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	<title>Short Sales Riches Blog &#187; mortgage applications</title>
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		<title>Housing bottom in 2013?</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2012 13:44:32 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[NAHB &#8211; housing affordability up Nationwide housing affordability hit a new record high for a second consecutive quarter in the first three months of this year, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI), released today. Yet tight lending conditions continue to pose a major obstacle to many prospective [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>NAHB &#8211; housing affordability up</p>
<p>Nationwide housing affordability hit a new record high for a second consecutive quarter in the first three months of this year, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI), released today. Yet tight lending conditions continue to pose a major obstacle to many prospective home buyers.  The latest HOI data reveal that 77.5% of all new and existing homes that were sold in this year’s first quarter were affordable to families earning the national median income of $65,000.  This beats the previous record set in the final quarter of 2011, when 75.9% of homes sold were affordable to median-income earners.  The most affordable major housing market in this year’s first quarter was Indianapolis-Carmel, Ind., where 95.8% of homes sold during the period were affordable to households earning the area’s median family income of $66,900.</p>
<p>Also ranking among the  most affordable major housing markets in respective order were Dayton, Ohio; Lakeland-Winter Haven, Fla.; Modesto, Calif.; Grand Rapids-Wyoming, Mich.; and Buffalo-Niagara Falls, N.Y.; the latter two of which tied for fifth place.  Among smaller housing markets, Cumberland, Md.-W.Va. topped the affordability chart for the first time in this year’s first quarter. There, 99% of homes sold during the first quarter were affordable to families earning the area’s median income of $53,000. Other smaller housing markets at the top of the index include Fairbanks, Alaska; Wheeling, W.Va.; Kokomo, Ind.; and Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, Iowa-Ill., respectively.  In New York-White Plains-Wayne, N.Y.-N.J., which retained the title of the least affordable major housing market for a 16th consecutive quarter, just 31.5% of homes sold in the first three months of this year were affordable to those earning the area’s median income of $68,200. </p>
<p>Other major metros at the bottom of the affordability chart included San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, Calif.; Honolulu; Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, Calif.; and Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, Calif., respectively.  Ocean City, N.J., was the least affordable smaller housing market on the list, with 45.9% of homes sold in the first quarter affordable to families earning the median income of $71,100. Other small metros at the bottom of the list included Santa Cruz-Watsonville, Calif.; San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, Calif.; Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Goleta, Calif.; and Laredo, Texas.</p>
<p>HP ponders 25,000 job cuts</p>
<p><strong>Hewlett-Packard</strong> is considering cutting its workforce by 8 to 10%, or a minimum of 25,000 jobs, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as newly installed CEO Meg Whitman strives to return the storied Silicon Valley institution to growth.  The job cuts, which could include retirements, are under discussion but have not yet been finalized, several people familiar with the situation told Reuters. The sources did not elaborate on a time frame or other details.  HP, which employs more than 300,000 people across the globe, could announce the layoffs as soon as next week when it unveils quarterly results, said the sources, who asked to remain anonymous because the plan has not been made public.  Analysts have been expecting job cuts in the wake of Whitman&#8217;s plan to merge the company&#8217;s personal computer and printer divisions.</p>
<p>NAR &#8211; need more short sales</p>
<p>In a letter sent today to the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, and the US Department of the Treasury, National Association of Realtors (NAR) responded to the agencies&#8217; recent request for input and offered its recommendations for selling REO properties held by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration.  In its letter, NAR urged the agencies to create an advisory board as they explore new options for selling foreclosed properties to ensure that efficiently disposing of agency REO properties will minimize taxpayer losses and reduce the negative effects that distressed properties have on local real estate markets. </p>
<p>To prevent further REO inventory increases, NAR recommended that the agencies take more aggressive steps to modify loans and, when a family is absolutely unable keep their home, to quickly approve reasonable short sale offers that allow families to avoid foreclosure. NAR President Ron Phipps said that while federal programs have been put into place to help keep families in their homes, many of these have fallen short of expectations, and advocated that those resources be applied toward modifying loans and expediting short sales, which are typically less costly than foreclosure.  &#8220;Loan modifications keep families in their home and reduce defaults, while short sales keep homes occupied, helping stabilize neighborhoods and home values,&#8221; Phipps said. &#8220;Expanding resources and ensuring the use of already allocated funds for pre-foreclosure efforts is the best opportunity to reduce taxpayer costs and creates more positive outcomes for homeowners and their communities.&#8221;</p>
<p>Greece dissolves Parliament, gold down</p>
<p>Greece&#8217;s Parliament is to be dissolved so new elections can be held June 17.  The move Friday comes after an inconclusive election left squabbling politicians unable to form government, deepening the country&#8217;s political crisis and jeopardizing its membership in Europe&#8217;s joint currency.  In a symbolic move Thursday, the 300 legislators elected May 6 were sworn in for just one day. A caretaker government has been appointed to lead Greece until the new election but it can&#8217;t make any binding decisions.  The political turmoil comes at a critical time. Greece must make more cutbacks next month to get new funds from its international bailout, which has kept the country afloat since May 2010.  Greece&#8217;s credit rating was reduced one level on concerns the country won&#8217;t be able to muster the political support needed to sustain its membership in the euro area as leaders began campaigning ahead of a second national vote in six weeks. Moody&#8217;s Investors Service lowered debt ratings at 16 Spanish banks, citing economic weakness and the government&#8217;s mounting budget strain. It follows Moody&#8217;s May 14 downgrade of 26 Italian banks and its Feb. 13 cut of Spain&#8217;s sovereign debt.</p>
<p>Gold dropped, headed for its third weekly decline, on signs that Europe&#8217;s crisis is worsening as concern grew about the health of Spanish banks and Fitch Ratings downgraded Greece&#8217;s credit rating, curbing demand for the metal.</p>
<p>Gold for immediate delivery fell as much as 0.4% to $1,568.03 an ounce and was at $1,570.68 at 2:49 p.m. in Singapore. The metal climbed 2.3% yesterday, paring this week&#8217;s loss to 0.5%. June-delivery bullion declined as much as 0.5% to $1,567.80 on the Comex in New York.  &#8220;The fact that people are worried about European banks again is likely to have a broader, more depressing effect across all markets,&#8221; said Nick Trevethan, senior commodities strategist at Australia &amp; New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Singapore. &#8220;Even though it broke away from other assets yesterday, gold is still very much traded in line with risk.&#8221;</p>
<p>Housing bottom in 2013?</p>
<p>US home prices could drop another 7.8% before reaching bottom next year, <strong>Fitch Ratings</strong> said in a report released Thursday.   A Fitch report from director Stefan Hilts forecasts steady economic growth and inflation levels that are close to 3% annually. The combination of the two could cause prices to reach bottom by next year, leading the market into a slow recovery, analysts with the firm said.  &#8220;The economy continues to grow with economic indicators on a positive trajectory and pointing to a recovery,&#8221; Fitch said. &#8220;But struggles remain. High unemployment, a declining labor force, stagnant wages, and a large delinquent inventory across many parts of the country are slowing the recovery&#8217;s momentum.&#8221;  States like Arizona and Michigan, which were hit with hefty price declines, are starting to see a turnaround, Fitch asserted.</p>
<p>Arizona saw small quarterly gains for the first time in two years in the most recent report and Michigan is beginning to stabilize, the study suggested.  While those markets stabilize, prices are falling in the Northeast as inventory backlog starts to move onto the market. Fitch says New Jersey and New York alone have watched prices drop 10% and 7%, respectively, over the past five quarters. The ratings giant expects further drops in those states in the coming months.  The state of Georgia also became an interesting case study for Fitch, with the ratings giant reporting that home prices in the state are now 32% lower than 2000 levels. However, Georgia is very much a divided state with the affluent northern suburbs of Atlanta and central city area holding onto their values and the overall economy collapsing to the city&#8217;s south.</p>
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		<title>Decline in foreclosure activity in California hurting the market</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 17:57:18 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Detroit sales down, prices up The best inventory on the market in metro Detroit &#8212; where foreclosures and short sales account for 36% of the listings &#8212; attracts multiple bids and pushed the median sales price to $70,000 last month, up 18.6% from $59,000 in April 2011, according to Realcomp, a Farmington Hills-based multiple listing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Detroit sales down, prices up</p>
<p>The best inventory on the market in metro Detroit &#8212; where foreclosures and short sales account for 36% of the listings &#8212; attracts multiple bids and pushed the median sales price to $70,000 last month, up 18.6% from $59,000 in April 2011, according to Realcomp, a Farmington Hills-based multiple listing service.  Its members reported 4,351 closed sales in April, which is down by 2.2% from the 4,439 homes and condos that sold in the same month a year ago.  Sales gains were seen in Macomb County, up 8.9% to 922, and Oakland County, up 1.5% to 1,448. Pulling down the metro area results were Livingston County, with a 9.5% drop to 182 homes sold in April, followed by Wayne County, with a 9% decline to 1,789 home sales from 1,965 last April.  All four counties included in the metro Detroit stats &#8212; Livingston, Oakland, Macomb and Wayne &#8212; saw median sales price increases in April. Here&#8217;s the breakdown:</p>
<p>-  Livingston: $150,000, up 7.1% from $140,000.</p>
<p>-  Macomb: $72,500, up 13.3% from $64,000.</p>
<p>-  Oakland: $114,500, up 9% from $105,000.</p>
<p>-  Wayne: $38,000, up 27.1% from $29,900.</p>
<p>The Detroit area, which is defined as Detroit, Hamtramck, Harper Woods and Highland Park, saw median prices rise to $9,000, up 2.3% from a year ago, but sales dropped 22% to 539 in April.  Nearly half, or 48%, of sales last month were cash sales and homes were selling an average of three days faster with 87 days on market, Realcomp said.  Inventories dropped 18.3% in April to 26,896 homes for sale in the entire multiple listing service compared with 32,910 in April 2011. The MLS includes metro Detroit plus parts of the Thumb and Genesee County.</p>
<p>Retail sales up slightly</p>
<p>Sales at US retailers barely rose in April as the boost from an unseasonably warm winter faded, pointing to some loss of momentum in consumer spending early in the second quarter.  <strong>Retail sales</strong><strong> </strong>edged up 0.1%, held back by a decline in receipts from building materials and clothing stores, the Commerce Department said on Tuesday. That was the smallest gain since December when sales were flat.  Other data showed manufacturing remained resilient, with a gauge of factory activity in New York state bouncing higher this month as new orders and shipments rose.  The New York Federal Reserve said its Empire State general business conditions index jumped to 17.09 in May from 6.56 in April, outpacing economists&#8217; expectations of 8.50.  &#8220;Growth is there, but it&#8217;s not that convincing,&#8221; said David Sloan, senior economist at 4CAST in New York.  March&#8217;s sales were revised slightly down to show a 0.7% rise rather than the previously reported 0.8% increase. Economists polled by Reuters had expected retail sales to gain 0.2% last month.  In the 12 months to April, sales rose 6.4%.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; Obama&#8217;s &#8220;responsible&#8221; homeowners</p>
<p>&#8220;As part of his &#8216;To Do List,&#8217; President Barack Obama visited Val and Paul Keller on Friday. The White House described them as &#8216;responsible&#8217; homeowners who owe more on their mortgage than their Nevada home is currently worth.  They owe $168,000 on their mortgage, but their Reno home is currently valued at $100,000.  The president is doing so to, &#8216;help demonstrate a concrete and tangible example as to why this broader push [to refinance] is so important not only for millions of Americans but for our economy,&#8217; said Shaun Donovan, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, in a conference call with reporters before the event.  During that call, Donovan used the words &#8216;responsible homeowners&#8217; more than a dozen times, in describing whom the administration’s proposed refinance programs should help.  It is not the Kellers&#8217; fault that home prices in Reno are down 52% from the peak, right? The Kellers bought their house 14 years ago, and they have not been late on a mortgage payment, according to Donovan. They were able to take advantage of the newly expanded government refinance program through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for severely underwater borrowers, and they are in fact putting some of their savings on the monthly mortgage toward paying down principal.  <strong>But were they responsible?  </strong></p>
