Archives
June 2007
Jun. 28, 2007 - Mortgage rates fall for 2nd straight week
Mortgage rates fall for 2nd straight week
By Holden Lewis, Bankrate.com
The good news is mortgage rates fell for the second week in a row. The bad news is they're still almost half a percentage point higher than they were three months ago.
The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell 2 basis points, to 6.74 percent, according to the Bankrate.com national survey of large lenders. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage point. The mortgages in this week's survey had an average total of 0.26 discount and origination points. One year ago, the mortgage index was 6.93 percent; four weeks ago, it was 6.47 percent.
The benchmark 15-year fixed-rate mortgage fell 5 basis points, to 6.4 percent. The benchmark 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage fell 11 basis points to 6.47 percent.
Rates have been rising for most of the year and skyrocketed from mid-May to mid-June, when the average rate on a 30-year fixed climbed from 6.32 percent to 6.84 percent in four weeks. While this week's decrease is welcome news for borrowers, we're a long way from the middle of March, when the 30-year bottomed out at 6.16 percent.
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| Weekly national mortgage survey |
 |
| This week's rate: |
6.74% |
6.40% |
6.47% |
| Change from last week: |
-0.02 |
-0.05
|
-0.11 |
| Monthly payment: |
$1,069.09 |
$1,428.27 |
$1,039.66 |
| Change from last week: |
-$2.19 |
-$4.53 |
-$11.95 |
Swooning Housing Market
Analysts haven't come to a consensus to explain why mortgage rates and associated bond yields have gone on their up-and-down trajectory of the past few weeks. One thing is clear, though: The housing market is swooning.
According to the National Association of Realtors, the pace of home resales has slowed dramatically -- down 10.3 percent in May compared with the previous May. The number of used houses on the market is a record 4.43 million. That translates into an 8.9-month supply.
Half of the houses resold in May cost less than $223,700 -- a 2.1 percent decline over the median price of $228,500 a year earlier. On a year-over-year basis, median resale prices have gone down 10 months in a row. That's a sign of a genuine housing slump.
Fewer Qualified Buyers
Realtors' economist Lawrence Yun says, "Psychological factors are currently the biggest drag on the housing market, in addition to a disruption from tighter credit for subprime borrowers."
For many would-be buyers, the main psychological factor appears to be the perfectly rational decision to wait for house prices to drop even more. Why buy a house for $250,000 when you might be able to snag one just like it for $220,000 a few months from now?
Yun has a point about the stricter requirements for subprime mortgages. Fewer people are qualifying for subprime mortgages, reducing the number of home buyers. According to the Commerce Department, sales of inexpensive new houses -- those costing $150,000 or less -- have plunged in the last year. Subprime customers are a target market for inexpensive new houses.
"Once the lenders opened the Pandora's box of loose credit, they created a Catch-22 situation in the housing market," writes Anthony Sanders, professor of finance and real estate at Arizona State University, in an e-mail. "If they don't tighten credit, defaults will increase and the supply of available housing will put downward pressure on the housing market. If they tighten credit, the demand for housing will fall and that puts downward pressure on the housing market."
Sanders adds that this doesn't affect the entire real-estate market, but a subset: condominiums, entry-level houses and low-income neighborhoods.
Midyear scorecard
Now that it's the end of June, here's an overview of what has happened to the benchmark 30-year rate in the first half of 2007: It began the year at 6.24 percent and went up in 16 of the year's first 26 weeks. The benchmark rate declined in nine of those weeks and remained unchanged once.
In the first half of the year, there was only one period when the benchmark rate fell more than two weeks in a row: a four-week period in February and March, during which the rate fell a total of 13 basis points.
The biggest one-week jump happened between the June 6 and June 13 surveys, when the average 30-year rose from 6.61 percent to 6.84 percent -- almost a quarter of a percentage point. The biggest one-week drop happened between Jan. 31 and Feb. 7, when the average 30-year fixed fell from 6.42 percent to 6.31 percent.
The 30-year remained slightly below 6.25 percent from February 28 to April 4. Pat yourself on the back if you locked your rate back then.
