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No BS Real Estate Indicators – January 2010

No BS Real Estate Indicators and Commentary – January 2010

The media said 2009 ended like a lamb.  The data was contradictory to that opinion.  No BS Real EstateDecember was a good month.  The media is also saying 2010 started like a lamb.    On this one, they are relatively correct.  Sales indeed showed a sharp decline in January (Sacramento single family homes; see Indicator #1 below).  As of right now, they are even lower in February.  Since March 2008, the number of closed sales has been consistenly over 1400 per month. 

The supply is limited to contingent short sales and REO fixers.  This is how booms start though.  Everything is quiet in the eye of the storm.  Spring has sprung and buyers are awakening.  If you are thinking of selling, get it on the market soon.  Call me for help.  If you are buying, yes, I can help you too. 

The charts below reflect over 10 years of local data collection, charting and trending.  The commentary is relevant to this information and what the author sees in the trenches.  No single piece of data can tell the whole story nor do these specific indicators predict the future. Remember, the “momentum” of a trend is important in understanding the force and direction of an underlying data element. A commodity trader watches momentum indicators to more accurately (but still with no guarantees) foretell a future data point. These are million-dollar decisions so momentum is important. 

The charting doesn’t end here.  Over 10 years of median sales price data has been collected and charted for over 40 local zip codes (see my Communities web page coming soon).  As you know, real estate is local and it’s hard to find data more granular than a zip code.  

Major Indicator #1 – Sales

Since April 2008 the momentum of Sales has been positive.  In January it crossed back into negative territory.  This would trigger a “SELL” action when a price is being charted.  In the case of this data element, it depicts the typical valley that “should” occur in a real estate cycle.  You can see the “winter dip” occur between December and February each year.  But things are thawing and bears are hungry.

Opinion:  Look for sales to decrease in February and then increase moderately through the spring and summer.  Nobody is sure what the rules will be and my bet is that Congress (should be written with a small “c” in Crayon font) will extend the tax credit for buyers, in some shape or form.  There are always hungry bears.

Major Indicator #2 – REO Sales

These are also known as “bank-owned” and “foreclosed” properties.  When auction demands are not met when offered on the courthouse steps, these homes revert to the owning/servicing bank to sell on the open market.  These have always occurred but not in the numbers we have seen since 2006. 

Since July 2009, REO sales have been less than half the number of Sales. The winter and spring before that, REOs were over 70% of the sales volume.  Banks are simply not foreclosing.  Whether due to accounting practices or “deer in the headlights” syndrome, the movement of product through the pipeline has stalled.  Now the supply is low except for contingent short sales.  And those can be a waste of time.  The momentum is negative.  We hope the REO Sales momentum increases — it would signify the availability of supply. 

Opinion:  Look for REO sales to stay low until the banks understand the new rules.  And then can understand the coming changes to those new rules.  

Major Indicator #3a – Median Sales Price (Sac Cnty)

The median price for all of Sacramento County has shown a slight improvement — but now retreating to the Summer 2001 price levels.  Momentum is serious about getting back to positive territory. 

Opinion:  The area price will decrease slightly while some high-priced areas/zipcodes will see a material reduction in comparable sales. 

Major Indicator #3b – Median Sales Price (ED Cnty)

The choppiness of this El Dorado County chart really just signifies the variation of homes, prices, and supply of sales comparables.  Even the momentum cannot decide which direction to go. 

Opinion:  This general price will decrease slightly due to the high-end which will experience most of the impact in 2010.

Major Indicator #3c – Median Sales Price (PL Cnty)

The slide of prices in Placer has been slower and smoother.  There also may be some corrupting forces at the County and City levels which we don’t see.  For some, the local pride is too sensitive and they won’t accept their just deserts.   Much of Whitney Ranch is entering the “short sale” zone.  This will help supply for some.

Opinion:  The price here will also decline to the squeeze at the higher end of home prices.

Major Indicator #3 – Median Sales Price (All)

This chart shows the comparison of the 3 counties.   It doesn’t include the momentum indicators but it’s interesting to see the responsiveness of Sacramento’s price changes compared to the other 2 counties.

Major Indicator #4 – Notices of Default (NODs)

Notices of Default have hit a major stoppage in the pipeline.  The indicator that is missing is “borrowers in distress”.  That would be a difficult piece of information to collect.

Opinion:  The number of NODs will increase as will Auctions and foreclosures.

Major Indicator #5 – New Home Permits

If they are still building, the homes are smaller and more sensibly designed.  Gone (temporarily?) are the massive walk-in closets and master bathrooms.  Gone are the 4-car garages and bonus rooms.  We have entered and exited the “McMansion Era”.  Some builders died before they could exit.

Opinion:  Population increases generally require more housing.  It only seems we have enough. 

Major Indicator #6 – Mortgage Rate

Free money!!!  If you can get a loan, don’t miss this window of opportunity.  But rules have changed so you better know your buying power and options.

