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Record low mortgage rates

mortgage-ratesThe latest Freddie Mac report shows all-time low mortgage rates, reports the Los Angeles Times. Lenders were offering 30-year fixed loans to credit-worthy buyers at 3.66% and the 15-year fixed mortgage at 2.94%, on average. Here are the specific figures for the week ending June 28, 2012.

Foreclosures were also down by 2% in the first quarter of this year as compared to the previous quarter, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Year-over-year, the rate fell by 8%. Overall, about 4.5% of all home loans were 60 days or more behind on payments, said the OCC, which is 10% lower than the previous quarter and 6% from one year ago.

Declining interest rates coupled with lower prices may encourage borrowers to purchase homes now rather than later, when the market begins to support higher sales prices. The National Association of Realtors expects the median existing-home price to rise 3% this year and another 5.7% in 2013.

The Cost of Owning a Home (Last 20 Years)

Cost-of-a-Home

Notes from the report: Prices and mortgage payments are based on the median existing single-family home price, averaged from quarterly data to obtain annual prices. Mortgage payments are calculated using the interest-rate average for that year and assume a 20% downpayment and fixed 30-year term. Rent is the median gross monthly rent from the 2010 American Community Survey, indexed using the CPI for rent of primary residence. Income is median household income.

Sources from the report: JCHS tabulations of National Association of Realtors®, Composite Affordability Index (NSA) and Existing Single-Family Home Sales via Moody’s Analytics; Freddie Mac, Primary Mortgage Market Survey; US Census Bureau, American Community Survey; Moody’s Analytics, median household income estimates.

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Are Appraisers ‘Scared’ to Report Rising Prices?

ScaredReal estate professionals and mortgage loan officers say that appraisers seem to be reluctant to report price appreciation occurring in numerous spots across the nation, and it’s complicating sales transactions, The Real Deal reports.

Appraisal problems — where property valuations have come in lower than the agreed-upon sales price — have been an ongoing problem in derailing many real estate transactions the last few years. And despite reports of several markets seeing an increase in their home prices, many agents report that appraisals continue to be a sticking point.

Thirty-three percent of real estate professionals say they are continuing to face appraisal problems, according to a survey conducted by the National Association of REALTORS® in May.

Low appraisals “in markets that are no longer in decline is the single most important” valuation obstacle to “seeing a real recovery,” NAR President Moe Veissi says.

Appraisers may be being overly cautious, not wanting to be accused of potentially overvaluing properties, says Frank Gregoire, an appraiser based in St. Petersburg, Fla., and also a former chair of the Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board. Gregoire told The Real Deal that appraisers fear they may expose lenders to future lawsuits or high-cost “buy-back” demands by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

“Appraisers are scared to death” to report rising values, Joseph Petrowsky, owner of the mortgage company Right Trac Financial Group Inc. in Manchester, Conn., told The Real Deal. Petrowsky says the appraisals aren’t reflecting the pick-up in some markets, in which some properties have even seen bidding wars.

Dennis Smith, co-owner of Stratis Financial Corp., recalls a bidding war recently in which four buyer offers took the contract price from $350,000 to $375,000, but the appraisal valuation still came in lower the contract price.

Nevertheless, the Appraisal Institute insists that appraisers aren’t discounting price appreciation in markets. Appraisers have a professional duty to arrive at valuations that “reflect the market,” whether positive or negative, and also reflect the most recent data, says Sara W. Stephens, president of the Appraisal Institute.

Source: "Appraisers ‘Scared to Death’ to Report Rising Prices," The Real Deal

Experts Say Housing Prices Are About to Turn

Home-and-MoneyEach quarter, Pulsenomics surveys a

“distinguished panel of over 100 economists, investment strategists, and housing market analysts regarding their 5-year expectations for future home prices in the United States.”

Here are the results of their latest survey: Price appreciation/depreciation expected over the next five years:

2012:   -.4%
2013:   +1.3%
2014:   +2.6%
2015:   +3.2%
2016:   +3.5%

The average pre-bubble (1987-1999) annual appreciation was 3.6%

by THE KCM CREW

Harvard University: Echo Boomers to Drive Recovery

HarvardThe Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University just released their annual State of the Nation’s Housing 2012. In the report, Harvard explained that, starting this year and continuing over the next twenty years, the echo boomers (born in the late 1970s and early 1980s) will drive the housing market.

“After several false starts, there is reason to believe that 2012 will mark the beginning of a true housing market recovery.”

As we reported in our InfoGraphic on Friday, adults under the age of 35 have decided to stay at home with their parents instead of purchase their own home. As the Harvard report states, it is not because they don’t believe in the value of homeownership:

“Although young households have increasingly opted to rent in recent years, most still aspire to homeownership. The late-2011 Fannie Mae National Housing Survey found that 86 percent of renters aged 18–34 believe they will ultimately own homes. In addition, close to 70 percent of respondents to both the Fannie Mae survey and the University of Michigan Survey of Consumer Attitudes felt that it was a good time to buy. In fact, the monthly mortgage payments for the typical home currently compare more favorably to rents than at any time since the early 1970s.”

The report projected the impact of these echo boomers over the next two decades

Over the next 10 years…

“… the most important drivers of household growth are the size and age structure of the adult population. Assuming the economic recovery is sustained in the next few years, the growth and aging of the current population alone— including the entrance of the echo boomers into adulthood— should support the addition of about 1.0 million new households per year over the next decade.”

