Thursday, December 29, 2005

NAR Spins Existing Home Sales

We have gotten two reports that the housing market is beginning to correct. First the sales of new homes reported their worst decline in 12 years. Now existing home sales PRICES and volume have dipped in a year to year comparison. Here's NAR's chief economist.


David Lereah, NAR’s chief economist, said higher mortgage interest rates were responsible for moderating sales, but noted it’s important to keep an eye on the actual level of home sales given the market surge this year. “The current pace of home sales activity remains historically strong – only eight months have had a higher sales pace,” he said. “A modest downtrend, to a sales volume that is expected to be the second-best year ever in 2006, will be good for the long-term health of the housing sector.”


Here's a warning I find useful for investors


One of the basic mantras of investing is that past performance is no guarantee of future results.


What people are really missing is the affordability barrier - it's simply not possible for most people in markets like California to BUY a home. If you cannot buy the home, pricing will inevitably drop or remain flat and have inflation do it's work.

BSD

Pacific Service Credit Union to offer below-market-rate mortgagesEast


Pacific Service Credit Union to offer below-market-rate mortgages
East Bay Business Times - Pacific Service Credit Union has been approved by the California Department of Financial Institutions to offer below-market-rate mortgages to low- and middle-income home buyers. The Walnut Creek-based credit union is one of more than 80 credit unions serving the East Bay market.

Friday, December 23, 2005

Sales of new homes plunged in November by the largest amount in nearly 12 years.

The party's over. It's official.

The Commerce Department reported Friday that new single-family homes were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.245 million units last month, a drop of 11.3 percent from October, when sales had surged to an all-time high.

Last month's decline was even bigger than the 8.7 percent drop-off that Wall Street analysts had been expecting. While sales of both new and existing homes are still on track to set records for a fifth straight year in 2005, analysts are forecasting sales will decline in 2006 as the housing boom quiets down.

Analysts are looking for home sales to dip by around 6 percent next year under the impact of rising mortgage rates. Analysts believe that house prices, which had been soaring at double digit rates, will moderate as well.

Some of that price moderation was evidenced in the November report, which showed that the median price of a new home sold was $225,200 last month. That was up just 0.3 percent from November 2004, the weakest year-over-year price change in two years. The November median price was down 4.1 percent from the October median sales price of $234,800.

In other economic news, the Commerce Department reported that orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket manufactured goods jumped to a record $223 billion in November. That was a 4.4 percent increase from October, representing the largest percentage advance in six months. Orders for durable goods had risen 3 percent in October.

The gain in demand for durable goods was far above the 1.1 percent increase Wall Street analysts had been expecting. But the strength was concentrated in a surge in demand for commercial aircraft, which shot up 133.8 percent to $25.9 billion from $11.1 billion the previous month.

Outside of this area, manufacturing demand was weak. Excluding transportation, durable goods orders dropped by 0.6 percent, the third straight monthly decline in these categories.

Some economists are worried that housing prices in some areas have been driven higher by a speculative frenzy that could see prices plunging as sales slow in the hottest markets. That scenario would evoke memories of the sharp declines that occurred when the stock market bubble burst in early 2000.

But other economists contend that housing is unlikely to exhibit the same collapse that the stock market did although they believe that the declines in sales expected next year will act as a drag on the overall economy.

By area of the country, sales were actually up by 13.4 percent in the Northeast, the biggest percentage increase in this region since January 1994.

However, sales fell in all other areas, led by a 22.1 percent drop in the West, the biggest decline in this region since February 1995. Sales were down 18.3 percent in the Midwest and fell 5.5 percent in the South.

The 4.4 percent rise in orders for durable goods, items expected to last at least three years, was the largest one-month advance since a 7.3 percent rise last May.

Analysts had expected a big gain in aircraft orders because of the sales success Boeing Co. had at the Dubai air show. Analysts said that Boeing booked 148 new plane orders for the month compared to 36 orders in October.

Orders for all types of transportation products were up 15.6 percent as the strength in commercial aircraft was offset by a 5.7 percent drop in orders for motor vehicles and parts and demand for military aircraft fell 44.3 percent.

Orders for non-defense capital goods, seen as a good barometer of business plans to expand and modernize, rose by 19.6 percent, but all of that strength was in the surge in aircraft orders. Excluding aircraft, non-defense capital goods actually fell by 2 percent last month.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Ameriquest Settles for $325 Million

Ameriquest Mortgage Co. would pay $325 million and change some business practices under an agreement with 33 states to settle allegations of overcharging customers and urging real-estate appraisers to increase property values, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Ameriquest added to the boom in 33 states by encouraging real estate appraisers to increase property values.

"The company would repay $295 million to borrowers and the additional $30 million cost of the investigation, the newspaper said, citing a copy of the settlement proposal it obtained.

Under the terms obtained by the Times, the company would be prohibited from paying workers to increase loan fees and interest rates, and adding penalties for early loan repayments, the newspaper said.

Ameriquest loan agents also would be barred from discussing property appraisals with the people conducting the assessments.

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Monday, December 19, 2005

The Real Estate Blog @ the NYTimes

I just noticed that we have been linked to from the real estate blog of the New York Times. The blog is good and offers a rather nice coverage of the bubble markets and great coverage of New York. Walkthrough Readers Welcome!

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

ResMAE Mortgage Corporation Offers 40/30 Product as Lower Payment Alternative

ResMAE Mortgage Corporation Offers 40/30 Product as Lower Payment Alternative
Business Wire - 03 AM US Eastern Timezone ResMAE Mortgage Corporation Offers 40/30 Product as Lower wholesale specialty residential mortgage lender and servicer headquartered in Brea, California.

Sunday, December 11, 2005

Real Estate Realty Q&A


Real Estate Realty Q&A
MarketWatch - Dec 8, 2005 one tend to be substantially more satisfied with the broker and his Being a California resident, most of us out here cap our primary mortgage at $359,000