Monday, January 23, 2012

week in review

Primary Residential Mortgage is in the finishing stages of establishing a correspondent relationship with  PennyMac in hopes to offer financing for condo developments that might not otherwise fit agency guidelines.  We also now allow borrowers with VA loans to refinance without an appraisal if the current loan is serviced by Wells Fargo. 

Financial Markets
The Dow posted another strong week, rising nearly 2.5% and landing at 12,720.  Bank of America’s Q4 earnings surpassed expectations as losses for the banking behemoth were not as bad as forecasters anticipated.  National home sales for the year were tallied and reported at 4.26 million sales for 2011.  Economists agree that a healthy housing market should post roughly 6 million sales.  Approximately 33% of all sales nationwide were distressed sales. 
A tame Consumer Price Index report (0%) helped keep mortgage rates in check.  The Core Consumer Price Index, which excludes energy costs such as volatile oil prices, finished the year at 2.2%, which is within the Fed’s tolerance level.  The reading supports the Fed’s decision to leave rates where they are. 
Last, talks of a widespread principal write down for non-Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans might actually become a reality, according to the article below.  There are little details as to who would qualify.  It discusses that the settlement is tied to the “robo-signing scandal” many banks have been accused of participating in and that it would go towards roughly 1 million homeowners.

Southern Nevada Real Estate and Economy
Larry Murphy held his crystal ball seminar this past week, and his crystal ball wasn’t as optimistic as in years past. He predicts an additional 10% decline in home values and an additional 100,000 homes to be foreclosed on in the next 4 years.  With that I decided to crunch numbers to see how an increase in rates + a decrease in loan amount would affect monthly payment.  Basically, a 10% decrease in loan amount is equivalent to about ½% increase in interest rate to offset the payment.  Meaning, if the price and thereby the loan amount drops by 10%, but mortgage rates go from say 4% to 4.5%, the monthly payment actually remains the same.
http://www.lvrj.com/business/another-rough-year-forecast-for-las-vegas-housing-137779633.html

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

week in review

Financial Markets
The Dow Jones had a relatively quiet week and ended up for the week slightly, but the big mover for mortgage interest rates had little to do with the European debt crisis or the beginning of earnings season.  The Guarantee-Fee, (aka the G-Fee) is a new fee that is charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to mortgage companies, for all conventional loans.  A recent bill passed by congress to extend payroll tax cuts included a provision that allowed the GSE’s (government sponsored entities, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) to increase fees in an effort to increase revenue.  This fee goes into effect April 1st, but loans being locked today are being affected, so you will notice mortgage rates increased by .125% to .25%. 
Southern Nevada Real Estate and Economy
Southern Nevada set the record in home sales for 2011, with 48,186 sales for the year.  38,153 of the sales were single family residences while 10,073 of the sales were townhomes and condos.  Roughly 50% of the sales were sold to cash buyers.  Nearly 50% of the sales were bank-owned properties and another roughly 25% of the sales were short-sales.  2011 was not so kind to builders, as new home sales attributed to just under 4,000 for the year, this down from 39,000 new home sales in 2006. 
The inventory of homes on the MLS is falling and according to the article below, sits under 20,000 homes for sale, with a little over 45% of the homes classified as “contingent”, which is a positive sign for builders and equity sellers.  (Amazing to think that individuals selling a home in which they have equity, have their own category now…”equity sellers”…like unicorns…)

Sunday, January 8, 2012

week in review

HARP 2.0, enabling home owner’s to refinance regardless of loan to value provided the loan is owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will not roll out now until the end of March.  Both agencies are still in the process of building their automated underwriting systems to support the guideline changes. 
Financial Markets
The Dow ended the week up roughly 150 points, ending at 12,359.  A stronger than expected unemployment report was released Friday, with over 200,000 private sector jobs created in December.  The national unemployment rate dropped to 8.5%, the U-6 report (underemployment, those that gave up looking for a job and part-time workers looking for full time employment) remains high, at 15.2%. 
Mortgage rates, which ordinarily would have risen off the news of a stronger than expected jobs report actually improved slightly Friday, as drama in Europe’s credit scene continued.  The latest, Hungary’s bonds were downgraded to “junk” status. 
Southern Nevada Real Estate and Economy
No articles of interest this week, but did a little research on the local unemployment numbers for the past 20 years.  In January 2008, with the housing market in free-fall, the unemployment rate still remained low, at roughly 5%.  In just 1 year, the unemployment rate sky-rocketed to 9.9%, basically doubling.  In the following 12 months, unemployment continued its unprecedented climb, reaching 14.7% in January 2010.  Unemployment rose 200% in 24 months…In the previous two recessions (1993 and 2000), unemployment recovered to its pre-unemployment rate in about same time it took to reach its peak.  That won’t happen in this recovery, but it is encouraging that a recovery in employment can happen quickly. 
http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=z1ebjpgk2654c1_&met_y=unemployment_rate&idim=state:ST320000&fdim_y=seasonality:S&dl=en&hl=en&q=nevada+unemployment

Monday, January 2, 2012

week in review

I want to wish you all Happy New Year’s and all the best in 2012!  I want to sincerely thank you for the opportunity to work with you and your clients, and look forward to helping many more of your clients in the years to come. 
The numbers are in and our branch, in its first full year with Primary Residential Mortgage, we finished in the top 10 in units for 2012 out of over 300 branches nationwide!  We are extremely proud of this accomplishment.  On an individual note, I finished the year as the 5th highest producing loan officer in the company, out of over 1,000 loan officers nationwide. 
I thank you again for your support and will continue to strive to make the home buying process a smooth and pleasant experience!

Financial Markets
The Dow ended the year at 12,217, up roughly 5 ½% for the year, a year in which the market experienced tremendous volatility and uncertainty.  For the quarter, the market was up nearly 12%, marking the highest quarterly gain in the stock market’s history. 
Mortgage rates continue to remain at historically low levels, as the ongoing crisis in Europe directed and continues to direct investors to the safe haven US bonds, despite US debt being downgraded for the first time in our nation’s history.  I suspect that the trend will continue as Europe continues to struggle with solutions to their own debt problems. 
So, my bold and gutsy prediction is that mortgage rates remain low in 2012 but rise by as much as ½ percent towards the latter part of the year.  30 year fixed would still remain below 5% and shouldn’t have a noticeable adverse effect on housing demand.

Southern Nevada Real Estate and Economy
Below is a link to the Las Vegas Sun where 10 economists give their forecasts for the local economy for 2012.  It is undisputed that our housing market can only recover as our local economy recovers, so it is critical to keep a watchful eye on local economic conditions.  The consensus is that the worst is behind us.  With unemployment now down to as low as 12.5%, (Still among the nation’s highest, but better than the 15% reached last year) being among the most critical of economic statistics.  All agree that our economy must diversify, and will be critical to a stabilized economy in the future.