Opinion:  Rates will increase slightly over the year although other lending restrictions will corrupt the market making the rate change less important.  This cannot last for much longer.  China will inevitably call us on it.

Major Indicator #7 – Inventory

I’ve added another piece of information to this chart:  “Active Short Contingent” properties are akin to a Pending status with regard to how Realtors treat them.   If it’s “contingent”, Realtors and buyers know the home has a soft deal with a prospective purchaser.  I think MetroList should make it a “Pending Contingent” status.  It will make the numbers stop lying. 

Opinion:  Inventory will increase but so will Active Short Contingent listings.  So who knows!

Major Indicator #8 – Months’ Inventory

The Inventory is over-stated so the true turn-over rate (Months’ Inventory) is a little different than depicted below.  Since this depicts the months required to sell all inventory (at the average Days on Market), this too is over-stated.  Mitigating that variance is the fact that many of these “active” listings are actually “pending contingent” and can remain on the market for many months without a bank approval or change in status.  In other words, this indicator is low but not necessarily 3.3 months.

Opinion:  See opinion on “7 – Inventory” above.

Major Indicator #9 – Short Sales

This is a new indicator showing how many Short Sales were successfully closed.  The momentum cannot be charted until at least 12 months of raw data have been collected. 

Opinion:  This number will stay relatively flat, with a slight increase.  Many banks have already concluded they will not entertain short sale offers.  Some borrowers purchased mortgage insurance with their loans which means the lender doesn’t care if they foreclose (insurance pays them about 80% of loan value). 

Major Indicator #10 – Swing Indicator

This is my favorite indicator since it shows the oscillation of the market — much like a EKG machine.  Let’s hope the market doesn’t flatline.  Except for January ‘09, Up-Ticks outpaced Down-Ticks.  For this last month, 41 zipcodes had a momentum up-tick. 

Opinion:  The up-ticks will retreat to a lower level.  This is a cycle that we cannot and should not fight.

These charts depict the momentum of changes in the underlying raw data to help forecast direction. These are not a guarantee of future direction but aid in the prediction of cause/affect in the various market forces. No single indicator tells the whole story. Also charted is the raw data itself. For an explanation or for a monthly subscription to this periodic report, call or email Jay Emerson (916-517-9606, Jay@JayEmerson.com). The data is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Sources include DataQuick, CBIA, Sac MetroList, and other public information.

Contact me for more details and to get an edge in real estate!

Jay Emerson, DRE Broker #01788488
Realty Executives Galster Group
5006 Sunrise Blvd, Ste 202
Fair Oaks, CA 95628
(916) 517-9606
Fax (916) 966-8706

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Home Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program « Logan Utah Real Estate Blog

There is another new Federal Government program out their designed to reduce the consequences and liability of people trying to avoid foreclosure by selling their homes as short sales, or else voluntarily giving up their homes with a Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure. This program is called the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program. Say that five times fast.

This program will be implemented on April 5th. It is supposed to “streamline” the short sale process, and remove the ability for banks to seek a deficiency judgement for the amounts they are actually owed from the borrowers. According to the official HMPadmin website:

The Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) Program provides additional options to avoid costly foreclosures and offers incentives to borrowers, servicers and investors who utilize a short sale or deed-in-lieu (DIL) to avoid foreclosures.

With either the HAFA short sale or DIL, the servicer may not require a cash contribution or promissory note from the borrower and must forfeit the ability to pursue a deficiency judgment against the borrower.

HAFA simplifies and streamlines the short sale and DIL process by providing a standard process flow, minimum performance timeframes and standard documentation.

While personally I think it is wrong for Government to relieve individuals of the responsibility of paying back debt they rightfully obtained, this should be a good thing for the housing market and real estate industry. Lengthy short sales are a huge problem with the way real estate works,  if that can somehow be shortened, real estate transactions will be far less complicated.

via Home Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program « Logan Utah Real Estate Blog.

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Short Sale approvals – 3 approved in 1 day!

Working with short sales

Working with short sales

It’s great to wake up in the morning and realize all of your hard work really does pay off!
Yesterday we received 3 short sale approvals…of course, we had been working on all of these listings for over 3 months! And a lot of hard work, persistance and patience finally has paid off. Two of these short sales were with Bank of America and on the new Equator system and one is with Aurora. Of course, the Aurora short sale took the least amount of time. The great thing was we still have buyers! This is huge, as so many times the buyers have walked by the time a short sale has been negotiated with the bank. The key to keeping the buyers engaged in the process seems to be great communication with the selling agent. We keep the buyer’s agents updated each and every week while we are negotiating with the banks, even if we have to tell them there has been no change. A conversation with the agent asking them to pass along the information to their buyers seems to keep everyone on te same page and it’s critical.

