Do you remember when we used to party like it was 1999? That was 1999. And then 2000 came, and the stock markets took a digger. A bunch of people lost a bunch of cash, and everyone freaked out about how crazy and dangerous the markets were. Just months earlier, everyone thought they could quit their job to make a fortune day-trading shares of BBQ.com, and other great business latest and greatest IPOs. It was easy while it was easy, and then, the bubble burst.
But what happened after a little time passed? Everyone looked back and said things like "should have seen it coming" and "that was unsustainable growth - had to correct at some point". And this is always what happens in a market cycle. It booms, it busts, and you want to be there while it's booming or your neighbor is going to drive a nicer car than you - and we don't like that. If you are tired of my references to Kindleberger's Manias Panics & Crashes, skip ahead to the next paragraph. Otherwise, please note that the author walks the reader through the common traits of all history's asset bubbles, and many of his lessons are being learned - again - by today's housing market participants. To understand the psychology that drives a market to extremes, he cites a South Sea stock investor in 1720 who said, "When the rest of the world are mad, we must imitate to some measure.", and he generalizes that "There is nothing so disturbing to one's well-being and judgment as to see a friend get rich." No wonder... its in our nature. Monkey see, monkey do. Read it now to put today's market in context with history - and to give peace with the idea that we have seen it all before, and things will get worked out.
Moving along... one of the typical components a market de-bubbling is the scapegoating. Heads need to roll, somebody needs to take the fall, etc. Its formula. And rightfully, there needs to be an understanding of the players involved in creating the bubble. But don't join the witch hunt this time, because chances are you had a piece of the action this go around. I am not going to dispute any of the accused in Barry Ritholtz's list which includes: The Federal Reserve, Borrowers, Mortgage Brokers, Appraisers, Federal Government, Fannie Mae, Lending Banks, Wall Street firms, CDO Managers, Credit Agencies (Moody's, S&P), Hedge Funds and Institutional Investors. Read his paper for elaboration on each participant.
An interesting article came out on 8/26 in The New York Times specifically flinging mud at one of the mortgage players, "America's number one lender", Countrywide. From reading it, it seems some disgruntled ex-employees ran to the press in an effort to expose some of the more eye-popping sales realities of the firm. And if this article is accurate, it would represent a disappointingly low standard of professionalism for an atmosphere where business of a financial nature is to be conducted. But who knows... the media is going to push this kind of sensational stuff to build on the souring momentum of everything connected to this phase of the market.
Keep things in perspective. Stay calm. Great time to read a book.
Monday, September 03, 2007
Lessons To Be Learned While Countrywide-Hating
Posted by
john
at
6:50 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace, Mortgage Marketplace
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
The Shifting Mood Of The Market
The mood on Wall Street is all over the place right now. The "Credit Crunch" or "Liquidity Crisis" now seems to be a little bit harsh of a label for what is going on. Much of that panic and fear seems to have settled down. There are still plenty of concerns, and quite a bit to get worked out in the credit marketplace, particularly in the residential mortgage market. But I like the re-classification of the whole state of affairs by Barry Ritholtz as a Credibility Crisis. There is enough underlying strength in the economy, and even the housing market to keep this from being too critical of an event.
He suggests that liquidity is not the problem. The issue is that nobody with cash is willing to take the leap into credit products because the whistle has been blown on the obfuscation of risk via derivitization. In other words, nobody can see what they are buying, and now that risk feels risky, the money has moved to the sidelines until credibility can be restored. This market stagnation has locked up a lot of the fluid movement in the market, and caused several companies to freeze up and die.
The un-levering process - where companies scale down their borrowing - has an affect of pushing prices (stocks, bonds, and other dollar-denominated assets) down further, as they sell assets to cover borrowed funds, but think of it as 'cutting to the chase'; the values clearly needed to correct back down to a more stable level. If we can find stability before selling everything too far, we get closer to that 'soft landing' type of adjustment.
The sentiment regarding the Federal Funds rate, and the role of the US Federal Reserve is also shifting. Whereas the markets immediately assumed that a cut in the Discount Rate suggested a near-term cut in the Fed Funds Rate, there is now more chatter covering the reasons why the Fed still will not rush to make these cuts. Inflation needs to prove itself a non-threat, or we start this cycle all over again without allowing investors to feel the painful results of poor judgement.
