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Huffington Post…

Sales of new homes rose slightly in March after reaching a record low in February, bolstering hopes among economists and home builders that the housing market’s multi-year decline has finally hit rock bottom. New home sales — tabulated when contracts are signed — grew 11.1 percent in March to a seasonally-adjusted rate of 300,000, according to estimates released Monday by the Census Bureau. Last month, only 270,000 new homes were sold, the lowest number recorded since the government started tracking the data in 1963. Housing experts say that some of the March increase reflects catch-up from February and January, when bad winter weather delayed home sales and construction projects. Although the 11 percent monthly growth is welcome, new homes sales are still down a staggering 21.9 percent from March of 2010. The median sale price for a new home was $213,800, up 2.9 percent from $207,700 in February, but down 4.9 percent from the March of last year. Analysts are awaiting a Tuesday release of the closely watched S&P/Case-Shiller index of home prices in the 20 largest US cities, which is expected to show a 0.4 percent decline since February. “With existing homes being sold at much more competitive prices, the demand for newly built properties will recover only very gradually,” Capital Economics, a London-based research firm, wrote in response to the latest data. Meanwhile, a separate report indicates that nearly half of the housing market is now made up of distressed properties. “It’s certainly a case that we’re establishing a pretty solid bottom for how low [home sales] can go,” said Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics. “The outlook is pretty bleak for housing, but not as bad as we thought a month ago. It does appear that without any sort of big outside shock, things are not going to get any worse.” Last month showed several mildly encouraging signs that the housing market may be on the mend: existing home sales and new home construction both increased slightly in March. Even so, President Obama said last week that housing is “probably the biggest drag on the economy right now.” Englund and others who think the housing bust has finally bottomed out argue that the general uptick in economy will eventually translate to a pick-up in home sales. “I look more to the housing market being pulled by the rest of the economy, and therefore I’m counting on the housing market moving forward because the rest of the economy is moving forward,” said David Crowe, chief economist of the National Association of Home Builders. First time home buyers, Crowe argues, will begin buying more as the job market improves. In the past year, the national unemployment rate has dropped from 9.7 to 8.8 percent — but much of that decrease has come from Americans dropping out of the labor force entirely . “We still have a sizable pool of people waiting to enter the job market, and that’s just one more factor hanging over the head of the housing market. People that quit looking for jobs are probably also not looking for a new home,” Englund said. Englund points to employment as the key to improving the housing market, saying businesses have to start hiring again. “What’s unusual in this recovery cycle is that the business community remains remarkably terrified,” Englund said. “By year three, that’s usually when the business starts to go gangbusters. I’ve never seen such a spooked economy at this state of the cycle.”

Read more from the original source:
New Home Sales Inch Up From Rock Bottom

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America’s Fastest Dying Business: Mobile Homes

April 2, 2011

When it comes to unlucky industries, it’s manufactured home (aka mobile home) retailers who really hit the trifecta. First they missed out on the housing boom. Then they felt the gut-punch of the recession. Now they might yet might miss out on the recovery. That makes them America’s fastest dying industry, according to a new report from IBISWorld.

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Video: Campbell Calls Land Buys `Silver Lining’ in Weak Market

March 30, 2011

March 30 (Bloomberg) — Ken Campbell, chief executive officer for Standard Pacific Corp., talks about operating strategy and the outlook for the housing market. Campbell, speaking with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday,” also discusses the role government should have to aid the housing recovery. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Campbell Calls Land Buys `Silver Lining’ in Weak Market

March 30, 2011

March 30 (Bloomberg) — Ken Campbell, chief executive officer for Standard Pacific Corp., talks about operating strategy and the outlook for the housing market. Campbell, speaking with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday,” also discusses the role government should have to aid the housing recovery. (Source: Bloomberg)

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More Americans Signed Contracts To Buy Homes In February

