Renaissance Realty Group’s Blog: Georgia: Lawrenceville

Regional banks hold 25% of their assets in commercial real estate

Prices for commercial real estate have already fallen by about 40%, but the problem is that lots of owners are in negative equity now, said Richard LeFrak, president of the LeFrak Organization.  Malls are also likely to suffer, as "the new norm is that nobody goes shopping, everybody is saving," LeFrak said, adding that mall vacancy rates run at about 11-12%.  Owners don't sell because "the bottom line is there's more debt than there's value," Zell added.  However, debt makes up about 80 or 90% of commercial real estate projects in the US and because of the recession, unemployed people "need little retail space," Wilbur Ross, chairman and CEO of WL Ross & Co., said.  Owners don't sell because "the bottom line is there's more debt than there's value," Zell added.  However, debt makes up about 80 or 90% of commercial real estate projects in the US and because of the recession, unemployed people "need little retail space," Wilbur Ross, chairman and CEO of WL Ross & Co., said.  "

 I think it's going to be a long, hard struggle even without new construction," Ross said. "I think it is going to be tragic for the equity owners and for some of the lenders."  Typical regional banks in the US would have 25% of their assets in commercial property loans. "I think the biggest victims are going to be the regional banks."

0 commentsEric Reid • December 01 2009 11:30AM

Commercial real estate defaults double

Real Estate Econometrics LLC says commercial mortgage default rate on loans held by U.S. banks more than doubled to 3.4% in the third quarter as vacancies rose and rents declined.  Defaults climbed from 1.37% a year earlier and from 2.88% in the second quarter, the New York-based property research firm said today in a report. Default rates in the first three quarters of 2009 have been the highest since 1993, the firm said.  Mortgages originated in 2006 and 2007 are experiencing the most significant shortfalls in current cash flow relative to current debt-service obligations, Sam Chandan, chief economist of the firm, said in the report.  Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a Nov. 16 speech that the fallout for banks from commercial real estate could slow the nations economic recovery.  Defaults on bank-owned commercial property mortgages posted the biggest quarterly jump from the previous quarter in six years of FDIC data analyzed by Real Estate Eco  nometrics. 

 

1 commentEric Reid • December 01 2009 11:28AM

Home Sales up ?

Existing home sales up?

The National Association of Realtors' report is scheduled for release today, and home resales for October are projected to rise to the highest level in more than two years as first-time buyers, anticipating that a tax credit would soon expire, rushed to beat the clock.  Sales are expected to show a 1.4 percent increase to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.65 million, up from 5.57 million in September, according to economists polled by Thomson Reuters. If this turns out to be true, it would be the best month for home sales since July 2007.  

 But sales are likely to drop over the winter as buyers hibernate for a few months without the looming tax credit deadline, said Pat Lashinsky, chief executive of online real estate brokerage ZipRealty Inc.  Over the summer, the housing market started to rebound from the worst downturn in decades, aided by aggressive federal interventions to lower mortgage rates and bring more buyers into the market.  But experts forecast that prices will fall again. Most say they will hit a new low next spring, perhaps falling another 5 to 10 percent, as more foreclosures get pushed onto the market.  Foreclosures also are a growing problem. The Mortgage Bankers Association said last week that a record-high 14 percent of homeowners with a mortgage were either behind on payments or in foreclosure at the end of September. Driven by rising unemployment, fixed-rate loans made to borrowers with good credit accounted for nearly 33 percent of new foreclosures last quarter. That compares with 21 perce  nt a year ago.

1 commentEric Reid • November 23 2009 03:38PM

Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) is it working ?

 

Only a tiny percentage of troubled homeowners have received permanent modifications under President Obama's Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), raising concerns about the effectiveness of the $75 billion effort.  Fewer than 5% of the trial modifications on loans owned or guaranteed by Freddie Mac were converted to long-term adjustments as of Sept. 30.  More broadly, the figures are even lower. As of Sept. 1, only 1.26% of all trial adjustments were made permanent after three months, reported the Congressional Oversight Panel, which monitors the government's use of bailout funds.  The preliminary data, which has not been widely reported, underscores the next big problem facing the government's effort: Officials have leaned on banks to offer more homeowners trial modifications, but the real test will be whether homeowners will receive lasting help. 

