| |
|
Home Values Built on Rotten Foundations
|
|
|
By Richard Benson
November 4, 2004
|
 |
|
|
We have been gleaning facts "brick by brick"
in order to write this story on the housing market and what
it all means for Wall Street and the economy. The story is
simple: While the Federal Reserve is slowly raising interest
rates, it is our observation that the housing price bubble
is already bursting of its own accord.
Let me begin with the sale of a property located a short distance
away from our modest casa in Palm Beach, where the big houses
have names. Casa Apava, an estate with ocean and lakefront
land totaling 18 acres, is under contract for about $70 Million
by its current owner, Ronald Perelman. This same property
sold for $14.25 Million in 1987. If the sale goes through,
it will be the largest residential real estate sale in United
States' history. (In 2004, the property was assessed for $33.4
Million and taxes were a modest $664,000 a year, or $55,333
a month). Needless to say, the buyer is reported to be the
chairman of NVR, Inc., the nation's eighth largest home builder.
Clearly, selling homes at inflated prices to average Americans,
who bought them using other people's money, has paid off handsomely
for this buyer.
The size of the housing bubble should not be
underestimated. In middle America, housing prices are up 44
percent over the past 5 years while in the momentum markets,
such as Las Vegas and Southern California, annual "price
pops" of 20 to 40 percent have commonly been recorded
until just recently. Housing is big business. In 2004, about
8 million new and used homes will sell with a total transaction
value of $1.9 to $2 Trillion. Mortgage debt will rise about
$800 billion to $7.5 Trillion by the end of this year. The
increase in mortgage debt represents the spending that the
Bush Administration needed to keep a $12 Trillion economy
moving forward.
The good news is that home ownership rose 2
percent to an all time record of 67.2; the bad news is what
had to be done to get it there while the labor force participation
rate has dropped 2 percent! In other words, easy credit and
record low interest rates have boosted home sales. In previous
economic cycles, the boost to home sales came from rising
incomes and more jobs!
Easy mortgage credit has been fostered by new
mortgage products. New types of mortgages have been introduced
over the past couple of years that transfer interest rate
risk from the financial institution (mortgage owner), to the
borrower, while allowing the borrower to take out the largest
possible mortgage. Long gone are the days when a borrower
borrowed what was considered a safe, prudent amount that they
could actually pay back. Today, the borrower takes every penny
that lenders will lend. In turn, lenders have "gone crazy"
because at the end of the day, the lender is not lending "his"
money. The loans go to a GSE security, or into a rated mortgage
security, which in turn is bought by a bank or Hedge Fund
that is invested just for a short term in the "Cash and
Carry Trade".
Today, the new mortgage lenders are offering
various types of mortgages to keep mortgage volume and quick
origination profits up. These mortgages include Adjustable
Rate, Interest Only, 40-Year, and Piggy Back. A Piggy Back
mortgage is a senior mortgage combined with a junior mortgage
that can leave the borrower owing more than 110% of the cost
of the house. Moreover, these lending tactics leave the borrower
more than a bit stretched and short liquidity, so it is no
surprise that new mortgages that allow the borrower to skip
payments and add the interest to principal are becoming popular.
What will lenders who don't lend their own money think of
next?
If these new types of mortgages aren't good
enough to stretch a consumer's buying capacity, a few years
ago special charities sprang up to give a home buyer his 5%
down payment. (Since a home builder was giving the charity
their funds anyway, he could easily "give back"
5% of his 30% profit to charity. Clearly, charity starts at
home!
On top of that, President Bush signed the "American
Dream Down Payment Act of 2003". This legislation authorized
$200 Million per year in down payment assistance to at least
40,000 low-income families. His goal was to increase the number
of minority homeowners by at least 5.5 million before the
end of the decade.
Under Federal Law, if you are a first time home
buyer and your income is 20 percent less than the local medium
income, your neighbor - the US taxpayer - will give you the
greater of $10,000, or 6% of the cost of the home to buy it!
Thus, sub-prime borrowers have influenced home ownership rates
considerably.
However, there are some sobering facts about
sub-prime borrowers. They are twice as likely to pick an ARM
mortgage. (ARM mortgages are already 30% of new home loans
and, as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to normal
levels, the monthly payment on an ARM will go up over 25 percent).
Moreover, sub-prime borrowers frequently refinance.
Borrowers who refinance for cash-out are twice as likely to
default as those who don't take cash out. Currently, 70 to
80 percent of sub-prime mortgages are debt consolidation loans
which add credit card and other debt onto the house!
These sub-prime mortgages have a terrible record.
At least 16 percent are delinquent or in foreclosure, and
4.6 percent are actually in foreclosure. The "funny money"
down payment mortgages are worse, with defaults running close
to 20 percent. The Federal Housing Administration, FHA, which
insures these loans, says national FHA mortgage defaults are
11 percent, while in cities like Baltimore, Maryland and Queens,
New York, the default rates for FHA loans are 21 percent and
25 percent. Perhaps more lenders could do what FNMA does with
loans heading to default: Re-write half of them and call them
"good". Remember, "A rolling loan gathers no
loss."
