Showing posts with label Real estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Real estate. Show all posts

Friday, April 2, 2010

Housing Prices Declining Again

Housing Prices Declining Again

According to this Real Estate Economy Watch article, Fear Seen Driving Prices Lower than Last 20 Years, the housing markets in most US cities "will see prices fall below the lowest levels of the last 20 years" according to the House Price Forecast from University Financial Associates (UFA) in Ann Arbor Michigan.

The article quotes Dennis Capozza, the Dykema Professor of Business Administration in the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, and a founding principal of UFA, as saying the "Detroit metro was the canary in the coal mine this cycle, with falling house prices arriving earlier than in other metros. Other metros that have already or will soon converge to pre-bubble real prices include Las Vegas, Phoenix, the inland California metros and many south Florida metros."

Overall, the UFA's forecast "would take the national median price of a home in most markets below $101,000, the national median in 1990, according to the Census Bureau." This prediction comes after other recent data which shows that housing prices are headed downward again. This will result in more short sales and foreclosures as underwater homeowners and real estate investors walk away from their upside down (i.e. negative equity) homes and properties.

Short Sale and Foreclosure Help and Assistance for Real Estate Investors, Home Builders and Developers in Nashville TN and Middle TN. If you are a Nashville Tennessee, Franklin Tennessee, Brentwood Tennessee, Nolensville Tennessee, Spring Hill Tennessee, Murfreesboro Tennessee, Smyrna Tennessee, La Vergne Tennessee, or Middle Tennessee real estate investor, home builder, condo developer or real estate developer who cannot pay the property/project mortgage payments (due to the poor economy, adverse financing conditions, slow sales, loss of investment property tenants, vacancy issues, lack of funds to complete the project, feuding business partners, etc.), have already defaulted on the mortgage, or are already in foreclosure, or owe more than the property/project is worth, please contact me to discuss your options including a short sale (a real estate short sale occurs when the sale proceeds are not sufficient to pay off all the mortgages and liens on the property/project). I am a Middle Tennessee distressed real estate, short sale, pre-foreclosure (preforeclosure) and foreclosure REALTOR and Expert. I primarily help sellers (property owners, real estate investors, home builders and real estate developers) of distressed real estate, short sales, pre-foreclosures, foreclosures, investment properties, failed new construction projects and struggling commercial real estate developments located in Middle Tennessee (Rutherford County TN, Williamson County TN, Davidson County TN, Murfreesboro TN, Smyrna TN, La Vergne TN, Eagleville TN, Lascassas TN, Rockvale TN, Christiana TN, Brentwood TN, Franklin TN, Nashville TN, Belle Meade TN, Nolensville TN, Springfield TN, Gallatin TN and Mt. Juliet TN). If you do need to short sell your home or property, or you need a quick sale due to being in foreclosure, you can request short sale and foreclosure help and assistance on my website at Get Short Sale and Foreclosure Help and Assistance from a Nashville Tennessee and Middle Tennessee Short Sale and Foreclosure REALTOR and Real Estate Expert.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Underwater Homeowners Walking Away From Their Homes

Underwater Homeowners Walking Away From Their Homes

According to this New York Times article, Homeowners Walking Away, a study produced by the Financial Trust Index (a financial and economic research group formed by the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and The University of Chicago Booth School of Business) states that more than 25% of foreclosures are actually strategic defaults where the homeowners walk away from their homes and mortgages even though they can afford to pay their mortgages. The Press Release, When Homeowners Walk Away: New Research Reveals More than 25 Percent of Mortgage Loan Defaults are Strategic, and Study, Moral and Social Constraints to Strategic Default on Mortgages, show that while most homeowners generally believe that walking away from a home is immoral, many will still do it if their negative home equity situation reaches a certain threshold. According to the Press Release "17 percent of households would default, even if they can afford to pay their mortgage, when the equity shortfall reaches 50 percent of the value of the house." Given that information and the fact that a Deutsche Bank report published this past summer (See my blog post on the subject - SCARY STUFF: About half of U.S. mortgages seen underwater by 2011) predicts that about 50% of all US mortgages will be underwater by 2011, it is highly probable that the foreclosure crisis could actually accelerate in the near future rather then settling down as several organizations have suggested. I predict that there will be record numbers of loan modifications, short sales and foreclosures over the next 3 years.

