Showing posts with label new home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new home. Show all posts

Friday, January 17, 2014

2 Bank Giants See Shrinking Mortgage Business

With rising mortgage rates, fewer people are refinancing their mortgages, which means big banks are seeing a dip in mortgage lending. 
Wells Fargo funded $50 billion in residential mortgages during the fourth quarter, a 60 percent drop from $125 billion a year earlier. Wells Fargo, the largest mortgage lender in the country, is also losing some of its market share. It controls about 19 percent of the U.S. mortgage market, which is a decrease from 30 percent a year ago, according to Mortgage Finance.  The last time the bank issued such few home loans was during 2008 in the midst of the financial crisis. 
Still, No. 2 J.P. Morgan did about half of Wells Fargo’s business, funding $23.3 billion in mortgage loans in the fourth quarter, a 54 percent drop from a year earlier. That is also the bank’s lowest amount in originations since before the financial crisis. 
“This is something we expected,” says Tim Sloan, Wells Fargo’s chief financial officer. “Originating $50 billion of mortgages in a quarter is a good feat. It just happens to be a little less than it was in the prior quarter.”
Wells Fargo says that about two-thirds of its loan volume was coming from refinancing and now two-third of its business is being driven by applications for home purchases instead. 
With a shrinking refi business, however, some lenders may look to generate extra mortgage revenue by easing up credit standards to try to attract more loan applicants, The Wall Street Journal reports. 
Source: “The End of the Mortgage Party? Home Lending Plummets at Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase,” The Wall Street Journal (Jan. 15, 2014)
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Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Economists: Growth in Home Prices Will Slow by Half in 2014

Economists are predicting housing prices to continue to rise next year — but only at about half the rate that they did in 2013, Money Magazine reports. 
However, “for a sustainable recovery, you want to see more balance between buyers and sellers,” says David Stiff, chief economist at CoreLogic Case-Shiller. 
Home sales will likely see modest growth next year, says Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of REALTORS® . Strict underwriting practices by lenders, rising interest rates, and tight inventories in many markets will moderate sales growth. NAR has predicted home sales of about 5.12 million for 2014, which is close to the same level forecasted for 2013. 
Meanwhile, inventory levels are expected to see some improvement in 2014. In September, they rose 1.8 percent compared to a year earlier, according to NAR data. That marked the first increase in inventory levels since late 2011. 
Still, expect 2014 to continue to be a seller’s market while inventory levels remain tight, analysts say. 
Fewer distressed homes on the market also will likely mean investors will take a step back, leaving more room for home buyers to step in. Investors’ share of residential home purchases dropped from 23 percent earlier this year to 17 percent in September, according to the Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking survey. 
But buyers will likely be greeted by higher mortgage rates. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is expected to increase from a 4.5 percent average to more than 5 percent in the new year. 
Also, buyers will still face tight underwriting standards. While real estate professionals are reporting that qualifying for a loan is getting easier, the speed of processing the loan has not improved. Virginia real estate professional Rob Wittman told Money Magazine that buyers might want to consider using local lenders with ties to nearby appraisers for faster closings. 
And sellers shouldn’t underestimate buyers in the new year, either.
"Buyers are smart these days — they know where the market is and know that rates are higher. They aren't going to bite on a list price above recent comparables," says Sara Fischer, an agent with San Diego-based Redfin.
Source: “Real estate: Look for value in 2014,” Money Magazine (December 2013) and “NAR: Price Gains, Not Sales, to Drive Housing Growth,” REALTOR® Magazine Daily News (November 2013)
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Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Nearly Half of States Within Reach of Peak Home Prices

