Foreclosure Activity Drops to 6-Year Low

auction-saleForeclosure filings dropped 5 percent in April from March, with foreclosure filings down 23 percent in April from year ago levels, RealtyTrac reports. Nationwide foreclosure activity has reached a 74-month low or the lowest point since February 2007.

“The April numbers indicate that the pig is moving through the python when it comes to deferred foreclosures in judicial foreclosure states,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. “Foreclosure starts have been increasing for several months in many of the judicial states, and now that increased volume is showing up in the second stage of the process: the public foreclosure auction.”

Judicial foreclosure auctions rose 22 percent from March to April and were up 31 percent from year-ago levels, RealtyTrac reports. On the other hand, scheduled, non-judicial foreclosure auctions dropped 7 percent in March and are down 43 percent from last year.

Foreclosure starts are rising in several non-judicial states, Blomquist notes. While foreclosure starts have fallen nationwide, 22 states are still seeing a rise in foreclosures over the previous month, RealtyTrac reports. Some of those states include: New Jersey (138 percent increase), Connecticut (46 percent increase), Texas (37 percent increase), Georgia (35 percent increase), Oregon (16 percent increase), and California (13 percent increase).

Source: RealtyTrac and “RealtyTrac: April foreclosure filings drop 23%,” HousingWire

What Happens to the Housing Market When the Investors Leave?

home-for-rentInvestors and all-cash home buyers accounted for about 19 percent and 30 percent, respectively, of all sales in March, according to the National Association of REALTORS®. That represents a significant share of the market, and some analysts are concerned that as home prices rise, investor and all-cash demand will start to shrink. 

Who will step up in their place?

Robert Dietz, an economist with the National Association of Home Builders, notes in a recent article for U.S. News & World Report that “missing households” in today’s market who have delayed home ownership will eventually play catch up.

Notably, recent college grads who delayed home ownership by moving in with their parents or renting are expected to increase their homebuying activity. Also, surveys show a growth in the number of Americans living together as roommates who are not relatives. Americans have doubled or even tripled up in rental residences to help cut costs. But as more people get married and start families and jobs stabilize, household formation will likely grow, Dietz notes.

The nation’s population has grown, but the number of independent households of renters and owners has not kept pace. The Census Bureau’s American Community Survey shows that the population from 2006 to 2011 grew by more than 4 percent, but there was only about a 3 percent growth in the number of households.

Dietz expects that homebuying demand will come strongly from rental households that were created over the last seven years. In that time, the number of rental households in single-family homes grew by 2.5 million, or 22 percent. Traditional renting households in multifamily units increased by nearly 7 percent, Dietz notes. FE_DA130503ownerrenter

Dietz says the “real demand for housing is on the sidelines, particularly among younger Americans. … For these younger prospective homebuyers, policy debates concerning the future of the housing finance system and home ownership programs like the mortgage interest deduction will have real impacts on their housing and wealth status in the years to come.”

Source: “What Happens to the Housing Market When the Investors Leave?” U.S. News & World

Data on Homeownership from Gallup [INFOGRAPHIC]

Top 5 Reasons people buy. Looking at both Financial and Non-Financial concerns. 73% believe now is a good time to buy.5 top reasons people buy

Housing Market: Looking Up

housing trends for blog

Life in America: 1983 vs. Today

I graduated high school in 1983, so this was pretty intruiguing to me. Life in America 83-Todaysource

 

House Prices Are Back To Late 2003 Levels

Case-Shiller housing report came in stronger than expected, with average home prices across 20 metropolitan areas rising 9.3% from last year. That’s better than the 9% gain that had been expected.

Housing has a way to go in the recovery.

With the current reading, house prices are now just back to Autumn 2003 levels.

S&P home prices

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-house-prices-are-back-to-to-autumn-2003-levels-2013-4#ixzz2S3YfzBPY

HARP 2.0 more effective than previous version

Real estate rescue. Isolated 3D image on whiteThe Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) underwent some significant changes in 2012, evolving into HARP 2.0 and spurring a surge in refinances under the government-run program. Based on the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) 2012 report, HARP volume represented 22 percent of the total refinance volume in the fourth quarter. Additionally, 1,074,755 refinances were completed through HARP in 2012, bringing the total number of HARP refinances to over 2.1 million since the program’s inception.

So what specific changes attributed to the growth in HARP refinances? HARP 2.0 gives better access to borrowers who are at risk of losing their homes, particularly those who are severely underwater, reports Ilyce Glink of CBS MoneyWatch. Meg Burns, senior associate director for housing and regulatory policy for the FHFA, wrote in an email that “removing the 125 percent loan-to-value ceiling, waiving certain representations and warranties for lenders, eliminating the need for a new property appraisal and eliminating certain risk-based fees for borrowers who refinance into shorter-term mortgages has proven successful.”

According to CBS MoneyWatch, HARP 2.0 appeals to more lenders in part because the program does not hold the new originator responsible for anything that occurred with the first loan. “The limited success of HARP 1.0 can be attributed to a lack of lenders that embraced the program,” said Spencer Llewellyn, executive director of Loans 101, a company that provides data to the public about the mortgage industry.

As a result of the revamp, the market has seen a 600 percent annual increase in the number of underwater homeowners who received HARP loans.To find out what HARP 2.0 can do for you, check outwww.makinghomeaffordable.gov.

Pending Home Sales Index Up 7% Over 2012

market_recoveryPending home sales increased in March and remain above year-ago levels. However, contract activity in recent months shows only modest movement, according to the National Association of REALTORS®. 

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, rose 1.5 percent in March, over a downwardly revised figure in February. The index is 7 percent above year-ago numbers, reflecting the fact that pending sales have been above year-ago levels for the past 23 months.

“Contract activity has been in a narrow range in recent months, not from a pause in demand but because of limited supply.  Little movement is expected in near-term sales closings, but they should edge up modestly as the year progresses,” says Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist. “Job additions and rising household wealth will continue to support housing demand.”

In the Northeast, the index was unchanged in March, but is 6.3 percent higher than in March 2012.  In the Midwest the index increased 0.3 percent, 13.7 percent above a year ago. Pending home sales in the South rose 2.7 percent, which is 10.4 percent higher than March 2012.  In the West the index increased 1.5 percent, but is 4.3 percent below a year ago.

Source: National Association of REALTORS®

Bloomberg: The Real Estate Market Recovery [video]

The buzz in the real estate market is recovery. Is it real? Bloomberg TV talks with Jed Kolko, chief economist of Trulia, about why housing is bouncing back in many regions where household job growth is strong, driving demand and boosting home prices.

[pb_vidembed title=”” caption=”” url=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzElHKvtLJA” type=”yt” w=”680″ h=”383″]