According to the Press Release "People under the age of 35 and over the age of 65 were less likely to say it was morally wrong to default compared to middle-aged respondents." I guess that younger people and older people view the strategic default decision more as a business decision than a moral one. There are in fact consequences of walking away from your home and mortgage including damaged credit, which will make it very difficult to borrow money in the future, get credit of any kind, obtain insurance (insurance companies frequently check credit as part of the insurance underwriting process) and even get a job (employers frequently check credit as part of the job application process). Another pitfall of the strategic default is that you are open to a potential deficiency judgment where the mortgage lender could pursue you for their losses not recouped by selling your foreclosed home. For these reasons, I highly recommend trying a short sale instead of a strategic default.

If you are a homeowner in Middle Tennessee who cannot pay your mortgage (due to losing your job, having your income reduced, illness, health problems, etc.), or your home is already in foreclosure, or you owe more than your home is worth, please contact me to discuss your options including loan modifications or short sales. I am a Middle Tennessee distressed real estate, short sale, pre-foreclosure (preforeclosure) and foreclosure REALTOR and Expert. I serve real estate owners, homeowners and investment property owners in Rutherford County TN, Williamson County TN, Davidson County TN, Murfreesboro TN, Smyrna TN, La Vergne TN, Eagleville TN, Lascassas TN, Rockvale TN, Christiana TN, Brentwood TN, Franklin TN, Nashville TN and Belle Meade TN. If you do need to short sell your home (a real estate short sale occurs when the sale proceeds are not sufficient to pay off all the mortgages and liens on the property/home), or you need a quick sale due to being in foreclosure, you can request short sale and foreclosure help and assistance on my website at Get Short Sale and Foreclosure Help and Assistance from a Middle Tennessee Short Sale and Foreclosure REALTOR and Real Estate Expert.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Over 6,600 Home Foreclosure Filings Per Day

Over 6,600 Home Foreclosure Filings Per Day

According to this REUTERS article, Foreclosures mark pace of enduring U.S. housing crisis, in the US there is a foreclosure every 13 seconds which translates into "more than 6,600 home foreclosure filings per day, according to the Center for Responsible Lending, a nonpartisan watchdog group based in Durham, North Carolina. With nearly two million already this year, the flood of foreclosures shows no sign of abating any time soon."

According to the article, "the country's worst housing downturn since record-keeping began in the late 19th century may only get worse since foreclosures, which started with subprime borrowers, have now moved on to the much bigger prime loan market on the back of mounting unemployment. In congressional testimony last month Michael Barr, the Treasury Department's assistant secretary for financial institutions, said more than 6 million families could face foreclosure over the next three years."

The article references a September 2009 report from a FL foreclosure task force as finding that people are now defaulting on their mortgages for different reasons. The report states "People are no longer defaulting simply because of a change in the payment structure of their loan. They are defaulting because of lost jobs or reduced hours or pay."

According to the article, "A recent pickup in sales and home prices in some regions has been heralded as a sign that the crisis in residential real estate may be close to bottoming out, after the steepest price decline since at least 1890. But nearly half of recent sales have been attributed to foreclosures or "short sales" at bargain-basement prices. Even as the U.S. economy seems to be recovering from its worst recession since the Great Depression, mortgage delinquencies continue to rise. And that adds risk to any relatively upbeat assessment, since foreclosures depress the value of nearby properties while eroding the net worth of homeowners and the tax base for communities nationwide. The Center for Responsible Lending says foreclosures are on track to wipe out $502 billion in property values this year. That spillover effect from foreclosures is one reason why Celia Chen of Moody's Economy.com says nationwide home prices won't regain the peak levels they reached in 2006 until 2020. In states hardest-hit by the housing bust, like Florida and California, the rebound will take until 2030, Chen predicted."

The article quotes Celia Chen of Moody's as saying "The default rates, the delinquency rates, are still rising. Rising joblessness combined with a large degree of negative equity are going to cause foreclosures to increase. Anyone doubting that the recovery in U.S. real estate prices will be long and hard should take a look at Japan, Chen said. Prices there are still off about 50 percent from the peak they hit 15 years ago."

According to the article, the chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association, Jay Brinkmann, thought that foreclosures would peak in the second half of 2010. The problem is that this somewhat rosy prediction is based on unemployment falling in 2010 after reaching a peak "barely in double digits by the middle of next year." As we already know, the US unemployment rate reached 9.8% in September 2009 and show no signs of going down anytime soon.