<p>The Kellers bought their home before the height of the housing boom. The trouble I’m having understanding this whole scenario is that the median home price in Reno is actually 7% higher today than it was 14 years ago. If the Kellers had a &#8216;responsible&#8217; loan, that would be a 30-year fixed, in which case they should have paid at least some principal on the loan over the last 14 years. And didn’t these &#8216;responsible&#8217; borrowers, the Kellers, put some money down on the home?  We went looking: According to Washoe County records, the Kellers purchased their home in June 1998 for $127,000. So why do they have, according to the White House, a $168,000 mortgage?  White House officials now confirm to CNBC that the Kellers did a cash-out refinance in 2007, when their home had appreciated to $250,000. Again, it’s not illegal, but are these the &#8216;responsible&#8217; borrowers that the administration is looking to help? They took out a $178,000 loan, using the $51,000 to pay down debt on the family construction business, so Paul could retire. Had they not taken that money out, and continued paying on the original mortgage, they would not be underwater today.  &#8216;This is a family, first and foremost, that has met their responsibility, remained on time with their mortgage and used their equity in their home in a way that so many Americans do, to send their kids to college, support a small business or save for retirement,&#8217; said Donovan, whom we contacted after learning of the refinance. &#8216;They deserve the chance to benefit from these record low interest rates because they have met their responsibilities.&#8217;</p>
<p>Another administration official familiar with the Kellers’ case says the couple were responsible because despite the incredible runup in home prices, they did not take all the equity out of the house. &#8216;She did not use her home as an ATM in the sense that we saw during the crisis, because she didn’t cash out all of the equity leaving her no cushion. She had a 71% LTV (loan to value ratio), or 30% equity in her home. That is by almost any definition a very responsible position to be in,&#8217; he added. In the past, Obama has criticized borrowers, who at the peak of the housing bubble, pulled money out, referring to it as using their house as an ATM.  LTV, Donovan and the other administration official claim, is not a minor issue. So it seems they are defining &#8216;responsible&#8217; as a borrower who maintains an equity cushion in the house, even when that house price has nearly doubled in just eight years.  &#8216;This was truly 100 year flood, and so lots of people who had 20, 30, 40% equity in their homes now find themselves underwater,&#8217; says the White House official, who also commends the Kellers for not walking away from their mortgage.&#8221;</p>
<p>Europe barely dodges formal recession</p>
<p>Stronger-than-expected growth in Germany was enough to help the European Union and the 17-nation eurozone avoid falling into recession for the second time since 2009 during the first three months of this year.  Initial readings on gross domestic product, the broadest measure of an economy&#8217;s health, released Tuesday showed Germany&#8217;s economy grew 0.5% in the first quarter, an improvement from the decline of 0.2% at the end of 2011.  The forecast had been for growth of only 0.1% for Germany, the continent&#8217;s largest economy, and there were some fears that it could report a drop in GDP for the second straight quarter, the common definition of an economy in recession.  The growth in Germany was enough to have GDP in the 27-nation EU and the 17-nation eurozone that uses the common currency both remain unchanged compared to the previous quarter, following a 0.3% decline on that basis at the end of last year. Economists had forecast that both would fall into recession with another quarter of falling GDP.</p>
<p>Decline in foreclosure activity in California hurting the market</p>
<p>The pace of foreclosures in California is slowing to a crawl, according to figures for the month of April compiled by foreclosure information company ForeclosureRadar Inc. of Discovery Bay.  In California, Notice of Default filings were down 69.8% from the peak in March 2009, and 15.8% from April 2011.  Foreclosure sales also declined, however, foreclosure investors purchased a record percentage of the limited inventory that was actually sold. California investors purchased 41.3% of foreclosure sales last month, the report says.  The low number of sales, combined with record% purchased on the courthouse steps left very little to become Bank Owned (REO). This further depletes the inventory of Bank Owned homes as REO sales continue to outpace the addition of new inventory, says ForeclosureRadar.</p>
<p>Despite investors purchasing a higher percentage of foreclosure sales, margins have rapidly declined in recent months. In California the discount between market value and winning bid have on average declined to 12.3%. This leaves investors who intend to resell their purchases with record low profits after eviction, repairs, and closing costs.  &#8220;Foreclosure declines would be wonderful news if they were being driven by a true market recovery in which hundreds of thousands were no longer unable to make payments, and millions were no longer upside down,” says Sean O&#8217;Toole, founder and CEO of Foreclosure Radar.  “That is not the reality today. Instead we are seeing unprecedented government intervention into the foreclosure process leaving underwater homeowners in limbo, while stealing opportunity from investors and first time buyers,&#8221; he says.  &#8220;California&#8217;s pending legislation, which is similar to laws we previously saw enacted in Nevada, will almost certainly bring foreclosure activity to a near halt there if passed. The reality is that these laws don&#8217;t solve anything as they fail to address the real problem – negative equity – while instead they punish real estate professionals, homebuyers, and investors far more than the banks they were aimed at.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fed governor Duke wants certainty</p>
<p>Federal Reserve Gov. Elizabeth Duke on Tuesday urged policymakers to finalize regulations and rules to provide more certainty for the housing market.   Establishing regulations and deciding on the future of government-controlled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will help reduce the uncertainty contributing to tight mortgage lending, Duke said in remarks prepared for a National Association of Realtors conference on Tuesday. She did not discuss monetary policy in her remarks.  &#8220;The most important solution that I am suggesting today is that policymakers move forward with the difficult decisions that will affect the future of the mortgage market,&#8221; Duke said. &#8220;If lenders tighten more than is warranted, it will hamper the recovery of the housing market and, in doing so, restrain economic growth.&#8221;  Duke did not make specific policy recommendations, but she stressed that questions around the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac must be resolved. More than three years after the government took the two mortgage giants into conservatorship, there still is no consensus about how they should be structured and what the government&#8217;s role should be, potentially discouraging private companies, Duke said.  &#8220;Private capital might be reluctant to enter the market until the future parameters of government support are resolved,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>Duke did note some encouraging signs in the housing market, including a slowdown in the pace of home prices&#8217; decline and an edging up in housing starts and permits. And she expressed confidence that as the economy slowly improves, some elements of the housing market will strengthen, as confidence increases.  Lenders seem to be reluctant now to make loans in part because of concerns over the higher cost of servicing delinquent loans and worries over regulations still being shaped, Duke said.  &#8220;Collectively, these uncertainties about the future are likely contributing significantly to the tight lending standards in the mortgage market today,&#8221; she said. The Federal Reserve will use its &#8220;best judgment to weigh the cost and availability of credit against consumer protection, investor clarity, and financial stability as it writes rules,&#8221; she said.  Duke stressed that lenders need clarity to shape business models and plan for the future.  &#8220;I don&#8217;t want to diminish the importance of any individual policy decision, but I do believe that the most important prescription for the housing market is for these decisions to be made and the path for the future of housing finance to be set,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>NAHB &#8211; builder confidence up in May</p>
<p>Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes gained five points in May from a downwardly revised reading in the previous month to reach a level of 29 on the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today. This is the index’s strongest reading since May of 2007.  Derived from a monthly survey that NAHB has been conducting for 25 years, the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index gauges builder perceptions of current single-family home sales and sales expectations for the next six months as “good,” “fair” or “poor.” The survey also asks builders to rate traffic of prospective buyers as “high to very high,” “average” or “low to very low.” Scores from each component are then used to calculate a seasonally adjusted index where any number over 50 indicates that more builders view conditions as good than poor.  Each of the index’s components rebounded from declines in the previous month. The component gauging current sales conditions and the component gauging traffic of prospective buyers each rose five points in May to 30 and 23, respectively, with the traffic component hitting its highest level since April of 2007. The component gauging sales expectations in the next six months rose three points to 34.  Three out of four regions registered improving builder sentiment in May. This included a six-point gain to 32 in the Northeast, and five-point gains to 27 and 28 in the Midwest and South, respectively. The West posted a two-point decline, to 29.</p>
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		<title>Short sales now better than foreclosures</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 14:13:25 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Discounts converge &#8211; short sales now better than foreclosures Short sales, once a rare event in local real estate market, today are nearly as prevalent as foreclosures as lenders seek to avoid adding to their foreclosure inventories and troubled homeowners opt for a faster way out of default.  Historically, foreclosures have been discounted 10% or [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Discounts converge &#8211; short sales now better than foreclosures</p>
<p>Short sales, once a rare event in local real estate market, today are nearly as prevalent as foreclosures as lenders seek to avoid adding to their foreclosure inventories and troubled homeowners opt for a faster way out of default.  Historically, foreclosures have been discounted 10% or more. Now, as short sales become more popular, the difference between and short-sale discounts and foreclosure discounts is shrinking, according to the latest LPS Home Price Index.  In April 2007, as the housing bubble burst, foreclosures sold at a 19% discount and short sales sold at a discount of 10%. As the volumes of both forms of distressed sales have increased, so have the discounts, but short sale discounts have increased more. Today foreclosures sell at a 29% average discount and short sales at an average discount of 23%, a difference of only 6%.</p>
<p>The shrinking discount may make short sales more attractive to buyers than foreclosures. In general, home sellers undergoing short sales are motivated to do so to protect their credit to the extent possible and they tend to maintain better condition of their properties than borrowers undergoing foreclosure. Foreclosures also may be vacant for long periods of time. Today&#8217;s average processing timeline for foreclosures is about a year, and substantially higher in some judicial states. With a short sale, the property may not be vacated at all during the sales process.  LPS suggests that the task of managing the large number of distressed properties in the market today is immense, which may, in some cases, contribute to suboptimal pricing of some distressed properties. Since 2007, discounts for both foreclosures and short sales have increased, but short-sale discounts increased a bit faster.</p>
<p>PPI falls</p>
<p>The Labor Department said on Friday its seasonally adjusted producer price index (PPI) dropped 0.2% last month. That was the first drop of the year and the biggest decline since October.  Economists polled by Reuters had expected prices at farms, factories and refineries to be flat.  The decline left wholesale prices 1.9% higher in April that a year earlier, the weakest reading since October 2009.  Wholesale prices excluding volatile food and energy costs rose in line with economists’ expectations, up 0.2% after March&#8217;s 0.3% gain.  The drop in PPI was due to a 1.4% decline in energy prices, the biggest drop since October. Gasoline costs slumped 1.7%, while prices also fell for residential natural gas and liquefied petroleum gas.  The producer price index outside food and energy was pushed up by a 0.4% increase in the index for pharmaceuticals. Higher prices for civilian aircraft also pushed up the core index.  In the 12 months to April, core producer prices increased 2.7% after rising 2.9% the previous month. April&#8217;s reading was the lowest since August and just below analysts&#8217; expectations.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; mortgage market hampers recovery</p>
<p>&#8220;The Realtors say it, the home builders say it, and now the chairman of the Federal Reserve is saying it: &#8216;Some creditworthy borrowers are still having trouble getting a mortgage.&#8217;  Loose mortgage underwriting is largely blamed for the housing crash, and as a result the credit markets have swung in the opposite direction, some say too far.  &#8216;You’ll see fewer willing lenders at 660 than you do at the top end of the scale,&#8217; notes Bankrate.com’s Greg McBride, referring to FICO scores (Fair Isaac Corporation).  Twenty five% of Americans today have a FICO credit score lower than 650, and twelve% more are below 700. While the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the government’s mortgage insurer, is supposed to be serving borrowers with lower credit scores, the average FICO for an FHA loan in March was 701.  &#8216;It’s often the lender regarding the higher score,&#8217; says Rick Sharga of Carrington Mortgage Holdings. Despite the FHA insurance, lenders just won’t take the chance.</p>
<p>Many borrowers who lost big during the housing crash are now fighting to regain their credit, but the time it takes to do that depends largely on how high their credit score was to begin with. According to FIC, a borrower with a credit score above 780 who lost a home to foreclosure will need 7 years of unblemished credit to regain their standing. A borrower who started at 680 will need just three years. Just being late on mortgage payments, up to ninety days, will drop your credit score 80 points if you started at 680 but 130 points if you were at 780. The higher you start, the harder you fall.  And it is not just credit standing in the way of a home loan. In order to get today’s record low interest rates, you need to put 20% down on the home. For a $300,000 home, that’s $60,000. On top of that you often have a 6% brokers fee and then closing costs, which averaged just over $4000 last year, according to Bankrate.com. If you do have lower credit, or a lower down payment, you will have to pay private mortgage insurance.  If you don’t have much money to put down, and you do have lower credit, the FHA is your only option now, but fees and premiums are going up there as well. 27% of home purchase financing in March of this year came from FHA loans, according to Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance, but that was just before fees went up. The FHA share of mortgage originations has been dropping precipitously since then.</p>