The market is eagerly awaiting the reports on PCE (August 31) and Unemployment (Sept 7) for insight into the Fed's mindset. Some say the Fed will not cut rates before Unemployment ticks up at least 0.2% (to 4.8). And the PCE reading needs to show a year-over-year of below 2.0% (currently at about 1.9, but close enough to the 2.0 to remain a concern).
Stay tuned... as I often say, there are a lot of moving targets involved, and the mood changes as the data rolls in...
Posted by
john
at
3:07 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Monday, August 27, 2007
How A Recession In Housing Affects The Rest Of The Economy
Watch CNBC for 5 minutes and 30 seconds and you can get a good sense of the attention being paid to the day-to-day developments in the housing and mortgage markets. At this point it is no secret (or real surprise) that the housing industry is in a recession. We have increasing inventory, slowing sales, and decreasing prices. The construction unemployment rates are rising. The mortgage industry is facing a fairly turbulent adjustment with several companies collapsing on short-notice, and leaving several consumers left waiting for the money to buy their homes.
But most agree that these adjustments are good for the industry's long-term benefit. This is typical of the market cycle. Its just that the other side of the cycle carried the industry so far for so long, that this side feels more intense.
Paul Kasriel of Northern Trust highlights some of the ways in which the housing industry's growing pains can spill over into the greater economy:
"The tentacles of the housing recession are reaching beyond consumer spending. Freight haulers, both truck and rail, are reporting weaker volume growth because of the decline in residential construction activity. With fewer housing developments popping up in suburbia, newspaper advertising revenues are being adversely affected. And the producers of construction equipment, such as Caterpillar, are experiencing softer domestic sales."It will be interesting to watch this develop. And of particular interest will be to monitor the role of the Federal Reserve, who is attempting to tread a fine line between averting a significant economic recession and giving the market participants false confidence through bail-out gestures.
Posted by
john
at
9:29 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Filtering News From The Media, Housing Marketplace
Friday, August 17, 2007
Fed Cuts Discount Rate
Jim Cramer got what he was looking for. This morning, the Fed lowered their Discount Rate by .500%, taking it from 6.250% down to 5.750%. The discount Rate is the rate at which the Fed lends money directly to commercial banks, credit unions and savings and loans, including large lenders like Countrywide and Bank of America. It is different than the Fed Funds Rate, which is the rate at which banks lend money to other banks. The Discount rate is usually held 1.000% above the Fed Funds Rate, which makes the Fed a last resort for lending institutions to borrow from. They would generally rather borrow from other banks at a lower rate, but with the current liquidity crisis making that difficult, this move will help provide some liquidity at more desirable rates in the short term.
This move has a direct benefit to banks and lenders more so than to consumers. The Fed is taking baby steps to help put some lubrication into the markets while being careful not to send the message that they will serve as a 'lender of last resort' to bail out institutions and individuals who face suffering loss as a result of poor decision making. This move softens things a little, but is not a bail-out move. They will let the markets second-guess recent behavior and correct themselves, but need to help guide so as to avoid a complete systemic breakdown. Its a fine line, and this is a baby step. The next few weeks will certainly be interesting, to see how much adjustment can be made, and how much stability can be built back
Posted by
john
at
9:12 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
What Do Fed Rate Actions Do To Mortgage Rates?
Thanks to this chart from HSH, you can see that the answer is "not much", at least not for mortgages based on long-term rates. The Fed changes the short-term or "overnight" rates to affect the costs of borrowing so that institutions and individuals will be more or less inclined to borrow to fund growth or expenditures. Higher rates means less spending, and the Fed has recently raised rates 17 times to try and slow down our hot economy to a more sustainable pace.
Mortgage rates are determined by the trade value of mortgage backed securities (RMBS), which are bond-type securities whose cashflow is generated by mortgage debt. The liquid value of these bonds reflect longer-term expectations of economic performance, and do not always move with the Fed Funds rate.
Back when the Fed was still raising rates (the incline on the tan line), there was a lot of expectation that this would pressure up the other longer-term rates. But it didn't, and we wound up with a flat and inverted yield curve. Then we heard an ongoing debate between economists who felt the inverted yield curve indicated the foretelling of a recession, and those who felt that this was a poor predictive tool. Now there are more folks on the recession bandwagon...
A higher Fed Funds rate does affect homeowners with significant home equity lines of credit however. HELOCs are based on the Prime rate, which moves in lock-step with the Fed Funds rate. If you have a sizable HELOC, you've probably already noticed your financing get a little top-heavy over the last few years. You will see some relief if the Fed starts to cut rates soon.
