive vice president of Carrington Mortgage Holdings LLC.  Allowing debt forgiveness on approved short sales to count against the required $17 billion in principal reductions helped secure a settlement that will reach more borrowers, the paper said. Loan servicers will also get partial credit even when it&#8217;s investors, rather than the banks themselves, taking the loss.</p>
<p>Also, if the remaining six to 14 loan servicers sign on to the settlement, it would grow to about $30 billion with more than $45 billion in benefit to homeowners, HUD said.  Cade Holleman, executive director of the Irvine, Calif.-based National Association of Women REO Brokerages, said the day is fast approaching when brokers and agents who have concentrated heavily in real-estate owned properties will have to diversify.  Short sales, refinancings, and loan modifications are each &#8220;pulling REO inventory out of the game,&#8221; he said.  &#8220;You&#8217;ve got to keep your eye on that process,&#8221; Holleman said.  &#8220;You can no longer be 80% REO,&#8221; but must diversify into short sales and property management.</p>
<h4>Retail sales up</h4>
<p>Total retail sales increased 1.1%, the Commerce Department said, after an upwardly revised 0.6% rise in January.  Economists polled by Reuters had forecast retail sales rising 1% after a previously reported 0.4% gain in January.  Sales last month were buoyed by a 1.6% rise in sales of motor vehicles, reflecting pent-up demand by households and growing confidence in the economy as job creation speeds up.  Excluding autos, retail sales advanced 0.9% last month, adding to January&#8217;s upwardly revised 1.1% gain.  Gas prices rose 20 cents last month, according to government data.  Sales at gasoline stations surged 3.3%, the biggest gain since March last year, after rising 1.9% in January. Excluding autos and gasoline, sales rose 0.6% in February after increasing 1% the prior month. Gasoline accounted for 11.5% of retail sales in February.</p>
<p>Outside autos and gas stations, details of the report were fairly upbeat, suggesting recent solid gains in employment were supporting consumer spending.  Last month, clothing store receipts jumped 1.8%, the largest increase since November 2010, while sales at building materials and garden equipment suppliers advanced 1.4%.  So-called core retail sales, which exclude autos, gasoline and building materials, were up 0.5% after advancing 1.0% in January.  Core sales correspond most closely with the consumer spending component of the government&#8217;s gross domestic product report.   Sales at restaurants and bars rose 0.8%, while receipts at sporting goods, hobby, book and music stores increased 1.0%.  Sales of electronics and appliances rose 1.0%, while receipts at furniture stores fell 1.2%.</p>
<h4>Olick &#8211; rent bubble?</h4>
<p>&#8220;Typically when rents go up, more renters turn to home buying.  When home prices go up, more turn to renting, but today’s housing market is anything but typical.  Rents were up 3% nationally in January, year-over-year, according to a soon-to-be released new rental index from Zillow.com. Home prices, however, were down 4.6% annually.  When you look locally, the numbers are more dramatic.  In some markets, rents rose almost as much as home values fell. Take Chicago, for example, where rents were up just over 9% annually while home values were down just over 10%. The same is true for Minneapolis, where the divide is nearly the same. In San Francisco and Detroit, rents are up around 5% while home prices are down the same. It begs the question, as the rent vs. own divide grows, will the rental bubble suddenly burst?  Right now investors are rushing to get in on cheap foreclosures, hoping to turn them around for quick rental income. The regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the FHFA, is in the midst of a pilot program to sell 2500 foreclosed properties to investors as rentals. The bulk of these properties are already rented, which means buyers get a turn-key investment with instant returns.  In the meantime, multi-family housing starts were up over 14% in January from December and have been rising steadily as developers look to cash in on high rental demand and relatively low supply. Multi-family REITs are seeing big returns.</p>