<p>As the housing market recovers, and home prices stabilize, one might assume the credit markets would loosen as well. That has not been the case so far, according to a recent Federal Reserve survey of bankers. In fact, mortgages will likely get more expensive, as federal regulators move closer to new rules concerning risk retention in mortgage lending.  In addition to fees, credit and down payment, just less than a quarter of homeowners with a mortgage owe more on that loan than their home is currently worth. These so-called &#8216;underwater&#8217; borrowers are therefore trapped, unless they have enough cash to put out and are willing to eat their losses. There are also many more who are in a near-negative equity position, which means they do not have enough equity in their homes to cover a new down payment, closing costs and brokers fees. That knocks a lot of potential buyers out of today’s market.  There is no question that we must not return to the lax lending of the past, where borrowers were asked no questions and offered whatever they wished. There is a question of how tight the mortgage market needs to be, when housing is still the chief impediment to overall economic recovery.&#8221;</p>
<p>Subprime is back</p>
<p>Mortgage backed securities are hot again.  Many of the hedge fund traders gathered at the Skybridge Alternatives investor summit at the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas are enthusiastically seeking out the once &#8220;toxic&#8221; mortgage bonds for their portfolios.  Even <strong>Kyle Bass</strong>, the Texan hedge fund manager who made billions shorting mortgage bonds in the years before the <strong>financial crisis</strong>, is bullish on mortgage credit. The &#8220;worst&#8221; bonds, those not backed by <strong>Fannie Mae</strong> and <strong>Freddie Mac</strong>, could see gains of 15%, he said Thursday.  The primary attraction of the bonds is their price. Although in recent months the bonds have rallied by as much as 20%, they still trade at steep discounts to par value. Last year they fell 40%.  The hedge fund mangers attracted to the bonds believe that even with massive defaults, they will continue to generate cash flows in excess of what current market prices indicate.  Some of the enthusiasm for the bonds is rooted in the idea that the housing market may be reaching a bottom. If home prices began to rise, mortgage defaults would likely decline and the prices of the bonds rise. But some traders believe that even if housing declines further and the economy stalls, the bonds could be profitable because the <strong>Federal Reserve</strong> would step in and buy them as part of a new round of <strong>quantitative easing</strong>.</p>
<p>NAHB &#8211; 55+ confidence up</p>
<p>Builder confidence in the 55+ housing market for single-family homes had a significant increase in the first quarter of 2012 compared to the same period a year ago, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) 55+ Housing Market Index (HMI) released today. The index increased 10 points to 27, and although 27 is relatively low for an index that lies on a scale of 0 to 100, it is nevertheless the highest reading since the inception of the index in 2008.  The 55+ single-family HMI measures builder sentiment based on a survey that asks if current sales, prospective buyer traffic and anticipated six-month sales for that market are good, fair or poor (high, average or low for traffic). An index number below 50 indicates that more builders view conditions as poor than good. All index components remain well below 50, but increased considerably from a year ago, each reaching an all-time high: Present sales rose 12 points to 27, expected sales for the next six months increased eight points to 32 and traffic of prospective buyers rose nine points to 26.  The 55+ multifamily condo HMI remains the weakest of the 55+ housing market indices, but also recorded an all-time high at 15, up seven points from a year ago. All index components showed an increase compared to a year ago: Present sales rose five points to 14, expected sales for the next six months increased seven points to 20 and traffic of prospective buyers jumped nine points to 15.  The 55+ multifamily rentals continue to lead the way in the overall 55+ housing market. Present production climbed 11 points to 31, expected future production increased eight points to 35, current demand for existing units rose three points to 42 and expected future demand increased one point to 45.</p>
<p>MOODY&#8217;s issues capital warning</p>
<p>Moody’s has warned that the tendency of global banks to avoid new capital requirement rules and load up on debt will continue to put pressure on their creditworthiness.  The credit rating agency announced it was placing 17 banks on review for a downgrade earlier this year, citing “vulnerabilities” in the companies’ vast and volatile capital markets businesses.  Moody’s caution could see all 17 banks downgraded when the review is finally completed, expected to happen in mid-June. Three of the banks, <strong>Credit Suisse</strong>, <strong>Morgan Stanley</strong>, and <strong>UBS</strong>, face as much as a three-notch downgrade; 10 face a two-notch slide and four a one-notch drop.  The potential downgrades have become a talking point on Wall Street, with some bankers openly criticizing Moody’s and others privately attempting to change the agency’s mind in closed-door meetings.</p>
<p>Commercial real estate improves slightly</p>
<p>Conditions in the commercial real estate sector improved in the first quarter, but investors and executives are worried about some of the commercial mortgages set to mature in the coming year and the market&#8217;s general lack of interest in sub-A real estate assets, real estate executives said.  Executives in the industry provided this &#8220;luke warm&#8221; feedback in the latest Real Estate Roundtable quarterly sentiment survey.  The survey&#8217;s overall confidence index is at 70, which shows confidence in the industry to be more favorable than not. Still, that index score is down from a reading of 77 in the first quarter of 2011, but up from a score of 59 in the fourth quarter of 2011.  To get the index number higher, the job market will have to improve, bringing demand for commercial real estate assets in the below Class-A category with it, the executives said.  &#8220;Fostering a commercial real estate recovery that extends beyond so-called class A or trophy assets in gateway markets still depends on an improved jobs picture, more confidence among businesses and consumers, and reduced uncertainty on looming tax and budget issues,&#8221; said roundtable chairman Daniel Neidich. &#8220;Our Q2 survey confirms the need for swift policy action to boost employment, business investment, and economic certainty.&#8221;  Another issue delaying full confidence in commercial real estate is the overall economy and uncertainty about how the US will handle economic issues and issues related to employment and business investment.</p>
<p>Foreclosure-rescue company president arrested</p>
<p>The president of a Palm Beach County foreclosure-rescue company was arrested Thursday and charged with several counts of fraud, including acting as a loan originator without a license, after an investigation that included law enforcement officials from Boca Raton to Tallahassee.  Guilfort Dieuvil, 38, is president of the Nationwide Investment Firm Corp., a for-profit company that has homeowners quitclaim deed their properties to it with promises to broker a short sale or loan modification, while also defending the case in court.  The arrest comes after The Palm Beach Post revealed, in a series of four articles beginning in November, lawsuits, police reports and letters to state officials from homeowners complaining that instead of getting the help they sought, they unwittingly signed over the deeds to their homes.  Some claim they were threatened with eviction and left with debt on properties to which they no longer have title.  Details of the investigation that led to Dieuvil&#8217;s arrest were not available late yesterday, but Boca Raton Police Department officer Sandra Boonenberg said detectives from her department worked in conjunction with other agencies on the case.</p>
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		<title>69,000 foreclosures in March</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 01 May 2012 15:43:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[69,000 foreclosures in March CoreLogic today released its National Foreclosure Report for March, which provides monthly data on completed foreclosures, foreclosure inventory and 90+ day delinquency rates. There were 69,000 completed foreclosures in March 2012 compared to 85,000 in March 2011 and 66,000* in February 2012. Through the first quarter of 2012, there were 198,000 completed foreclosures compared to 232,000 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>69,000 foreclosures in March</p>
<p>CoreLogic today released its National Foreclosure Report for March, which provides monthly data on completed foreclosures, foreclosure inventory and 90+ day delinquency rates. There were 69,000 completed foreclosures in March 2012 compared to 85,000 in March 2011 and 66,000* in February 2012. Through the first quarter of 2012, there were 198,000 completed foreclosures compared to 232,000 through the first quarter of 2011. Since the start of the financial crisis in September 2008, there have been approximately 3.5 million completed foreclosures.   Approximately 1.4 million homes, or 3.4% of all homes with a mortgage, were in the national foreclosure inventory as of March 2012 compared to 1.5 million, or 3.5%, in March 2011 and 1.4 million, or 3.4%, in February 2012. The number of loans in the foreclosure inventory decreased by nearly 100,000, or 6.0%, in March 2012 compared to March 2011.   </p>
<p>The share of borrowers nationally that were more than 90 days late on their mortgage payment, including homes in foreclosure and real estate owned (REO) assets, fell to 7.0% in March 2012 from 7.5% in March 2011, and remained unchanged from 7.0% in February 2012.  Also in March, the inventory of REO assets held by servicers nationwide grew more slowly than the pace of REO sales, as measured by the distressed clearing ratio.  The distressed clearing ratio is calculated by dividing the number of REO sales by the number of completed foreclosures. The higher the distressed clearing ratio, the faster the pace of REO sales relative to the pace of completed foreclosures.  The distressed clearing ratio for March 2012 was 0.81, up from 0.76 in February 2012.</p>
<p> Highlights as of March 2012</p>
<p>-  The five states with the largest number of completed foreclosures for the 12 months ending in March 2012 were:  California (150,000), Florida (92,000), Michigan (62,000), Arizona (58,000) and Texas (57,000). These five states account for 49.1% of all completed foreclosures nationally.</p>
<p>-  The% of homeowners nationally who were more than 90 days late on their mortgage payments, including homes in foreclosure and REO, was 7.0% for March 2012 compared to 7.5% for March 2011, and 7.0% in February 2012.   </p>
<p>-  The five states with the highest foreclosure rates were:  Florida (12.1%), New Jersey (6.6%), Illinois (5.4%), Nevada (4.9%) and New York (4.9%).</p>
<p>-  The five states with the lowest foreclosure rates were:  Wyoming (0.7%), Alaska (0.8%), North Dakota (0.8%), Nebraska (1.1%) and South Dakota (1.4%).</p>
<p>-  Of the top 100 markets, measured by Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) population, 35 are showing an increase in the year-over-year foreclosure rate in March 2012, two more than in February 2012 when 33 of the top CBSAs were showing an increase in the year-over-year foreclosure rate.   </p>
<p>*February data was revised.  Revisions are standard, and to ensure accuracy CoreLogic incorporates newly released data to provide updated results.</p>
<p>BOA to cut 400 jobs</p>
<p>Bank of America (BOA) is planning to cut up to 400 jobs in its investment banking, corporate banking, and sales and trading units, The Wall Street Journal<em> </em>reported, citing people familiar with the situation.  An expected sale of the bank&#8217;s non-US wealth-management operations in Asia, Latin America, and Europe would eliminate up to 2,000 jobs, the Journal reported.  Reuters reported on April 17 that Bank of America was looking to sell its wealth-management units outside the US for as much as $3 billion.  BOA declined to comment on the Journal report.  Last spring, the bank announced a cost-cutting program called Project New BAC that aims to eliminate 30,000 consumer banking and technology jobs over the next few years.  The bank has said it expects to wrap up plans for the second phase of the program, which focuses on investment banking, commercial banking, and related support jobs in May. The second phase is expected to cut fewer jobs than the first because it covers a smaller, more efficient part of the bank.  At the end of March, Bank of America had about 278,700 employees worldwide.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; renter nation</p>
<p>&#8220;More Americans are renting homes, and fewer are owning them; it’s not as if this is news to anyone who follows the US housing market, but a new report from the Census Bureau today really put an historical exclamation point on the trend.  The share of US household renting reached a fifteen year high, and home ownership reached a 15-year low. Funny how those numbers travel together.  34.6% of households were renters in the first quarter of this year, and that number is climbing, as lack of credit or sufficient down payment keeps Americans young and old from becoming home owners. Rental vacancies are therefore falling, the lowest rate out West, where foreclosures have run the highest during this housing crash. That is also where investors are rushing in to buy foreclosed properties and put them up for rent. Single family homes for rent, in fact, surpassed multi-family units, taking 52% of the $3 trillion rental market, according to CoreLogic.</p>
<p>Both rental and homeowner vacancies are down, which is a general positive for the housing market, because empty houses are a blight on communities. &#8216;The vacancy rates will only decline if household formation is increasing or units are being destroyed,&#8217; notes ISI Group’s Stephen East.  While banks have bulldozed some foreclosed properties here and there, the practice is by no means popular or widespread. That should mean that household formation is increasing, which is generally a product of an improving jobs picture. Younger Americans who have been living together or with their parents may finally be getting into their own homes, more likely into rentals, but at least they’re forming their own households. That is thanks to a small drop in the unemployment rate among 25-34 year olds to its lowest rate in three years. The home ownership rate now stands at 65.4%, down a full percentage point from a year ago, and down from just over 69% at the peak in 2004.  Since the recession began, growth in overall new households has been about 50% short of trend lines, according to analysts at Goldman Sachs. While household formation is rebounding for single or un-related Americans, formation among families is still waning; that may be due to the types of homes they need, i.e. larger, single-family homes. It thus stands to reason that pent-up demand will show itself first in single family rentals in the future and less in multi-family. No wonder investors are flooding the foreclosure market.&#8221;</p>
