October 7th, 2008

titleBernanke hints at a rate cut/titleRemember the saying #8220;a href=http://economicdisconnect.blogspot.com/2007/10/to-man-with-hammer-everything-looks.htmlif all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail/a#8220;?/pobject width=425 height=344param name=movie value=http://www.youtube.com/v/fZuzMKLs9PE#038;hl=en#038;fs=1/paramparam name=allowFullScreen value=true/paramembed src=http://www.youtube.com/v/fZuzMKLs9PE#038;hl=en#038;fs=1 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowfullscreen=true width=425 height=344/embed/object/pp class=akst_linka href=http://blownmortgage.com/?p=1443amp;akst_action=share-this title=E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc. id=akst_link_1443 class=akst_share_link rel=nofollowShare This/a/pa href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=vGcMZyimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=vGcMZy border=0//img/a/pdiv class=feedflarea href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=BYk0Mimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=BYk0M border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=363gmimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=363gm border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=4Mwsmimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=4Mwsm border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=F3NjMimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=F3NjM border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=4po4Mimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=4po4M border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=NXEvmimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=NXEvm border=0//img/a/divbr/br/a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/blownmortgage_blog/~3/414157537/ target=_newRead More…/a br/font size=-2br/[Source: a href=http://blownmortgage.com target=_newBlown Mortgage/a]br//font

October 7th, 2008

titleFreddie Mac Employees Speak Out/titleFrustrated by the governments latest move, Freddie Mac employees are beginning to air their opinions.a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=INlYQzimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=INlYQz border=0//img/a/pdiv class=feedflarea href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=hXceMimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=hXceM border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=3tTxmimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=3tTxm border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=26ewmimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=26ewm border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=hGwSMimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=hGwSM border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=Mx73Mimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=Mx73M border=0//img/a a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?a=hdtfmimg src=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/typepad/blownmortgage_blog?i=hdtfm border=0//img/a/divbr/br/a href=http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/blownmortgage_blog/~3/412278585/ target=_newRead More…/a br/font size=-2br/[Source: a href=http://blownmortgage.com target=_newBlown Mortgage/a]br//font

Existing home sales hit decade low

August 19th, 2008

Existing home sales hit their lowest levels in a decade while price declines offered little to help stem the fall. Median home prices fell nearly 10%. Of course the biggest losses were seen in bubble areas such as inland California, Florida and Las Vegas.

From Bloomberg on the losses:

Existing U.S. home sales fell to a 10-year low in the second quarter and the median price for a single-family house dropped 7.6 percent as the real estate recession deepened.

The median price tumbled to $206,500 from $223,500 a year earlier, the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors said today. Sales of single-family houses and condominiums fell 16 percent to 4.913 million at an annualized pace.

Prices are declining with the U.S. on the brink of a recession, consumer prices rising and 30-year fixed mortgage rates at a six year high last month. A third of all sales in the quarter were foreclosures or “short sales,” in which lenders take a loss on a property, the Realtors said. Bank repossessions almost tripled in July from a year earlier, RealtyTrac Inc., a seller of foreclosure data, said in a separate report today.

“It’s getting worse,” Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac’s executive vice president for marketing, said in an interview. “The number of properties that have been foreclosed on by the banks and still haven’t sold is the highest we’ve ever seen.”



Read More…

[Source: Blown Mortgage]

Fed: Banks reluctant to lend

August 19th, 2008

Banks have dialed up the lending requirements in the face of the nearly half-trillion dollars lost in the mortgage mess to-date. The Federal Reserve reported that banks and lending institutions have tightened credit standards across all loan-types as losses mount and liquidity remains a key issue.

This should be seen as good news of course. Common sense lending disappeared for a long time, and now it seems like we’re making our way back to some place of balance. Of course, we’re sure to over-correct in the process; but we’re certainly not there yet.

From Bloomberg:

Most “domestic institutions reported having tightened their lending standards and terms on all major loan categories over the previous three months,” the Fed said today in its quarterly Senior Loan Officer Survey.