<p>So what exactly is the tipping point, given that mortgage availability is still tough, consumer confidence in housing is still weak, and employment, while improving, is still not where it needs to be to spur strong buyer demand?  &#8217;While it seems that rents are rising at the expense of home values, the opposite is true. A thriving rental market will stimulate home sales, as investors snap up low-priced inventory to convert to rentals. That, in turn, will lower the number of homes on the market, which will eventually help put a floor under the value of all homes,&#8217; says Zillow chief economist Stan Humphries.  More supply of rental homes, especially single family, could slow the upward trajectory of rent rates, which in turn would make renting more attractive and buying less so. It just raises a red flag to see home affordability at a record high, investors rushing in, and rents so strongly outpacing home values.&#8221;</p>
<h4>Banks to face tough reviews</h4>
<p>Banks will face stiff penalties and intense public scrutiny if they fail to live up to the standards of a $25 billion mortgage settlement with state and federal authorities, according to court documents filed as part of the deal Monday in federal court in Washington.  While the broad outline of the deal was announced last month, the mechanics of the agreement that took more than a year to negotiate were laid out in Monday’s filing, including exactly how much credit the five banks would receive for varying levels of loan forgiveness and just what kind of conduct from the past is off-limits to future investigations.  Banks must review their adherence to the new rules every quarter through a random sampling of cases, with a maximum threshold for errors at 1% in some cases if they are to avoid fines. “Any error that is found during the sampling process will have to be corrected,” the official said.  In some cases, servicers would face civil penalties of up to $1 million for each violation of Monday’s consent order.  Repeat violations could bring fines of $5 million each. An independent monitoring and enforcement office is being set up under the agreement, to be paid for by the banks, that will be led by Joseph A. Smith Jr., the former North Carolina banking commissioner.</p>
<p>The complaint, which specifies the terms of the settlement, comes nearly 18 months after reports of “robo-signing” and other abuses in the foreclosure process set off a nationwide furor, and marks another legal milestone in the wake of the bursting of the housing bubble and the financial crisis of 2008-9.  The five banks covered by the settlement -<strong> </strong>Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally - engaged “in a pattern of unfair and deceptive practices,” according to the complaint. Besides failing to perform modifications for borrowers seeking to ease the terms of their loans, the documents also cite what consumers have been complaining about for years: lost applications and other paperwork, inadequately trained staff and wrongfully denied modification requests.</p>
<h4>WSJ &#8211; rise in Phoenix housing shows the way to recovery</h4>
<p>As home prices continue to drop in most cities, a nascent real-estate rebound here holds lessons for the rest of the country.  This sprawling desert metropolis was one of the hardest hit housing markets during the bust. Phoenix home prices declined 55% from 2006 through the end of 2011, and Arizona&#8217;s foreclosure rate jumped to No. 3 in the nation in 2009. Hundreds of thousands of homeowners are underwater.  Now real-estate economists across the country are studying an early but surprisingly broad Phoenix turnaround. The sharp drop in home prices has brought new buyers into the market. Unlike other markets where housing recoveries have been snuffed out by big overhangs of homes for sale and foreclosed properties, inventories are lean here.  &#8220;Phoenix has hit a bottom,&#8221; says Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist who was one of the first to warn six years ago that prices in overbuilt metros were poised to fall.  The nation&#8217;s hard-hit housing markets face a tough act: engineering a housing recovery without traditional trade-up buyers, many of whom are either unwilling or unable to sell because of huge price declines.</p>
<p>Phoenix has found a viable formula. Low prices are igniting demand from first-time buyers and investors who are converting the homes to rentals. The local economy is on the upswing with several big employers like Amazon.com Inc. and Intel Corp. hiring again, which is further increasing demand for housing. And the region is benefiting from a surge of buyers from Canada who are using their favorable exchange rate to scoop up bargains in the desert.  Local mom-and-pop investors are also playing key roles in soaking up supply. Out-of-state buyers accounted for one-quarter of all purchases last month. One in every 25 sales went to a buyer that listed a Canadian address when registering the sale, according to the Cromford Report, a local real-estate publication. Many are flush with cash from a real-estate boom of their own in Canada and an exchange rate that has given Canadians unusual buying power.</p>