<p>No more easing?</p>
<p>Two top Federal Reserve officials — one with a dovish, employment-focused bent, and the other a self-avowed inflation hawk — yesterday both said they see no need for the US central bank to ease monetary policy any further.  But the comments, from San Francisco Fed<strong> </strong>President John Williams and Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher, do not mean they believe the central bank should quickly move to raise rates, which it has kept near zero for more than three years.  The economy grew at a 2.2% pace last quarter, down from its 3% growth rate in the final three months of the year. Recent economic data, including a gauge of business activity in the US Midwest, signal growth may slow further this quarter.  &#8220;I don&#8217;t think we are ready to exit yet,&#8221; Fisher, an inflation<strong> </strong>hawk, told Reuters at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles.  Fisher said he would oppose the extension of Operation Twist, the Fed bond-buying program that is set to end in June, but stopped short of calling for outright monetary tightening.  &#8220;We&#8217;ll have to see how the year works out,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>US home ownership sets new record &#8211; down</p>
<p>The US homeownership rate fell to the lowest level in 15 years in the first quarter as borrowers lost homes to foreclosure and tighter inventory and credit kept buyers off the market.  The rate dropped to 65.4% from 66% in the fourth quarter and fell a full percentage point from a year earlier, the Census Bureau said in a report today. That is the lowest level since the first quarter of 1997, and down from a record 69.2% in June 2004.  Mounting foreclosures are displacing borrowers, while a lack of inventory has kept home sales from accelerating amid record affordability, the National Association of Realtors reported April 19. Stricter mortgage standards are also limiting purchases as rental demand surges, said Paul Diggle, property economist with Capital Economics Ltd. in London.  “Although house prices and mortgage rates have fallen to a level that makes buying preferable to renting, ongoing problems accessing mortgage credit are preventing many households from taking advantage,” he wrote in a note today.  The US apartment vacancy rate fell to 4.9% in the first quarter, an 11-year low, according to New York-based Reis Inc. (REIS).  The vacancy rate for rental homes was 8.8% in the first quarter, compared with 9.7% a year earlier, the Census Bureau said in today’s report.</p>
<p>Of the estimated 132.6 million US homes, 18.5 million, or 13.9%, were vacant in the first quarter. A year earlier, about 19 million homes were vacant, according to the report. That includes homes for sale or rent or held off the market, and vacation properties used seasonally.  The ownership rate may drop below 64% by the end of 2015 and stay there for years, Scott Simon, the mortgage bond head of Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California, said in an e-mail today.  “It will be lower by 2017,” he said. “It will be lower in 2020.”  About 6 million borrowers will lose their properties in the next five years because of inability to pay, creating 4 million new rental households, Simon said in an April 24 interview on Bloomberg Television.  The homeownership rate fell 3 percentage points from a year earlier to 61.4% in the first quarter for people aged 35 to 44, the biggest drop of any age group. The Northeast had the biggest regional decline, with the ownership rate falling 1.4 percentage points to 62.5%. The West had the lowest ownership rate at 59.9%, down 1 percentage point from a year earlier. </p>
<p>The US homeownership rate rose to a record in 2004 when President George W. Bush, running for re-election, called for expanding home-loan availability to create an “ownership society.” The current rate of 65.4% matches the average since 1965, when the Census Bureau began reporting the figures, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.  Home prices fell 3.5% in February from a year earlier and are 35% below their July 2006 peak, according to the S&amp;P/Case-Shiller index of 20 US cities. The average rate for a 30-year fixed loan was 3.88% last week and reached 3.87% in February, the lowest level in at least four decades, according to Freddie Mac.  About 2.37 million homes were listed for sale in March, a and 6.3 month supply and down 22% from a year earlier, the Realtors association said on April 19. A six-month supply is considered a healthy market, according to the group.</p>
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		<title>Fannie and Freddie Servicer Response Timelines on Preforeclosure Sales</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Apr 2012 17:44:29 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Fannie and Freddie Servicer Response Timelines on Preforeclosure Sales When evaluating a borrower’s request for Fannie Mae’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) program or the non-HAFA program for Fannie Mae preforeclosure sales, servicers must comply within the response times described in Servicing Guide Announcement SVC-2012-07,  Changes to Servicer Response Times and the Preforeclosure Sale Process  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fannie and Freddie Servicer Response Timelines on Preforeclosure Sales</p>
<p>When evaluating a borrower’s request for Fannie Mae’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) program or the non-HAFA program for Fannie Mae preforeclosure sales, servicers must comply within the response times described in Servicing Guide Announcement SVC-2012-07,  Changes to Servicer Response Times and the Preforeclosure Sale Process  and outlined in the table below.  Servicers must document the mortgage servicing loan file for validation of compliance with these response timelines.</p>
<p>Fannie Mae HAFA &#8211; Servicer Evaluation of Borrower Response Package (BRP)</p>
<p>-  Within 3 business days of receipt of the BRP &#8211; The servicer must acknowledge receipt of the BRP to the borrower either verbally or in writing.</p>
<p>-  Within 5 business days of receipt of the BRP &#8211; If the servicer determines that documentation is missing, the servicer must send an Incomplete Information Notice to the borrower.</p>
<p>- Within 5 business days of a decision but in no event more than 30 calendar days after receipt of a complete BRP &#8211; The servicer must send an Evaluation Notice to the borrower.  If the servicer determines a HAFA Short Sale is the most appropriate foreclosure alternative, the HAFA Short Sale Agreement (Form 184) and the HAFA Request for Approval of Short Sale without Short Sale Agreement (Form 185) should be included with the Evaluation Notice.</p>
<p>Within 30 calendar days after receipt of the complete BRP but in no event more than 60 days after receipt of the complete BRP &#8211; If the servicer is unable to fully evaluate the</p>
<p>borrower for a HAFA, including preparation of the Form 184 and Form 185, an extension of 30 calendar days is permitted as long as the servicer provides weekly verbal or written status updates to the borrower. All communication must be documented in the mortgage loan servicing file.  The servicer must send the Evaluation Notice no later than 60 days after receipt of the complete BRP. </p>
<p>- Within 14 calendar days after return of a fully executed Form 184 &#8211; The servicer must allow the borrower 14 calendar days to return a fully-executed Form 184 with required documentation.</p>
<p>- Within 10 calendar day extension of return of fully executed Form 184 &#8211; If necessary, the servicer may allow the borrower up to 10 additional calendar days to complete the Form 184 submission.</p>
<p>-  Within 10 business days of receipt of the Form 185 &#8211; The servicer must respond with a decision of approval or denial. </p>
<p>*If the offer results in net proceeds equal to or greater than the minimum acceptable net proceeds (MANP), the servicer must approve the short sale.  </p>
<p>*If the offer does not result in net proceeds equal to or greater than MANP, the servicer must provide a counteroffer with the denial.  </p>
<p>* The MANP should not be disclosed to the borrower. </p>
<p>- 5 business days after communicating a counteroffer &#8211; The servicer must request a response from the borrower on the purchaser’s decision of a counteroffer.</p>
<p>- Within 10 business days after receipt of revised offer &#8211; The servicer must respond with a decision on a revised offer from the borrower. </p>
<p>*If the offer results in net proceeds equal to or greater than the MANP, the servicer must approve the short sale.  </p>
<p>*If the offer does not result in net proceeds equal to or greater than the MANP, the servicer may provide a counteroffer with the denial.  </p>
<p>*The MANP should not be disclosed to the borrower.</p>
<p>Fannie Mae’s Non-HAFA Preforeclosure Sale &#8211; Prior to Receipt of a Preforeclosure Sale Offer</p>
<p>-  Within 3 business days of receipt of the BRP &#8211; The servicer must acknowledge receipt of the BRP to the borrower either verbally or in writing.</p>
<p>-  Within 5 business days of receipt of the BRP &#8211; If the servicer determines that documentation is missing, the servicer must send an Incomplete Information Notice to the borrower.</p>
<p>-  Within 5 business days of a decision but in no event more than 30 calendar days after receipt of a complete BRP &#8211; The servicer must send an Evaluation Notice to the borrower. The Evaluation Notice should include the approved model language provided on eFannieMae.com.</p>
<p>Fannie Mae’s Non-HAFA Preforeclosure Sale – Preforeclosure Sale Offer Received with a BRP</p>
<p>-  Within 3 business days of receipt of the offer  The servicer must acknowledge receipt of a short sale offer. </p>
<p>-  Within 5 business days of receipt of the offer  If the servicer determines that documentation is missing, the servicer must send an Incomplete Information Notice to the borrower.</p>
<p>-  Within 5 business days of a decision but in no event more than 30 calendar days after receipt of a complete BRP &#8211; The servicer must respond to the short sale offer with approve, approve with conditions, deny with counteroffer, or “still under review.”</p>
<p>-  5 business days after communicating a counteroffer If the response is “deny with counteroffer,” the servicer must request a response from the borrower on the purchaser’s decision of a counteroffer.</p>
<p>-  Within 10 business days after receipt of revised offer  The servicer must ensure that revised offers are evaluated within time frames that enable a decision to be communicated to the borrower within 10 business days after receipt of the revised offer.</p>
<p>-  30 calendar days after receipt of the BRP  If the servicer responds with “still under review,” an extension of 30 calendar days is permitted as long as the servicer provides weekly verbal or written status updates.   All communication must be documented in the mortgage loan servicing file.</p>
<p>-  Within 60 calendar days of receipt of the BRP and offer &#8211; The servicer must respond with a final decision.</p>
<p>Economic growth flat</p>
<p><strong>Gross domestic product </strong><strong>(GDP) </strong>expanded at a 2.2 percent annual rate, the <strong>Commerce Department</strong> said on Friday in its advance estimate, moderating from the fourth quarter&#8217;s 3 percent rate.  While that was below economists&#8217; expectations for a 2.5 percent pace, a surge in <strong>consumer spending</strong><strong> </strong>took some of the sting from the report. However, growth was still stronger than analysts&#8217; predictions early in the quarter for an expansion below 1.5 percent. Although the details were mixed, the GDP report offered a somewhat better picture of growth compared with the fourth quarter, when inventory building accounted for nearly two thirds of the economy&#8217;s growth. In the first quarter, demand from consumers took up the slack.  Consumer spending which accounts for about 70 percent of U.S. economic activity, increased at a 2.9 percent rate &#8211; the fastest pace since the fourth quarter of 2010. That compared to a 2.1 percent rise in the fourth quarter.  Business spending fell at a 2.1 percent pace after rising 5.2 percent in the fourth quarter.</p>
<p>Excluding inventories, GDP is rose at a 1.6 percent rate. In the fourth quarter, the comparable figure was just 1.1 percent.  Elsewhere, growth in the first quarter was held back by a another drop in government defense spending, which confounded expectations for a strong rebound. An increase in exports was offset by a rise imports, causing trade to have virtually no impact on growth. Separately, civilian employment costs rose more modestly by 0.4 percent during the first quarter, primarily because growth in benefits slowed after a sharp rise in last year&#8217;s fourth quarter, Labor Department data showed on Friday.  The gain in employee costs was slightly lower than the 0.5 percent rise forecast by analysts surveyed by Reuters. Costs had increased 0.5 percent in the final three months of 2011.  Benefit costs, which account for 30 percent of compensation, grew by 0.5 percent in the first quarter after a sharp 0.7 percent rise in last year&#8217;s fourth quarter.  Wages and salaries &#8211; the other 70 percent of costs &#8211; were up 0.5 percent in the first three months this year, a pickup from the 0.3 percent gain posted in last year&#8217;s closing quarter.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; foreclosures return</p>
<p>&#8220;Big jumps in foreclosure activity in cities like Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, New York and Raleigh pushed the national numbers higher in the first three months of this year, according to a new report from <strong>RealtyTrac</strong>, an online foreclosure sales and data company.  A majority of U.S. housing markets posted a quarterly increase in foreclosure activity, although the numbers are still down from a year ago.  &#8216;First quarter metro foreclosure trends were a mixed bag,&#8217; said Brandon Moore, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac, adding that the increase in the number of cities seeing a quarterly jump is, &#8216;an early sign that long-dormant foreclosures are coming out of hibernation in many local markets.&#8217; Tracking <strong>foreclosure activity</strong><strong> </strong>is a tricky business right now, as the system has been roiled with problems left over from the so-called &#8216;robo-signing&#8217; foreclosure paperwork scandal.  The five largest banks signed a <strong>$25 billion settlement agreement</strong><strong> </strong>earlier this year, requiring them to do more modifications and write down principal on some troubled loans. While some expected foreclosure numbers to surge, as states that require a judge in the foreclosure process finally start pushing the documents through again, but more recent data has shown the opposite. As banks work on saving more loans or doing foreclosure alternatives, like short sales, deeds in lieu of foreclosure, or deeds for rent programs, the final foreclosure numbers are falling. New mortgage delinquencies are also falling, thanks to a slowly improving jobs picture.</p>
