Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Report: Investment Buyers Strengthen Foreclosed Home Sales

While home sales have slowed from the typical pace seen at the start of the spring buying season, the foreclosure market is performing better than the market for all other homes, according to the RPX Housing Market Report from Radar Logic Incorporated, a real estate data and analytics company based in New York.

So far this year, the motivated transaction count within the firm’s RPX Composite, which assesses sales of foreclosed homes by financial firms and at foreclosure auctions, increased just slightly less than its average gain for the period over the last four years.

All other sales, on the other hand, increased by less than half as much as they usually do during the period.

Radar Logic credits investment buyers for these latest findings.

“Investment buyers are driving sales of foreclosed homes, but they have largely ignored the rest of the market,” said Quinn Eddins, director of research at Radar Logic.

“On average, foreclosed homes are priced at a 39 percent discount to other homes,” Eddins said. “Investors believe they can purchase these properties at a significant discount to their future value. Sellers in the rest of the market have not lowered their prices to levels where investors feel confident they can make an adequate return on their investment.”

Eddins explained that non-investment buyers are not as active this year.

“Widespread negative equity is reducing demand as it makes it difficult for would-be move-up buyers to sell their current homes,” he said. “And buyers in general are wary of making a down payment of 20 or 25 percent in an environment where home prices are widely expected to fall over the next 12 to 24 months.”

The report also revealed that home prices increased less than usual this spring.

The RPX Composite price measures home prices in 25 major U.S. metropolitan areas. So far in 2011, the RPX Composite has increased just 0.5 percent.

The weak performance of the RPX Composite price is consistent with the fact that, unlike most years, the market for foreclosed homes is the segment of the housing market with the strongest sales growth, according to Radar Logic.


Source: DSNews
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Friday, May 27, 2011

New-home sales rise 7.3% in April

U.S. sales of new homes posted their second solid monthly gain in April after hitting extremely low levels in February, according to data released Tuesday by the Commerce Department.

In April, sales rose 7.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 323,000 after an 8.3% increase in March, the Commerce Department reported.

The increase surprised economists, who had forecast a slight decline to 295,000, according to a MarketWatch survey.

Sales gains took place in all four regions. Sales rose 15.1% in the West, 7.7% in the Northeast, 4.9% in the Midwest and 4.3% in the South.

Those gains followed February's steep drop to a 278,000-unit pace. Analysts had attributed that weakness in part to winter storms that depressed figures in the East and the Midwest as well as a California tax credit that has expired.

Economists were cautious about reading too much into the increase in April new-home sales, as the level of sales remains very depressed and not too far above record lows.

"Is it a rebound that is for real? At least it's a start toward one," said Robert Brusca, chief economist at FAO Economics.

Compared with April 2010, last month's sales were down 23.1%.

On a three-month moving average — which reduces the month-to-month variance in the hugely volatile release — sales rose to a 300,000 rate from 296,000.

Economists at Barclays Capital noted that new-home sales have ranged from 275,000 to 310,000 since May 2010, when the effects of the federal tax break for home buyers began to wane.

By comparison, monthly new-home sales averaged a 1.05 million pace in 2006, just when the housing bubble was beginning to collapse.

In April, the number of unsold new homes on the market slipped 2.8% to a record-low 175,000. That represented a 6.5-month supply at the April sales pace, the leanest inventory since April 2010. This is down from a peak of 12.2 months in January 2009.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

New Listings 5/25/11



8612 CADILLAC AVE , LOS ANGELES 90034


$349,000

2 Bed


1 Bath


You'll appreciate this charming starter home located in the quant neighborhood of Beverlywood, the 2 bedroom, 1 bath remodel has amazing value. The open floor plan offers generous bedrooms with beautiful

hardwood floors throughout, the tiled floors lead you into the remodeled kitchen with granite counters, stainless appliances, and a cozy breakfast nook. The bonus room is great for a playroom, office, or den. The extra long 4 car driveway leads to the garage and cozy back yard that's perfect for entertaining. This is a Short

Sale. Listing Agent is a Certified Pre-Foreclosure Specialist with an In-House Negotiation Team.


17111 PALISADES CIR , PACIFIC PALISADES 90272

$549,000

3 Bed

2 Bath

1777 SF

This Short Sale Opportunity Knocks! Serenity abounds in this Palisades Highlands townhouse featuring 3 Bedrooms and 2.5 baths and views of the tranquil Santa Monica Mountains. A spacious master suite has a private balcony. The chef's kitchen features a Viking range, stainless steel dishwasher, refrigerator/freezer, granite counter tops and refurbished cabinets. There is large open floor plan living room w/fireplace which steps up to dining room w/wet bar and out to the patio. There is an over-sized two car garage w/ built-in workbench and storage shelving big enough to fit your cars, bikes and beach/pool gear. Listing Agent #2 is a Certified Distressed Property Specialist.

For more information please contact Toni Patillo directly.

Toni Patillo & Associates
Broker Of Record l DRE#0313287
Keller Williams Realty Santa Monica
2701 Ocean Park Blvd., Ste. 140 • Santa Monica, CA 90405
Office (310) 482-2035 • Fax(424) 744-4148

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Monday, May 16, 2011

Nontraditional data may help mortgage applicants


Millions of Americans whose credit scores have declined in recent years because of economic stresses could start rebuilding their scores if their rent, utility, cellphone, insurance and other monthly payments were reported to the national credit bureaus.

