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Posts Tagged ‘economy’

Investors buy 25-acre Folsom project out of foreclosure

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

A real estate investment firm said Monday it has acquired a 25-acre residential development in Folsom through foreclosure proceedings and plans to develop the property with new homes.

PCCP LLC, which has an office in Sacramento, will resume construction at the Folsom Treehouse master-planned community, located at Prairie City and Iron Point roads, in a partnership with Signature Properties. The company acquired the project last week. The property had been in possession of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and United Commercial Bank, after the original loan of $22.5 million went into default last year. PCCP acquired a discounted note from the FDIC and United Commercial in March.

The development is made up of 291 finished lots, with 99 single-family lots, 164 condominium lots and 28 constructed or partially constructed homes.

The terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.

Company vice president Jim Galovan said PCCP, which focuses on recapitalizing distressed real estate, has targeted Folsom for investment in the past due to its strong job base anchored by the 7,000-employee Intel campus. The area currently has a low inventory of new homes, he said.

Sidney B. Dunmore still looking for the next big chance

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Home Front caught up this morning with Sidney B. Dunmore, former head of failed Granite Bay-based Dunmore Homes,regarding a story going around in the building industry.

 As the first local builder to go under as the housing bust gathered steam here in Sacramento, it was probably inevitable that Dunmore would be among the first rumored to be engaged in some kind of comeback.

Not so, Dunmore, 54, said in a phone conversation. Not yet. He has no new limited liability corporation to sniff around for land to start over.

“I’m always looking. I’m always looking at opportunities,” said Dunmore. “I can’t really say I’ve found anything at this time. But I’m still in the hunt if some opportunity pops up. But there’s nothing on the horizon.”

Dunmore Homes filed for bankruptcy in Nov. 2007 and was liquidated in Feb. 2008 – after more than a half century in business and construction of 22,000 homes. Dunmore described the current building industry economy in the capital region as “pretty flat.” But at least it’s finally stopped getting worse, he said.

Nearly $1 trillion worth of Calif. homes are “under water” ……WOW!!!

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Santa Ana-based First American CoreLogic just minutes ago released a grim look at the mortgage crisis, reporting that 32.2 percent of all U.S. mortgages were tied to homes worth less then the amount of their loans.

In California, it says, 42 percent of mortgages are in that condition often referred to as “under water.” The report says 2.9 million California mortgages are in a state of negative equity and  3.1 million more are nearing it as the housing crisis persists and the economy worsens.

Nationally, 15.2 million mortgages tied to $3.4 trillion worth of residential property are in a negative equity position, and consequently in some danger of foreclosure, says First American.

The firm didn’t immediately have a Sacramento-area breakdown, but in the past has said that more than one-third of the region’s mortgages were in that condition. We have an email into the firm to try and get the regional picture.

“Negative equity continues to be the dominant driver of the mortgage market because it leads to foreclosures in the event a borrower experiences some kind of economic shock such as a job loss, illness or other adverse situation. Given that negative equity did not increase this quarter and home prices declines are moderating or flattening, we may be at the peak of the negative equity cycle. However, until negative equity recedes and unemployment declines, mortgage risk will continue to be very elevated,” said Mark Fleming, chief economist for First American CoreLogic.

Home Front: Competition frustrates first-time buyers….

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Laurel Bane, 28, is a working professional with a down payment in hand. Hunting for her first home in Natomas, she’s made six offers since March. And she’s lost every house.

“It’s been a bidding-war hell,” Bane said. “I increased my offer by $12,000 on one, and I still lost out. I was $13,000 over asking price on another and still didn’t get it.”

Welcome to the punishment being inflicted this summer on first-time buyers. Considered saviors of the region’s real estate economy, thousands like Bane are trudging through minefields where their homebuying dreams are repeatedly blown up.

That’s because at the lower end of the price scale there are far more potential buyers than homes for sale.

Horror stories increasingly abound across a Sacramento housing market dominated by repos and short sales.

Home Front is hearing from buyers who expected it to be easy but are being outbid by investors. When they do offer more than investors, the bank often takes the lower bid because it’s cash.

Others say offers are made without getting any response.

The only way to compete is to bid well above the listing price. But when appraisals come in below the offer, the deal is killed.

The alternative is short sales, in which banks take less than owed to avoid the higher costs of foreclosures, but they can take months to complete.

Another snag: Home sales increasingly involve “flippers,” said Smith, referring to investors who buy properties that they try to quickly resell for a profit.

But if the so-called flipper hasn’t held the home for at least 90 days, the first-time buyer can’t get a Federal Housing Administration loan, which requires only 3.5 percent down.

“Minefield? That’s an understatement,” said Smith.

For Bane, who’s looking for a house below $200,000, it’s not been easy.

“I’m just looking for a small, manageable house for myself and one roommate. Yet everything I find is sold within the day,” said Bane, a facilities business coordinator at Rancho Cordova-based Vision Service Plan. “We’ll write an offer and submit it, and then find it was already sold.”