<p>Still, inventories of properties in the foreclosure process are still abnormally high, and some of the usual markets are the culprits. Stockton and Modesto, California still have the highest foreclosure rates in the nation, while Las Vegas dropped to the eighth spot, with foreclosure activity down 61 percent from a year ago. The Phoenix market is also improving, although still in the top ten list of foreclosure rates.  Just over 7 percent of U.S. loans were in some stage of delinquency in March, and 4.14 percent were in the foreclosure process, according to a new report from Lender Processing Services. The delinquency number is down almost 9 percent from a year ago, but the foreclosure inventory is fairly flat, down 1.6 percent from a year ago, but up slightly from the previous month. 5.6 million properties are still in some stage of delinquency or foreclosure. These numbers, negative home equity, and still-tight credit are the largest impediments to a robust recovery in the housing market.&#8221;</p>
<p>Treasury Secretary wants to open markets to China</p>
<p>Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Thursday the United States was willing to open up its markets to China and give it more access to U.S. technologies if Beijing made progress on issues that concern the United States.  Also Thursday, a top GOP lawmaker pressed the Obama administration to increase pressure on China to make currency and trade reforms.  The comments came ahead of the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue meetings in Beijing next week. &#8220;We are willing to continue to make progress on these issues, but our ability to do so will depend in part on how much progress we see from China on issues that are important to us,&#8221; Geithner said. He repeated that <strong>China&#8217;s currency</strong>, the yuan, needed to appreciate more rapidly and pledged that the United States would continue to push aggressively for fair treatment of U.S. companies doing business with China.  Rep. Dave Camp, chairman of the House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee, urged the administration to negotiate an investment treaty with China and to press the world&#8217;s second-largest economy to make reforms.  &#8220;Plain and simple, we cannot allow China to continue its unacceptable trade practices,&#8221; the Michigan Republican said in a speech, referring to longstanding barriers to U.S. exports and the widespread piracy and counterfeiting of U.S. goods.  &#8220;The litany of China&#8217;s trade distorting policies is deeply troubling and cannot be allowed to stand,&#8221; Camp said. &#8220;In addition, we should pursue a Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) with China.&#8221;  Camp&#8217;s call for the United States to begin talks with China on a treaty comes one week before Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton travel to Beijing for high-level talks.</p>
<p>Remodelling Market Index (RMI) flat</p>
<p>Due to a recently discovered computer coding error, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) has revised the RMI going back to 2006. The error had slightly reduced the true values of the overall index, as well as its two major components. The revisions generally show a one point or less quarterly increase, with quarter-to-quarter patterns remaining relatively unchanged. Some of the subcomponents experienced larger revisions but in a counteracting fashion, so that the impact on the primary indicators was muted.  Remodeling activity remained relatively flat in the first quarter of 2012, as the Remodeling Market Index (RMI) compiled by the National Association of Home Builders decreased one point to 47 from the upwardly revised 48 in the previous quarter.  The overall RMI combines ratings of current remodeling activity with indicators of future activity. An RMI below 50 indicates that more remodelers report market activity is lower (compared to the prior quarter) than report it is higher.</p>
<p>In the first quarter, the RMI component measuring current market conditions dropped one point to 49, while the component measuring future indicators of remodeling business fell two points to 44.  “We are seeing that the demand for remodeling work has been pulled forward because of a mild winter,” said NAHB Remodelers Chairman George “Geep” Moore Jr., GMB, CAPS, GMR and owner/president of Moore-Built Construction &amp; Restoration Inc. in Elm Grove, La. “That is why many remodelers reported lower numbers for future activity.”  The three components measuring current market conditions moved in different directions in the first quarter: major additions remained even at 44; minor additions rose one point to 52; and maintenance and repair dropped four points to 51. Two of the four components measuring future market indicators decreased: backlog of remodeling jobs dropped four points to 43 and appointments for proposals fell five points to 45. Meanwhile, calls for bids rose one point to 47 and amount of work committed for the next three months remained even at 42.  Regionally, remodeling market conditions in the West increased three points to 47, while the other three regions showed declines: the Northeast to 48 (from 55), the Midwest to 50 (from 52) and the South to 46 (from 49).</p>
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		<title>California Bay area sales up</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Apr 2012 17:52:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Illinois prices turn around Median home prices in Illinois snapped a 20-month streak of price declines in March, a turnaround coinciding with the start of the spring selling season.  The statewide median price in March came in at $130,000, even with March 2011, according to the Illinois Association of Realtors. It’s the first time the state’s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Illinois prices turn around</p>
<p>Median home prices in Illinois snapped a 20-month streak of price declines in March, a turnaround coinciding with the start of the spring selling season.  The statewide median price in March came in at $130,000, even with March 2011, according to the <strong>Illinois Association of Realtors</strong>. It’s the first time the state’s median price hasn’t decreased since June 2010.  “There’s no doubt that these are strong numbers to open the spring selling season,” said IAR President Loretta Alonzo. “To see such good sales numbers, coupled with a measure of price stability is encouraging news no matter what side of a real estate transaction you happen to be on.”  Illinois home sales posted the best March sales numbers since 2007. Home sales (including single-family homes and condominiums) in the month totaled 9,575, expanding 21.1% from 7,904 home sales a year earlier.  In the nine-county Chicago Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area, 6,590 homes were sold in March, up 23.8% from March 2011 sales of 5,323 homes. The median price in March was $151,850 in the Chicago PMSA, down 3.9% compared to a year earlier when it was $158,000.  “Sales volumes are up, time-on-the-market levels are down significantly from a year ago and prices appear to be stabilizing in Illinois although continuing to fall in Chicago,” said Geoffrey Hewings, director of the Regional Economics Applications Laboratory at the University of Illinois.  “Further, in the last month there was a more even spread of sales prices compared to previous months where homes sold for less than $200,000 dominated the market,” Hewings added.</p>
<p>Hiring going up?</p>
<p>The National Association of Business Economics&#8217; (NABE) industry survey found that 39 percent of respondents expect hiring will pick up in their companies and industries during the next six months, up from 27 percent in January.  Some 48 percent of respondents expect hiring will hold steady. While that is down from 64 percent in January, it still underscores the slow pace of recovery in the labor market following the 2007-2009 recession.  The survey was conducted between March 20 and April 10.  The NABE surveyed 55 members from companies and trade organizations. Not all responded to every question.  The uptick in demand for labor could be leading companies to offer bigger paychecks. Some 44 percent of respondents said wages and salaries were rising, up from 26 percent in January.  The poll also showed 63 percent of respondents expected U.S. gross domestic product to grow between 2.1 and 3 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier.  In the NABE&#8217;s previous poll released in January, 60 percent of respondents expected growth in that range.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; Phoenix turns around</p>
<p>&#8220;Mike Ripson hasn&#8217;t built a home in three years, but he is about to. He has been sitting on one hundred sixty acres of land just outside Phoenix, Arizona, which he intends to divide into 121 one-acre lots.  &#8216;Now&#8217;s the time because we&#8217;ve been studying the marketplace, and we noticed beginning late last summer, early fall, that for homes priced less than $100,000, the market was becoming very tight,&#8217; says Ripson, whose company is celebrating its ten year anniversary this week.  &#8216;Over the last several months that price point has increased such that today, homes priced less than 300,000 dollars, there&#8217;s less than a thirty-day supply in the marketplace,&#8217; Ripson adds.  The supply of homes for sale in the Phoenix area is down 42 percent from a year ago, and foreclosures are down 52 percent, according to Michael Orr, of the Real Estate Center at ASU. That is bringing demand back to the builders.  Ripson is building about 40 miles outside of Phoenix in Wittmann, where there is less competition from foreclosures.  &#8216;To give you an example, within a five mile radius of where we sit here at Sonoran Acres, two months ago there were 18 homes on the market. Today there&#8217;s only one,&#8217; says Ripson.  That&#8217;s why he re-opened his model home two weeks ago, and immediately saw high buyer traffic. He filed permits for two new homes, which he expects to sell in the next few weeks, thanks to his low, $200,000 price point. </p>
<p>Closer in to Phoenix, prices are a bit lower, thanks to a higher supply of distressed properties, but those properties are selling fast as well, as large scale and institutional investors flood the market.  &#8216;I really think we&#8217;re at the top of the first inning in terms of this opportunity, and there will be ebbs and flows, ups and downs, people will come in and come out,&#8217; says Justin Chang, principal at Colony Capital, which intends to invest over a billion dollars in distressed properties this year.  &#8216;But if you&#8217;re looking to build a business over the next five to seven years, this is the first inning, and we&#8217;re pretty excited about it,&#8217; Chang goes on to say.  Colony has a history of investing in commercial real estate, but about a year ago they saw the potential as well in the single family rental market. They began building an infrastructure, and started buying homes last month from banks, the government and at auction.  They own 170 homes in three states so far and intend to close on fifty more this week. They spend $3,000 to $5,000 rehabbing each home and readying it to rent. Their team is entirely internal, which they say saves them extra costs.  &#8216;We&#8217;ve got our internal team doing acquisitions, we&#8217;ve got our internal team doing the rehab and we&#8217;ve got an internal team doing the property management. These are employees,&#8217; explains Jay McKee, COO of Colony American Homes.  &#8216;We have 120 people on our payroll, W-2 employees, right now doing this work. A lot of other folks are doing it by outsourcing to third parties,&#8217; says McKee. &#8216;We think by doing it in house, we can do it without markups.&#8217;</p>
<p>At a Colony home in Laveen, AZ, a suburb of Phoenix, workers were installing new appliances into a former foreclosure, as the old ones had been stolen. Nearby, a large development from <strong>Pulte Homes</strong><strong> </strong>advertised new construction starting at $100,000. McKee is not concerned.  &#8216;There are people who cannot buy those homes, and those are our clients. The people that lost their home to foreclosure, are repairing their credit, or just decided they don&#8217;t want to be owners of properties anymore, they&#8217;re our client,&#8217; confirms McKee.  Colony is considering a program to help their renters become buyers, much like some rent-to-own programs being considered by banks and the government. Colony has also been pre-approved to bid on Fannie Mae foreclosures through a new pilot program by the <strong>Federal Housing Finance Agency</strong><strong> </strong>(FHFA).  &#8216;We really understand what they want to accomplish, and we think we can be good partners,&#8217; says Chang. &#8216;The pilot programs that are out there now are very smart, and I hope they are the first of many.  Colony is just one of a growing cadre of investment teams buying distressed real estate to rent. Chang expects to see returns of anywhere from 15 to 25 percent on his investment. Cash flow is almost immediate. He says he can rehab a home in three days and have it rented in less than a month. 85 percent of Colony&#8217;s homes are already rented.  As for competition in the space, which Chang calls a pioneering asset class, he&#8217;s not concerned.  &#8216;The opportunity is so vast that there&#8217;s room for a lot of companies,&#8217; Chang says. &#8216;Eight to ten million homes will be foreclosed over next 3-5 years. That&#8217;s $800 billion in capital required. Fifty other firms could do it, and it still would be a drop in the bucket. We&#8217;re really just a small part of the game at this point.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Gas prices down</p>
<p>The average retail price of a gallon of gasoline in the United States declined for the first time since mid-December, dropping 5.44 cents over the past two weeks, the nationwide Lundberg Survey showed.  The national average for a gallon of regular gasoline fell to $3.9127 on April 20, from $3.9671 on April 6, according to the survey of gasoline retailers in the continental United States.  Still, drivers are paying 3.27 cents more for a gallon than they did a year ago.  &#8220;The decline began in California about six weeks ago,&#8221; survey editor Trilby Lundberg said, adding that prices peaked there on March 9 at $4.3162 and fell in subsequent surveys by nearly 15 percent to $4.1669.  Drivers in Chicago continued to pay the most at the pump &#8212; $4.26 per gallon &#8212; even though prices fell nearly 19 cents from April 6.  Prices in Tulsa, Oklahoma, remained lowest at $3.52 per gallon.  &#8220;If crude oil does not shoot back up we may find another price decline of 5-10 cents in the coming weeks,&#8221; Lundberg said.  Average diesel prices fell 4.15 cents to $4.1735 compared with two weeks earlier.</p>
<p>California Bay area sales up</p>