<p>Nationally, housing demand still remains weak and bank-owned sales are expected to rise this year, putting more pressure on prices. Many economists say they expect home prices nationally could fall by another 3% or so this year before hitting a bottom next year. Most expect that prices will rise little for several years.  US home prices fell another 2% in the fourth quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the Standard &amp; Poor&#8217;s/Case-Shiller index tracking 20 cities. But prices rose by 2% in Phoenix, the biggest increase of any metro area in the country. Over the past year, prices in Phoenix are down by 1.2%, the smallest drop since its prices started falling in 2006.  Big price drops, like those in Phoenix, are another key. In Detroit, prices are down by 46% over the past six years and have fallen to levels last seen in 1994. Sales have picked up in Miami, where prices are down by 51% over the past five years.</p>
<p>But low prices alone haven&#8217;t been enough to so stabilize other epicenters of the housing bust where job growth still lags. In Las Vegas, where prices have tumbled 62% since 2006, including 8.9% over the past year, the local economy is heavily dependent on tourism and gambling, both industries that haven&#8217;t recovered. &#8220;A lot of markets in the country have hit a bottom, but I just don&#8217;t see them coming back the way Phoenix has,&#8221; says John Burns, a homebuilding consultant in Irvine, Calif.  The improving housing market in Phoenix isn&#8217;t much comfort to anybody who bought a home there a few years ago. More than 52% of mortgage borrowers owe more than their homes are worth, according to CoreLogic, a real-estate data company. And not everyone in Phoenix is convinced that the improvements will last, especially if the economy falters or oil prices soar.  Phoenix saw a small run-up in prices three years ago when federal tax credits spurred a buying frenzy, but prices dropped again once the credits expired. Others worry that banks have delayed foreclosures and will begin to saturate the market with more properties in the coming year.</p>
<h4>Small business optimism up</h4>
<p>Optimism among small business owners may be increasing at a “glacial” pace, but it’s “mostly headed in the right direction.”  That’s according to William Dunkelberg, chief economist of the National Federation of Independent Business and keeper of the Small Business Optimism Index. The latest survey of 819 NFIB members showed indications that small business owners are starting to spend, and could even ramp up hiring in some sectors over the next few months.  Respondents to the February survey expressed optimism about their expectations for higher real sales, an increase in inventories and positive earnings; these three things taken together helped push the index up 0.4%, to 94.3, the sixth straight increase in the monthly index.  Inventories have decreased for many business owners in the past month &#8211; 20% of respondents reported reductions &#8211; which is good news for an economy that needs spending to make it grow.</p>
<p>Capital outlays, too, are being planned, according to the survey. “The capital spending number keeps going up,” he noted. “It’s the highest we’ve seen in years.” While still far from normal, he said, “Even if it’s just to fix a leaky roof, business owners’ capital expenditures are rising.”  In the past month, more business owners also added workers &#8211; 12% of owners added 3.4 workers per firm.  The November elections, as well as the uncertainty surrounding health-care reform, are causing some business owners to remain on the sidelines, said Dunkelberg, waiting to see the outcome of both before committing to spending and expansion. “There is a lot of political uncertainty between now and November,” he said.  Still, the trend, at least for now, is upward. And for many business owners, even a slow improvement is better than movement in the other direction.</p>
<h4>Foreclosures to jump in 2012</h4>
<p>Analysts expect between 900,000 and 1 million homes will move from delinquency into REO in 2012, back to levels seen before the robo-signing slowdown.  Servicers moved roughly 800,000 properties through the foreclosure process and into REO liquidation in 2011, according to<strong> </strong>RealtyTrac. After resolving affidavit problems late last year, banks began moving more properties through the process. JPMorgan Chase analysts expect repossessions to reach as high as 900,000 even with a wave of new alternatives to foreclosure.  &#8220;Several major policy changes in the last few months have sped up resolution of the pipeline. Of course, new delinquencies will ensure that full resolution will still take years, but the pace may be faster than we expected,&#8221; analysts said.  Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac, said that pace could return this year.  &#8220;For 2011 we hit 804,423, not quite the 825,000 we were on pace for because of a slowdown in November and December,&#8221; Blomquist said in an interview. &#8220;We are expecting close to 1 million REOs in 2012 as some of the delayed foreclosures finally complete the process this year.&#8221;</p>