Bane had expected she’d be moved into her first home by now. With the federal Nov. 30 deadline for an $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit approaching, she’s fretting.

What’s roughing up buyers like Bane is a shortage of bank repos – and an unwillingness of most private homeowners to sell at today’s prices. For reasons that aren’t fully understood, banks have held thousands of repos off the market. The result is bidding wars, especially for homes listed below $200,000.

With defaults and foreclosures back on the rise regionally, I believes a “substantial” new supply of repos may hit the market next month.

“I am hoping that’s true because right now, I’m telling you, it’s tough on buyers.”

In Rocklin, would-be buyer Karin DeFoe said she’s just had her fourth offer fall apart. DeFoe, house hunting for her college-age son, said, “We haven’t had any luck.”

Last month, she told Home Front she’s lost offers on three houses to cash investors. All made lower bids than hers.

“All the repos are priced real low to start bidding wars,” she complained.

To Bane, it’s just plain frustrating.

“We’ll go into houses and people are there before us, and people are there after us,” she said. “Every house we look at has lines of buyers.”

How is this for a financial solution for the country?

Monday, July 27th, 2009

This is from an article in the  St. Petersburg Times Newspaper on Sunday.   The Business Section asked readers for ideas on  “How Would You Fix the Economy?”    I think this guy nailed it!

  Dear Mr.. President,

 Please find below my suggestion for fixing America ’s economy..  Instead of giving billions of dollars to companies that will squander the money on lavish parties and unearned bonuses, use the following plan. You can call it the Patriotic Retirement Plan:

   There are about 40 million people over 50 in the workforce. 

  Pay them $1 million a piece severance for early retirement with the following stipulations:  

 1) They MUST retire.  Forty million job openings -  Unemployment fixed.

  2) They MUST buy a new American CAR.  Forty million cars ordered - Auto Industry fixed.

 3) They MUST either buy a house or pay off their mortgage -   Housing Crisis fixed.

 It can’t get any easier than that!

 P.S. If more money is needed, have all members in Congress and their  constituents pay their taxes…   

Mortgage defaults spread as even ’safe’ borrowers falter

Monday, July 13th, 2009

The mortgage default crisis has an ominous new face. It’s your neighbor with a traditional fixed-rate loan.

No longer is the real estate bust simply the result of exotic, subprime loans that doubled payments and blew up in homeowners’ faces. As the Sacramento economy buckles, even the safest mortgages have become part of a new wave of loan defaults, experts say.

With capital-area job losses reaching 45,000 in the past year and unemployment at 11.1 percent, lenders, bankruptcy attorneys and debt counselors all say they’re seeing rising delinquencies among prime borrowers with fixed-rate loans and good credit. Many of those slipping into trouble are state workers, the mainstay of Sacramento’s economy.

I think the tide has definitely shifted, w’re seeing more people with a loss of income.

Prime fixed-rate mortgages, with the most favorable interest rates and 15-, 20- or 30-year terms that guarantee the same monthly payment for the life of the loan, have long been the bulwark of American homeownership.

There are 3.3 million of them in California – 56 percent of all mortgages. But nearly 4 percent were delinquent in the first quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. That number was less than 1 percent two years ago, when the default crisis was dominated by subprime loans.

The MBA says layoffs are now hitting more educated borrowers.

“There tends to be a higher correlation there with having a fixed-rate mortgage,” said Jay Brinkmann, chief economist of the lender trade group.

It’s not just the layoffs creating trouble for traditionally safe loans. Many area workers have had to absorb wage cuts. Others who lost jobs have found new jobs that pay less. Or they have found only part-time work. Many workers who depend on overtime pay have also seen it disappear or dwindle.

Finally, in a capital region defined by a massive state government work force, furloughs have grown to three days monthly, approximating a 14 percent salary cut. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is proposing still more pay cuts for an educated population that’s increasingly showing up at nonprofit mortgage counseling centers.

The upheaval has had a ripple effect on small-business owners throughout the Sacramento area. Theses business owners need some breathing room to get back into the business and start making profits again.

As the newest turn in a housing crisis that has seen 40,000 area foreclosures and heartbreak in thousands of other homes, trouble for prime borrowers is one more obstacle to a housing recovery any time soon.

Lending-industry officials say it’s harder to restructure loans for jobless people who can barely afford any payment. Worse, economists say rising defaults and the foreclosures to come among these borrowers are likely to persist long after unemployment peaks sometime next year.

“Foreclosures and delinquencies have a long tail, and we will see that continue for several quarters after a turnaround in unemployment,” said the MBA’s Brinkmann.

Forecasters at Stockton’s University of the Pacific predict unemployment in the capital region will peak late next year at 12.3 percent – and remain in double digits through 2011. If so, problems with prime loans are likely to linger in a region having a hard time catching a break.

So….What does all of this mean to the average cicizen who owns a home??? We will have alot more forclosures coming on the market and the price range will be much larger then what we have been seeing.