<p>March home sales in California’s Bay Area reached their highest level for the month in five years, the result of lower prices, low interest rates and an improving economy.  About 7,700 new and resale houses and condos sold in the nine-county Bay Area in March, up 34.9% from 5,702 in February, and up 9.1% from 7,051 a year earlier, according to San Diego-based <strong>DataQuick</strong>.  The February to March sales jump is normal for the season, but the latter’s sales count was the highest for the month since 8,317 homes were sold in 2007. Since 1988, March sales have ranged from 4,898 in 2008 to 12,645 in 2004, with an average of 8,812.  “This is the time of year when buying patterns usually start to normalize,” said DataQuick President John Walsh. “And while the changes we’re seeing are incremental, they’re incremental in a positive direction. That said, there’s a long way to go.”  The median price paid for all new and resale houses and condos sold in the Bay Area in March totaled $358,000, a 10.2% increase from $325,000 in February, but down 0.6% from $360,000 in March 2011. </p>
<p>To put these figures in perspective, the low point of the current real estate cycle fell to $290,000 in March 2009, while the peak rose to $665,000 in June/July 2007.  Statewide median home prices posted their first year-over-year increase in 16 months. The <strong>California Association of Realtors </strong>members said tight inventory (4.1 months) throughout the state and particularly robust sales in the San Francisco Bay area helped fuel the price increase.  “Two of the big issues to watch closely are how fast distressed properties are being put on the market, and the availability of, or lack of availability of, mortgage financing,” DataQuick&#8217;s Walsh said.  Distressed property sales, according to the firm, made up 44.3% of the resale market, down from 48.8% in February and 48.2% a year earlier.  Foreclosure resales accounted for 24.9% of resales in March, falling from 26.4% in February, and down from 31.5% in the year-ago period. Foreclosure resales averaged about 10% over the past 17 years.  Short sales made up 19.4% of Bay Area resales in the month, down from 22.4% in the previous month and up from 16.7% a year earlier.</p>
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		<title>Builder confidence down</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Apr 2012 15:27:50 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[BOA Florida plan draws 678 short sales Bank of America&#8217;s (BOA) payoff to Florida homeowners who do a short sale instead of dragging out a foreclosure has averaged $12,000 per deal and helped close 678 contracts statewide since it debuted in October.  The Florida-only plan originally targeted 20,000 homeowners with incentives of between $5,000 and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BOA Florida plan draws 678 short sales</p>
<p>Bank of America&#8217;s (BOA) payoff to Florida homeowners who do a short sale instead of dragging out a foreclosure has averaged $12,000 per deal and helped close 678 contracts statewide since it debuted in October.  The Florida-only plan originally targeted 20,000 homeowners with incentives of between $5,000 and $20,000 to forgo the more than two-year foreclosure process and leave their home in &#8220;broom swept&#8221; condition for a new owner.  Bank of America spokesman Rick Simon said the Charlotte, N.C.-based company remains &#8220;enthused&#8221; about the pilot program, which generated 3,900 purchase offers and 11,000 verbal agreements from customers who said they were interested in participating.  &#8220;We&#8217;ve quietly done a little experimentation with a similar plan in one of the non-judicial states, but we are not to the point of announcing a major expansion,&#8221; said Simon, adding that monthly short sale volume has more than doubled this year.  &#8220;Of particular note is the response from &#8216;hand-raisers&#8217; who heard about the program and asked to be included without us reaching out to them.&#8221; </p>
<p>To participate, purchase offers had to be submitted by mid-December. Sales must close by Aug. 31.  Attorney Adam Seligman said his North Palm Beach firm of Cohen, Norris, Wolmer, Ray, Telepman and Cohen has closed about a dozen Bank of America short sales in which owners received a cash incentive.  &#8220;It&#8217;s just difficult dealing with them because they can&#8217;t seem to put into writing who qualifies,&#8221; Seligman said about Bank of America. &#8220;They have general guidelines, but nothing specific.&#8221;  Florida was a testing ground for Bank of America because of the state&#8217;s high foreclosure rates. Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase have similar plans.  In March, Florida ranked fourth nationally in foreclosure activity, with one in every 336 homes receiving some type of foreclosure notice, according to a RealtyTrac report that was released Thursday.  The same report said it takes an average of 861 days to foreclose on a home in Florida.  Short sale incentive money is meant to dissuade struggling borrowers from going through a prolonged foreclosure, which can cost the bank more in the end then a cash payout up front. Typically, the bank also is willing to waive a deficiency judgment, which is the remaining balance on the home seller&#8217;s mortgage after the short sale is completed.</p>
<p>Retail up</p>
<p>Total retail sales increased 0.8%, the Commerce Department said on Monday, after rising 1% in February.  Last month&#8217;s gains, which surpassed economists&#8217; expectations for only a 0.3% rise, could prompt analysts to raise their first-quarter growth forecasts from an annual pace of around 2.5% currently.  The economy grew at a 3% rate in the fourth quarter.  The rise in sales last month was broad-based, even though Americans paid 27 cents more per gallon of gasoline than they did the prior month.  Motor vehicle sales rose 0.9% after increasing 1.3% in February. Auto sales have accelerated in recent months, boosted by pent-up demand by households.  Excluding autos, retail sales climbed 0.8% last month after advancing 0.9% in February. </p>
<p>Elsewhere, gasoline sales receipts increased 1.1% after rising 3.6% in February. Excluding autos and gasoline, sales advanced 0.7% in March, adding to the prior month&#8217;s 0.5% gain.  Details of the report showed some strength, suggesting consumer spending will continue to support growth.  Last month, clothing store receipts rose 0.9%, while sales at building materials and garden equipment suppliers jumped 3.0% — the largest gain since December.  So-called core retail sales, which exclude autos, gasoline and building materials, rose 0.5% after increasing by the same margin in February. Core sales correspond most closely with the consumer spending component of the government&#8217;s gross domestic product report. Sales at restaurants and bars edged up 0.3%, while receipts at sporting goods, hobby, book and music stores rose 0.5%. Sales of electronics and appliances increased 1.0%, the largest gain since October, while receipts at furniture stores climbed 1.1%.</p>
<p>Spring recovery?</p>
<p>Five years after the US housing bust sent sales and prices plunging, the spring home-buying season is pointing to a long-awaited recovery.  Reduced prices, record-low mortgage rates, higher rents and an improving job market appear to be emboldening many would-be buyers.  Open houses are drawing crowds. A wave of foreclosures is leading investors to grab bargain-priced homes.  And many people seem to have concluded that prices won&#8217;t drop much further. In some areas, prices have begun to tick up.  Interviews with more than two dozen potential buyers, sellers, brokers, Realtors and economists suggest that confidence is up and that sales will move slowly but steadily higher.  The spring buying season got an early lift-off from an uncommonly warm January and February — a winter that was the best for sales of previously occupied homes in five years. Permits to build houses and apartments rose in February to their highest level since 2008.</p>
<p>Some analysts detected a slight uptick in prices for February and March. CoreLogic, a real estate data firm, says prices for homes not at risk of foreclosure — about two thirds of the market — rose 0.7% in February. It was the first increase in four years. Price gains occurred both in some hard-hit areas, such as Phoenix, and some still-thriving areas like New York and Washington.  In Miami, the average sales price has surged 14% in the past year, according to Trulia, a real estate data firm. In Phoenix, the average is up 13%, in Pittsburgh 9%.  Earnings reports Friday from two big banks suggested that more people are taking out mortgages. <strong>JPMorgan Chase</strong> issued 6% more mortgages from January through March than it did a year ago and got 33% more applications. <strong>Wells Fargo</strong> issued 54% more mortgages and received 84% more applications.  Still, few think the housing industry is nearing a return to full health. For that to happen, a robust job market would be needed. More hiring would give more people the money and job security to buy. That would help boost sales and prices.  Such areas as Atlanta, suburban Las Vegas and central California show few signs of recovery. And in some others — from Seattle to Cleveland — home prices have continued to slip. The average has dropped 9% in Seattle over the past 12 months and 7% in Cleveland.</p>
<p>US can handle higher gas prices and 30% taxes</p>
<p>Cheer up, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says not to worry!  According to him, the US economy is in a better position to deal with high gasoline prices and taxes. He added that unseasonably warm winter had lowered overall energy costs for consumers.  &#8220;The economy is in a much better position to deal with those pressures &#8230; because natural gas prices are down, the overall cost of energy for consumers is down,&#8221; Geithner said on ABC&#8217;s &#8220;This Week&#8221; program.  A spike in gasoline prices caused economic growth to brake sharply in the first half of last year. Gasoline prices have risen 64 cents since the start of this year, leaving many Americans with a sense of deja vu, which was further reinforced by a slowdown in the pace of job creation last month.  However, Geithner said it was too early to tell whether the economy, which he described as getting stronger, would go through a repeat of last year. &#8220;We can&#8217;t tell yet. Obviously, we&#8217;ve got a lot of challenges ahead and some risks and uncertainty ahead. And some of those risks are, of course, Europe is still going through a difficult crisis,&#8221; he said.  He also dismissed suggestions that the country&#8217;s huge budget deficit put it at risk of being the next Greece, adding that the challenge was to bring the deficit down without compromising economic growth.  In a separate interview, Geithner said a proposal to impose at least 30% income tax on Americans making more than a million dollars a year will not hurt the economy by stifling investment and growth.</p>
<p>NAHB &#8211; builder confidence down</p>
<p>Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes declined for the first time in seven months this April, sliding three notches to 25 on the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index, released today. The decline brings the index back to where it was in January, which was the highest level since 2007.  “Although builders in many markets are noting increased interest among potential buyers, consumers are still very hesitant to go forward with a purchase, and our members are realigning their expectations somewhat until they see more actual signed sales contracts,” noted Barry Rutenberg, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and a home builder from Gainesville, Fla.  “What we’re seeing is essentially a pause in what had been a fairly rapid build-up in builder confidence that started last September,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “This is partly because interest expressed by buyers in the past few months has yet to translate into expected sales activity, but is also reflective of the ongoing challenges that are slowing the housing recovery – particularly tight credit conditions for builders and buyers, competition from foreclosures and problems with obtaining accurate appraisals.”</p>
<p>Derived from a monthly survey that NAHB has been conducting for 25 years, the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index gauges builder perceptions of current single-family home sales and sales expectations for the next six months as “good,” “fair” or “poor.” The survey also asks builders to rate traffic of prospective buyers as “high to very high,” “average” or “low to very low.” Scores from each component are then used to calculate a seasonally adjusted index where any number over 50 indicates that more builders view conditions as good than poor. Each of the index’s components registered declines in April. The component gauging current sales conditions and the component gauging sales expectations in the next six months each fell three points, to 26 and 32, respectively, while the component gauging traffic of prospective buyers fell four points to 18. (Note, the overall index and each of its components are seasonally adjusted.)  Regionally, the HMI results were somewhat mixed in April, with the Northeast posting a four-point gain to 29 (its highest level since May of 2010), the West posting no change at 32, the South posting a three-point decline to 24 and the Midwest posting an eight-point decline to 23.</p>
<p>Fitch &#8211; builder confidence should be up</p>
<p><strong>Fitch Ratings</strong> believes single-family housing starts will increase 10% in 2012, while new home sales will rise 8%, according to the firm&#8217;s latest US homebuilding update.  Still, the ratings giant sees an erratic homebuilding market after witnessing disappointing results for 2011.  &#8220;Single-family housing finished well below expectations at the beginning of the year,&#8221; Fitch said in its update. &#8220;Single-family starts fell 8.5%, while new home sales declined 5.9%. Existing home sales, meanwhile, improved 1.7%.&#8221;  Despite challenges in the housing market and the expectation that home prices will remain soft, Fitch expects builders to fare better in 2012 with the market peppered with less competitive rent options and new home inventories at historic lows.  Fitch&#8217;s outlook for homebuilders runs from stable to negative, with most builders rated as stable.   The sector continues to face headwinds from a an anemic job market and what Fitch calls &#8220;negative buying psychology,&#8221; where people are afraid to buy a home, fearing home prices are still vulnerable to decline.  Going forward, Fitch believes public homebuilding firms will add selectively to their developed lot holdings while committing resources to partially or undeveloped land.  &#8220;The still irregular flow of appropriately priced land from banks and other sources tends to support this strategy,&#8221; Fitch said. &#8220;However, if the operating environment becomes more challenged. Fitch expects builders will be more cautious as to land purchase and will preserve cash.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Foreclosure squatters beware</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Apr 2012 16:41:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Foreclosure squatters beware The golden age for foreclosure squatters may soon be coming to an end now that the $26 billion mortgage settlement has been approved. The settlement, agreed to by the nation&#8217;s five largest mortgage lenders, is expected to speed up the foreclosure process by providing stricter guidelines for the banks to follow when [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Foreclosure squatters beware</p>
