The Week Ahead…What Homes Sales and Durable Goods mean to you! Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring Joe Willse of New Your Life The Week Ahead…What CPI and Housing Market Index mean to you! Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring Lauren and James Cronmiller discussing how to pick the right Agent The Week Ahead… What Producer Price Index, Consumer Sentiment, and Import Prices Mean to You! Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring another hour with Brian Meara The Week Ahead…What Factory Orders, Productivity, Costs and the Employment Situation Means to you! Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring Brian Meara the Short Sale Stallion The Week ahead…What the FOMC meeting, Pending home sales, and GDP mean to you! Real Estate Reality Radio Featuring Alison Tulio from Midatlantic Tax Solutions The Week Ahead…What Retail Sales, Leading Indicators,Housing Starts Mean to You! Real Estate Reality Radio Featuring Richard Hoback Reverse Mortgage Specialist
The Week Ahead…What Homes Sales and Durable Goods mean to you! Sunday, 20 May 2012 Market Focus: This week, we get more news on housing, with existing home sales on Tuesday and new home sales this Wednesday. Also out Thursday are the latest numbers on durable-goods orders, as well as the weekly jobless claims. This week, the primary focus will again be on the Europe. While I don’t expect anything [...]
Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring Joe Willse of New Your Life Thursday, 17 May 2012 Hello, and welcome to Real Estate Reality Radio. The most important hour of radio every Friday from 9 to 10 on WBCB 1490 am. Thank you for joining Vince and me. For those of you who are not familiar with the show I am the guy with a bow tie and a bit of an [...]
The Week Ahead…What CPI and Housing Market Index mean to you! Sunday, 13 May 2012 Market Focus: Volatility should be this week’s mantra. JP Morgan Chase, Greece and a thin calendar. All of this should make for a choppy week. Monday: No Reports Tuesday: CPI: The Consumer Price Index is a measure of the average price level of a fixed basket of goods and services purchased by consumers. Monthly changes [...]
Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring Lauren and James Cronmiller discussing how to pick the right Agent Friday, 11 May 2012   Hello, and welcome to Real Estate Reality Radio. The most important hour of radio every Friday from 9 to 10 on WBCB 1490 am. Thank you for joining Vince and me. For those of you who are not familiar with the show I am the guy with a bow tie and a bit of [...]
The Week Ahead… What Producer Price Index, Consumer Sentiment, and Import Prices Mean to You! Sunday, 6 May 2012 Market Focus: Europe, Producer Price Index, Consumer Sentiment and lots of Fed Speak. Elections in France and Greece should hold the edge with a thin economic calendar. Monday: Consumer Credit: The dollar value of consumer installment credit outstanding. Changes in consumer credit indicate the state of consumer finances and portend future spending patterns. The consensus [...]
Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring another hour with Brian Meara Friday, 4 May 2012 Hello, and welcome to Real Estate Reality Radio. The most important hour of radio every Friday from 9 to 10 on WBCB 1490 am. Thank you for joining Vince and me. For those of you who are not familiar with the show I am the guy with a bow tie and a bit of an [...]
The Week Ahead…What Factory Orders, Productivity, Costs and the Employment Situation Means to you! Sunday, 29 April 2012 Market Focus: This week’s release of a slew of economic data including the U.S. labor market coincides with the beginning of the latter half of corporate earnings. This will be keenly watched to see if they are enough to allow stocks to break above the recent trading range. Watch for any surprises. Monday: Personal Income [...]
Real Estate Reality Radio…Featuring Brian Meara the Short Sale Stallion Friday, 27 April 2012   Hello, and welcome to Real Estate Reality Radio. The most important hour of radio every Friday from 9 to 10 on WBCB 1490 am. Thank you for joining Vince and me. For those of you who are not familiar with the show I am the guy with a bow tie and a bit of [...]
The Week ahead…What the FOMC meeting, Pending home sales, and GDP mean to you! Sunday, 22 April 2012 Market Focus: Dare I say it again but Europe is center stage again as earning season hits its stride. While the growth has been steady it has also been unimpressive. This week should be a push and pull between earnings and jitters over Europe. Monday: No Reports Tuesday: The FOMC Meeting begins: The Federal Open [...]
Real Estate Reality Radio Featuring Alison Tulio from Midatlantic Tax Solutions Friday, 20 April 2012 Hello, and welcome to Real Estate Reality Radio. The most important hour of radio every Friday from 9 to 10 on WBCB 1490 am. Thank you for joining Vince and me. For those of you who are not familiar with the show I am the guy with a bow tie and a bit of an [...]
The Week Ahead…What Retail Sales, Leading Indicators,Housing Starts Mean to You! Sunday, 15 April 2012 Market Focus: While last week was a rollercoaster ride of sorts you may want buckle up for this week. Three housing reports and earnings season at full force. Let’s not lose sight of Europe. Monday: Retail Sales: Retail sales measure the total receipts at stores that sell durable and nondurable goods. Consumer spending accounts for [...]
Real Estate Reality Radio Featuring Richard Hoback Reverse Mortgage Specialist Friday, 13 April 2012 Hello, and welcome to Real Estate Reality Radio. The most important hour of radio every Friday from 9 to 10 on WBCB 1490 am. Thank you for joining Vince and me. For those of you who are not familiar with the show I am the guy with a bow tie and a bit of an [...]