I think this article provides even more evidence that the US real estate/housing short sale and foreclosure crisis is not going to end anytime soon. As more people lose their jobs, short sales and foreclosures will increase for the next several years since it will take until at least 2011 before the unemployment starts to go back down and even then it will take until at least 2012 or 2013 before the US unemployment reaches a level where people can afford to pay their mortgages. The net effect of all this will be that US real estate and housing prices will continue to decline for the next several years leaving more homeowners underwater.

If you are a homeowner in Middle Tennessee who is unemployed, have seen your income decline, has been turned down for a loan forbearance or loan modification and your home is worth less than your mortgage balance, please contact me to discuss selling your home via a short sale. I am a Middle Tennessee distressed real estate, short sale, pre-foreclosure (preforeclosure) and foreclosure expert and REALTOR. I serve real estate owners, homeowners and investment property owners in Rutherford County TN, Williamson County TN, Davidson County TN, Murfreesboro TN, Smyrna TN, La Vergne TN, Eagleville TN, Lascassas TN, Rockvale TN, Christiana TN, Brentwood TN, Franklin TN, Nashville TN and Belle Meade TN.

If you need to sell your home fast via a short sale you can my request help on my website at Get Help and Assistance from a Middle TN Short Sale and Foreclosure Expert and REALTOR.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

My Thoughts on the "Doomed" Housing Market: Listen When "Dr. Doom" Speaks

According to this CNBC article, US Economy Facing 'Death by a Thousand Cuts': Roubini, Nouriel Roubini says "more banks will fail and residential real estate prices have more room to decline."  According to Roubini, the economy faces a real threat of a "double dip" recession due to the severely damaged financial system and a lack of consumer spending.  Roubini says "the securitization market is all but dead, the credit markets are still frozen and consumers will continue to save more rather than spend and boost growth."  He predicts that by the time this financial and economic crisis is all over the following will happen:
  • More than 1,000 financial institutions could fail.
  • Housing prices will likely to fall another 12 percent in the next year making the total decline approximately 40 percent since the market began its steep decline. This will result in nearly one half of all homeowners owing more on their mortgages than their houses are worth.
Regarding housing construction, Roubini states "The gap between supply and demand is so huge we could stop producing new homes for a year to get rid of all the inventory  This price adjustment, in my opinion, is going to continue for another year."

Regarding commercial real estate, he warns that regulators are repeating some of the same mistakes made during the financial crisis. He states "Allowing forbearance in the deeply troubled sector will mask underlying problems that will come back and bite the economy".

While I do have a BA degree with a major in Economics from an Ivy League University, I am not a professor or professional economist.  However, I have been saying much of the same for months now.  That is that housing prices are still too high and there is still too much new construction.  We do not need new construction reduced to such and such levels - we need all new spec construction to come to a halt for at least a year.  Of course, that will not happen.  Instead new homes will be built, housing will continue to decline, more short sales and foreclosures will occur and more bailouts will be doled out to foolish banks and lenders.  It's an endless cycle of disaster.

With respect to the Middle Tennessee real estate market:
  • Rutherford County Tennessee: Murfreesboro TN, Smyrna TN and La Vergne TN (LaVergne TN)
  • Williamson County Tennessee: Brentwood TN and Franklin TN
  • Davidson County Tennessee: Nashville TN and Belle Meade TN
I have been saying since I moved here in September 2008 that the Middle Tennessee housing and commercial real estate market is significantly over built and that housing prices are still too high.  Since the peak of the real estate market in Middle Tennessee occurred in late 2007/early 2008 (i.e. 2 years later than most places) the market here will decline for a few more years.  Also, a large portion of the homes sold with 95-100% subprime and FHA financing which have high default rates so short sales and foreclosures will be high in Middle Tennessee.  Therefore, I predict that the Middle Tennessee real estate market will do worse than the US average over the next few years.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Prime Mortgages Make Up One Third of Foreclosure Actions