Posted by
john
at
12:28 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Mortgage Marketplace
Sunday, August 12, 2007
Friday, August 10, 2007
Fed Steps In To Calm Nerves?
Markets sure can be moody. Yesterday and today, the US Federal Reserve 'injected liquidity' into the markets to the tune of $38 billion in an effort to try and calm things down. Expectations of Federal Funds rate cuts have quickly changed, with 33% chance of a cut before the next Fed meeting in September. Last time the Fed changed rates off the scheduled meetings was in the wake of 9-11.
So the stock markets around the globe have been in a roil over all of this credit crunching. Shouldn't they be happy to see the Fed taking action? Or does the fact that they are reacting on the fly suggest to the markets that the Fed is officially acknowledging a problem? Security vs. Uncertainty. Markets hate uncertainty, and there will be a negative tone out there until it has evaporated.
While the Fed was raising rates in this last cycle - 17 consecutive 0.250% hikes over a two year period - mortgage rates often went down at each interval. This is often counter-intuitive, but if you can read between the lines it makes sense. Even though Fed rate hikes meant that the environment for interest rates was rising, the fact that the Fed was doing battle with inflation by raising over-night rates made bond investors happy, so they bought more bonds and brought long term rates lower. Security vs. Uncertainty again.
Meanwhile, check out Mr. Mad Money flipping his lid while talking about the current market conditions. Just another measurement of our current state of markets in 'panic mode'. If you are (or are not) familiar with Jim Cramer, here's a great chance to get a glimpse of the guy.
Posted by
john
at
2:19 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Thursday, August 09, 2007
So Much For The Soft Landing Theory?
Holy smokes! The market is changing quickly, as the 'other side' of the cycle has arrived with a thud. Rates and products in the mortgage market are changing rapidly, and many homeowners are going to get caught up in the crossfire. Last week at American Home Mortgage, 800 Million dollars of would-be loan funds piled up in just 3 days as the company announced that it would not fund deals that had already signed. Forget those in underwriting, application, etc. 800 Million dollars - that's a lot of homes! Think of the domino effect of broken purchase contracts, failed credit payments, etc. This kind of spiral is what causes the market to buckle, and why a quick change in liquidity is referred to as a "crunch" or "crisis". Read more about it here, or here, or here.
As for today specifically, Mortgage Bonds are trading higher on unexpected news from Europe connected to US sub-prime mortgage investing problems, as well as Stocks trading lower off the same news. French Bank BNP Paribas, second largest bank in Europe, announced it has temporarily halted withdrawals in three of its mutual funds that have exposure to US subprime credit. As you can imagine, investors like you and I, who are told that their own funds are not available for withdrawal, would be quite worried. In the day's only economic news, Initial Jobless Claims edged higher by 7,000 claims to 316,000, the highest weekly total since June 30 - a positive factor for the Bond market.
I often talk about the book "Manias, Panics and Crashes". About a year ago I started reading this book again, and everyone looked at me like I was a doomsayer. But there is so much historical information in this book that can be applied to the current situation. It gives a detailed look at the anatomy of an asset cycle, and when and where systemic breakdown can occur. Rather than stick your head in the sand, take a look at it and consult with a professional about your finances, so that you can be sure you are prepared to weather this storm in housing and the mortgage market. Are you liquid enough to get through this?? It promises to get at least a little uglier before the dust settles. But this correction will be healthy for the long run.
Posted by
john
at
1:15 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace, Mortgage Marketplace, Mortgage Planning, Personal Finance for the Homeowner
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
If You Pay Somebody Else's Mortgage, Can You Deduct Interest?
In another good bit from the Kiplinger Tax Letter, according to the IRS, the answer is no. Even if you actually paid any of it yourself. You have to be liable on the loan and an equitable owner to be eligible.
But Kiplinger's points to a limited exception based on a ruling back in 1997. It says that a couple could deduct interest that they paid on a home loan, that their relatives signed for. The reason was that the couple had poor credit, and the relatives stepped in to help. But the occupants of the home made the payments, lived in the house, and made all repairs and improvements. They experienced all benefits and burdens of ownership.
I guess the IRS does not concern themselves with risk of foreclosure as one of the 'burdens' of ownership. The charitable relatives took on this burden, but Uncle Sam doesn't seem to mind.