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Jun. 22, 2007 - Announcing 3967 Sharps Road N, Warsaw VA 22752
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Jun. 18, 2007 - Announcing 12252 Short Street, Remington VA 22734
3BR/2BA Rambler $247,500 MLS#FQ6448271
THIS LOVELY RAMBLER FEATURES: 3BR/2BA, REFINISHED HARDWOOD FLOORS THROUGHOUT, NICELY LANDSCAPED YARD WITH INVISIBLE FENCE TO KEEP IN YOUR DOGS, LARGE MODERN KITCHEN W/BUTLER PASS-THRU TO LIVING ROOM. HOME WARRANTY. ARCHITECTUAL SHINGLES. RELAX COMFORTABLY ON THE REAR DECK OR FRONT PORCH...BEST BUY IN NEIGHBORHOOD!!!
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Jun. 13, 2007 - Commercial Real Estate Sound With Record Investment
Commercial Real Estate Sound With Record Investment
WASHINGTON, June 13, 2007 -
Investment in commercial real estate remains at record levels with sound fundamentals in most sectors, according to the latest COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK of the National Association of Realtors®.
Lawrence Yun, NAR senior economist, said there are variations across the commercial sectors. “The overall office market has been booming, the industrial sector is holding its own, retail is a bit sluggish while apartments are strong with some condo conversions reverting to rental,” he said. “We expect fundamentals to remain basically sound for the commercial sectors.”
Outside of the hospitality sector, a record $157.0 billion was invested in commercial real estate in the first four months of 2007, up from $97.0 billion in same period in 2006; that total does not include transactions valued at less than $5 million.
Cindy Chandler of Charlotte, N.C., chair of the Realtors® Commercial Alliance, said investors clearly like the office market. “So far this year, 60 percent of all commercial real estate purchases have been in the office sector,” she said. “We expect the flow of capital into commercial sectors to remain strong throughout the year, driven by large portfolio transactions and REIT privatizations, as investors continue to value diversification. This could make 2007 another record year for commercial investment.”
The NAR forecast for four major commercial sectors includes analysis of quarterly data for various tracked metro areas. The sectors include the office, industrial, retail and multifamily markets. Metro data were provided by Torto Wheaton Research and Real Capital Analytics.
Office Market
Pent-up demand for quality office space has driven construction in many areas, while space in older properties sometimes is left vacant for some period of time, resulting in sluggish absorption where there is a clear preference for quality space. Some of the older space is being marketed aggressively with generous improvement packages.
Office vacancies are projected to increase to an average of 13.3 percent by the fourth quarter of this year from 12.6 percent in the final quarter of 2006. Annual rent growth in the office sector is expected to be 4.1 percent this year after rising 5.6 percent in 2006.
Projections for the second quarter show areas with the lowest office vacancies include New York City; Ventura County, Calif.; Honolulu; Orange County, Calif.; Los Angeles; and Miami, all with vacancy rates of 9.7 percent or less.
Net absorption of office space in 57 markets tracked, which includes the leasing of new space coming on the market as well as space in existing properties, is forecast at 44.4 million square feet in 2007 compared with 76.4 million last year.
Office building transaction volume in the first four months of this year totaled $95.0 billion, a record for the four-month period. Equity funds accounted for 53 percent of office building purchases. Markets with the highest transaction volume were Manhattan, Chicago, Northern Virginia and San Francisco.
Industrial Market
Booming trade continues to bolster the demand for warehouse and distribution facilities across the country, with the strongest demand in coastal markets followed by inland ports and distribution hubs. There is significant construction of build-to-suit industrial projects, while obsolete structures are being converted to other uses in stronger markets.
Vacancy rates in the industrial sector are likely to average 9.3 percent by the fourth quarter, slightly below the 9.4 percent rate at the end of 2006. Annual rent growth should be 3.0 percent by the end of this year, up from a 1.4 percent annual rise in the fourth quarter of 2006.
The areas with the lowest industrial vacancies include Los Angeles; Orange County, Calif.; San Francisco; Tampa; Albuquerque; and Portland, Ore., all with vacancy rates of 5.3 percent or less. Elsewhere, the slowdown in the automotive industry is hurting some markets.
Net absorption of industrial space in 58 markets tracked will probably total 162.9 million square feet in 2007, down from 202.8 million last year.
Industrial transaction volume in the first four months of 2007 was $11.9 billion, down 13 percent from the same period in 2006.
Retail Market
Same-store retail sales are decelerating, which is dampening the demand for retail space.
Vacancy rates in the retail sector are estimated to rise to 8.6 percent in the fourth quarter from 8.1 percent at the end of 2006. Average retail rent is forecast to rise 2.4 percent in 2007, following a 4.1 percent increase last year.
Retail markets with the lowest vacancies include San Francisco; Orange County, Calif.; Miami; San Jose, Calif.; Las Vegas; and Washington, D.C., all with vacancy rates of 5.4 percent or less.