According to this Forbes.com article, Prime Mortgages Are Failing, between April and June of 2009 13% of all homeowners in the United States were either behind on their mortgage payments, or in foreclosure. If that is not bad enough news, the article goes on to state that while subprime (sub prime) ARM loan defaults decreased, the decrease was offset by large a large increase in the number of delinquent prime mortgages (that is mortgages to the most credit worthy borrowers who actually invested down payments, had verifiable jobs and excellent credit). The article quotes Jay Brinkmann, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), as stating "Prime fixed-rate loans now account for one in three foreclosure starts. A year ago they accounted for one in five. While 41 states had increases in the foreclosure start rate for prime fixed-rate loans, 43 states had decreases in that rate for subprime (sub prime) adjustable-rate loans." According to the article, the MBA defines delinquencies as those between 30 and 90 days past due. Homeowners beyond 90 days past due, or in foreclosure, are identified as seriously delinquent. The article blames increasing unemployment and declining property values (think underwater homeowners) as the main causes of this huge increase in prime mortgage foreclosure starts. According to the article, California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada continue to make up the largest % of foreclosures, but that % has decreased from 46% in the 1st quarter of 2009 to 44% in the 2nd quarter of 2009. The article states that Florida is in particularly bad shape with 12% of mortgages in the process of foreclosure, and at least 22.8% are delinquent. Also, according to the article, there was a major jump in Federal Housing Authority (FHA) foreclosures.

Here is my synopsis of the real estate market based on the information above and other information.
  • The most financially responsible borrowers (prime mortgagors) are hurting. Even large down payments are not enough to counter the huge price declines. More homeowners underwater = more foreclosures.
  • Foreclosures are increasing in general. This will cause more price declines.
  • While the "Fab 4" (California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada) are still the kingdoms of foreclosure and prices will surely continue to fall in those markets, the decrease in % of total foreclosures nationwide from 46% to 44% while overall foreclosures increased means that foreclosures in other states increased at a higher pace that the "Fab 4" states. This means prices will decline nearly everywhere.
  • More distressed homeowners will cause more people to try to rent out their homes. Until prices decline to a point where monthly rents exceed total monthly housing payments prices will continue to decline. Rampant foreclosures will make sure prices actually head below this normal equilibrium.
  • Government meddling (expanded FHA mortgages, tax credits, etc.) has not and will not work to save the real estate market. The market is correcting itself to sustainable levels. FHA mortgages are now failing at alarming rates. Tax payers will once again have to foot the bill for regulatory incompetence. It seems that very few people are stating the truth about the real estate market. That is that high housing prices are bad for people (especially lower income people) and high commercial real estate prices are bad for business, which is in turn bad for job growth. Also, real estate has never (until the last few years) been the driver of the economic bus. It has been the passenger, meaning that economic growth (and the resultant business, job and income growth) caused housing prices to increase and new construction to increase. Not the other way around. Any attempt to work in reverse logic = insanity.
Please be clear about my opinion. "The worst is yet to come." I have been saying this since early 2006 and I see no reason to change my outlook on the housing and commercial real estate markets.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

TransUnion.com: Mortgage Loan Delinquency Rates Rise

According to this TransUnion News Release, TransUnion.com: Mortgage Loan Delinquency Rates Rise - But Pace Is Slowing, mortgage delinquencies (the % of borrowers that are 60 or more days past due) increased for the 10th straight quarter reaching an all-time high national average of 5.81% for the 2nd quarter of 2009, which is an 11.3% increase over the 1st quarter's national average of 5.22%. The news release goes on to say that the "good news" is that this increase is less than the almost 16% that occurred from the 4th quarter of 2009 to the 1st quarter of 2009. Of course the news release goes on to state that year over year mortgage loan delinquencies increased a staggering 65%.

The Analysis section of the release reads "In its first quarter analysis, TransUnion reported a potential positive sign in mortgage delinquency rate trends. For the first time since the recession began at the end of 2007, the quarter-to-quarter growth rate for national mortgage delinquency showed a decrease," said FJ Guarrera, vice president of TransUnion's financial services division. "Now, with the release of second quarter results, we see even more deceleration in mortgage delinquency, an indication that the mortgage market is beginning to stabilize." "There are several complementary economic statistics at the national level to support this guarded optimism, such as the increase in consumer confidence in the second quarter. As for the labor market, although unemployment had continued to rise through the second quarter, July figures for unemployment insurance were lower than expected. Furthermore, recent figures from the government show the unemployment rate actually dipping to 9.4 percent nationally in July. These encouraging economic signs, coupled with a decrease in the rate of mortgage delinquency growth, suggest that we may have seen the worst of the recession. This is particularly noteworthy, in that delinquency statistics are generally lagging indicators of the economic environment," continued Guarrera.