<p>The pace began to pick up in January but is still down from 2011. Servicers repossessed 66,500 homes that month, up 8% from December but down 15% from one year ago.  Just because a property moves into REO doesn&#8217;t mean it will be resold that year, either. For instance, Freddie Mac data shows the GSE had to wait an average of nearly 200 days to unload an REO. According to Blomquist, there were nearly 538,000 REO sales in 2011, roughly two-thirds of all homes repossessed that year.  About 2.6 million loans, or half of the total delinquency inventory, will be removed either through modification, short sale or a traditional repossession in 2012, Chase analysts said.  The AG settlement guidelines released yesterday could result in 500,000 modifications, according to Chase.  The Treasury Department<strong> </strong>expanded the Home Affordable Modification Program in January to allow more borrowers to qualify and provide higher incentives for principal reduction.</p>
<p>Analysts still expect the changes to result in relatively few additional modifications, roughly 140,000 added to the 220,000 permanent workouts under the program estimated this year.  If so, HAMP workouts may outnumber the 270,000 proprietary modifications, which have routinely outsized HAMP in the past.  Chase analysts also expect the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac<strong> </strong>bulk REO sales and rental programs to reach as high as 100,000 properties. A pilot program began in February to sell just 2,500 Fannie-owned homes.  Roughly 500,000 short sales could occur in 2012, roughly one-third of all liquidations — which include the 900,000 expected repossessions and the new rental program as well.</p>
<p>See you at the top!<br />
Chris McLaughlin</p>
<p>**************</p>
<p>Copyright Loss Mitigation Institute LLC 2011.<br />
All Rights Reserved.</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalesriches.com</p>
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<p>About the author:</p>
<p>Chris McLaughlin is widely known as America’s top<br />
Real Estate Attorney and Investment Consultant.</p>
<p>* As the top Florida foreclosure and pre-<br />
foreclosure expert, he oversees more than<br />
100 short sale &amp; REO closings each month</p>
<p>* Long-time authority on real estate investing<br />
and rapid reselling of distressed homes.  Owns<br />
portfolio of nearly 150 high-value, high-profit<br />
properties</p>
<p>* Owner of one of Florida&#8217;s largest Real Estate firms,<br />
running 4 different offices, supporting over<br />
420 agents, uniquely positioning him to help<br />
thousands of investors make money in the<br />
biggest market opportunity ever!</p>
<p>* In 2011, Chris&#8217; 4 Central Florida real estate offices<br />
closed 3,336 sides for a closed sales volume of<br />
$430,902,643!</p>
<p>* Highly sought-after speaker, consultant, and<br />
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		<title>U.S. Housing stepping towards recovery</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Mar 2012 21:42:02 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Smart Real Estate News &#38; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 2, 2012 Forward this e-mail to your friends! Then they can subscribe directly at the following link: http://www.smartrealestatenews.com/ *** Join Chris’ Facebook Fan Page&#8211;&#62; http://www.mclaughlinchris.com *** Follow Chris on Twitter&#8211;&#62; http://www.twitter.com/mclaughlinchris ************************************************************ U.S. Housing stepping towards recovery After several false starts, housing is flashing the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Smart Real Estate News &amp; Commentary by Chris McLaughlin March 2, 2012</p>
<p>Forward this e-mail to your friends!</p>
<p>Then they can subscribe directly at the following link:</p>
<p>http://www.smartrealestatenews.com/</p>
<p>*** Join Chris’ Facebook Fan Page&#8211;&gt;</p>
<p>http://www.mclaughlinchris.com</p>
<p>*** Follow Chris on Twitter&#8211;&gt;</p>
<p>http://www.twitter.com/mclaughlinchris</p>
<p>************************************************************</p>