Is the Bank of America Equator system helping? It seems to me that it is. Although it’s still a process, Bank of America is now not losing everything we send to them as it is uploaded onto the system. We can see on the system what is going on. Once we had a negotiator assigned to the property instead of the general negotiator it took approximately 25 days to get an answer back…that’s not bad considering Bank of America was taking about 3 months for this process before.

Now we move on to the closing process on all 3 of these transactions….our work is not done. Now we need to get through the inspections, appraisals, buyer’s loan process and then close. Still work to be done, but I can breathe a sigh of relief now that we have our short sale approvals!

For more information on Short Sales

If you are a seller and wish to contact us for a FREE consultation regarding your options or a possible short sale on your home, please call us at (916) 230-0371 or send email to Lori@ModeandDurhaM.com.

Search all Elk Grove homes here!
Search all Sacramento homes here!

Lori Mode of Keller Williams Realty, Elk Grove
Certified Distressed Property Expert
DRE License #00935148
www.AllElkGroveHomes.com
(916) 230-0371

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Is a Monkey Negotiating Your Sacramento Short Sale?

Sacramento Short Sale NegotiatorMuch of my work as a Sacramento short sale agent is handled through email. So, I almost had a heart attack when I turned on my computer this morning. My start-up programs loaded and I didn’t have any emails. For a brief second, my heart about exploded. My immediate thought was my computer had malfunctioned, maybe my hard drive had been erased. Of course, nothing of the sort happened. I simply had too many emails coming in for the computer to immediately bring them up. I wasn’t patient enough.

Many of those emails are one-liners that say: Thank you. Or will do. While it’s nice to receive acknowledgments, they aren’t always necessary, and those emails certainly don’t require a response; yet, I am guilty of doing the same thing. It depends on, though, whom the email is from. If it’s from clients, I do want them to know that I have received their documents. But I don’t try to clog up my associates’ or vendors’ email in-boxes. I imagine they get as much email as I do.

I talk all day with my short sale negotiator via email. If it’s a particularly difficult short sale, and which ones aren’t, these days, I’ll call her, or she’ll stop what she’s doing and pick up the phone to call me. This woman is a law school graduate and a real estate agent. A darn fine real estate agent, too. She started negotiating short sales a few years ago and has become an expert negotiator. Due to the volume of Sacramento short sales that I handle, I share some of my short sales with this agent and pay her half of my commission, too. She’s worth every penny.

There are other short sale negotiators whom I could hire in Sacramento — many who charge way less — but many of those so-called third party negotiators do not have a real estate license. Therefore, they are breaking the law when they negotiate short sales. I would never in a million years want to place my short sale sellers in that position. I don’t even go there. Besides, I want to provide my clients with superior service. I’ve heard too many horror stories from other Sacramento short sale agents who have hired these vendors.

For certain types of short sales, I tackle a handful myself. Especially some Bank of America short sales, because I’ve been working with Bank of America for years and understand its goofy systems. Since they’ve switched to Equator, the short sale process has been easier and faster. I also love, love, love a Wachovia short sale because they are so straight forward and simple, which few short sales are lately. Wachovia also gives my sellers cash bonuses.

Moreover, I also work with Litchney Law Firm on short sales. Particularly those that involve hard-money loans and cash-out refinances. The lawyers who work for Litchney Law Firm are methodical strategists and expert negotiators. Those lawyers are known for removing further collection rights verbiage from short sale approval letters and, in many ways, are miracle workers. They do things I can’t. Sellers pay for Litchney Law Firm’s services separately, and there are no referral fees passing between us, even when Litchney Law Firm refers clients to me. It’s a clean association.

A lawyer doesn’t need a real estate license to negotiate a short sale. And dare I say, a lawyer never clogs up my inbox with an email that says, “thank you.” They’re much wordier with their thanks than that.

So, if your short sale isn’t moving forward, I suggest you take a look at who is negotiating your sale. Is it a third-party vendor that runs a short sale mill by volume, without personal attention to each file? Is it an agent without any experience? An agent who is too swamped with business to do the job right? Has your short sale dropped into a black hole never again to see the light of day? Because my Sacramento short sales tend to close, regardless of whether I personally do them, my associate does or Litchney. I’ve got a great team. I mean, am I lucky or what?

Photo: Big Stock Photo

sacramento short sale agent

Elizabeth Weintraub is an author, home buying columnist for The New York Times-owned About.com, a Land Park resident, and a Land Park real estate agent who specializes in older, classic homes in Land Park, Curtis Park, Midtown and East Sacramento. Weintraub is also a Sacramento Short Sale agent who lists and successfully sells short sales throughout Sacramento. Call Elizabeth Weintraub at 916.233.6759. Put 35 years of real estate experience to work for you. DRE License # 00697006.

The Short Sale Savior, by Elizabeth Weintraub, available through bookstores everywhere and at Amazon.com.

Photo: Unless otherwise noted in this blog, the photo is copyrighted by Big Stock Photo and used with permission.

The views expressed herein are Weintraub’s personal views and do not reflect the views of Lyon Real Estate.

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