March 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — More Americans signed contracts to buy homes in February, but sales were uneven across the country and not enough to signal a rebound in the housing market. Sales agreements for homes rose 2.1 percent last month to a reading of 90.8, according to the National Association of Realtors’ pending home sales index released Monday. Sales rose in every region but the Northeast. Signings were 19.6 percent above June’s index reading, the low point since the housing bust. Still, the index is below 100, which is considered a healthy level. The last time it reached that point was in April, the final month people could qualify for a home-buying tax credit. Contract signings are usually a good indicator of where the housing market is heading. That’s because there’s usually a one- to two-month lag between a sales contract and a completed deal. But the Realtors group also noted “a measurable level of contract cancellations” that also occurred in February. Many buyers canceled after appraisals showed the properties were valued much lower than their initial bids. A sale is not final until a mortgage is closed. “Therefore, the latest pickup in pending home sales and mortgage applications might not necessarily end up in a measurable pickup in mortgage closings and translate into an increase in existing home sales,” said Yelena Shulyatyeva, an analyst at BNP Paribas. The pace of sales varied from region to region. Signings fell 10.9 percent in the Northeast. They rose 2.7 percent in the South, 4 percent in Midwest and 7 percent in the West. High unemployment, strict lending standards, and a record number of foreclosures are deterring would-be buyers, who fear home prices haven’t reached the bottom. Sales of previously owned homes fell last year to the lowest level in 13 years. Economists say it will be years before the housing market fully recovers. The rise in foreclosures has pushed the median price of previously occupied homes to its lowest point in nearly 9 years. New-home sales have fared even worse. Americans are on track to buy fewer new homes than in any year since the government began keeping data almost a half-century ago. Sales are now just half the pace of 1963 – even though there are 120 million more people in the United States now.

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Dealing with Distress Head On, Lennar Turning a Healthy Profit

February 3, 2011

With the housing markets in distress, Miami-based homebuilder Lennar Corp. has proved correct the old adage that when life deals you a bunch of lemons, make lemonade. Lennar’s real estate investment management company focused on distressed real estate asset management and workouts, Rialto Capital, contributed $57.3 million in operating earnings to the company last year. That profit came on revenues of $125.3 million interest income on portfolios…

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Home Builders: ‘Sales Will Struggle,’ Depend On Jobs

January 13, 2011

ORLANDO, Fla. — The housing market could gradually begin to emerge from its doldrums this year, industry experts said Wednesday, but their forecast depends on a steady ramp-up in hiring and for the U.S. jobless rate to get no worse than it is right now. And even if their outlook proves true, a full housing recovery is still at more than two years away. The forecast delivered at the International Builders’ Show in Orlando sees U.S. economic growth sharply lifting home sales and residential construction over the next two years, but from near-historic lows posted last year. Many homebuilders, however, remain unconvinced that a recovery is brewing this year. Most, like Lennar Corp., at best see the market not getting any worse. Still, forecasts by David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, and Freddie Mac Chief Economist Frank Nothaft are cautiously optimistic. Crowe’s forecast hinges on the U.S. jobless rate getting no worse than 9.4 percent and employment growth accelerating to a pace of 200,000 jobs a month by the end of 2012. “Home sales are going to struggle, but they will follow employment,” Crowe said. “That’s clearly the trigger: A better employment market giving people the comfort that they can go forward with a major purchase like a home.” High unemployment, tighter bank lending standards and uncertainty about home prices have kept many people from buying homes, despite low mortgage rates and home prices that have fallen by more than half in some markets since the peak of the housing boom. The job market and unemployment rate need to improve before the housing can fully recover. Crowe’s forecast calls for the unemployment rate this year to go no higher than 9.4 percent, where it stood last month. He said he also expects the economy to add jobs at an increasing clip, eventually hitting 200,000 a month by the end of next year – about double the number of jobs added by the economy last month. More jobs should help release some of the pent-up demand for homes squelched in recent years as would-be homebuyers and renters held off buying a home. And it should stoke demand and prompt builders to step up construction to keep up, Crowe said. Single-family home construction, a bellwether for the housing market and the economy, will rise 21 percent to 575,000 this year and climb to 860,000 in 2012, Crowe said. Nothaft also sees home construction rising about 20 percent. “It’s still far, far below levels we had seen prior to the downturn in the housing industry, but at least we’re moving in the right direction,” Nothaft said. On the mortgage interest rate front, Nothaft’s outlook envisions rates climbing to 5.5 percent by the end of this year and as high as 5.8 percent in 2012. The economists pointed to other consumer trends that bode well for housing. Sales of cars, furniture and similar big-ticket items are up. Households have been getting their finances in order, paying off debt and saving more money. And tax cuts taking effect this month should help people see more money in their paychecks. “That suggests to me that consumers are finally willing to go forward with a more substantial financial commitment,” Crowe said. New home sales have been hovering near historic lows since spiking briefly last spring thanks to a temporary federal tax credit for homebuyers. Between May and November, monthly sales of new homes in the U.S. declined or were flat four times. Even in the months when sales rose, the gains came off near-historic lows. Crowe expects the upcoming spring, traditionally a strong season for home sales, to be better than last year’s, even without the aid of government tax credits. “The stimulus this year will be job markets,” he said. His forecast calls for 405,000 new homes to be sold this year, up 26 percent from 2010. That’s still well below the 600,000 generally considered a healthy annual rate for new home sales. Crowe projects new home sales will be in that range next year. Other economists believe it could take three years to get back to that level, however. On the price front, Crowe is forecasting prices for new and previously occupied homes to be flat this year and inch up 1.4 percent next year. Nothaft’s forecast calls for home prices to bottom out this year. He anticipates sales of newly built and previously occupied homes will rise 10 percent this year from 2010. Both he and Crowe agree not all markets will recover as quickly, noting housing will be slow to improve in California, Florida, Nevada, Arizona, states hard-hit by foreclosures. Still, Crowe said he expects improved home sales this year will help absorb some foreclosures.