The news release continues by stating that they project that the average mortgage loan delinquency rate will peak at just under 7% by the end of the year. The release goes on by stating However, due to a continued downward trend in housing prices throughout the year as well as high unemployment levels, TransUnion does not see national delinquency rates beginning to fall until the first half of 2010.

Frankly, I find TransUnion's rosy views comical. First, unemployment only fell to 9.4% in July due to nearly 500,000 being removed from the unemployment figures not because they found a job, but because they UNEMPLOYED TOO LONG! Also, there is no way that the mortgage loan delinquencies have turned a corner. With unemployment continuing to rise, increasing numbers of homeowners owing more than their homes are worth (i.e. underwater homeowners) and the wave of ARM mortgages coming due in May 2010 you can absolutely bank on increasing foreclosures and short sales. There is just no way around it. The bottom is something we have yet to see.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

RealtyTrac: U.S. Foreclosure Activity Up 32% from July 2008 and 7% from June 2009

According to this RealtyTrac press release, U.S. FORECLOSURE ACTIVITY INCREASES 7 PERCENT IN JULY, in July 2009 US foreclosures increased by 32% from July 2008 and by 7% from June 2009. According to the press release, July is the 3rd time in the last 5 months that a new record has been set for foreclosure activity. Again, the 4 hardest hit states were Nevada, California, Arizona and Florida. However, there were a many other notable problem areas with Utah at #5, Idaho at #6, Georgia at #7, Illinois at #8, and Colorado at #9. Tennessee ranked 22nd (worse than average), while Pennsylvania, a more stable area, ranked 34th (better than average). A complete list of the July 2009 state by state foreclosure rankings are below (courtesy of RealtyTrac):

U.S. Foreclosure Market Data by State – July 2009



Properties with Foreclosure Filings

Rate Rank

State Name

NOD

LIS

NTS

NFS

REO

Total

1/every X HU (rate)

%? from Jun 09

%? from Jul 08

--

U.S.