Net absorption of retail space in 54 tracked markets is expected to be 15.7 million square feet this year, up from 10.6 million in 2006.
Retail transaction volume doubled in the first four months of this year to a total of $27.7 billion, in contrast with the same period in 2006. Institutional investors and foreign investors together accounted for 60 percent of transaction volume.
Multifamily Market
In many areas, buildings constructed as condos are now being turned into rental projects. The demand for apartments remains strong, but new supply is essentially matching leasing activity.
In the apartment rental market – multifamily housing – vacancy rates are projected to average 5.8 percent in the fourth quarter, almost unchanged from 5.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2006. Average rent should increase 2.1 percent in 2007, after a 4.1 percent rise last year.
Multifamily net absorption is likely to total 212,300 units in 59 tracked metro areas this year, down from 229,300 in 2006.
The areas with the lowest apartment vacancies include Northern New Jersey; Pittsburgh; Salt Lake City; San Jose; San Francisco and Norfolk, Va., all with vacancy rates of 2.7 percent or less.
Multifamily transactions in the first four months of this year totaled $23.2 billion, down 25 percent from the same period in 2006. Essentially half of the purchases were by private investors; condo converters accounted for only 5 percent of acquisitions.
The COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK is published by the NAR Research Division for the Realtors® Commercial Alliance. The RCA, formed by NAR in 1999, serves the needs of the commercial market and the commercial constituency within NAR, including commercial members; commercial committees, subcommittees and forums; commercial real estate boards and structures; and NAR affiliate organizations.
Organizations in the RCA include the CCIM Institute, the Institute of Real Estate Management, the Realtors® Land Institute, the Society of Industrial and Office Realtors®, and the Counselors of Real Estate. The RCA also provides commercial products and services.
More than 120,000 NAR members offer commercial services, and 68,000 of those are currently members of the RCA.
The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing more than 1.3 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.
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Jun. 12, 2007 - Foreclosures jump 90% over last year
Foreclosures jump 90% over last year
Figure pushed up by slowing real estate market, subprime meltdown.
June 12 2007: 5:29 PM EDT
NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Home foreclosures in May jumped 90 percent from a year earlier, reflecting a poor spring housing market and foreshadowing even higher levels later in 2007, real estate data firm RealtyTrac said Tuesday.
The May foreclosures - a sum of default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions - totaled 176,137, up 19 percent from April, the firm said in its May 2007 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report.
"After a barely perceptible dip in April, foreclosure activity roared back with a vengeance in May," James Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac, said in a statement.
"Such strong activity in the midst of the typical spring buying season could foreshadow even higher foreclosure levels later in the year," said Saccacio. "Certainly not every community nationwide is seeing an increase in foreclosures, but foreclosed properties are becoming more commonplace and adding to the downward pressure on home prices in many areas."
RealtyTrac said there was a national foreclosure rate of one foreclosure filing for every 656 U.S. households during May.
Where the growth is - and isn't
The default rates in the subprime segment of the U.S. mortgage market, which caters to borrowers with poor credit histories, have jumped in recent months as the housing industry has slowed and prices have fallen.
More than two dozen lenders in the subprime mortgage sector have collapsed as rising defaults drove them out of business during a downturn in the housing market.
Market observers are keeping a watchful eye on the subprime crisis because it has triggered broader concerns that the fallout may spread to mainstream lenders and damage the economy.
A slowing housing market affects homebuilders, such as Centex (down $1.18 to $44.09, Charts, Fortune 500), Hovnanian Enterprises (down $0.86 to $20.31, Charts, Fortune 500) and Pulte (down $0.74 to $24.65, Charts, Fortune 500), as well as banks that make mortgage loans, such as Bank of America (down $0.39 to $49.66, Charts, Fortune 500) and Wachovia (down $0.65 to $52.95, Charts, Fortune 500).
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Hi, I'm Keith and I would like to welcome you to my website! I List and Sell real estate in Prince William County and Fauquier County. I provide helpful real estate information to my clients so that they can make important financial decisions regarding residential and commercial property investments. I am a Realtor®, E-Pro Certified, Senior Real Estate Specialist, and Commercial Specialist. If you are looking to buy or sell a home in the next 12 months give me a call. I work for RE/MAX Olympic Realty in Prince William County and can be reached at (703) 754-4341 or on my cell at 540-272-9012 or, via E-mail at kelliott@comcast.net. Oh, by the way...I'm never too busy for any of your referrals.
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