Showing posts with label Federal Housing Finance Agency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federal Housing Finance Agency. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

sign that low interest rates may be moderating declines in real estate values

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"Home Prices Gain 0.7% in February From January (Update1)

By Kathleen M. Howley

April 22 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. home prices rose 0.7 percent in February from January, the first consecutive monthly gain in two years, a sign that low interest rates may be moderating declines in real estate values.

Prices fell 6.5 percent in February from a year earlier, the second-smallest drop in six months, led by a 19 percent decrease in the region that includes California, the most populous U.S. state, the Federal Housing Finance Agency in Washington said today. The gain in February from a month earlier beat the average estimate of 10 analysts in a Bloomberg survey for a decline of 0.7 percent.

Mortgage rates have tumbled 1.6 percentage points in six months, making houses and condominiums more affordable. The Mortgage Bankers Association’s index of applications to purchase a home or refinance a loan increased 5.3 percent last week as Americans took advantage of interest rates near record lows. Home sales rose 5.1 percent in February from a month earlier, the National Association of Realtors said March 23.

“As demand firms, and once inventories of houses and a broad range of goods are brought into line with sales, economic activity should begin to stabilize,” Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald Kohn said in an April 20 speech in Delaware.

The inventory of properties on the market fell to a 9.7 month supply in February at the current sales pace, down from April’s high of 11.3 months, and sales rose 5.1 percent from a month earlier, the Realtors group said.

The number of Americans signing contracts to buy previously owned homes rose 2.1 percent in February, led by a 14.5 percent jump in the Midwest and a 10.6 percent increase in the Northeast, the National Association of Realtors said in an April 1 report.

Arizona, Nevada

The FHFA’s February house price index is down 9.5 percent from its peak in April 2007. The Mountain region of the U.S., including Arizona and Nevada, had the second-biggest decline in home prices from a year ago, dropping 9.2 percent, the FHFA said in today’s report. The South Atlantic area, including Florida, fell 8 percent.

New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania declined 4.1 percent from a year earlier and New England dropped 3 percent, according to the report.

Mortgage Rates

The average U.S. rate for a 30-year fixed home loan dropped to 4.82 percent last week from 4.87 percent a week earlier, according to Freddie Mac, the McLean, Virginia-based mortgage buyer. The rate has averaged 5.02 percent this year, compared with 6.21 percent during the five-year housing boom that ended in 2005.

The difference between 30-year mortgage rates and 10-year Treasury yields has narrowed to about 2.2 percent from 3.1 percent in December, which was the widest since 1986. The spread remains almost 0.7 percentage point above the average of the past decade, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Rates for 15-year mortgages are about 1.8 percent above 10-year Treasury yields, compared with an average 1.4 percent since 1999.

U.S. banks owned $11.5 billion of foreclosed homes in the fourth quarter, up from $6.7 billion a year earlier, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in Washington. California and Florida metropolitan areas led the U.S. in foreclosures in the first quarter as unemployment and falling property values deepened the housing recession, according to RealtyTrac Inc., based in Irvine, California.

‘Glut of Homes’

“Whatever damage has been done in California is only going to get worse because there is a glut of homes owned by lenders that aren’t yet on the market,” said Bruce Norris, a principal with the Norris Group, a Riverside, California-based real estate investment firm. “These homes are like a shadow inventory that is likely to drag down prices further when they come onto the market.”

Freddie Mac, along with larger rival, Washington-based Fannie Mae and banks including New York-based Citigroup Inc., have slowed or delayed foreclosures using various moratorium plans in the hopes that homeowners in default will be able to modify their loans.

U.S. home prices probably will fall 5.1 percent this year to $188,500, less than the 9.3 percent plunge in 2008, according to the real estate group. Home resales probably will rise 1 percent to 4.96 million after a 13 percent drop last year, NAR said in a forecast posted on its Web site.

The housing market may be buoyed by improvements in the banking sector. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said yesterday in testimony to a congressional oversight panel that most banks now have “more capital than they need.” Geithner also said there were signs of “thawing” in credit markets.

The U.S. has pumped more than $590 billion of public money into troubled financial institutions over the last six months through the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. Geithner said in a letter to the oversight committee yesterday that $109.6 billion remains of the funds authorized by the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act last year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kathleen M. Howley in Boston at kmhowley@bloomberg.net."

Monday, March 30, 2009

Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co., which don't need warehouse funding, are increasing their dominance of the mortgage market

TO BE NOTED: From the WSJ:

"By JAMES R. HAGERTY

The regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is considering giving the government-backed mortgage companies another role: helping to finance small mortgage banks.

A spokeswoman for the regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said it is looking at ways that the two companies might help revive the market for so-called warehouse loans, which are loans made to mortgage banks. This possible role for Fannie and Freddie is the latest sign of how they are being used increasingly as instruments of government policy rather than corporations focused on shareholder returns.

[John Courson, head of the Mortgage Bankers Association,wants Fannie and Freddie to help small lenders.] Reuters

John Courson, head of the Mortgage Bankers Association,wants Fannie and Freddie to help small lenders.

Demand for mortgages is surging as low interest rates prompt millions of Americans to refinance. New U.S. first-lien home-mortgage loans granted this year will surge to $2.78 trillion, up 72% from 2008's depressed level, the Mortgage Bankers Association predicts. But mortgage banks have been hobbled in recent months by a dearth of credit, making it hard for them to respond to that demand.

Partly as a result of this credit crunch, giant full-service banks like Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co., which don't need warehouse funding, are increasing their dominance of the mortgage market. Consumers will face higher interest rates and slower service if mortgage banks can't get enough credit to compete with the giants, mortgage bankers argue.

The regulator has asked representatives of mortgage banks, including the Mortgage Bankers Association, to come up with a detailed plan for Fannie and Freddie to help mortgage banks get credit. John Courson, chief executive officer of the association, said in an interview that the plan should be ready to be presented to the regulator within about a week. One possibility is that Fannie and Freddie will guarantee debt issued by warehouse lenders, making it easier for them to provide financing to mortgage banks.

When mortgage bankers complained about the lack of warehouse funding, officials in the Treasury and Federal Reserve urged them to seek help from the regulator of Fannie and Freddie.

Last September, the regulator took over management control of the two shareholder-owned companies as surging defaults depleted their thin layers of capital. They are now being propped up by funds from the Treasury. Under regulatory control, they have shifted their focus to the prevention of foreclosures, even though that may delay their return to profitability. The Treasury also has said that Fannie and Freddie may play a role in supporting state housing-finance agencies.

Bloomberg News

Mortgage banks typically are small, family-owned companies. Unlike commercial banks or thrifts, they aren't licensed to take deposits and so don't have that source of money for their loans. Instead, they borrow money from warehouse lenders, which often are units of larger banking companies. The mortgage banks use the short-term credit to provide loans to their customers and then pay back the warehouse lenders after selling the loans to bigger banks or to investors such as Fannie or Freddie.

Until credit markets froze up in 2007, Wall Street investment banks and many large mortgage lenders were eager to provide these warehouse lines of credit. Now, many of those big institutions have stopped making warehouse loans or have cut back on that business. Warehouse Lending Project, a group of mortgage bankers seeking to revive the market, estimates overall money available for warehouse loans has dropped nearly 90% since 2006, to about $25 billion

Mr. Courson said he believes the regulator can give Fannie and Freddie temporary authority to help fund warehouse loans and that it won't be necessary to seek congressional approval for this expansion of the two companies' role. "We just don't have the luxury of time for going through the legislative meat grinder," he said."