Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Vallejo, Fresno, Modesto, Stockton, Visalia, Bakersfield and Merced--are in California's Central Valley, Ground Zero of the housing bubble

TO BE NOTED: From Forbes:

"Riskiest Places For U.S. Homeowners
Maha Atal, 03.31.09, 7:00 PM ET

The recession may have spread across the global economy, but recovery efforts haven't taken the edge off the mortgage meltdown that helped start it all. In fact, many American real estate markets may be at risk of even worse declines.

While the president's Homeowner Stabilization Initiative, announced on Feb. 18, offers loan modifications for homeowners already in negative-equity situations and the stimulus package offers an $8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers, there are several places where such efforts are likely to have little effect.

In Depth: Riskiest Places For U.S. Homeowners

Specifically, you don't want to be a homeowner in several parts of California, Florida and the upper Midwest. Detroit, Mich., Miami, Fla., and Merced, Calif., are among the top five riskiest spots for homeowners, ranking second, third and fifth, respectively. California and Florida areas dominate the list, taking up almost three-quarters of the 25 spots.

One thing all the spots on our list have in common, though, is they're only going to get worse. As foreclosures rise and home prices plummet (27% since their 2006 peak, but more than one-third in many other places), the ability of many borrowers to make payments becomes more difficult as unemployment rises.

The national foreclosure average is now 3%, but the average for subprime loans--a disproportionate share of mortgages in high-stress markets--is 13.9%. That number could rise even after the recession ends because solid economic growth can't bring back housing prices that fell so far so fast after the boom.

"We had a housing decline in Massachusetts in the 1990s with no recession," says Mark Fleming, chief economist of real estate analytics firm First American CoreLogic, "and a recession in 2001 within the middle of the housing boom."

In other words, home prices and lending rates rising right along with the economy was never good for borrowers.

Behind the Numbers
To determine America's riskiest housing markets, Forbes teamed up with Moody's Economy.com to survey the nation's 200 largest metropolitan statistical areas, as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.

For each metro area, we added the number of loans to low-rated borrowers and divided the sum by the total number of mortgages to calculate the percentage of the area's market that is nonprime. The 25 MSAs on our list had the highest percentages of nonprime mortgages and are ranked accordingly.

These nonprime centers are especially susceptible to defaults as joblessness rates continue to rise.

Seven of the 25 highest-risk areas--Vallejo, Fresno, Modesto, Stockton, Visalia, Bakersfield and Merced--are in California's Central Valley, Ground Zero of the housing bubble. People were drawn to these exurbs to live big but cheaply, and lenders responded with mechanisms to make home ownership more affordable.

But once home prices crashed, the loan values on these homes outstripped the value of the homes themselves--which spells even more trouble for the economy of those areas at large.

"Much of the primary economic boom in cities like Stockton was new-home construction," says Fleming. When those jobs dried up, people became more likely to default on their mortgages.

By contrast, in Texas, foreclosure rates are low despite similar affordability measures that conferred home ownership on a large immigrant population. Even though the state has three cities on this list, housing never came to dominate the regional economy.

Yet the situation is hardly rosy given the state's dependence on the energy industry: Oil prices have tumbled over 70% since the middle of 2008, pushing up unemployment numbers. In some places, including No. 1-ranked Mission, Texas, unemployment is now above the national average, increasing the risk of default.

All three Texas areas on this list have above-average unemployment rates.

Not-So-Sunny Florida
While California has seen first-time buyers hurting, in central and southern Florida the market was affected by those who took advantage of lenient rates to buy and "flip" second homes. Florida towns and cities make up one-third of our list.

According to Fleming, buyers in these trouble spots are simply walking away as home values plunge, even if they can still afford to make their mortgage payments. That explains why foreclosure rates in these towns are double or triple the national average of 3%, even though unemployment rates are relatively consistent with the national average.

Home-flipping Floridians were in a lower-risk credit tier than the Central Valley's first-time buyers. Able to access unusually generous loan terms, they took on more leverage and wound up on thinner ice than their subprime counterparts. First American's most recent market survey shows delinquencies among this group rising faster than among the highest-risk borrowers.

The worries do not end there. When speculative investors choose to sell instead of default, the fire-sale prices drive down home-equity values for other owners by reducing market value.

Out in the Cold
In the upper Midwest, price appreciation was hardly the problem. Where California and Florida saw prices more than double from 2000 to 2006, Michigan home prices rose less than 30% over the same period.

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"Places like Detroit or Flint didn't even have a housing boom," says Fleming, so even a small price decline could create a negative-equity situation. High unemployment, led by the foundering auto industry, sends underwater owners into foreclosure--and unemployment hasn't yet peaked.

While the National Association of Realtors estimates existing-home sales rose 5.1% nationwide in February, foreclosures are still on the rise. Dr. David Berson, chief economist of mortgage insurer PMI Group, says the sales uptick simply reflects re-sales of foreclosed properties.

"Sales will turn up before the recession ends," says Berson, but they will be at lower prices. That does little for those who already bought homes during the boom and now face the dual forces of negative equity and job loss. "Delinquencies and foreclosures lag behind unemployment," he says, "and unemployment lags behind the recession."

Regardless of what happens nationally, then, the risks associated with buying a home in these markets will increase for a long time to come."

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