But typically they are not, and as a consequence fail to show up as positive factors on credit scoring systems such as FICO or VantageScore. These on-time payments essentially go to waste for consumers, even though monthly rents often can be as large as mortgage bills, and years of utility and other payments are widely recognized as strong indicators of creditworthiness.

Now for the secret: Under federal law, these unreported accounts need not go unused. You as a mortgage applicant are guaranteed the right to bring evidence of your unreported on-time payments to lenders, and they in turn are required to consider those records in making a decision on granting you a home loan — provided that you request it. If a loan officer refuses, he or she could be open to legal penalties.

Although federal financial regulators generally acknowledge the right to present supplementary data that consumers enjoy under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, only one — the National Credit Union Administration — has published guidance informing lenders that they are required to comply.

Factoring in so-called nontraditional credit accounts not only could provide important help to buyers and owners with recession-scarred scores but could also aid the estimated 35 million to 54 million consumers who don't — or barely — show up in the files of Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, the three national credit bureaus. Many of these are young people with thin files with just a couple of credit accounts, and many are minorities.

So why aren't more consumers documenting their otherwise unreported monthly payments? And why are loan officers likely to stare at account records and say: Are you kidding? We only look at credit files.

The problem is complex. Almost no one in the consumer finance field has paid much attention to the Federal Reserve's Regulation B that interprets the rules on treatment of alternative credit. Lenders who know about it don't want the hassles of sorting through "shoe box" records that may not be accurate. Major players in the mortgage market such as the Federal Housing Administration, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac all say they will accept alternative credit data but have restrictions on what they will consider. The FHA, for example, does not permit applicants with low credit scores to boost them by adding positive, nontraditional data.

The credit industry is eager to incorporate accurate, nontraditional information but is ill-equipped to deal with sources that cannot provide large and regular amounts of verified reports.

"The [national] bureaus know that alternative data is highly predictive," says Barrett Burns, chief executive of VantageScore, a joint venture created by Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. "We think millions of people could benefit" if it were collected and loaded into scoreable files. Experian already collects positive rent-payment data on about 8 million units in large apartment complexes and incorporates the information into its scores, he said.

But Burns noted that the industry has had difficulty accessing information on utility payments in some states, and collection of cellphone account records has raised privacy issues. Without accurate information being available in large quantities, he said, it is difficult to assist large numbers of consumers.

Nonetheless, efforts are underway to mine unreported credit data and transform it into something useful. A private firm, Trycera Credit Services, has announced an agreement with the National Credit Reporting Assn. — a trade group representing companies that provide the merged credit bureau reports and scores used by mortgage originators — to independently verify the accuracy of consumer-supplied payment records. Those records can then be provided to lenders as part of the standard credit reporting and scoring information used in mortgage underwriting.

Michael G. Nathans, president of Trycera Credit Services, says that the project is just getting off the ground but that preliminary information is available at the company's website at http://www.trycera.com. The service will cost $20 to verify rental and mortgage payments, $15 for other verifications. Trycera also offers Visa debit cards that can help consumers document their nontraditional credit payments in a scoreable format.

Of course, there are no guarantees that lenders will accept your alternative credit data. But federal law requires them to at least consider it — if you ask.
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Thursday, May 5, 2011

Mortgage rates drift lower, Freddie Mac says

Here's a bit of good news for anyone still thinking about refinancing a home loan -- mortgage rates have once again drifted lower for well-qualified buyers.

A Freddie Mac report on Thursday said the lenders it surveys were offering 30-year fixed-rate mortgages at an average rate of 4.71% early this week, compared with 4.78% the week before.

Rates for 15-year fixed loans, a popular option for homeowners looking to refinance mortgages, averaged 3.89%, down from 3.97%.

Buyers would have paid 0.7% of the loan amount upfront to the lenders to obtain the rates, according to Freddie Mac, the government-controlled home finance giant. Borrowers typically owe significant additional fees to third parties such as appraisers, and can "buy down" rates by paying lenders more initially.

The initial rates for floating-rate mortgages fell as well, Freddie Mac said.

Fixed mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which has fallen recently on weaker economic data. Laguna Niguel mortgage broker Jeff Lazerson said rates of 4.375% were available to some people with good credit this week because of the trend.

Freddie Mac conducts one of the most widely watched surveys of home loans, asking lenders across the country what rates they are offering to borrowers with solid credit who have at least a 20% down payment or equivalent equity in their homes if they are refinancing.

Source: LATimes

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Wednesday, May 4, 2011

New Listing: 7120 LA TIJERA BLVD #D101, LOS ANGELES 90045



$149,000

1 Bed

1 Bath

664 SF

This stunning mediterranian style condo offers an open and flowing floor plan great for entertaining. Complete with pergo wood flooring, living room with fireplace, and European style kitchen.The building features a spa, gym, and a romantic saltillo tiled courtyard. One covered gated parking space and one tuck under. Full size stackable washer/dryer hookup in the unit, Central A/C, and security system. This is a Short Sale. Listing Agent is a Certified Pre-Foreclosure Specialist.
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