<h3>U.S. Housing stepping towards recovery</h3>
<p>After several false starts, housing is flashing the strongest signals yet of a sustainable rebound. While foreclosures continue to depress prices, buyers are wading back into the market, lured by rising employment and record-low mortgage rates. Six years into the biggest real estate collapse since the Great Depression, housing may become a net contributor to the U.S. economy for the first time since 2005. “There are definitely green shoots in the housing market, no argument about that,” said Peter de Bruin, an economist at ABN Amro Group Economics in Amsterdam. Speculation that new home sales will rebound has boosted shares of homebuilders, with the 11-member Standard &amp; Poor (SPY)’s 1500 Homebuilding index up 17 percent this year, compared with a 9.3 percent gain for the Standard &amp; Poor’s 500 Index.</p>
<h4>Apply stimulus vigorously: Fed Williams</h4>
<p>Recent signs of improvement in the U.S. economy are encouraging but the rebound has been anemic and the Federal Reserve must &#8220;keep applying monetary policy stimulus vigorously,&#8221; San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams said on Thursday. Despite a recent drop in the unemployment rate to 8.3 percent, Williams said he expected it to remain above 8 percent into next year and to be &#8220;well over&#8221; 7 percent for several years to come. Strained household finances, a weak housing market and tight credit conditions are likely to hold down spending growth for some time, he added. The economy should grow about 2.25 percent this year and 2.75 percent in 2013, he said, adding the main threat to his forecast was the debt crisis in Europe. The San Francisco Fed chief is known as a monetary policy &#8220;dove&#8221; who is more concerned with the threat of high joblessness than high inflation.</p>
<h4>Olick &#8211; Negative equity traps one third of American borrowers</h4>
<p>As home sales begin a slow recovery and potential buyers dip their toes back in real estate&#8217;s still-troubled waters, many of them face a huge barrier to entry: Negative equity, that is, borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are currently worth. One point 1 million, or 22.8 percent, of all residential properties with a mortgage were in negative equity at the end of the fourth quarter of 2011, according to a new report from CoreLogic. Combine negative equity and near-negative equity, and about one third of all borrowers cannot sell their homes without either putting up some cash to pay off the mortgage or the closing costs or without the bank agreeing to a short sale. That&#8217;s when the home is sold for less than the value of the mortgage. The prime culprit in rising negative equity is falling home prices, and home prices are falling because distressed property sales are rising. Sales of properties in some stage of foreclosure made up a full 24 percent of all home sales in Q4, up from 20 percent in Q3, according to RealtyTrac. As previously noted, home sales are rising, but largely on the backs of investors buying distressed, low-end properties. With one third of borrowers stuck in their underwater homes, there is unlikely to be much movement at all this spring in the move-up market.</p>
<h4>Economy awaits liftoff</h4>
<p>A flurry of economic reports issued Thursday captured some solid recent gains in the U.S. economy.  But Thursday’s reports also showed that a healthier job market hasn’t translated into bigger paychecks for workers or a surge in consumer spending. And the progress of the past few months is now threatened by a rise in gasoline prices. “When you get this sort of hodgepodge and not-so-good results, you start to see the true nature of this recovery,” said Sean Snaith, director of the University of  Central Florida’s Institute for Economic Competitiveness. A healthier job market hasn’t produced bigger paychecks or a surge in consumer spending. The housing market is still weak. A European recession threatens to hold back U.S. growth. The economy grew at a 3 percent annual rate at the end of last year. “It’s a very subpar recovery,” said Beth Ann Bovino, senior economist at Standard &amp; Poor’s. “Historically, after a recession ends, we would see 5 percent growth.&#8221;</p>
<h4>Government foreclosure to rental pilot programs not needed</h4>