Banks may be reluctant to lend against housing collateral that is falling in value. Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas dropped 15.8 percent in May, the biggest decline since record keeping began in 2001, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Home-Price Index.

The economy is also faltering. The unemployment rate has moved up 1 percentage point during the past 12 months to 5.7 percent, while delinquencies on home loans to borrowers with weak or limited credit histories rose to 18.8 percent in the first quarter from 13.8 percent a year earlier.

“Large majorities of domestic respondents reported having tightened their lending standards on prime, nontraditional, and subprime residential mortgages over the previous three months,” the Fed said.

Of the 32 banks that originate non-traditional mortgage loans, about 85 percent reported tighter lending standards, up from 75 percent in the prior survey, the Fed said.

About 65 percent of domestic banks indicated they had tightened their lending standards on credit card loans over the previous three months, up “notably” from about 30 percent in the April survey, the Fed said.



Read More…

[Source: Blown Mortgage]

Merrill: credit crisis far from over

August 19th, 2008

It’s nice to see the mainstream media cover more of the voices outside of the bottom callers who keep tripping over each other to be the first one to call bottom. Merrill Lynch’s Chief Investment Strategist Richard Bernstein said that investors are “significantly underestimating” the risks still associated with the credit crisis and suggested that we are not even close to the end of the problems.

I couldn’t agree more - the more that the mainstream media gets this message out the faster we’ll precipitate the changes that will get us to that bottom, where we can actually start a recovery.

From Bloomberg:

Financial stocks fell, led by Bank of America Corp. and Morgan Stanley, after a limit on short selling expired and Merrill Lynch & Co. said the credit crisis is “far from over.”

Finance company stocks also fell after Merrill Chief Investment Strategist Richard Bernstein said investors are “significantly underestimating” the extent of the credit crisis.

“The problems are not confined to large institutions that are overexposed to U.S. subprime loans,” Bernstein wrote in a note to clients. He said banks and brokerages need “massive” consolidation to recover.

Analysts including Oppenheimer & Co.’s Meredith Whitney and Deutsche Bank AG’s Mike Mayo this week cut profit estimates and forecast further writedowns on mortgage-related bonds.

“You are going to see stresses continue for financial institutions,” said Stephen Wood, who helps manage $213 billion at Russell Investments in New York. “You’re beginning to see that macroeconomic slowdown ripple through.”



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[Source: Blown Mortgage]

Thats gotta sting: Wachoiva to buy back $9 billion in auction rate securities

August 19th, 2008

That can’t help matters. Wachovia has agreed to buy back $9 billion in auction rate securities as part of a wide-ranging SEC investigation of several Wall Street firms’ sales and marketing practices. UBS, Morgan Stanley and others are buying back ARS by the billions in order to avoid formal charges of securities fraud.

Will this be the death knell for Wachovia? The cash-strapped company has been raising capital through numerous debt and equity sales - where will the $9 billion come from, or what about next quarter’s losses? Spooky.

From Market Watch:

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday said Wachovia Corp. Wachovia Corp has agreed to a settlement related to sales of auction-rate securities, the market for which collapsed earlier this year. Under the settlement, Wachovia will offer to purchase roughly $5.7 billion of auction-rate securities held by individual investors, small businesses and charitable organizations, the SEC said. The bank will also offer to purchase the roughly $3.1 billion of securities held by all other Wachovia investors, according to an SEC press release.



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[Source: Blown Mortgage]

ALT A is Broken? Really?

August 19th, 2008

Note: I’m very excited to introduce a series of guest articles by Anthony M. Freed. This is his first. Anthony is an analyst, researcher and freelance writer, and can be reached at anthonymfreed@gmail.com. Please welcome him - I’m excited to get his take on the market from the analyst perspective.

So once again wild swings in the markets have unleashed the bullish cries of Bottom! by the guestimating industry cheerleaders like Jim Cramer, the NAR, and similarly minded government ilk who believe we can all collectively wish our way out of this mess. But the proverbial writing has long been on the wall, and we have yet to measure the depth of the losses.