Posted by
john
at
10:39 AM
0
comments
Labels: Mortgage Planning, Taxation
San Francisco Real Estate Professionals And The IRS
When it comes to defining a Real Estate Professional for tax purposes - which comes in handy if you are a high income earner and have passive losses on rental property - the IRS essentially says that you need to have an active role in managing the property, and spend at least 750 hours a year in doing so (That's about 1/3 of your 40 hour work week). Then your losses are not 'passive', and there is no limit to the detectability. Otherwise, your cap is $25k per year. Oh, but if your income is over a certain limit, you lose the write-off...
...still with me? One more step, and its key. If you cannot deduct losses based on income being too high, you can defer these losses until the sale of the property, and reduce your gain by the exact amount of losses racked up over the years.
In San Francisco, and California in general, this is a big deal. Incomes here are on the high end, and rental losses are as well, as the rental cost vs ownership costs for property are at a historical gap. Gaining access to the 'Real Estate Professional' treatment has potentially significant implications.
According to the Kiplinger Tax Letter a recent IRS ruling has clarified a deeper-level detail of this test, which helps tax payers gain the 'Real Estate Professional' status. It allowed a couple to have extra time to elect to treat multiple properties as a single entity, thereby working around the time test for each property individually.
More info on the IRS Real Estate Professional test can be found here. Please also consult with your tax planner if you think you need to navigate this test or have any landlord or passive loss issues related to real estate.
Posted by
john
at
9:40 AM
0
comments
Labels: San Francisco Bay Area, Taxation
Thursday, July 26, 2007
Foreclosure Chart, The Return Of The Investor?
I posted here back in May of 06 that the caliber of real estate investor had significantly changed, and that the pros had vanished. Soon after, the amateurs disappeared as well, and the only investor activity we have seen recently has been folks looking to capture a good gain on an inflated property, and 1031-Exchange it into something different.
In the last few weeks however, I have seen quite a bit more investor interest. Folks who are not afraid and who know that a market like this has "deals". They embrace the Warren Buffett's mantra of "We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful." But I wonder if they are premature and if the market is going to deteriorate significantly further before things settle down. I know those builders do not want to hold inventory into a declining market, so I expect to see further cuts in prices, and increased incentives. I'm not buying into the media's doom & gloom rhetoric, but I do not think there is any reason to be anxious just yet... Deals are certainly out there...
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco Bay Area
Posted by
john
at
10:28 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace
Saturday, July 14, 2007
Has Been Stein Seen the Light?
Somebody forwarded to me an article by Ben Stein recently, and I noticed a stark contrast to the tone of the last Ben Stein article I recall reading back in January. I remember thinking when I read the first article that he was missing a key component of understanding housing as an investment. I assumed that he was not ignorant, but rather opted to deliver a streamlined and simplified message to his audience.
In the first article, Stein misses the concept of leverage when discussing return on housing. With leverage, you have to shift the focus to return on investment, not return on asset. I know he knows this, but now you can get an idea of why I had not - until the other day - read another of his articles.
So in the recent article, his tune changes a bit. He isn't as suggestively sour on the financial aspects of house-as-investment, and focuses on pre-paying mortgage debt. But comparing the two pieces provides a great example of the fact that the decision to 'buy the house' and the decision to 'pay off the mortgage' need to be looked at as wholly separate investment decisions. They are totally unrelated. Stein seems ho-hum about buying a house for financial reasons (again, ignores the leverage component), but once you own the home, he suggests liquidity is more important than retiring debt.
I like the direction he is heading in...
Posted by
john
at
4:44 PM
1 comments
Labels: Mortgage Planning
Monday, July 02, 2007
Dead Fish Don't Have A Mortgage Plan
I knew this kid in High School who was about as anti-establishment as they come. Pretty interesting guy, but somewhat difficult to get to know or get a good read on. When the senior year yearbooks came out, the quote beneath his name read: "Only dead fish follow the stream". It captured what I perceived to be at the core of his personality. And the message was clear. What's a worse thing to be than a dead fish? And what could be more true an image?
... 14 years later, it remains one of the more memorable from that sea of inside jokes, cliche inspiration, failed attempts at humor, and so on. It popped into my head again recently when I read a headline about a mortgage survey administered by Re/MAX in the Detroit area. It made the case that some 2/3 homeowners with a 'nontraditional' mortgage were planning to refinance. This was yet another media criticism of the mortgage industry, and the 'nontraditional' loan type. The media has made the terms 'exotic' and 'nontraditional' synonymous with 'dangerous' and 'rip-off' in the context of the mortgage industry.
