Showing posts with label Integrated Asset Services. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Integrated Asset Services. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

due to a combination of incentives and low interest rates

TO BE NOTED: From HousingWire:

"IAS Sees ‘Normalization’ in House Prices

Posted By KELLY CURRAN
June 9, 2009 7:04 am

US home prices remain down 13% year-over-year as of April, but the pace of decline in prices seems to have leveled off, according to IAS360 data released Tuesday morning.

“It’s too soon to call this a turn in the housing market, particularly given all the political and regulatory uncertainties,” said Dave McCarthy, president and CEO of Integrated Asset Services. “I think that we’re still in for some difficult spells ahead, but we are seeing a certain kind of pricing equilibrium in several important markets. That’s encouraging for the long term.”

Four of the country’s largest metropolitan areas — San Diego, Boston, Chicago, and Denver — now show positive month-over-month gains in home prices. San Diego values are up 0.2%, while Boston and Chicago prices are up 0.8%. Home prices in Denver sit a significant 2.2% above values the previous month.

Three of the four US census regions posted stable or positive price activity in April. Only the South, which includes several hard-hit Florida communities, was down for the month, dropping 0.3%. Still, the the trend line in the South was flattening, showing less volatility, said Integrated Asset Services.

Rick Foos, president of SRA Foos & Associates, Inc. says inventory levels are declining and sales are increasing particularly in the lower priced markets due to a combination of incentives and low interest rates; altogether, creating a positive outlook for the entire market.

However, Foos says if interest rates rise, boosting foreclosures, the market could experience a false bottom. “But if neither materializes to a great degree then it does appear the market may have bottomed.”

IAS360 data also shows signs of normalization, or at least a return to seasonality, in California. Arguably the hardest hit state in the US, California is home to six of the ten hardest-hit counties in the country. In April, however, counties up and down the state, including Monterey, San Bernadino, Ventura, Riverside, Sacramento, Sonoma and King, reported upticks in home prices. San Diego, down almost 24% from its high in 2007, has reported three consecutive months of stable prices.

Write to [1] Kelly Curran."

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Since the economic collapse began in September 2008, the index shows a drop of 10.9%.

TO BE NOTED: From HousingWire:

"Housing Prices Yet to Stop Dropping

Posted By KELLY CURRAN
April 14, 2009 1:13 pm

By no surprise, U.S. housing prices continued on a downward slide in February. In a [1] report released Tuesday, Integrated Asset Services, LLC, a provider of default management and residential collateral valuations, reports a 3% month-over-month drop in home prices during the month.

U.S. house prices have now fallen 14.4% on a year-over-year basis and a whopping 17.9% since the height of the real estate bubble in 2006, according to IAS360 data. Since the economic collapse began in September 2008, the index shows a drop of 10.9%.

“We have seen no indication of a positive turn in the housing markets we track, if anything the rate of decline in some areas has increased,” says Dave McCarthy, president and CEO of Integrated Asset Services.

The IAS360 tracks home sales down to the neighborhood level, and then rolls up local totals in 360 counties, nine census divisions, four regions and the nation overall.

Among the four U.S. Census region levels, the Northeast reported a 12.8% decline across the last 5 months and 4.6% drop in February. Similarly, the South dropped 12.8% and 3% for the same respective periods. The West, for its part, was down 10.2% and 2.5%. The Midwest, though down, was the only region that did not experience double-digit declines, dropping a lesser 8.9%.

According to the index and its accompanying report, six of the ten largest metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) in the U.S. have experienced double-digit declines since the economy’s downturn. “No markets seem to be completely immune from the housing crisis,” McCarthy says.

Boston, San Francisco, and Miami were the areas hardest hit, down 20.3%, 19.3%, and 18.1% respectively. The Boston area fell 10.3% in February alone. Within Boston’s metropolitan area, Essex, MA plunged at an astonishing rate of 22.8% in February, while Suffolk, MA followed closely, dropping 19.3%.

Write to Kelly Curran at [2] kelly.curran@housingwire.com.

Disclosure: The author held no relevant investment positions when this story was published. Indirect holdings may exist via mutual fund investments. HW reporters and writers follow a strict disclosure policy, the first in the mortgage trade."

Thursday, March 26, 2009

a first-of-its-kind integration of automated transparent property analytics with human observation.

TO BE NOTED: From HousingWire:

"IAS Touts Hybrid AVM/BPO Property Valuation

Posted By PAUL JACKSON
March 26, 2009 11:27 am

Denver-based Integrated Asset Services, LLC [1] said Wednesday that it had rolled out a new “Conditioned Valuation Model” (CVM) — a first-of-its-kind integration of automated transparent property analytics with human observation.