<p>Housing markets are complex and varied, and a government pilot program to turn bank-owned properties into rentals could be disruptive and counter productive in some markets, according to the National Association of Realtors. NAR urges the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) to proceed cautiously with its Real Estate-Owned (REO) Initiative pilot program to sell homes repossessed by government agencies to private investors to convert into rental units. According to a recent NAR analysis, while the overall visible inventory of foreclosures has been trending down across the country, there is a noticeable difference in foreclosure inventories in states that require judicial proceedings to foreclose on a property versus inventories in states that do not require the court’s intervention. NAR urges that a national advisory board be created to ensure that current and future REO-to-rental pilot programs truly benefit the local community, minimize taxpayer losses and stabilize home values, and suggests substantial participation of local market experts, especially licensed real estate professionals, who have unparalleled knowledge of local market conditions.</p>
<h4>Fannie REO inventory declines 27% in 2011</h4>
<p>For the first time since the collapse, Fannie sold more REO than it repossessed. In 2011, the government-sponsored enterprise acquired nearly 200,000 properties and sold more than 243,000, the most in the company&#8217;s history. Total repossessions of REO homes declined nearly 24% from the year before, due mostly to the slowdown caused by servicers correcting affidavit and other documentation problems. The Federal Housing Finance Agency began a pilot program in February to more efficiently sell bulk REO held by Fannie and Freddie Mac to investors. About 23% of Fannie Mae&#8217;s REO inventory is located in California followed by 11.5% in Florida.  According to the filing, the average amount of days between the last mortgage payment and the completion of the foreclosure process was 890 days in Florida on Fannie Mae loans. California, a nonjudicial state, was second at 529 days.</p>
<h4>DSnews.com &#8211; Rise in Underwater Homes</h4>
<p>Negative equity homes known as underwater homes shot up to 22.8 percent, during the fourth quarter of 2011, according to CoreLogic. Third quarter numbers showed 10.7 million properties to be in negative equity, or 22.1 percent. Borrowers with less than 5 percent equity in their homes, also known as near-negative equity, stood at 2.5 million for the fourth quarter. In total, those with negative equity and near-negative equity equaled 27.8 percent of all residential properties. Nationally, the total mortgage debt outstanding on underwater properties stood at $2.8 trillion in the fourth quarter, compared to $2.7 trillion in the previous quarter. The states with the highest level of negative equity were Nevada (61 percent), Arizona (48 percent), Florida (44 percent), Michigan (35 percent) and Georgia (33 percent). These five states had a combined average 44.3 percent of the share of negative equity, whereas the remaining states have a combined average negative equity share of 15.3 percent. CoreLogic included 48 million properties with a mortgage, which accounts for over 85 percent of all mortgages in the U.S., when putting together the report.</p>
<p>See you at the top!<br />
Chris McLaughlin</p>
<p>**************</p>
<p>Copyright Loss Mitigation Institute LLC 2011.<br />
All Rights Reserved.</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalesriches.com</p>
<p>http://www.shortsalescoach.com</p>
<p>http://www.sixfigurebpo.com</p>
<p>http://www.reomillionaireclub.com</p>
<p>http://www.youtube.com/shortsalesriches</p>
<p>http://www.smartrealestatenews.com</p>
<p>(subscribe to this newsletter)</p>
<p>*************************************************</p>
<p>About the author:</p>
<p>Chris McLaughlin is widely known as America’s top<br />
Real Estate Attorney and Investment Consultant.</p>
<p>* As the top Florida foreclosure and pre-<br />
foreclosure expert, he oversees more than<br />
100 short sale &amp; REO closings each month</p>
<p>* Long-time authority on real estate investing<br />
and rapid reselling of distressed homes.  Owns<br />
portfolio of nearly 150 high-value, high-profit<br />
properties</p>
<p>* Owner of one of Florida&#8217;s largest Real Estate firms,<br />
running 4 different offices, supporting over<br />
420 agents, uniquely positioning him to help<br />
thousands of investors make money in the<br />
biggest market opportunity ever!</p>
<p>* In 2011, Chris&#8217; 4 Central Florida real estate offices<br />
closed 3,336 sides for a closed sales volume of<br />
$430,902,643!</p>
<p>* Highly sought-after speaker, consultant, and<br />
seminar leader for current trends and hot topics<br />
in Real Estate Investing, Entrepreneurship, and<br />
Wealth Building</p>
<p>* Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mclaughlinchris</p>
<p>* Join my Facebook Fan Page: http://www.mclaughlinchris.com</p>
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