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Video: Whalen Calls U.S. Foreclosure Crisis a `Cancer’: Video

October 18, 2010

Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) — Christopher Whalen, managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton about the impact of U.S. mortgage foreclosures on banks and the housing market and the outlook for the economy. Whalen is author of the book “Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Eisen Like McDonald’s, Verizon, Microsoft, Natural Gas: Video

October 14, 2010

Oct. 14 (Bloomberg) — Harvey Eisen, chairman of Bedford Oak Advisors, talks about investment opportunities in dividend-paying stocks and natural gas, and the outlook for U.S. inflation and the housing market. He speaks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Sorrentino Says Banks Need Access to Foreclosed Assets: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Frank Sorrentino, chairman and chief executive officer at North Jersey Community Bank, talks about the possible impact of a halt in home foreclosures at the largest U.S. mortgage firms on the housing market. Sorrentino talks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Zandi Sees Foreclosure Errors Lengthening Housing Crisis: Video

October 4, 2010

Oct. 4 (Bloomberg) — Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc., talks about the impact of bank foreclosure errors on the housing market. Bank of America Corp. delayed foreclosures after a federal regulator called for a review because lenders may have submitted defective documents when repossessing homes. Court documents showed JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Ally Financial Inc. employees may have submitted affidavits without confirming their accuracy. Zandi talks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Mortgage Apps Fall Amid Feds Growth Concern

September 26, 2010

Mortgage applications in the US fell for the third week in a row as the economic recovery struggles to gain momentum and unemployment continues to weigh on the housing market according to Bloomberg

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Carmen Reinhart Warns That High Unemployment Could Last 10 Years

August 28, 2010

The American economy could experience painfully slow growth and stubbornly high unemployment for a decade or longer as a result of the 2007 collapse of the housing market and the economic turmoil that followed, according to an authority on the history of financial crises.

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Banks’ Self-Dealing, Fake Demand Made Financial Crisis Much Worse

August 26, 2010

Over the last two years of the housing bubble, Wall Street bankers perpetrated one of the greatest episodes of self-dealing in financial history. Faced with increasing difficulty in selling the mortgage-backed securities that had been among their most lucrative products, the banks hit on a solution that preserved their quarterly earnings and huge bonuses: They created fake demand.

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Video: Markus Schomer Discusses July U.S. Existing Home Sales: Video

August 24, 2010

Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) — Markus Schomer, chief economist at Pinebridge Investments, discusses U.S. existing home sales for July and the outlook for the housing market and economy. Sales slumped more than forecast and the number of unsold houses swelled, evidence the market is depressed by foreclosures and limited job growth. Schomer talks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Gapen Says GSE Overhaul May Soften U.S. Housing Market: Video

August 17, 2010

Aug. 17 (Bloomberg) — Michael Gapen, senior U.S. economist for Barclays Capital, talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman about the outlook for the housing market and the possible impact tighter policies governing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may have on the housing recovery. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan gathered housing-industry stakeholders to seek advice as the administration prepares a housing-finance overhaul to be delivered in January. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Humphries Says Decline in U.S. Home Values Is Slowing: Video

August 9, 2010

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — Stan Humphries, chief economist at Zillow Inc., talks about U.S. home prices and the state of the housing market. The percentage of U.S. homeowners who owe more than their properties are worth declined in the second quarter as tax credits boosted prices in California and foreclosures surged, according to the report from Zillow. Humphries speaks with with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Habitat For Humanity Among Top U.S. Homebuilders

July 2, 2010

As the housing and financial crisis struck several years ago, the large publicly traded builders, including D.R. Horton Inc. and KB Home, pulled back. But Habitat kept building. “We’re a lot less tied to the market as a whole,” said Mark Andrews, Habitat’s senior director for U.S. operations. “We’ve been able to keep chugging along at a pretty solid pace.”