What are the monsters that are lurking in the nearby shadows? Well I am not going to tell you anything you have not already figured out if you have been following news posts and blogs about the mortgage industry with even a passing interest. Its that illegitimate offspring of Sub prime and Prime called ALT A that is taking over the national spotlight. Now everyone in charge can throw up their hands in surprise that the golden child of the short lived post-sub prime era was a bad idea too. This from Housingwire.coms Paul Jackson on Fannie mounting ALT A problems:

…any changes purchase/underwriting criteria still clearly came far too late to prevent GSE (Fannie) from taking a direct credit hit, now that the Alt-A mortgage class is the latest area of mortgages to go through a meltdown, and many borrowers are defaulting at a seemingly parabolic rate each month and each quarter.

This should not be news to anyone, especially those who should be in the know. As late as the spring of 2007, major national lenders were still aggressively marketing ALT A products with with ridiculously vacuous underwriting criteria: A borrower could secure a no income/no asset documentation cash-out refinance loan, with a simultaneous second mortgage up to 95% CLTV, on a non-owner occupied investment property, with only a 620 FICO, two months PITI reserves and a debt to income ratio up to 60%. Whah?

So even as executives were in the midst of struggling to explain how they were blindsided by the rapid demise of their sub prime divisions, they were also racing to expand ALT A criteria to cover all but those borrowers with the very worst credit ratings. And they did not stop there, they pressed on with the development of other exotics like Near Prime and Expanded Approval. And it was all done to maintain market share and the record origination levels they had grown addicted to. But who will they blame in the media for their greed driven and fiscally irresponsible business practices? Why, all the lying cheating borrowers who did this to them, of course! Also from Jacksons article:

The strategy isnt all that surprising, as nearly anyone in the mortgage business these days is looking for a reason to push the bad loans and the losses associated with them off of their books, and onto someone elses. And in the case of Alt-A, theres likely to be more than a just a fair amount of income misrepresentation, among other sorts of fraud.

I am in love with this line of reasoning: The average American homebuyer- be they plumber or grocery clerk or postal worker collectively conspired by the millions to defraud the financial industry out of 3 trillion dollars in about a five year period. And now, they are cleverly concealing their new found fortunes by going through the motions of being foreclosed upon and thrown out on the street just to cover their tracks. Truthfully, how much can you be lying about if you only need to get yourself to a 60% DTI?

I know if they look at enough liar loans, they will find some liars. But that is missing the fundamental issue at hand here, that it was lax underwriting and low down payments initiated by the lenders, not the borrowers that are responsible for this mess.

I can remember as a little boy, asking my dad why someone would bother putting up a chain link fence that was only four feet tall. Little fences are only for keeping good people out of trouble, he told me. And that is exactly what the lenders did not do when they developed and marketed these and other more complicated products like Pay Option Arms, they built them without the little fences that would have kept them and us out of trouble.

Lets pretend for a moment that borrower overstatement of income on ALT A loans really was so greatly overstated on average as to be responsible for 50% of all defaults on the books. Imagine what the effect a simple underwriting requirement like a signed T4506 the authorization to review tax returns could have made. They do not inherently prevent default on stated income and asset loans, but they certainly would have made borrowers who might be tempted to stretch the truth think twice about the consequences. Instead, there was a culture were no one felt they had to be really honest with anyone else. The hunters set the traps, and now they want to blame the animals for getting snared, and the media just eats it up.

So dont be fooled by those who need you to stick your money into those raucous markets. The time will come, but its not here yet. And it should not be this difficult for the big brains to figure it all out. The underwriting is on the wall, the deals are closed, and the resets are coming like clockwork. Lets all just accept that it is really no surprise to any of us.