Posts Tagged ‘mortgages’

Friends,

 To all of the people I come into contact with during the course of a day, I take this opportunity to write a brief note to express my deepest gratitude for all that you mean to me each and every day. At this time of the year, we give thanks and celebrate a birthday followed by a new beginning. It is a time of family and friends – a time historically celebrated with gift giving.

Marie, Brian and I have chosen to take a different gift giving path this year. Rather than give everyone we know trinkets of appreciation, we have chosen to provide a true Christmas for a few families in the Philadelphia area that are unable to do so during these difficult and uncertain economic times. Three such families were referred to us by a pastor in a local church which was, for the first year ever, unable to internally aid  its own congregation. The frames of these families we are honored to help with a Christmas dinner, clothing, and toys are as follows:

First, we have a single mother of three children including an eight month old girl and two boys, ages nine and twelve. The boys’ interests range from sports to drawing, and they have created their own series of comics, which they hope to share with their sister when she grows old enough to appreciate the fun.  Second, we are helping a young married couple with two girls and three boys. And finally, our assistance is extended to another single mother with four girls (ages four, twelve, seventeen, and eighteen) and a fifteen year old boy. I have been instructed that the four year old likes anything pink, the twelve year old loves to sew, and the remaining two sisters entertain themselves with board games. The boy collects Hot Wheels.

We feel privileged to have the opportunity to help bring a joyous season to these three families. Without the help of everyone who touches our lives every day, we would not be in a position to do this.

To that end, we offer a heartfelt thanks from our home to yours this holiday season. May peace and generosity fill your hearts and the hearts of those you love as well.

Warmest holiday regards,

I recently read Dr. Seuss’ book titled “If I Ran The Circus” and thought what if I ran the mortgage circus. First some history. According to the book there is a vacant lot behind Sneelock’s store. Morris McGurk was a young man with big ideas and he thought that this was a great place for a circus. Location, location, location. So off he went with a little imagination and a lot of help from acrobats, jugglers, and clowns from many faraway places to run the circus.

Wow, acrobats and jugglers should be easy. Every real estate office in every town has jugglers, and every mortgage company still in business has acrobats. Clowns have to be the easiest. They all seem lately to congregate in one place called Washington DC. That must be the District of Clowns. They don’t dress like clowns. They dress like the rest of us and only come out to be seen around election time.

First, if I ran the mortgage circus, I would go from there to here, and here to there, funny things are everywhere.” Dr. Seuss. I would meet real estate jugglers from every town to ask them what they could do to keep people in their homes and restore confidence in the marketplace. I would ask these professional jugglers what do home buyers want. How could we sell a short sale property in a shorter period of time to help the seller and the buyer (and in turn the banker)? How can we manage the flow of inventory hitting the market so that prices do not fall for no real reason.

Next on the way to building the mortgage circus I would visit mortgage acrobats. They appear ordinary on the outside. Modest sorts. But on the inside where it counts these professionals are magicians in a pinch, mind readers, time travelers, and more. They move from file to file while jumping through hoops set in their path by the clowns. All the while repeating “I love my office and its location. I hate to have to go on vacation.
I love my furniture, drab the grey, and piles of paper that grow each day!
I think my job is really swell, there’s nothing else I love so well.” Dr Seuss.
I would ask these acrobats what do you need in order to put more people in homes? What do buyers need in order to feel comfortable making the biggest decision in their lives? How do we not sell them too much house so we don’t repeat the last mistake?

And now let’s send in the clowns. Defined as; A buffoon or jester who entertains by jokes, antics, and tricks in a circus, play, or other presentation. b. One who jokes and plays tricks. Here is where the problems begin. A buffoon with no knowledge of what the jugglers and acrobats do plays tricks on them by setting obstacles in their way. They tighten the lending rules and change the rules without notice. They seem to like the chaos. They thrive on it. The chaos seems to justify why they have jobs.

I almost forgot I run the circus not the clowns. Sometimes the questions are complicated and the answers are simple.” Dr. Seuss. So here we go, as we travel back in time. The problem that created the crisis was not the “sub prime” meltdown. In my opinion it was a myriad of conditions. The first problem was creating a “credit score”. The credit bureaus are not even able to tell us how they work or how they are affected. How accurate could your score be if when they remove a derogatory account because they made an error and your score stays the same? Are you kidding me? So we took this score as if it were the only factor involved in qualifying for a loan. Oops, sorry it used to work that way. So you had one tradeline and an 800 score we didn’t care if you had a job or money. We were happy to lend you money. Next was greedy lenders that lent money to anyone who met the credit score criteria. Then came the loan officers that worked for the lenders. Not a care in the world that the borrower who could barely afford one home but bought a more expensive home because with an interest only payment a 6% less than the market they could afford more. Never a about what happens when tomorrow comes. We can’t blame just the credit scorers and loan providers. We need to look at the borrowers also. They willingly borrowed more than they knowingly could pay back. All of this greed was based on the presumption that the real estate values would always rise.