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Video: Shiller Sees `Significant’ Double-Dip Recession Chance: Video

June 11, 2010

June 11 (Bloomberg) — Robert Shiller, an economics professor at Yale University and chief economist at MacroMarkets LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Julie Hyman about the U.S. economy, consumer spending and the outlook for U.S. stocks and the housing market. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Wang Doubts `Hard Landing’ for China’s Property Market: Video

June 10, 2010

June 11 (Bloomberg) — Wang Qing, Morgan Stanley’s chief economist for Greater China, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about measures taken by the Chinese government to curb property prices, and the outlook for the housing market. Wang also discusses the outlook for China’s economy, central bank monetary policy and stocks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Clients Worried About Goldman’s Dueling Goals

May 18, 2010

As the housing crisis mounted in early 2007, Goldman Sachs was busy selling risky, mortgage-related securities issued by its longtime client, Washington Mutual, a major bank based in Seattle. Although Goldman had decided months earlier that the mortgage market was headed for a fall, it continued to sell the WaMu securities to investors. While Goldman put its imprimatur on that offering, traders in the same Goldman unit were not so sanguine about WaMu’s prospects: they were betting that the value of WaMu’s stock and other securities would decline.

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Freddie Mac Asks For $10.6 BILLION In Aid After 1Q Loss

May 5, 2010

WASHINGTON — Freddie Mac is asking for $10.6 billion in additional federal aid after posting a big loss in the first three months of the year. It’s another sign that the taxpayer bill for stabilizing the housing market will keep mounting. The McLean, Va.-based mortgage finance company has been effectively owned by the government after nearly collapsing in September 2008. The new request will bring the total tab for rescuing Freddie Mac to $61.3 billion. But the company’s CEO Charles Haldeman said, “We are seeing some signs of stabilization in the housing market, including house prices and sales in some key geographic areas.” Freddie Mac set aside $5.4 billion to cover credit losses from bad mortgages, down from $7 billion in the final three months of last year. Haldeman cautioned, however, that the housing market “remains fragile with historically high delinquency and foreclosure levels” and high unemployment. Created by Congress, Freddie Mac and sibling company Fannie Mae buy mortgages from lenders and package them into bonds that are resold to global investors. As the housing bubble burst, they were unable to raise enough money to stay afloat, and the government effectively nationalized them. Since then, Uncle Sam’s share of the mortgage business has kept getting bigger. Government institutions – mainly Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Administration and the Veterans Administration – backed nearly 97 percent of home loans in the first quarter of 2010, according to trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance. Late last year, the Obama administration pledged to cover unlimited losses through 2012 for Freddie and Fannie. Freddie’s new request will bring the total taxpayer tab for both companies to about $136.5 billion. Fannie Mae is expected to release earnings soon and may also request additional financial aid. With the housing market still on shaky ground, Obama administration officials argue that it is still too early to draft any proposals to reform the two companies or the broader housing finance system. But Republicans argue that the sweeping financial overhaul currently before Congress is incomplete without a plan for Fannie and Freddie. Senate Republicans propose transforming Fannie and Freddie into private companies with no government subsidies, or to shut them down completely. “The events of the past two years have made it clear that never again can we allow the taxpayer to be responsible for poorly-managed financial entities who gambled away billions of dollars,” Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said in a statement. “The time has come to end Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s taxpayer-backed slush fund and require them to operate on a level playing field.” But Barry Zigas, director of housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America and a former Fannie Mae executive, said Obama officials are right to take their time. “They are providing most of the mortgage credit that’s making it possible for Americans to buy homes and refinance their mortgages,” Zigas said. “They’re vital to the housing recovery that everyone is hoping is getting started.” But the hangover from bad loans made in during the boom years still hurts. Freddie Mac said Wednesday it lost $8 billion, or $2.45 a share, in the January-March period. That takes into account $1.3 billion in dividends paid to the Treasury Department. It compares with a loss of $10.4 billion, or $3.18 a share, in the first quarter last year. The company, however, cautioned that new accounting standards make it difficult to compare the most recent quarter with the year-ago period. In the first quarter of this year, Freddie Mac was forced to bring $1.5 trillion in assets and liabilities onto its balance sheet, causing the company’s net worth to plunge by $11.7 billion.

