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This week I'm doing something a little different and
including an article on housing by author and real estate
professional, Mike Morgan. I was early to warn of housing's
collapse and I continue to see signs of danger. After all,
the economy cannot stabilize until housing does.
We are just in the eye of the storm and the current rally
should be looked upon as a gift, and used to prepare your
portfolio and your finances for the rough road ahead. We
will be going through many different cycles, deflation to
inflation and back again, and a different approach is
required for each. Plus, there are a lot of safer
investments out there right now that offer great yields, so
why take the risk. A buy and hold strategy is has proven
ineffective and in most cases calamitous. You have to be
tactical in this market. That's why our specialized
Top-Down
Tactical - TDT™, has worked so well.
The Housing Hurricane Will Howl Again
This is only a lull in the housing hurricane.
By Mike Morgan
WE'RE OUT OF THE EYE OF THE HURRICANE, but here comes the
back half of the storm. A lot of people think that we've
seen the worst of the housing crisis. They're talking about
green shoots and glimmers of hope, when they should be back
in the storm shelter, preparing for a flood of inventory
that will overwhelm the markets and produce another round of
falling prices
For the past few months there has been a semi-moratorium on
foreclosures. Most institutions with delinquent mortgages
didn't foreclose. The signs that blanket many neighborhoods
have been posted by a fraction of the lenders. Now the rest
of the banks are rushing to get their properties on the
market. As a Florida real-estate broker who works with bank
asset managers to dispose of foreclosed properties, I get a
good view of this market. From December 2008 through
mid-March 2009, the number of asset managers calling to
discuss REO (real estate owned) properties on their client
banks' books dropped by more than 80% from the level at
which it previously had been running. In the past two
months, however, asset managers have been busy, with most
interested in how many properties we could handle at once.
Law firms for banks are once again lining up to file
foreclosures and to process evictions. The asset managers we
work with have warned us to expect a flood of properties,
beginning in early June. This will hit as the number of
potential buyers continues to dwindle. Builders, traditional
sellers and investors who entered too early are already
loaded with REO properties.
ALL OF THE OBAMA administration's attempts to revive,
resuscitate and shock the housing markets into recovery have
failed. Potential buyers can't purchase homes when they are
losing their jobs, regardless of how attractive the credits
and mortgages are. The price of homes will continue to fall
until the properties are affordable for potential buyers.
If an investor could purchase a home and rent it out for
close to breakeven, we might be getting close to a bottom.
But we are nowhere close to that level in most critical
markets. Until it is approached, prices will continue to
fall. In fact, the negative cash flow now evident, along
with the flood of properties coming into the inventory pool,
warn of lower prices.
There's no light at the end of the tunnel yet. We're still
supporting builders through misguided programs that are only
adding to the inventory woes. California decided to offer a
$10,000 credit to buyers of new homes, on top of the $8,000
federal credit. But California made the $10,000 available
only for new homes purchased directly from builders. That
shows the power of the builders' lobby, but it only adds to
California's housing-industry problem. It encourages
builders to construct dwellings we don't need, and it
penalizes anyone else trying to sell a home.
Housing inventory soon will flood a market in which more
than 500,000 homes are being built each year, even though
the annual sales pace for new homes is closer to 300,000. We
must also deal with a system clogged with impossible short
sales, a surge of second and vacation homes being dumped,
and third-wave flippers realizing that they entered the
market too soon.
FOR THE BANKS, the back half of the hurricane will destroy
balance sheets, unless the Obama administration comes up
with another plan to mythically mark these assets on the
books. Or we might see some chimerical plan to write down
mortgage payments, or move toxic mortgages into a dark pool,
or create some new illusion that glosses over the problem.
Our experience with banks' selling REOs is they realize
about 50%-75% of what they initially think they will get.
Moreover, their expenses to bring these properties to market
and manage them are growing. Court systems bogged down with
foreclosures are raising fees so that they can hire
additional staff. More and more homeowners being evicted are
stripping homes to the bone, removing appliances, fixtures,
carpet, cabinets, air handlers, motorized garage-door
openers and anything else that they can carry off or sell.
Unemployment presents a two-pronged problem. If homeowners
lose their jobs, they have difficulty meeting mortgage
payments. And a high jobless rate forces more people to put
their homes on the market.
During the housing bubble, many second homes were purchased
with the mythical equity from primary residences. These
second homes are coming onto the market at an alarming rate,
as many middle- and upper-class sellers need to raise cash.
In some very exclusive private communities in Florida, where
home prices are in the seven figures, more than 50% of the
homes are on the market. (For more on the vacation-home
market, see Cover Story.)
Unfortunately, there are no signs of recovery, despite the
hype and the twisting of numbers in many media reports. The
end of the unofficial moratorium on foreclosures, combined
with rising unemployment, signals that the back half of this
housing hurricane is only just beginning.
Keith Springer is President of Capital Financial Advisory Services, a registered investment advisor,
providing Wealth Management and Mortgage Consulting
Services. For more information on how to build and
maintain a solid retirement plan, please contact Keith at
916-925-8900 or
Keith@KeithSpringer.com |