The CVM is uniquely positioned along the continuum of existing property valuation products between the widely-used Automated Valuation Models (AVM) and Broker Price Opinions (BPO), the company said in a press statement. At half the price of a standard BPO, the new CVM targets those business applications requiring more than an AVM but less than a BPO.

“Black Box” AVMs often don’t disclose supporting data and valuation methodologies, leading to what IAS characterized as “questionable and unsubstantiated property values.”

“Traditionally, the industry has had the choice of a more expensive human-based solution, or faster and riskier automated solutions. But the current mortgage industry requires these two valuation approaches interact intelligently and at the right price point,” said Dave McCarthy, CEO of Integrated Asset Services. “We’ve combined revolutionary valuation technology with objective third party property inspection services to produce what we believe to be the first humanized automated valuation for residential property at a reasonable price.”

The CVM product is the first entry in a new suite of IAS Integrated Valuation Solutions that IAS plans to roll out in the months ahead. The valuation formula integrates accurate, transparent property data from IntelliReal, IAS’s technology partner, and provides accurate real estate intelligence supported by comparable sales, neighborhood analysis, current neighborhood sales, and active listings. These analytics are then combined with a hands-on inspection performed by a third-party property inspection firm, including photos on the subject and its neighborhood condition, occupancy status, and conditions that impact value. The data resulting from the third party inspection directly influences the automated valuation estimate, solving a long standing problem of the AVM: the lack of real-time property condition information.

“The market has suffered by blind reliance on traditional AVMs. Today’s market requires transparency and innovation in the approach to valuations, including the integration of human observation,” said Ric Miles, CEO of IntelliReal. “With a 14 year track record of delivering quality valuations and services nationwide, IAS is ideally positioned to deliver this new type of integrated solution.”

IAS has been busy this year. The Denver-based firm launched its own IAS360 Home Price Index last year, which pulls pricing data down to specific neighborhoods, and recently rolled out CDA Credit Due Diligence Analytics, a due diligence service for the mortgage industry."

And:

"Integrated Asset Services®, LLC (IAS®), a leader in default management and residential collateral valuation, unveiled today its new “Conditioned Valuation Model" (CVM™), a first-of-its-kind cost-effective integration of automated transparent property analytics with human observation.

CVM is uniquely positioned along the continuum of existing property valuation products between the widely-used Automated Valuation Models (AVM) and Brokers Price Opinions (BPO). At half the price of a standard BPO, the new CVM allows for more comprehensive and affordable due diligence for those business applications requiring more than an AVM but less than a BPO.

“Black Box” AVM’s failure to disclose supporting data and valuation methodologies has led to questionable and unsubstantiated property values, and until now there were few alternatives. CVM delivers a real-time, 360 degree view of a subject’s condition, the subject’s neighborhood condition, a condition-adjusted value, and market price trends.

“Traditionally, the industry has had the choice of a more expensive human-based solution or faster and riskier automated solutions. But the current mortgage industry requires these two valuation approaches interact intelligently and at the right price point,” said Dave McCarthy, CEO of Integrated Asset Services. “We’ve combined revolutionary valuation technology with objective third party property inspection services to produce what we believe to be the first humanized automated valuation for residential property at a reasonable price.”

CVM, the first entry in a new suite of IAS Integrated Valuation Solutions™ (IVS™), goes well beyond just pairing two reports together side by side. The valuation formula integrates accurate, transparent property data from IntelliReal, IAS’s technology partner, and provides accurate real estate intelligence supported by comparable sales, neighborhood analysis, current neighborhood sales, and active listings. These analytics are combined with a hands-on inspection performed by a third-party property inspection firm, including photos on the subject and its neighborhood condition, occupancy status, and conditions that impact value. The data resulting from the third party inspection directly influences the automated valuation estimate, solving the long standing problem of the AVM: the lack of real-time property condition information.

“The market has suffered by blind reliance on traditional AVMs. Today’s market requires transparency and innovation in the approach to valuations, including the integration of human observation,” said Ric Miles, CEO of IntelliReal. “With a 14 year track record of delivering quality valuations and services nationwide, IAS is ideally positioned to deliver this new type of integrated solution.”

The CVM is one of the many innovations recently introduced by IAS to assist the mortgage community mitigate losses, reduce risk and lower costs. The firm, which launched its monthly-reported IAS360 House Price Index last year, recently rolled out CDA Credit Due Diligence Analytics, a ground-breaking due diligence service for the mortgage industry. "