Also, with the Fed making money free, and the government trying
to give money to sub-prime borrowers regardless of their willingness
or ability to pay, the private sector is trying to get back
in the lead of "the easy money free for all". The
FBI has reported that in the first 9 months of 2004, 12,100
complaints of suspicious activity in the mortgage market have
been reported. Fraud hot spots include the usual suspect states
such as Florida, California, and Nevada with honorable mention
to Michigan, Illinois and Missouri. (At least this restores
my pride in the Midwest). Moreover, the reported fraud would
be higher except that i) most of the FBI are out looking for
terrorists, and ii) fraud big enough to interest the FBI only
includes something like the house or buyer not even existing.
Most mortgages written today have a bit of a
fudge factor in the total honesty of income and net worth.
Much information is excluded from debt and payment histories,
and "appraisals are either wish or myth." Even the
Mortgage Bankers Association recognizes that the home appraisal
process is totally broken. In reality, with easy money allowing
home prices to rise, fraud has become a way of life in the
mortgage market because every participant makes a commission
or fee if the mortgage closes. The higher the house price,
the bigger the mortgage!
Looking back at the facts, it is easy to see
that the foundation for housing prices is rotting fast. Buyers
have stretched the truth, in every possible way, in order
to buy the most expensive house for the lowest possible monthly
payment. Given the fraudulent loan underwriting and emphasis
on Adjustable Rate mortgages and sub-prime loans, it is clear
that any rise in mortgage rates will bury housing.
At the high end of the housing market, there
are reports of "Yuppie Fatigue". Super-sizing homes
also super-sizes the heating and utility bills, insurance
and maintenance costs. Those vaulted ceilings sure look nice,
but watch out for the heating bill! Million dollar home foreclosures
are picking up.
In the general housing market, 5 to 6 percent
of homes already have more debt than home value, and homeowners
are loading up with home equity loans and lines of credit.
These home equity loans and lines will be up to $400 billion
in 2004. Home equity can be spent, but as home prices stop
going up, more and more homes will have "no equity left".
Currently, wages and salaries have not kept
up with inflation despite "economic recovery"; bankruptcies
will hit another all time record of over 1.6 million in 2004.
Forty five percent of workers have total net assets of less
than $25,000 (including the value of their house) and less
than 4 of 10 workers save anything.
All of these facts were in place well before
oil and natural gas prices headed north for the economic winter.
Reasonable estimates show the average household bill for gas
for the car and energy for the home will be $9,000 in 2005,
up from $6,000 last year. Other costs of running a household
would put people in the poorhouse, but it's too expensive
to check in. This Christmas, Santa might skip homes that are
draining their home equity.
Does housing always go up forever? In the United
Kingdom where housing prices have soared like in America,
prices fell last month. Real estate agents can't be found
to talk about it, as it is bad for business. In San Diego,
housing prices have been flat the last couple of months while
the supply of homes for sale has jumped from a 2-month to
an 8-month supply.
In Las Vegas there is an unfolding house price
debacle. The national public has heard that the large developer,
Pulte Homes, has cut new home prices by 8 to 25 percent, and
25 percent of new homes on order have just been cancelled.
However, the public hasn't heard that i) 20 to 40 percent
of sales in new planned unit developments were to speculators;
ii) For-Rent signs in the complexes are everywhere. (To make
some easy money on the flip, buyers of second and third homes
planned to rent them out first); and, iii) Homes that sold
for $750,000 just three months ago are across the street from
homes that the same developer is selling today at a nice profit
for $550,000. "The Las Vegas housing market has crapped
out!"
In the United States, the supply of new homes
has risen steadily to a 275 day supply. Six of the 14 largest
home builders have debt-to-equity ratios of 95 percent, and
home builders know exactly what the car companies know: "If
you want to move inventory, cut the price!"
If home lenders would only read history they
would know that from 1975 to 1995, on average home prices
rose only 0.4% and with prices sagging now, they should ask
for a larger down payment, and fast, or they will be facing
big losses. In a market where housing prices are flat, it
takes a 15 to 20 percent down payment to protect a lender
against loss. The sales commission is 6% and REPO, carry,
and marketing costs can run another 10% or more.
What would a rational down payment mean for
housing prices? Today, a buyer who can scrape up $20,000 for
a 5 percent down payment can afford a home priced at $400,000.
If you ask him for a 10 percent down payment, he can suddenly
only afford a home costing $200,000! Rational down payments
will force housing prices down. Whatever you do, please do
not share this observation with existing homeowners; they
might want to sell before I have had a chance to follow up
with Ron Perelman's example.
Richard Benson
President
Specialty Finance Group LLC
Member NASD/SIPC
www.sfgroup.org
800-860-2907
|