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Goldman Sachs SEC Fraud Charges: LIVE Updates, Breaking News

April 16, 2010

The Goldman Sachs SEC fraud charges are creating quite a stir across the financial sector. Per the AP , the government has accused Goldman Sachs of defrauding investors by failing to disclose conflicts of interest in mortgage investments it sold as the housing market was faltering. Follow LIVE updates and breaking news about the Goldman Sachs charges on this page. Know of a great Twitter user that should be on here? Let us know at twitterlists@huffingtonpost.com !

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Video: Mudd Makes No Apologies on Seeking Profit for Fannie: Video

April 9, 2010

April 9 (Bloomberg) — Former Fannie Mae Chief Executive Officer Daniel Mudd talks with Bloomberg’s Peter Cook about the his strategy to seek profit for the government-sponsored mortgage company. Mudd, currently the chief executive officer of Fortress Investment Group LLC, also discusses factors that led Fannie into conservatorship, the state of the housing market and the need for a definitive charter for government-sponsored enterprises. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Ely Sees No Immediate Change to Fannie, Freddie Role: Video

April 9, 2010

April 9 (Bloomberg) — Bert Ely, chief executive officer of bank consulting firm Ely & Co., talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about the structure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Former Fannie executives Daniel Mudd and Robert Levin testified about Fannie’s role in the housing crisis before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission today in Washington. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Home Prices in Golf Communities Fall Amid Housing Crisis: Video

April 9, 2010

April 9 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Monica Bertran reports on the impact of the housing crisis on high-end homes in golf communities. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Moody’s Risk Committee Disappeared At Height Of Collapse

April 2, 2010

WASHINGTON — As the bottom fell out of the housing market and complex mortgage-backed securities began tanking in 2007, a strange thing happened at Moody’s Investors Service, one of the largest firms that rate bonds for the risks they pose to investors. Moody’s blue-ribbon board of directors stopped receiving key information from an internal committee that was supposed to keep the board informed of risks to the company, a McClatchy investigation has found.

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Dean Baker: Will the Washington Crew Ever Notice the Housing Bubble?

March 29, 2010

Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke and the rest of the crew running economic policy somehow could not see the housing bubble as it grew to more than $8 trillion. It really should have been hard to miss. Nationwide house prices had just tracked overall inflation for 100 years from 1895 to 1995. Suddenly in 1995, coinciding with the stock bubble, house prices began to hugely outpace the overall rate of inflation. There was no explanation for this run-up in house prices on either the supply or demand side of the housing market. Furthermore, there was no unusual increase in rents, providing further confirmation that fundamentals were not behind the increase in house prices. Finally, in contrast to a story of housing shortages driving up house prices, vacancy rates were at record levels. But the super-sleuths at the Fed, Treasury and other centers of decision-making just could not see the bubble. They couldn’t even see the flood of bogus mortgages being spit out by the millions and packaged into mortgage-backed securities and more complex instruments. As a result of this astounding incompetence, we are now living through the worst downturn since the Great Depression. Because Greenspan and Bernanke and the rest messed up, tens of millions of workers are out of work. Close to one in four mortgages are underwater and the baby boom cohort has seen much of its wealth destroyed as they reach the edge of retirement. In short, as Joe Biden would say, this was a f***ing big mistake. Remarkably, the folks in charge seem to have learned zip. They still have no clue about the housing bubble. How else can anyone explain the Obama Administration’s latest proposal for helping out underwater homeowners? If the point is to help homeowners then there are two incredibly simple questions that must be asked: Are homeowners paying less under the plan than they would to rent the same place? Are homeowners going to end up with equity in their home? These are the key questions, because if we can’t answer “yes” to at least one of them, then we are not helping homeowners. If we can’t answer “yes” to at least one of these questions, then taxpayer dollars being put into the program are helping banks, not homeowners. Unfortunately, because it seems no one in the Obama Administration has yet been told about the housing bubble. There is no evidence that they ever considered these questions in designing the latest policy to “help” homeowners. The program will potentially pay banks and loan servicers up to $12 billion to write off principle on mortgages. In exchange, the government will guarantee new mortgages through the Federal Housing Authority (FHA). Those familiar with the housing market will note that house prices are still falling and must fall by close to 15 percent to get back to their long-term trend. If house prices continue to fall, then the vast majority of the homeowners that take part in this program are likely to never accrue any equity in their home. Furthermore, the FHA is likely to incur substantial losses on these loan guarantees, as homeowners will again find themselves underwater and many will be unable to pay off their mortgages when they sell their home. Because the FHA hugely expanded its role in the housing market in the last two years, without paying attention to falling prices, it now is below its minimum capital requirement. It will suffer additional losses and fall further below its capital requirements as a result of this program. By the way, the losses to the FHA and the taxpayers are money in the pockets of the banks, but no reason to mention that detail. For anyone who can see an $8 trillion housing bubble, this is all as clear as day. There is nothing complex about a story in which the government buys banks out of bad mortgages. But the Washington policymakers could not see an $8 trillion housing bubble before it wrecked the economy and apparently still haven’t noticed it even after the fact. It’s great to know that there are good-paying jobs for people with no discernible skills. But do those jobs have to involve running the economy? [originally printed in the Guardian ]