This got me thinking, as the 2/3 number seemed extreme to me. I can't imagine that 2/3 of the people with 'nontraditional' loans need to refinance into a market that is close to its 5 year high water mark. Generally, the media refers to anything that isn't a 15 or 30 year fixed loan as 'nontraditional', but it would help to have clarification.
Refinancing always involves a cost/benefit analysis and can be viewed as a snapshot of one's financial and credit profile as well as of the marketplace for money at any given point in time. "Based on where I am today, does the market offer me something better?" Something has to improve. It is unlikely that loans originated in the last few years are eligible for lower rates today - credit is at/near its tightest and most expensive levels in the last 5 years (though there are some cases). So this statistic has to refer to people who are looking for more protection in the form of longer fixed rate periods. They are likely rolling into a higher rate, higher payment or both.
Of people who need to refinance, there are a few possible motivations: they were misguided when they took out their current loan, they are misguided about what they need going forward, or more innocently, things have just simply changed.
Among those who intend to refinance based on changes in life, those who are not taking out cash are going to be refinancing specifically to change the terms of their loan. And if this specific sector is equal to 2/3 of those with 'nontraditional' mortgages, then this would indeed be worthy of a news headline with a story about how 'nontraditional mortgages' are bad for your financial health.
But I doubt this is the case. Cash-out refinancers would be re-financing regardless of the current loan (to a degree). The misguided folks are not adequately understanding how to evaluate the cost/benefit proposition, or they didn't when they took out that last loan.
The key takeaway here is that life does in fact change. Among this 2/3 figure, there are likely those who knew life would be changing around this time, and took out a mortgage that fit the timeline of expected change, and saved a bundle in the process. They are the guided ones. The 'dead fish' are the folks who are letting the current push them around.
Living fish also follow the stream for the most part, but they navigate. They know when to resist the current, move to the side, etc, as opposed to banging into rocks and driftwood - and washing up on shore.
Let's face it. Resistance can get you in trouble. Defiance can get you hurt. But if there is a stampede headed for a narrow escape, sometimes you'll be better off figuring out a different way out rather than trying to squeeze through that door with the rest of them - or better yet - knowing how to avoid being stuck in the first place. Don't be a dead fish. Get a plan in place.
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
9:20 PM
0
comments
Labels: Mortgage Planning
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
CDC National Health Interview Survey Has Some Interesting Data
For example, it found that adults in wireless-only households were more likely than adults in households with landlines to report binge-drinking, smoking, uncovered health insurance, and limited access to health care.
Shocking! How many "adults" do you know who don't have a landline phone? Its a youtube generation thing folks, or at least a more youthful one. My guess is that if we controlled this study for age distribution, we would conclude that:
"younger people are more likely to use cell phones in favor of having a landline phone"
As opposed to:
"people in households with no landline tend to be binge-drinkers"
No knock against the youthful cell phone sector here - my mother is brilliant, but teaching her to use a computer was maddening because she learned how to type on a typewriter. Word Processing felt weird and strange. Just took her longer to adopt the idea, but now she's working on a PHD and setting the curve academically. Try doing that today without a computer.
To all you cell-phone only kids out there, there once was a time when we had to plug the phone into the wall, and dial with our fingers. I know, crazy, right?
Who wants a drink?
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
4:34 PM
0
comments
Labels: Filtering News From The Media
Family & Estate Planning Basics
A good checklist found in a recent article in Money Magazine is below. These are items that you should discuss with your parents - at any age. You don't need all the info now, but you should know how to find it:
-Will
-Life Insurance Policies
-Long-Term-Care Policies
-Banking & Brokerage Accounts
-Social Security Cards
-Medicare & Insurance Cards
-Doctor's Names & Numbers
-List of Medications
-Lawyer & Accountant Numbers
Seems pretty basic, but helpful to review. I mention it here because of the frequency with which I work with people who have lost their parents, and are facing major financial implications that we are coordinating through strategic mortgage planning. Its not a fun topic to discuss, but help yourself by cutting out some of the chaos that ensues when you cannot find the items listed above.
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
4:27 PM
0
comments
Labels: Mortgage Planning
If You're Like Me, Refurber Might Be For You
I grew up the son of a proficient handy-man. When I was a kid living with my parents, my dad made a living in the courtroom, but somehow knew everything possible about how to take care of the home. Gardening, fix-ups, painting, moving, storing, and especially anything requiring a 'gnarly set of tools' - he could do it. As a kid, I assumed it was a rite of man, and that it would someday translate to me... somehow.