Twenty-three states are within 10 percent of their 2006 home price peaks, CoreLogic reports in its latest housing data report reflecting October data.  
Home prices have increased 12.5 percent year-over-year. However, prices had a more modest month-over-month gain of 0.2 percent from September to October. CoreLogic’s Home Price Index also reflects distressed sales. 
“In terms of home price appreciation, the housing market appears to be catching its breath as we head into the final months of 2013,” says Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO of CoreLogic. “The deceleration in month-on-month trends was anticipated as strong gains in home prices over the spring and summer slow in line with normal seasonal patterns and the impact of higher mortgage interest rates.”
The following five states have seen the highest home price appreciation year-over-year: 
  • Nevada: +25.9%
  • California: +22.4%
  • Georgia: +14.2%
  • Michigan: +14.1%
  • Arizona: +14%
The only state in the CoreLogic index that has seen prices fall is New Mexico, where home prices fell 0.5 percent year-over-year.
Soaring home prices are allowing more states to catch up to their home price peaks in 2006. Sixteen states are all within 5 percent or less of their peak home prices: Arkansas, Colorado, District of Columbia, Iowa, Louisiana, Nebraska, Montana, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Wyoming, and Alaska.
“The slowdown in appreciation is positive for the housing market as almost half the states are now within 10 percent of their respective historical price peaks,” says Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic.  
Meanwhile, the following five states remain the furthest from their peak values as of October, according to CoreLogic:  
  • Nevada: -40.7%
  • Florida: -37.4%
  • Arizona: -31.5%
  • Rhode Island: -29.3%
  • West Virginia: -28%
The National Association of REALTORS® recently reported that its existing-home sales index saw home prices tick up 12.8 percent in October year-over-year. A persistent tight inventory of homes for sale is holding back sales but pushing up home prices in most areas of the country, Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, said in the report. 
--REALTOR® Magazine Daily News
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Monday, November 11, 2013

NAR: Price Gains, Not Sales, to Drive Housing Growth

The dollar volume of home sales will rise modestly next year, but that growth will stem entirely from increased home prices, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed forum Friday at the REALTORS® Conference & Expo.
Continuing tight underwriting by lenders, low inventories in many markets, and rising interest rates are holding back growth in sales volume, said Yun, leading him to predict home sales of about 5.12 million for 2014, virtually the same level forecast for 2013. But home prices will rise by 6 percent.
More broadly, economic growth is likely to remain sluggish. Yun doesn’t see any signs of a return to recession, but neither does he see anything that would boost growth beyond the 1 to 2 percent that’s been the case during the recovery. Economists consider a minimum healthy growth rate to be 3 percent.
What’s needed to spur stronger growth in the housing market is a marked increase in inventory through stepped-up new construction, because only more new homes will ease tight inventories and, in turn, help slow home price gains, helping affordability. Last year only about 900,000 homes were started, a 50-year low and half the amount that’s needed, Yun said.
Also needed is more certainty from the federal government. Lenders are keeping underwriting tight in part because of concern over the pending qualified mortgage and qualified residential mortgage rules, which are due to take effect next year.
Although NAR supports most parts of the rules as drafted, community lenders are concerned over the rules’ implementation burdens, which they believe will put them at a competitive disadvantage with large banks.
Meanwhile, lenders remain tied up in litigation and contentious negotiations with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHA over loans that went bad during the market collapse. The conflict is keeping them from lending more and from making more loans available to applicants with less than pristine credit profiles.
Yun thinks lending could break out once there’s more clarity over the rules. He’s hoping lenders will look to purchase loans as their next profit center, since their refinance business—which has been fueling profits over the last few years—is drying up in tandem with the rise in interest rates. The average interest rate is now about 4.5 percent, still low by historical standards, but as they continue their upward movement the universe of home owners who can refinances shrinks.
Yun is predicting refinancings to drop next year to their lowest level in 15 years. But lenders won’t turn to purchase mortgages in a big way as long as the regulatory environment is as uncertain and contentious as it is now.
By Robert Freedman, REALTOR® Magazine
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Monday, May 13, 2013

Mortgage Fraud Activity Posts First Drop in 16 Years


Reports filed by banks flagging suspicious activity in mortgage loans dropped for the first time in 16 years, falling nearly 30 percent last year, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network reports. 
Beginning in 1996, mortgage loan fraud had been the only suspicious activity report that saw rises each year. According to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, nearly 46 percent of all cases of potential mortgage fraud in the past decade have occurred in just the last three years alone. 
The numbers are finally falling, due to greater detection. But banks also suffer from fraud perpetuated from within their institutions.
“The Federal Bureau of Investigation said while a majority of bank failures in recent years resulted from declining market conditions, insider abuse caused by bank officers and directors remains a factor in many loan fraud activities recorded in the past decade,” HousingWire reports. “Some of the activities that raised red flags include engaging in mortgage loan fraud by submitting misrepresentations of borrowers’ income, employment, credit, occupancy, and other requirements.”
Source: “Suspicious loan activity reports shrink first time in a decade,” HousingWire (May 8, 2013)
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