Could accelerating all foreclosures actually fix housing?

mortgage delinquencies Could accelerating all foreclosures actually fix housing?

Rising mortgage delinquencies

As the White House seeks methods do save distressed homeowners, a growing number of economists are advocating for the opposite, pushing for acceleration of “the inevitable” to expedite the bottoming out of the housing sector so a natural recovery can begin, according to CNN Money.

“Loans enter into foreclosure, but never come out,” Thomas Lawler, founder of Lawler Economic & Housing Consulting told CNN. “If this keeps going on, you have a continual overhang that never goes away.”

Shadow inventories

Some claim shadow inventories are a myth while others call it the plague of housing that threatens a slow recovery.

“They can’t be a glacier hanging over the market with everyone waiting for it to fall,” Jim Gaines, research economist at The Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University said to Fortune Magazine. “Those properties have to clear the market.”

What is the answer?

It is clear that the current regulated path isn’t working, just look at the difference over two years in the chart above. Could acceleration be the answer? What of the hundreds of illegal foreclosures happening every year and the homeowners who never anticipated being so far underwater? Could aiding homeowners help or would that slow down the inevitable bottoming out of the market so desperately needed before we recover? No one agrees on the way forward, but the graph above better change- quickly.

The CSI Effect

CSI effect

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Beautiful dream homes

Foreclosed Home Owners Take Out Their Frustrations on Properties

damaged-foreclosure-homes-for-saleSome foreclosed home owners are taking out their anger on the homes they are forced to leave behind, smashing holes in the walls, scribbling graffiti everywhere, leaving piles of trash, and ripping out appliances.

More banks — facing a growing problem from trashed foreclosures — are opting to offer homes at big discounts rather than fix the repairs, which can send surrounding home values in the neighborhood spiraling down, experts say.

Real estate pro Nick Davis with RE/MAX Premier Group told the Tampa Tribune that he has seen some home values greatly diminish from foreclosed home owners who have trashed it. For example, he recalls one home that would have fetched $250,000 back in 2006 during the housing boom that would now sell for about $75,000 because it was trashed by the former owners.

"It looks like someone took revenge," Davis says about the home, which had holes in the wall, appliances ripped out, and piles of trash. "Unfortunately, we’re seeing more of this. We’ve seen cement in the plumbing systems, the air conditioners ripped out from the outside, wiring being removed."

BankruptcySome real estate professionals and lenders are even blaming the high number of real estate deals falling apart due to more homes being left in poor condition by the original owners.

Buyers "look at these homes and say, ‘If this is the damage I can see, what else did the home owner do to this place that I can’t see?’ " Davis says.

Some home owners facing foreclosure place the blame on banks for their woes so they leave behind a mess for the bank. But trashing a home can backfire. Some banks are saying they may even start taking steps to sue home owners for the cost of repairs, and law enforcement officials say home owners can be charged with vandalism as well as theft if they remove items that don’t belong to them from the home.

"Anything that came with the house needs to stay with the house," says Larry McKinnon, spokesman for the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office in Florida. "You may think you’re getting back at the bank. But the bank may have the last laugh."

Remembering Mother Teresa

What is a short sale? [infographic]

You or someone your know, may be one of the nearly 23% of homeowners whose properties now are worth less than the underlying mortgage loan and you find yourself in a situation where you have to move (a new job, perhaps, or because you can no longer afford the payments on this house and are hoping to downsize), the only way to sell your house successfully is either pay the bank the difference between the sales price and your mortgage balance out of your own pocket… or convince the lender to accept less cash than you actually owe.

While a short sale may make sense for some, the pros and cons should be weighed carefully before you get the ball rolling. In this infographic, we walk you through the basics of short sales, who should consider one and the typical steps in the process.

ShortSale_final

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If you are someone you care about is wondering about the possibility of a short sale and if they are a candidate. Please call or email Emmanuel@EmmanuelFonte.com

Constructive Concrete: Incredible Carbon-Negative Cement

What could be better than building concrete structures without creating more CO2? How about this: a new form of cement that actually absorbs carbon dioxide rather than being a primary source of its man-made emissions.

Consider this: 1 out of 20 units of carbon released by human activity into the atmosphere comes directly from concrete – this does not even take into account other construction-related activities, such as on-site vehicles or other building materials.

So how does an age-old, nearly-universal building material move from being destructive to the environment to being constructive for pollution? “By replacing the calcium carbonates used in cement formulation with magnesium silicates, and by using a low-temperature production process that runs on biomass fuels … developing a new class of cement that offers performance and cost parity with ordinary Portland Cement, but with a negative carbon footprint.”

Novacem™s Carbon Negative Cement is two steps in the right direction, simultaneously displacing a carbon-intensive building block and substituting it with something that goes beyond simply doing no harm. As for awards: “Novacem is a World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer for 2011 and features on MIT Technology Review’s list of the ten most important emerging technologies for 2010. It is also on the Global Cleantech 100, is a Wall Street Journal Technology Innovation winner and a Bloomberg New Energy Pioneer for 2010.”

ThumbSaver – Magnetic Nail Setter

If you’re like me, you’ve smashed fingers while nailing or using a drill to drive screws. Here is an amazing thumb saving device.

The ThumbSaver helps to position a nail without exposing finger to hammer hit. It has a powerful magnet that can hold all sizes of nails, stable and screw etc. And its bent design allows it to reach all narrow spaces. BUY | $12.99

3D Digital Models Sliced in Plan & Section

Plans and sections provide blueprints for building, but a three-dimensional slice along the horizontal or vertical axis through a house provides subjective spatial and experiential data almost impossible to capture (or show) in other graphics.

Sectional slices of entire sites can show how views, daylight and shade work within and between neighboring houses. Detail cuts can illustrate relative heights and provide a snapshot of space shapes, and hybrid models give glimpses into three dimensional-complexity hard to capture in two-dimensional pictures or images.

Plans add dimension and depth to flat drawings, modeling the most important features by slicing below the ceiling to show the inner workings of a level and its relationship to outdoor volumes.

But beyond bland the bland slice, dice and be done approach lies a rich set of possibilities for layering a sectional photo of a real model (or digital file) with additional annotations, information and sketches, either to explore or simply represent a design in progress.

For all the versatility of computer models, though, there is still something to be said for the act of creating physical ones – particularly if they are treated as evolving rather than finished works, like this 1960s Sydney Opera House section assembled in part to resolve engineering and architectural decisions.