Over the next 20 years…

Over the next 20 years, the echo boomers have the potential to spur new home demand to an even greater extent than their parents did beginning in the 1970s. The good news for housing production is that this new generation already outnumbers that of the baby boomers at the same ages. With even a modest lift from immigration, the echo-boom generation will grow even larger as its members move into the prime household formation years.”

As housing affordability reaches historic lows, we believe more and more of the echo boomers will take the plunge into homeownership

by Steve Harney

Under-35 Population Staying Home Not Buying One

Under-35

Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality [SURVEY]

dreamTrulia Chief Economist, Dr. Jed Kolko notes that renewed optimism is not without reason, but the pendulum may have swung to far as expectations do no meet the market’s reality.

Trulia’s American Dream Survey

Trulia released the results of its American Dream Survey Wednesday, tracking American attitudes toward homeownership since 2008, revealing that 58 percent of Americans think prices will return to their peak within 10 years, 78 percent of renters plan to buy someday, and interest in supersized homes (3,200+ sf) nearly doubled in the last year.

Trulia’s Chief Economist, Dr. Jed Kolko projects that at its current pace of recovery, the housing market will be back to pre-recession normal by 2016, as will the turnaround rate for renters waiting to become homeowners.

Despite recent reports that the recession cut Americans’ net worth in half, Dr. Kolko reports that there is renewed optimism “for a good reason,” even if there are unrealistic price expectations in the market, particularly in the hardest hit areas. The top three key optimism drivers for consumers are lower foreclosures and delinquencies (which have dropped 24 percent from its worst point during the recession), increased sales (up 10 percent in the last year), and lower vacancy rates (rental vacancies have hit ten year low).

“Optimism is essential for housing recovery,” said Dr. Kolko, “but too much optimism could lead to next bubble. Right now, optimism is outpacing the reality of what is on the market.”

Optimism outpacing the market realities

Trulia reports that sales prices of homes on their site have risen quarter over quarter in 86 of the 100 largest U.S. metros as of May, and cites that 61 percent of Americans believe home prices in their local market will rise in the next year.

“American’s hope for a real estate market bounce-back may be too high,” the company reports. “Even though prices in many markets reached unprecedented and unsustainable levels during the boom, 58 percent of Americans believe home prices in their local markets will return to their previous high in the next 10 years.”

Supersize me

During the recession, Americans got quite realistic about what their next home looked like, and as housing shows signs of improvement, even though slight, the affinity for big homes is on the rise.

According to the survey, more than one in four Americans who believe home ownership is part of achieving their personal American Dream said that their ideal home size is over 2,600 square feet – up from 17 percent in 2011. In fact, interest in homes of more than 3,200 square feet nearly doubled in the last year from 6 percent in 2011 to 11 percent in 2012.

Dr. Kolko noted that “developers are on top of this trend and are responding” by increasing the size once again of new homes being built. We have not seen a dramatic increase in the size of homes built this year, but Dr. Kolko points out that builders are shifting their plans.

Starter home reality check

Homeownership remains central to the American Dream. Fully 72 percent said owning a home is part of achieving their personal American Dream, and the number of renters saying they’ll never buy a home has fallen.

This take us back to unrealistic optimism, as future homeowners were asked what would make them fall in love with a home if they were in the market for a home today. The top amenities were a master bathroom (62 percent), walk-in closet (56 percent) and gourmet kitchen (50 percent), but only 26 percent of homeowners said that they had an en-suite master bathroom in their first home, while just 35 percent had a walk-in closet and 9 percent had a gourmet kitchen.

It is our assertion that these expectations could be set not only by optimism about housing, but with the improving multifamily units coming online, as renters in many markets are getting used to luxury amenities, and wishing for them in their first home. Additionally, overall optimism is naturally fueled by the bargains being found in short sales and foreclosures, setting consumers’ expectations high that they too will get a good deal, then wait out the recovery to gain equity.

Returning to normal by 2016?

“As the economy recovers, people are dreaming bigger, but most won’t realize their dreams anytime soon,” said Dr. Kolko. “Few homebuyers – and even fewer first-timers – can afford 3,000 square feet and a gourmet kitchen. Buyers need to take a hard look at what they can actually afford, and give themselves some cushion in case a Euro crisis or federal budget battle pushes us back into recession.”

Trulia reports that a year ago, housing was at 20 percent of its normal, pre-recession rate, which has risen to 37 percent this year. At the current pace, Trulia predicts a housing recovery, or a return to “normal” to be achieved by 2016, but cautions that the hardest hit cities like Las Vegas may not match the national norms.

Additionally, 78 percent of renters plan to buy someday, but when exactly is “someday” for them? New data from Freddie Mac reveals that 1.5 million households moved to rental units in the last year, and as rents rise, vacancies continue to drop, so how will the market recover as we become a renter nation?

Dr. Kolko tells AGBeat, “Credit is still tight and rising rents are hurting renters’ ability to save for a down payment. Recovery is several years away, and the turnaround rate [for renters to become homeowners] is closer to 2016 as well.”

American Dream Survey

Below are some of the key findings of Trulia’s American Dream Survey:
fuel of optimism Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
price stabilization Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
supersized homes Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
disparity Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
dream home amenities Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
when buying Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
prices rising Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
barometer Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality
recovery Housing recovery optimism outpacing market reality

About the survey: Harris Interactive conducted this online survey on behalf of Trulia among 2,205 U.S. adults, age 18 and over, between May 22 – 24 and among 2,230 U.S. adults, age 18 and older, between June 4-6, 2012.

by AGBeat