Then I eventually moved out into a flat in San Francisco. My roommates and I didn't have time for home improvement projects, with all the work and happy hours. But more importantly, we didn't have space for tools. Therefore, we ignored basic property maintenance and called the landlord when necessary (remind me to post later on how to find tenants for your precious home who were NOT like us...). Eventually I realized I had some challenges. Seriously. At one point I tried to hack up a dried Christmas tree with a pocket knife so we could use it for indoor fires. The butcher knife didn't work. The end of that story has to do with a call to the fire department (see parenthetical comment above), but let's keep me on point here...
I moved again, and now I have space for tools. I also have a bigger house, that I care more about, and no landlord to do the dirty work. It is my domain. And I still feel like I know nothing. I am trying to accumulate a good set of tools, and a good set of experiences with these tools, but every little project always turns out bigger than expected, in physical and intellectual scope. It gets overwhelming, and can be demoralizing at times. I have dreams that I am walking through Home Depot in my underwear (no, not really).
So where do I turn for help? I buy books and manuals for specific projects. I call my dad to come over and help when he's up for it (almost always is). I hired a gardener when I realized I couldn't keep up with the yard. And I go online. A luxury that was not available in my dad's time, and until recently, one that usually did not live up to its potential with all the message boarding and googling and waiting and waiting when I want to screw in my light bulb right now, darn it!
Enter Refurber. This site centralizes the effort. Its a social network (web 2.0 for 'community') of people all built around handy-manning, refurbishing, repairing, and remodeling. Its a fantastic resource. Forget the random message boards and obscure sites. This is a place where people who have as big of a tool shed as my dad - and know how to use it - come to boast about their work, get excited about sharing tips, and find value in helping their virtual neighbors. Check it out.
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
4:02 PM
0
comments
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Trabajadores Escondidos - Why Construction Industry Contraction and Unemployment Data Do Not Correlate
With the slow-down in the housing market comes a slow-down in the housing industry. This is why economists fear that a drastic correction in housing prices will have the kind of ripple effect that could send the US Economy into a recession. If the appetite for housing slows, fewer construction workers (and Realtors, mortgage brokers, appraisers, title/escrow... etc) can find employment. We are seeing pretty big drops in some of the housing construction data now - fewer homes being built, fewer permits applied for - and expectations have been that we would see a rise in unemployment related to this. The housing industry is assuredly large enough to influence that number.
But the unemployment rate has remained stubbornly low, keeping pressure on the Federal Reserve to watch out for 'wage-based' inflation, aka too many workers making too much money. So where are all the laid-off construction people now, if not unemployed?
A few months ago I read a fascinating piece forwarded by a favorite economist and author, John Mauldin, which explored not only the concept that much of the construction labor is undocumented workers, and therefore not showing up in official unemployment records, but also the impact this might have on the global economy. Much of the money earned by undocumented workers is sent back across borders to Latin American family back home. The central banks of these countries literally count on this cash in their economy, and it affects their own policy decisions and economic steering. The essay's question: do these countries know as much about this housing slow-down as we do? If not, there is risk of a ripple-effect well beyond our borders. And in today's global economy, those ripples bounce back and forth across borders. Interesting stuff.
Last month at the Pacific Coast Builders Conference in San Francisco, there was a panel titled Immigration, Labor and the Future of the American Workforce which focused on the importance of immigrant laborers to the home-building industry. And Jerry Nickelsburg with the Anderson Forecast group at UCLA recently published a report about a study on these "Hidden Workers".
With the immigration debate and legislation proposals, keep an eye on this topic in the coming months...
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
10:12 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Monday, June 18, 2007
The Yield Curve Is Sloping Upwards
With the current sell-off in the bond market, we have finally returned to an upward sloping yield curve in the 2yr - 10yr chart. It's still pretty flat, and bonds have started to retrace some of the steps they took during that little three-week selling frenzy, but we have not had an upward slope for a long time. Check out this site for a great illustration of the yield curve over the last 9 years or so (make sure to hit the 'animate' button). If it didn't make a lot of sense before, this will help. Pay close attention to the last few years where we see the Federal Reserve's steady 0.250% rate hikes (on the left) and the corresponding long term rates (on the right). This stubborn long-term rate has stayed relatively calm in the face of all those Fed tightening moves.