Read More…

[Source: Blown Mortgage]

Runaway prices stun market watchers

August 19th, 2008

Consumer prices rose by .8% last month, more than double analysts expectations. Of course, with artificially low interest rates one can’t really expect anything different; but it does make it damn clear that the Federal Reserve has nowhere to go but up with interest rates.

While the mainstream media is spinning the oil price drop means inflation has peaked the core inflation (excluding food and energy) still rose .3% which was also above analyst estimates.

So basically our dollar doesn’t go as far, our homes are heading in to the toilet, employment is up surprisingly and the government wants to raise taxes to bail out of our financial institutions for the greed and largesse. Sweet, happy Thursday. God bless America.

From Bloomberg:

U.S. consumer prices jumped to a 17- year high in July, reducing the scope of the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates as economic growth slows.

The consumer price index climbed 0.8 percent, twice as much as anticipated, the Labor Department said today in Washington. The cost of living was up 5.6 percent in the year ended in July, the biggest rise since January 1991. So-called core prices, which exclude food and energy, also advanced more than projected.

The surge last month reflected energy prices that have since declined, signaling July may represent the peak in inflation. Still, increases went beyond food and fuel, including gains in clothing, airline fares and education, likely intensifying discussions among Fed policy makers about how quickly to shift toward raising rates.



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[Source: Blown Mortgage]

Fannie and Freddie on Verge of Bailout

August 19th, 2008

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are on the verge of government intervention, reports the Financial Times. As credit worries continue to wreak havoc on the financial markets liquidity concerns at the two massive GSE’s sparked a stock sell-off that left both company’s stocks down nearly 25%.

Any government intervention or recapitalization would severely undercut the value of any current shareholder stock by diluting the living daylights out of it. Many had hoped that the mere notion of the US Treasury backstopping the GSEs would put an end to the market unrest. This drove Fannie and Freddie stock higher as investors gained confidence that the market would stabilize with the weight of a US government guarantee. Now that it looks exceptionally likely that it will actually happen investors are once again spooked.

From FT.com:

Fears about the financial system grew on Monday as money market liquidity tightened and sharp falls in the share prices of mortgage financiers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac led the US stock market lower.

Fannies and Freddies shares lost 22 per cent and 25 per cent, respectively, after an article in Barrons suggested that the US government was considering recapitalising the companies on terms that would all but wipe out existing shareholders.

The concerns about Fannie and Freddie also spread to their debt, which fell in price. This threatened to push interest rates on mortgages backed by the two firms higher and put further pressure on the battered housing market.

The price of insurance against default on Fannie and Freddie subordinated debt hit record levels in the credit default swaps market, according to data from Markit. Risk spreads on their senior debt which most analysts presume would be fully honoured by the government in any rescue widened to levels last seen in the immediate run-up to the Treasurys July 13 rescue plan, Credit Suisse said.



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[Source: Blown Mortgage]

AIG takes $5.4 billion 2nd quarter loss

August 10th, 2008

The worst over? Not so much. AIG took a whopping $5.4 billion dollar loss last quarter related to, you guessed it, mortgage losses and write downs! I’m one big broken record these days, but there’s not much else to say here.

AIG quickly took a nice chunk out of its recently-raised $20 billion as writedowns on mortgage hammered its business.

From Market Watch:

American International Group reported a $5.36 billion second-quarter net loss late Wednesday as the insurance giant was hit again by write-downs and impairments on mortgage-related exposures.

The quarterly net loss included $5.57 billion of unrealized market valuation losses on AIG’s super senior credit default swap portfolio. It also included $6.08 billion of net realized capital losses from its investment portfolio, the company disclosed.

“Our second quarter results were adversely affected by the severe conditions in the housing and credit markets and a very difficult investment environment,” AIG’s new Chief Executive Robert Willumstad said in a statement. “We have a lot of work to do to restore AIG’s profitability to where it should be.”

AIG reported a record quarterly loss earlier this year after suffering huge write-downs on credit exposures. The company quickly raised roughly $20 billion selling new shares and other securities.



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[Source: Blown Mortgage]