62,939

71,565

104,830

33,557

87,258

360,149

355

6.74

32.32

33

Alabama

0

0

1,630

0

452

2,082

1,026

-23.34

141.25*

24

Alaska

3

0

266

0

102

371

761

76.67

79.23

3

Arizona

2

0

14,120

0

5,572

19,694

135

16.99

47.52

21

Arkansas

104

0

1,319

0

828

2,251

572

35.03*

110.77*

2

California

50,917

0

35,802

0

21,385

108,104

123

6.99

49.55

9

Colorado

5

0

3,947

0

1,536

5,488

388

-4.12

2.08

29

Connecticut

0

1,084

0

190

295

1,569

917

7.84

-22.10

37

Delaware

0

0

0

226

72

298

1304

-12.61

125.76


District of Columbia

267

0

219

0

35

521

546

24.94

-6.80

4

Florida

0

35,227

0

14,502

6,757

56,486

154

6.78

23.11

7

Georgia

1

0

7,616

0

3,519

11,136

356

-20.59

10.68

15

Hawaii

186

0

481

0

323

990

512

40.23

332.31

6

Idaho

1,290

0

1,051

0

150

2,491

253

32.43*

166.13*

8

Illinois

0

6,770

0

4,060

3,694

14,524

361

34.53

62.92

17

Indiana

0

1,015

0

1,881

2,290

5,186

536

-6.86

8.43

43

Iowa

0

0

227

0

374

601

2,212

7.32

20.68

30

Kansas

0

183

0

408

728

1,319

925

37.68

94.83

39

Kentucky

0

405

0

488

341

1,234

1,545

9.30

0.65

40

Louisiana

0

6

0

928

183

1,117

1,664

-23.07

9.83

41

Maine

0

138

0

212

57

407

1,712

39.38

59.61

11

Maryland

0

3,521

0

633

998

5,152

450

66.19

65.98

16

Massachusetts

0

3,548

0

1,049

517

5,114

532

58.77

43.09

19

Michigan

1

0

2,695

0

5,561

8,257

548

-39.32

-28.76

20

Minnesota

12

0

2,266

0

1,847

4,125

559

23.80

146.86

45

Mississippi

0

0

354

0

124

478

2,625

-36.69

151.58*

27

Missouri

5

0

1,729

0

1,441

3,175

834

2.02

-9.60†

47

Montana

0

0

2

0

88

90

4,839

45.16

-36.62

46

Nebraska

0

164

0

5

26

195

4,004

30.87

-70.45

1

Nevada

7,139

0

7,833

0

4,563

19,535

56

4.11

94.18

31

New Hampshire

0

0

611

0

12

623

954

42.24

-31.01

18

New Jersey

0

4,210

0

1,505

752

6,467

541

49.25

39.92

32

New Mexico

0

479

0

270

128

877

983

23.52

61.21*

38

New York

0

4,613

0

871

470

5,954

1,334

22.76

-3.45

36

North Carolina

1,120

0

756

0

1,552

3,428

1,203

7.97

-20.33

48

North Dakota

0

1

0

26

23

50

6,211

56.25

-23.08

12

Ohio

0

5,062

0

3,032

2,927

11,021

460

-2.05

-18.10

35

Oklahoma

595

0

522

0

420

1,537

1,056

18.69

-11.05

10

Oregon

29

0

2,463

0

1,113

3,605

446

15.80

84.40

34

Pennsylvania

0

1,869

0

1,805

1,642

5,316

1,030

7.59

27.36*

28

Rhode Island

0

0

17

0

488

505

893

-44.63

2.23

26

South Carolina

0

1,209

0

484

735

2,428

833

44.01

82.15*

42

South Dakota

0

60

0

56

48

164

2,178

45.13

446.67*

22

Tennessee

0

0

2,263

0

2,309

4,572

596

-2.20

0.15††

25

Texas

24

0

7,194

0

4,859

12,077

781

0.45

16.64

5

Utah

1,234

0

1,728

0

732

3,694

250

6.42

93.30

50

Vermont

0

0

0

0

11

11

28,312

0.00

120.00

14

Virginia

5

0

3,927

0

2,474

6,406

511

23.48

11.51†

13

Washington

0

0

3,632

0

1,738

5,370

511

14.79

94.42*

49

West Virginia

0

0

119

0

20

139

6,350

21.93

265.79

23

Wisconsin

0

2,001

0

926

890

3,817

671

8.10

86.74*

44

Wyoming

0

0

41

0

57

98

2,473

16.67

-26.32

* Actual increase may not be as high due to data collection changes or improvements
† Collection of some records previously classified as NOD in this state was discontinued starting in January 2009
† Collection of some records previously classified as NOD in this state was discontinued starting in September 2008


U.S. Foreclosure Rates Heat Map – July 2009

A US Foreclosure Rates Heat Map for July 2009 is below (courtesy of RealtyTrac). As you can see, many counties in Tennessee experienced high rates of foreclosure activity in July 2009. Although the map is small (and difficult to tell for sure), it appears that some of the hardest hit counties are Davidson, Williamson and Rutherford. Rutherford County TN appears to have one of the highest foreclosure rates in the entire the state of Tennessee.



After the RealtyTrac press release was issued, a Bloomberg article, U.S. Foreclosure Filings Set Third Record-High in Five Months, obtained additional information from the following real estate sources and experts.
  • National Association of REALTORS (NAR) - The median price of an existing single-family house dropped 15.6 percent to $174,100 in the second quarter of 2009, the most in records dating to 1979.
  • Zillow - Almost one-quarter of U.S. mortgage holders are now underwater (i.e. they owe more in mortgage debt than their homes are worth).
  • Stuart Gabriel (director of the UCLA Ziman Center for Real Estate in Los Angeles) - “There are a slew of factors showing fundamental weakness on the demand side: tighter underwriting, job loss, investors who’ve been badly burned. We have not seen the bottom of the housing market.”
  • Diane Swonk (chief economist at Chicago-based Mesirow Financial Inc.) - “We’re in a deep hole. There is a whole new wave of foreclosures tied to the cyclical dynamics of the economy. It has been more profitable to put a home in foreclosure than restructure the loan. The only thing that helps is forgiveness of principal, and there is little willingness to do that.”
The information above from RealtyTrac and the additional information and quotes are all proof that what I said several months ago is true: "The worst is yet to come." The real estate market is still declining and will actually accelerate downward starting in the summer of 2010. The major issues that will continue to harm the real estate market are as follows:
  • Continued job losses.
  • More and more homeowners underwater.
  • Massive government debt which will result in higher interest rates.
There is no way to escape what is coming. All the events that will cause the impending declines have already happened.