<p>The golden age for foreclosure squatters may soon be coming to an end now that the $26 billion mortgage settlement has been approved.</p>
<p>The settlement, agreed to by the nation&#8217;s five largest mortgage lenders, is expected to speed up the foreclosure process by providing stricter guidelines for the banks to follow when repossessing homes.  The banks involved include Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Wells Fargo and Ally Financial.  Many foreclosures have been in limbo since fall 2010 following the so-called robo-signing scandal, when banks allowed employees to sign off on thousands of foreclosure documents a month with little verification.  Lenders hit the pause button on foreclosures because they &#8220;were afraid that anything they did would be under a microscope,&#8221; said Eric Higgins, a professor of business at Kansas State University.  As a result, borrowers who were seriously delinquent on their loans have been able to stay in their homes for months or even years without making a single payment. Nationwide, the average time it takes to foreclose on a home &#8212; from the first missed payment to the final bank repossession &#8212; stretched to 370 days during the first quarter, almost twice as long as it took five years ago, according to Daren Blomquist, the marketing director at RealtyTrac. </p>
<p>In some states, delinquent borrowers have been squatting in their homes much longer. In Florida, the average time was 861 days, and in New York it was 1,056 days &#8212; close to three years.  &#8220;Perhaps a million foreclosures could have been pursued last year but weren&#8217;t,&#8221; said Rick Sharga, executive vice president for real estate investment company, Carrington Holdings.  But that&#8217;s all about to change, he said. &#8220;We&#8217;re going to see an increase in the speed of foreclosures and a higher number of foreclosure starts.&#8221;  In fact, there are indications that the pace of foreclosures are already starting to pick up.</p>
<p>While overall foreclosure activity was down during the first quarter, filings were up 10% in the 26 states where foreclosures must undergo court scrutiny, according to RealtyTrac.  It was in these judicial states that the processing of foreclosures slowed the most following news of the robo-signing scandal, said Blomquist.  Many banks in these states stopped filing foreclosures unless they were extremely confident it would pass muster in the court. (In non-judicial states, foreclosures are reviewed by a trustee, which is a third party such as a title company and less likely to parse every legal document).  But now lenders can move more confidently, said Brandon Moore, RealtyTrac&#8217;s CEO.  In the judicial state of Indiana, for example, foreclosure filings were up 45% year-over year. And in Florida, they were up by almost 26%, according to RealtyTrac.  &#8220;The dam may not burst in the next 30 to 45 days, but it will eventually burst, and everyone downstream should be prepared for that to happen &#8212; both in terms of new foreclosure activity and new short sale activity,&#8221; Moore said in a statement.  The resulting flood could bring home prices down even further &#8212; yet another impetus for the banks to clear out their foreclosure pipeline as quickly as possible, said Kansas State&#8217;s Higgins.  Then, industry thinking is, the housing market would be able to get back to normal and home prices could eventually find their true value. Some industry analysts, such as the chief economist for listing site Zillow, Stan Humphries, are predicting that could happen as soon as the end of the year.  Zillow estimates that home values nationwide will fall another 3.7% by the end of 2012, and that price will likely bottom out by early 2013.  Should home prices hit a bottom then stabilize, it would push many potential buyers off the fence, according to Mike Fratantoni, a vice president at the Mortgage Bankers Association. House hunters would no longer be afraid of investing in assets that were losing money.  &#8220;The market is already on the verge of turning the corner on prices and this will help,&#8221; said Fratantoni.</p>
<p>Inflation up</p>
<p>The Labor Department said on Friday its <strong>Consumer Price Index</strong><strong> </strong>increased 0.3% after advancing 0.4% in February. That was in line with economists&#8217; expectations.  Outside the volatile food and energy category, <strong>inflation</strong><strong> </strong>pressures appeared to be modest. Core CPI edged up 0.2% after gaining 0.1% in February.  The US <strong>Federal Reserve</strong><strong> </strong>has said it will probably hold interest rates super low into 2014 to help the economy, which is limping back from the 2007-2009 recession.  Amid recent signs of weakness in the <strong>labor market</strong>, investors are betting the Fed could unleash further monetary stimulus to boost growth, although comments by Fed officials this week suggested the central bank is on hold as it waits to see whether the recovery gains traction.  Last month, overall inflation was pushed up by gasoline prices, which rose 1.7%. That was a much more mild increase than the 6% gain in February.  But electricity prices fell 0.8%, the steepest decline since June.  Food prices climbed 0.2% last month.  Overall consumer prices rose 2.7% year-on-year, down from a reading of 2.9% in February.  In the 12 months to March, core CPI increased 2.3% after rising 2.2% in February. This measure has rebounded from a record low of 0.6% in October.</p>
<p>Wells Fargo has record earnings</p>
<p><strong>Wells Fargo</strong>, the largest mortgage lender in the US, reported record earnings in the first quarter.  The San Francisco-based bank earned $4.2 billion, or 75 cents per share, a 10% increase from the $3.8 billion profit one year prior.  Revenue jumped to $21.6 billion in the first quarter from $20.6 billion last year. It&#8217;s the highest quarterly revenue in more than two years, the bank said.  Wells still held nearly $2 billion in provision for credit losses at the end of the first quarter. It did release $400 million from its loan loss reserve, compared to a $600 million release in the previous three months.  Wells Chief Financial Officer Tim Sloan said he expects expenses to drop by as much as $700 million in the second quarter. Roughly $100 million in expenses during the first quarter came from consent orders signed with federal regulators last spring to settle mortgage servicing issues.  Mortgage originations totaled $129 billion in the first three months of 2012, up significantly from $75 billion in the same period last year and up from $121 billion in the last quarter of 2011.  The bank did say 15% of the originations during the first quarter were workouts under the Home Affordable Refinancing Program.  Demand is also increasing at Wells. The bank reported $188 billion in mortgage applications as of the end of the quarter, up 20% from the previous three months.</p>
<p>New bubble</p>
<p>According to Citigroup economist Steven Wieting <strong>health care</strong> is the next big bubble looming in the distance.  And to make matters all the more worrisome, his analysis suggests it’s like nothing we’ve seen before.  “It’s not a single asset price that’s about to pop (like housing) and it doesn’t have a cyclical component,” he said.  Rather, “It’s a fundamental bubble that will have a large impact on the economy.”  Wieting says the trouble is spiraling health care costs that are growing at a fast and furious pace, a pace that will become all but impossible to support.  “Ultimately there will be a price to pay” he says.  With the lion’s share of health care costs shouldered by companies and governments, he thinks the rising costs will ultimately hit budgets.  “We’ll either have to raise taxes or increase budget deficits in order to finance it. And it will crowd out other things. Already we&#8217;re starting to see it impact education and infrastructure spending.&#8221;  Going forward, Wieting tells us areas in health care that will be hardest hit are areas that operate at high margins. Those companies will probably see their margins squeezed.</p>
<p>DSNews.com &#8211; strategic default here to stay</p>
<p>With reports that around 20% of mortgages are underwater, about 46% of bank risk professionals surveyed by FICO expect to see the volume of strategic defaults in 2012 exceed 2011 levels.  “After five years of a brutal housing market, many people now view their homes more objectively and with less sentimentality,” said Dr. Andrew Jennings, chief analytics officer at FICO and head of FICO Labs. “Regardless of legal or ethical issues around strategic defaults, lenders must account for this risk when they evaluate mortgage applications in declining markets. Many homeowners who find themselves upside down on mortgages in the future are likely to consider strategic default as an acceptable exit strategy.”  Combined with concerns over strategic default are disconcerting results about consumer priorities. Only 29% of bankers said the current generation of homeowners considers their mortgage to be their most important credit obligation, while 49% said its not a priority. </p>
<p>Even with this discouraging data, 53% of survey respondents expect to see the housing market improve by the end of 2012, compared to 24% who said the market would deteriorate.  Also, 64.8% of respondents think mortgage delinquencies will decrease or stay the same, an 11.3% increase from the previous quarter.  “If job creation continues, banks will be more likely to embrace mortgage lending once again. A healthy job market is essential for improving the quality of mortgage applications and reducing default risk,” said Jennings.  Most respondents, 56%, expect demand for residential mortgage credit to exceed supply over the next six months. A similar majority, 53%, project demand for the supply of credit for mortgage refinancing surpass supply.  The survey included responses from 263 risk managers at banks throughout the US in February 2012 and was a joint effort between FICO, provider of analytics and decision management technology, and the Professional Risk Managers’ International Association, a nonprofit that works to define and implement the best practices of risk management through education.</p>
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		<title>Higher prices coming?</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Apr 2012 14:09:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[WSJ &#8211; foreclosures fall, but… First-quarter foreclosures declined 16% from a year earlier, falling to their lowest quarterly total since 2007, according to the latest report from market researcher RealtyTrac.  The number of foreclosure filings in the first quarter fell 2% sequentially. Default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions were reported on 572,928 US properties [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>WSJ &#8211; foreclosures fall, but…</p>
<p>First-quarter foreclosures declined 16% from a year earlier, falling to their lowest quarterly total since 2007, according to the latest report from market researcher RealtyTrac.  The number of foreclosure filings in the first quarter fell 2% sequentially. Default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions were reported on 572,928 US properties in the latest quarter, the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2007, when 527,740 properties with foreclosure filings were reported. One in every 230 US housing units had a foreclosure filing during the quarter.  In March, there were 198,853 US properties in varying stages of foreclosure, down 17% from a year earlier and 4% from the prior month.  RealtyTrac reported the decline in foreclosure activity is primarily due to decreasing activity in states that use the nonjudicial foreclosure process. Foreclosure filings in these 24 states and the District of Columbia, which represented more than half of the nation&#8217;s total during the quarter, fell 28% on the year. States that primarily use the judicial foreclosure process saw a 10% year-over-year increase in foreclosure activity in the first quarter.</p>
<p>RealtyTrac Chief Executive Brandon Moore warned that the low foreclosure numbers in the latest period do not indicate that the massive amount of distressed properties built up over the past few years has evaporated.  &#8220;There are hairline cracks in the dam, evident in the sizable foreclosure activity increases in judicial foreclosure states over the past several months, along with an increase in foreclosure starts in many judicial and non-judicial states in March,&#8221; Moore said in a statement. &#8220;The dam may not burst in the next 30 to 45 days, but it will eventually burst, and everyone downstream should be prepared for that to happen&#8211;both in terms of new foreclosure activity and new short sale activity.&#8221;  Completing the foreclosure process took an average of 370 days in the first quarter, up from 348 days in the prior quarter. However, RealtyTrac noted the average foreclosure timeline fell in bellwether states like California, Colorado, Utah, Massachusetts and Nevada.</p>
<p>Nevada&#8217;s foreclosure activity fell 62% on the year and 26% from the prior quarter, but the state again posted the nation&#8217;s highest foreclosure rate. In the latest period, one in every 95 Nevada housing units received a foreclosure filing.  California had the second highest rate, though the state&#8217;s default activity also decreased on a quarterly and annual basis. One in every 103 California housing units had a foreclosure filing in the first quarter. The state also had the highest number of properties with foreclosure filings.  Arizona had the third highest foreclosure rate, with one in every 106 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing.</p>
<p>Jobless claims up</p>
<p>Initial claims for state <strong>unemployment </strong>benefits increased 13,000 to a seasonally adjusted 380,000, the Labor Department said on Thursday, defying economists&#8217; expectations for a drop to 355,000.  The four-week moving average for new claims, considered a better measure of labor market trends, rose 4,250 to 368,500.  Some economists blamed the Easter holidays for the spike in claims and expected applications to trend lower in coming weeks.  &#8220;It&#8217;s very difficult to know the extent to which that&#8217;s driven by seasonal effects from Easter or not,&#8221; said Eric Green, chief economist at TD Securities in New York.  The claims data comes in the wake of Friday&#8217;s disappointing employment report for March, which showed the economy created 120,000 new jobs, the smallest amount since October.  Despite the rise in claims last week, both first-time applications for unemployment aid and the four-week average held below the 400,000 mark, implying steady job gains.</p>
<p>Olick &#8211; higher prices coming?</p>