Now, moving forward, “You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose. You’re on your own. And you know what you know. And YOU are the one who’ll decide where to go…” Dr. Seuss. Maybe we should rely on people (not machines) to analyze credit to determine if the borrower actually has shown the propensity to repay a debt. Call me crazy but looking at the person not a number is what we should all want.  “They say I’m old-fashioned, and live in the past, but sometimes I think progress progresses too fast! ” Dr. Seuss.

A loan is still a loan. It comes in pieces like a puzzle. So if you think “this mess is too big and too deep and too tall. We can’t clean it up! We can’t clean it up at all!” Dr. Seuss. Then I am glad I run the circus. I would look to see what I learned from the jugglers and the acrobats. I would change the rules (remember I run the circus so my tent my rules). I would pressure the banks to do two things. I would make them reduce values on all of the homes they have a loan on. I would have them write down the balance of the loan to at least 100% of the new value. I would allow for the banks to raise the balance owed if the property sold for more than the estimated value. If the owner was behind on payments because they borrowed more than they could afford I would have the banks sell the home for it’s estimated value at a loss if necessary (short sale). However the bank will be required to accept a reasonable offer. I would further require the banks to loosen their lending rules. Not open the flood gates but loosen their current rules so that reasonable people can borrow money under reasonable terms. There needs to be a balance somewhere between what we did in 2003 and what we are doing in 2010. We need to address the unemployed by extending a loan to them if again they have shown a propensity to pay their bills. The idea is to keep more people in their homes and limit the foreclosure problem from causing the values to fall further. We need to have the municipalities participate in helping reduce closing costs. Reduce transfer taxes and government related costs so that the closing costs are not more than the required down payment. When the cities wanted to increase homeownership they provided tax abatements. Not a bad thought right about now. Again make it easier to afford the home not necessarily easier to finance the home.

None of this will work if the borrowers have no confidence in the marketplace. Remember I run the circus. We need to stop selling bad news and promote good news. “If things start happening, don’t worry, don’t stew, just go right along and you’ll start happening too.” Dr. Seuss

The Governments Expanded Loan Modification Effort

The governments’ latest attempt to curtail the anticipated foreclosure crisis is eerily similar to the bail out of AIG. I was always curious why after the first $85 billion loan we so readily wrote another check to the financial institution for another $37.8 billion dollars because they “miscalculated” something. Miscalculated? That sounded more like a broken calculator. Sorry, I digress from time to time. The first Loan Modification initiative which hoped to help 3 to 4 million homeowners only helped 170,000. Again, this is not a miscalculation. This initiative did not work.

While I have never professed to have all of the answers I have proclaimed to have a lot of questions. A bank would never lend a homeowner, home builder or business a second loan because they “miscalculated”. Yet, now that I own the bank, (the treasury) we are doing just that. I am not sure that the decision makers are even listening to themselves. I keep hearing that the reason the government can not keep people in their homes is because the majority of loans are held in pools owned by lots of investors (to complicated for us to understand). Hence the servicers are not in a position to make the necessary changes. Okay. If that is factual how with the new initiative work? Here is the proposal:

Principal reduction: The new initiative encourages servicers to reduce loan principal for delinquent borrowers when that is more advantageous to mortgage investors than reducing interest rates. While lowering balances would remain optional, many servicers are required by contract to do what is in the investor’s best financial interest. Servicers and second-lien holders would receive financial incentives to write down principal.

Principal reduction would be available for HAMP-eligible borrowers who owe more than 115% of their home’s current value. The balance would be forgiven as long as the homeowner makes timely payments for three years.

FHA refinance: Some borrowers who are current on their mortgages but have seen their property values drop could refinance into Federal Housing Administration loans worth no more than 97.75% of their home’s price.

Separately, the government will double the incentive to servicers to complete a HAMP modification, to $2,000, and provide more funds to second-lien holders that release borrowers from their debt. It will also double relocation assistance to borrowers who cannot afford to stay in their homes to $3,000.

If the servicers are mechanically unable to make the changes in the first initiative how will the incentive mentioned above help? I am sure that the answer to the question is also too complicated for us to understand.  Let’s see where our Bailout money went.

Please do not misunderstand this post. I believe that there is a definite need to help those unemployed and those who owe more than their home is worth. I believe it is in all of our best interest to keep people in their homes. The goal is not what I am questioning but rather the execution that gets us to the desired goal. If we could possibly learn from our mistakes we would not have lent AIG a second loan and we would have pressured the banks to lend us out of the “property value crisis.”

Please. To Whom It May Concern: Please look at what Pennsylvania Housing Finance has done. With a lot less money at their disposal they are helping a great number of people. $450 million was distributed to keep $43,000 people in their homes. Do that math. $75 billion should help 716,666 people stay in their homes. While that is not the goal we are being sold it is a far cry from the 170,000 they helped in the first try.

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Peter Buchsbaum I Pennsylvania Mortgage Banker I NMLS #133257