 

"No one is really sure why the conversion rate is so low," said Mike Zoller, assistant economist at Moody's Economy.com. "We're concerned these loans will eventually become foreclosures."  Guy Cecela, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication, says, "Everyone is going to be shocked at the low conversion rates from trial modifications to permanent modifications."  The president's program "won't result in a significant number of loans being modified and won't put a significant dent in foreclosure rates."

4 commentsEric Reid • November 21 2009 07:06PM

The next Foreclosure Wave ?

In a lead story, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) paints a dismal picture of the housing market in 2010.  Uncertainty over the extension of a home-buyer tax credit sent new-home starts in October crashing down a full 10.6% from September, and starts of single-family houses fell 6.8%.   That's the lowest level since April, the Commerce Department said. This news suggests that foreclosures are not only going to keep rolling in, but that they may actually increase.  Richard Dugas,  chief executive of Pulte Homes Inc., the nation's largest home builder, warned investors: "As we look out to 2010, we are expecting difficult conditions to continue."  Wednesday's data prompted some economists to revise their fourth-quarter forecasts down slightly. Macroeconomic Advisers moved its GDP estimate down to 3% from 3.2% and Nomura Securities predicts 3.4% growth, down from 3.6%. The data adds to the suggestion "that the recovery is a little bit rickety," said Zach Pandl, an economist from Nomu

 ra.  Given that 3.4% of U.S. households -- or about 1.9 million homeowners -- are 120 days or more overdue on their payments, and that millions of homes are expected to go through foreclosure over the next few years, adding to supply, it's a fair bet that foreclosure problem won't be gone anytime soon.

 

3 commentsEric Reid • November 21 2009 07:04PM

Mortgage rates at record lows

Mortgage rates at record lows

 Freddie Macs weekly survey of average interest rates put the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) at 4.83% with an average 0.7 points for the week ending Nov. 12, down from the average rate of 4.91% the previous week. Thats a mere 5 basis points shy of Freddie Macs record low of 30-year FRM rates, reached twice in April this year. Last year, the rate was 6.04%.  Freddie Mac put the 15-year FRM at 4.32% with an average 0.6 points, down from last weeks 4.4% and the lowest rate for the product since Freddie Mac began its 15-year FRM survey in 1991. A year ago, the average rate for the loan was 5.73%.  Bankrate.coms survey of large US banks and thrifts put the 30-year FRM at 5.06%, the lowest in the surveys 24-year history and down 13 basis points from the previous week. The previous low on the Bankrate survey was 5.13% in April. Bankrate.com put the average rate for a 15-year FRM at 4.48%, down 13 basis points from the previous week.  Low fixed rates throughout

  the third quarter prompted an estimated $1.1 trillion in refinancing activity, saving homeowners about $10 billion in aggregate monthly payments over the first 12 months of their new loan, said Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist Frank Nothaft. Moreover, for the fourth consecutive quarter, more than 95% of prime borrowers who originally had an ARM selected a conventional fixed-rate mortgage in the third quarter of this year

0 commentsEric Reid • November 21 2009 06:59PM

Why are foreclosures up?

Why are foreclosures up?