<p>&#8220;A response to a recent <strong>RealtyCheck</strong> blog on home prices included the following:  <em>&#8216;Someone needs to explain to Ms. Olick what these &#8216;price declines&#8217; really represent because they most assuredly do not measure how much home values have changed. They simply measure the statistical midpoint for all home sales. So in an economy where people are buying smaller homes that number moves down. That doesn&#8217;t mean that every house lost that % value.&#8217;  </em>Thanks, but no explanation necessary, as I believe I covered that a while back. But I would like to elaborate a bit on this theme, as we’re starting to see some changes mortgage applications; specifically the average loan amount is rising, which might suggest a turnaround in pricing, due to a change in the type of homes being bought.  The average size of a mortgage purchase application increased 9% from December to the end of March, from $214,500 to $233,300 in March, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. &#8216;That points to underlying improvement in borrowers’ appetite for mortgage credit,&#8217; notes Paul Diggle of Capital Economics. </p>
<p>Just yesterday analysts at <strong>Goldman Sachs</strong> said both <strong>Toll Brothers</strong> and <strong>Pulte Homes </strong>should benefit from more positive sentiment among high end buyers. Their survey showed 63% of respondents expect home prices to be either stable or rise, but 83% of respondents with an annual income above $120,000 expect home prices to be either stable or rise. That’s up from 75% six months ago.  If in fact the higher end buyers start getting back into the market, or at least the move-up buyers, that will shift the volume to a higher price range and consequently the median price, which gets all that national attention. 72% of home sales in February were of homes priced less than $250,000, according to the National Association of Realtors.  Of course, as I always say, all real estate is local, as are all home prices, and let us not forget that.&#8221;</p>
<p>Producer prices flat</p>
<p>US producer prices were unchanged last month after advancing 0.4% in February.  Economists polled by Reuters had expected prices at farms, factories and refineries to rise 0.3%.  Wholesale prices excluding volatile food and <strong>energy costs</strong><strong> </strong>rose 0.3% after February&#8217;s 0.2% gain.  That was a touch above economists&#8217; expectations for a 0.2% advance and marked the fifth successive month of increases in core PPI.  Over one-third of the rise in core PPI was attributed to prices for light motor trucks. Higher costs for passenger cars, soaps and detergents also contributed to the advance in core PPI.  However, manufacturers have limited scope to pass on these increased costs to consumers given the still considerable slack in the economy.  Overall producer prices were held back by a 2.0% fall in gasoline, the largest decline since October, after a 4.3% jump in February. That offset a 0.2% rise in food prices, which halted three straight months of declines.  However, gasoline prices rose 7.5%, when seasonal factors are excluded.  In the 12 months to March, wholesale prices increased 2.8%, the smallest increase since June 2010, after advancing 3.3% in February.  Outside food and energy, producer prices were pushed up by light motor trucks prices, which rebounded 0.7% after falling 0.4% in February. Passenger car prices rose 0.8% after edging up 0.1% the prior month.  The increases likely reflected strong demand for automobiles.  In the 12 months to March, core producer prices increased 2.9% after rising 3.0% the previous month.</p>
<p>Loan demand improves</p>
<p>Loan demand in the banking industry, as well as residential and commercial real estate activity, improved in most <strong>Federal Reserve</strong><strong> </strong>districts across the US, according to the latest Beige Book from the Fed.  The survey, which develops a consensus on economic activity by interviewing industry contacts in every Federal Reserve district, reported that the US economy continued to grow at a modest pace from mid-February to late March.  Residential real estate activity also improved in most districts, with Cleveland and San Francisco remaining outliers with lackluster real estate activity.  Nationwide construction of multifamily housing units grew in most Fed districts, with most of the construction centered around apartments and senior housing.  Meanwhile, home prices continued to fall in key areas like Boston, New York and Minneapolis. Prices remained flat in San Francisco.  Mild winter weather during the first part of the year delivered a slight boost in real estate activity in the areas of Boston, Philadelphia and Kansas City. </p>
<p>Conditions in the financial services and banking industry remained &#8220;stable&#8221; as demand for lending increased modestly. While lending remained unchanged in St. Louis, it expanded in New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Chicago, Kansas City, Dallas and San Francisco.  &#8220;In general, the demand for commercial and industrial loans remained steady, while several districts reported an increase in commercial real estate lending activity,&#8221; the Beige Book said.  &#8220;The Philadelphia and Cleveland districts reported increased lending for multifamily housing and health care, and contacts in Richmond cited increased lending to small business to finance inventory and capital expenditures.&#8221;  Overall, residential real estate showed signs of modest improvement and multifamily housing construction continued to grow. On the banking side, credit quality increased and financial firms noted improvement in loan demand.</p>
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		<title>FHA delays collections rule</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Apr 2012 18:12:18 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[What the foreclosure settlement does The $26 billion foreclosure settlement has finally been given the green light, making it possible for roughly two million of the nation&#8217;s hardest hit borrowers to see a significant reduction in their mortgage payments.  Agreed to between the nation&#8217;s five largest banks and attorneys general from 49 states and the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What the foreclosure settlement does</p>
<p>The $26 billion foreclosure settlement has finally been given the green light, making it possible for roughly two million of the nation&#8217;s hardest hit borrowers to see a significant reduction in their mortgage payments.  Agreed to between the nation&#8217;s five largest banks and attorneys general from 49 states and the District of Columbia, the deal settles charges of foreclosure processing abuses dating back to 2008.  The settlement, the details of which were first announced in early February, has been in the works for more than a year. Here&#8217;s what the banks agreed to and what borrowers can expect in the days ahead.</p>
<p>The banks and servicers have committed at least $17 billion to reduce principal for borrowers who 1) owe far more than their homes are worth 2) are behind on payments.  The amount of principal reduction will average about $20,000 per borrower in the cases of four of the banks. The Bank of America reductions will be even steeper, averaging $100,000 or more, according to spokesman Rick Simon.  Another $3.7 billion will go toward refinancing mortgages for borrowers who are current on their payments. This will enable them to take advantage of the historically low interest rates that are currently available.  The banks will pay $5 billion to the states and the federal government, the only hard money involved in the deal. Out of that fund will come payments of $1,500 to $2,000 to homeowners who lost their homes to foreclosure.</p>
<p>Other funds will be paid to legal aid and homeowner advocacy organizations to help individuals facing foreclosure or experiencing servicer abuses.  Another $1 billion will be paid directly by Bank of America to the Federal Housing Administration to settle charges that its subsidiary, Countrywide Financial, defrauded the housing agency.  In addition, the banks agreed to eliminate<strong> </strong>robo-signing altogether and to use proper and legal procedures when putting homeowners through the foreclosure process. They also agreed to end servicer abuses, like harassing delinquent borrowers for payments, and to include principal reductions more often in their mortgage modifications programs.</p>
<p>Iran sanctions to cost 25 cents a gallon</p>
<p>Twenty-five cents a gallon — that’s about how much some international energy experts say the tough US sanctions on Iran’s oil industry are costing Americans at the pump.  As US consumers cope with <strong>gas prices</strong> that are approaching an average of $4 a gallon, some international trade experts say the cost of the sanctions the US imposes — as in the case of the Iran measures — is something political leaders should discuss more openly. Instead, they say, most politicians act as if sanctions affect only the country targeted — something these experts say isn’t true.  Energy experts say it’s difficult to pinpoint precisely how much sanctions on Iran are costing consumers as they filter down to the gas pump. But Lucian Pugliaresi, president of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, a Washington nonprofit organization that studies energy economics, says it’s possible to make an estimate.  The sanctions the US and other countries have slapped on Iran’s energy sector and on its central bank (aimed at curtailing its oil exports) are costing Iran about 300,000 barrels a day in exports, Mr. Pugliaresi estimates. When added to other factors affecting the international oil market, that decrease in exports may have added about $10 to the current price of a barrel for crude, he says.  And that $10 increase translates roughly to about a 25-cent increase in the cost of a gallon of gas in the US, Pugliaresi says.</p>
<p>FHA delays collections rule</p>
<p>The <strong>Federal Housing Administration</strong> (FHA) rescinded and will delay a rule that as of April 1 prohibited borrowers with more than $1,000 in disputed collections accounts from getting a federally backed mortgage, according to a notice sent late Friday.  FHA postponed the rule until July, and will take public comment from lenders, builders and others in the industry until then to clarify guidance.  &#8220;There is clearly a bigger ripple effect here than the <strong>Department of Housing and Urban Development</strong> might have anticipated going into this revision,&#8221; said Lisa Jackson, senior vice president of research and business development with <strong>John Burns Real Estate Consulting</strong>. &#8220;Any measure that impacts even 10% of sales is meaningful and our analysis shows it would be far greater in some markets.&#8221;  The FHA attempted to ease the original proposal, allowing borrowers to provide written documentation on &#8220;life event&#8221; disputed accounts with them, such as bills stemming from illness, divorce or unemployment in order to obtain an exemption.  Borrowers could previously show the lender they arranged a payment plan to settle other accounts too in order to qualify, including credit card and utility bills.  According to the alert sent Friday, the FHA ensured lenders they would not be in violation of the new rule for loans written between April 1 and April 8.  Until July, the old guidance will be put back into place.</p>
<p>Analysts from <strong>JPMorgan Chase</strong> said the rule would affect many first-time homebuyers the most, those most likely to carry such debt. The analysts estimated the rule could cut FHA demand by up to 20%, and the damage would affect homebuilders differently depending upon how much of their business hinged on these borrowers.  Many questioned the timing and the murkiness of the rule. The FHA previously said it adopted the rule in order to reduce default risk for newer books of business. Mortgages written during the housing bubble continue to haunt the agency. The FHA emergency Mutual Mortgage Insurance fund dropped to nearly 0.2% last year was in danger of needing a bailout from the <strong>Treasury Department</strong> if insurance premiums were not hiked and some lucrative settlements were not struck.  &#8220;There are two positives to this latest decision: HUD is willing to analyze the real implications of the housing market before they put a new measure in place, plus they are engaging feedback on the issue,&#8221; Jackson said.</p>
<p>Stock market on a cliff?</p>
<p>For the stock market, it was a triumphant first quarter. But for earnings growth, the past three months were just ho-hum.  Analysts are expecting earnings for companies in the Standard &amp; Poor&#8217;s 500 index to decline 0.1% compared to a year ago, according to FactSet. It&#8217;s a tiny number but a significant turning point. Earnings growth was on a winning streak for the previous nine quarters. Year-over-year earnings growth has been at least 10% for all but the most recent period, when it was 6%.  The reasons for the expected slowdown range from global (a weak Europe hurts everybody) to mathematical (it&#8217;s hard to top double-digit quarters). Whatever the cause, the stagnation in earnings growth is a stark reminder that the economy&#8217;s problems are far from solved. Just three months ago, analysts were predicting 3% earnings growth for the first quarter.  We&#8217;ll soon see if the expectations are on target. Earnings season gets under way Tuesday when the aluminum producer Alcoa becomes the first major US company to release its first-quarter results.  Should this batch of earnings contain a lot of bad surprises, it could upend a stock market rally that pushed the S&amp;P 500 index up 12% in the first three months of the year.</p>
<p>63% of HAMP-eligible second liens modified</p>
<p>Mortgage servicers started modifications on 63% of eligible second liens under the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), according to <strong>Treasury Department</strong> data released Friday.  Through February, servicers participating in 2MP started 71,133 second-lien workouts of the 113,774 eligible loans. More than 15,600 of them have been fully extinguished. More than one-third of the second-lien mods occurred in California, according to the Treasury.  Of the $29.9 billion allocated for HAMP, roughly $2.7 billion is set aside for modifying second liens, according to the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.  In January, the Treasury boosted incentives to investors who allow the workouts, doubling the pay from earlier in the program.  In order for a loan to be eligible for the second-lien program under HAMP, the servicer must receive notification of a match with a permanent first lien modification, according to program guidelines. The Treasury said roughly 315,000 HAMP first-lien mods have been matched to a second, but many are deemed ineligible because of a redefault on the first lien, an extinguishment before it entered HAMP.  In some cases, the Treasury said some homeowners with an eligible second decline to participate in 2MP.  <strong>Bank of America</strong> has nearly 40,000 eligible second-liens, the most of any servicer, and has started modifications on 62% of them.  <strong>Wells Fargo</strong> started workouts on 71% of its 16,300 eligible seconds, the highest percentage of any servicer.  Overall, servicers start modifications on between 2,000 and 5,000 second-liens under 2MP. The median monthly payment reduction was $161 for borrowers.  Servicers started 1.8 million trial modifications and completed 974,000 permanent workouts under the first-lien program through February.</p>
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