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Video: Donovan Expects Additional Foreclosure-Prevention Aid: Video

February 19, 2010

Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan talks with Bloomberg’s Peter Cook about President Barack Obama’s foreclosure-prevention initiative. Donovan said the $1.5 billion initiative targets the housing markets that need it most and additional programs may be created. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Home sales up, price decline slows (San Francisco Chronicle)

February 14, 2010

The Bay Area’s battered real estate market found some tentative stability in 2009, but that fragile equilibrium could be upset by a range of possible developments this year. The free-fall in home sale prices, which had battered the market since the housing… Real estate – San Francisco Bay Area – United States – Business and Economy – California

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Financing troubles loom for commercial real estate (MalaysiaNews.net)

February 9, 2010

Just as the housing market is showing signs of life, here comes another real-estate crisis. Squeezed by plunging rents, empty storefronts, the credit crunch and a dearth of buyers, a growing number o…

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FHA Defaults Foreshadow A Crush Of Foreclosures

February 2, 2010

The share of borrowers who are falling seriously behind on loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration jumped by more than a third in the past year, foreshadowing a crush of foreclosures that could further buffet an agency vital to the housing market’s recovery. About 9.1 percent of FHA borrowers had missed at least three payments as of December, up from 6.5 percent a year ago, the agency’s figures show.

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Housing sales seen shifting in 2010 (Orange County Register)

December 27, 2009

2010 could be the year of the short sale. That’s when a homeowner sells a property for less than debt owed on it to a bank, or banks. The possibility that more lenders and homeowners might agree to short sales is a sign that the ills of the housing…

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New American Dream: Default, Then Rent

December 9, 2009

People’s increasing willingness to abandon their own piece of America illustrates a paradoxical change wrought by the housing bust: Even as it tarnishes the near-sacred image of home ownership, it might be clearing the way for an economic recovery. Thanks to a rare confluence of factors — mortgages that far exceed home values and bargain-basement rents — a growing number of families are concluding that the new American dream home is a rental.

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The mystery of the rising house prices

November 9, 2009

With unemployment up and people avoiding debt, why aren’t property prices falling? Sean O’Grady reports Close What on earth is happening in the housing market? Of the many economic puzzles thrown up by the recession

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The mystery of the rising house prices

November 9, 2009

With unemployment up and people avoiding debt, why aren’t property prices falling? Sean O’Grady reports Close What on earth is happening in the housing market? Of the many economic puzzles thrown up by the recession

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The ETF Advisor: Real Estate ETFs

October 22, 2009

Well-run real estate investments have much to offer With the housing market a mess, credit tight, and default rates for commercial mortgages growing by the week, it’s hard to get excited

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Foreclosure Increases at the Real Estate Markets Upper Ranks (Turks.US)

October 14, 2009

Current data show an evident rise in the number of foreclosures in the real estate market’s luxury sector. Most of the foreclosures in June, 30% to be exact, are homes belonging to the upper ranks of the housing market; a significant 16% increase from the crisis three years ago.

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Association update: Impact of distressed sales on local real estate (Finance and Commerce)

September 22, 2009

Distressed residential real estate sales, otherwise known as bank-owned or corporate-owned sales, have been causing some problems over the past several months in the Twin Cities residential real estate market. This trend is likely to continue until the housing market returns to normal.

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After crash, loan officers are reined in (12 News Phoenix)

September 20, 2009

Most of the blame for the loans that led to the housing crash has been leveled at big lenders and Wall Street investment firms. However, all those high-risk mortgages that led to record foreclosures and fraud cases wouldn’t have been as popular without the loan officers who sold them.

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UAE’s property market collapses

March 2, 2009

After six years of unprecedented price increases, the housing market has now crashed.

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