 Jay Brinkmann, MBAs Chief Economist, says it's jobs.  Despite the recession ending in mid-summer, the decline in mortgage performance continues.  Job losses continue to increase and drive up delinquencies and foreclosures because mortgages are paid with paychecks, not percentage point increases in GDP.  Over the last year, we have seen the ranks of the unemployed increase by about 5.5 million people, increasing the number of seriously delinquent loans by almost 2 million loans and increasing the rate of new foreclosures from 1.07% to 1.42%.  Brinkmann says it's prime and FHA mortgages that are taking the worst beating.  Prime fixed-rate loans continue to represent the largest share of foreclosures started and the biggest driver of the increase in foreclosures.  33% of foreclosures started in the third quarter were on prime fixed-rate and loans and those loans were 44% of the quarterly increase in foreclosures.  The foreclosure numbers for prime fixed-rate loans wi  ll get worse because those loans represented 54% of the quarterly increase in loans 90 days or more past due but not yet in foreclosure.  The performance of prime adjustable rate loans, which include pay-option ARMs in the MBA survey, continue to deteriorate with the foreclosure rate on those loans for the first time exceeding the rate for subprime fixed-rate loans.  In contrast, both subprime fixed-rate and subprime adjustable rate loans saw decreases in foreclosures."

3 commentsEric Reid • November 21 2009 06:57PM

Foreclosures hit record highs

Foreclosures hit record highs

 According to the Mortgage Bankers Associations (MBA) National Delinquency Survey, the delinquency rate for mortgage loans on one-to-four-unit residential properties rose to a seasonally adjusted rate of 9.64% of all loans outstanding as of the end of the third quarter of 2009, up 40 basis points from the second quarter of 2009, and up 265 basis points from one year ago.  The non-seasonally adjusted delinquency rate increased 108 basis points from 8.86% in the second quarter of 2009 to 9.94% this quarter.   The delinquency rate includes loans that are at least one payment past due but does not include loans somewhere in the process of foreclosure.  The percentage of loans in the foreclosure process at the end of the third quarter was 4.47%, an increase of 17 basis points from the second quarter of 2009 and 150 basis points from one year ago. The combined percentage of loans in foreclosure or at least one payment past due was 14.41% on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, the hi

 ghest ever recorded in the MBA delinquency survey.  The percentage of loans on which foreclosure actions were started during the third quarter was 1.42%, up six basis points from last quarter and up 35 basis points from one year ago.  The percentages of loans 90 days or more past due, loans in foreclosure, and foreclosures started all set new record highs.  The percentage of loans 30 days past due is still below the record set in the second quarter of 1985. 

0 commentsEric Reid • November 21 2009 06:55PM

Thank you Sesame Street.. and Happy 40th Birthday.

Thank you Sesame Street.. and Happy 40th Birthday.

Oh all the firends that lived on my street when I was growing up, there was Grandpa Mudcat, Grandmama Bear,Hero Guy,Kermit the Frog (to be a freind to all),Wally and Ralph,Baby Bear,Bert and Ernie (best friends for life no matter what) ,Big Bird (alwasy ready to learn),Cookie Monster (who tought me to love life full out),Count von Count (who tought us to have PRIDE in what we could do and show off every chance we got),Elmo,Dorothy,Grover,MS Piggy( who told us to love ourselfs regardless of what other said)

 I miss my Friends maybe I go back today for a visit ...

Who ways your BFF on Sesame Street ?

3 commentsEric Reid • November 10 2009 08:25AM

Cash For Clunkers is Over But What about Cash for LSV's

Cash for Clunkers is over, but the opportunity to cash in continues. A new tax credit promises to pay you handsomely for a buying a vehicle some say only sees time on a golf course. Nicknamed "Cash for Clubbers" by critics, the new plan causing protesters and profiteers to move quickly

It sits at a golf cart shop on a golf cart lot, but don't call it a golf cart.

"This is an LSV," explained Bob Hill, with The Cart Shed. "It is actually an automobile - an electric automobile."

LSVs, or low speed vehicles, arrived quietly about 10 years ago. But, 10 months ago the American Relief and Recovery Act put them in the limelight offering a tax credit that was hard to miss.

"It's big money...$4,300 and it's someone's ability to claim that $4,300 on this car," said Hill. 

To qualify for the program, purchase and delivery of your LSV must be made by December 31st. You will be eligible for whatever amount of credit your vehicle qualifies for when you file your 2009 federal income tax documents

 

1 commentEric Reid • October 31 2009 09:00PM