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
6:37 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Warren Buffett On Opportunity Cost
Its no breaking news that you can learn a lot about investment and prosperity from a guy like Warren Bufett. I saw a blurb recently about the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder's meeting, and clicked my way into this 5 page document he wrote in 1996 titled "An Owner's Manual", where he outlines his basic economic principles of business operation. There is some great insight here, particularly on the last page where he describes the difference between intrinsic value vs. book value.
This passage uses a well-constructed example of the opportunity costs of college education to illustrate the difference between "Book Value" and "Intrinsic Value", two important business valuation metrics. This same exact principle applies to debt and wealth management when we talk about the use of the marginal dollar.
Most people can clearly evaluate the cost of not paying off a dollar's worth of mortgage principle - we call it interest. But we see most people mistakenly value the actual cost of paying the mortgage principle back, measured in foregone return on investment and foregone liquidity, as well as increased risk and tax exposure.
Its tough to set your financial priorities in order when you don't know what they all cost. With the mortgage being the largest 'bank account' most people have, it is critical that the mortgage plan is congruent with these priorities - adequately valued. Take a look at this for evidence of how 'most people' are missing opportunities to build a better bottom line. Good mortgage planning can take this concept even farther in the right direction.
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco
Posted by
john
at
4:58 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Measuring Affordability In Real Estate
There was an interesting article today in Realty Times discussing the currently escalating energy costs, and the implications for home sizes and housing decisions. One might think that with gas prices rising so quickly, the average consumer might alter their behavior reflecting sensitivity to these costs.
The author makes the case that it would take a true energy crisis to change the current course of larger average home sizes (20% are 4 or more bedrooms, nationwide!). One interesting detail is the fact that garage doors are being built with larger dimensions to accommodate the larger, gas-guzzling SUV cars that so many Americans love to drive.
I don't think the average home builder can respond to the weekly changes in gas prices, and expect to see some of the energy-conscious construction trends become more wide-spread. There has been a lot of buzz for months about "green construction" in my area (San Francisco Bay Area), but the building industry has to deliver based on some amount of lag time.
A little over a year ago, the Brookings Institute issued an insightful report about "The Housing Affordability Index, A New Tool for Measuring the True Affordability of a Housing Choice". One of the key issues that hit home for me was the discussion on a consumers tendency to mis-appropriate values of things like commuting, environment, time, road-rage, etc.
We have seen a huge growth of housing in the areas to the East of the Bay Area over the last several years. As a result, tons of homes have been built in towns like Tracy, Stockton and Modesto. There have also been entire up-start communities built at former cattle ranches like Mountain House. Most of this growth has been by people who work in the Bay Area, but cannot afford - or do not want to pay for - the houses. If you doubt this, try driving east on Interstate 580 during afternoon commute hours.
Reading the Brookings paper, you might gain a sense of how to evaluate things like:
- -gas costs, auto wear and tear costs
- -time spent commuting measured against time spent with spouse, kids, etc.
- -psychological costs of road-rage
- -physical health costs of traffic stress, sitting in smog and exhaust fumes
- -health care costs related to the above
- -living away from urban cultural centers, food choices, arts, etc.
Everyone will have a different set of priorities of course. But you need to know how to measure the cost of missed opportunity, and other things that cannot be easily defined in dollar amounts.
If you need help figuring out how your mortgage plan can be molded to accommodate your life's priorities rather than restrict you from them, its time to talk.
Posted by
john
at
10:10 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Wednesday, May 09, 2007
More Movement For Change To Real Estate Commission Model
The Federal Trade Commission has issued a lengthy report getting behind the movement for change to the way Real Estate commissions are structured for residential US Real Estate transactions.
I wrote about this in a previous post with a similar report from the AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies. I'm a huge fan of the Freakanomics guys; they have some interesting criticism of the Realtor commission model despite a few oversights and a petty undertone. Also, 60 Minutes has a story coming up this Sunday about alternative compensation models. Its unclear if they will contribute to this debate with balanced representation, but the fact is that this issue continues to be one of the biggest in the Real Estate business today.
It continues to be a very interesting battle, and the National Association of Realtors (NAR) has their defenses of course. Problem is, most of it sounds 'defensive'. There is some merit to the claims made by NAR, but the inherent problems with professionalism and integrity within this business make these defenses 'not applicable in all cases'. Some good insight to their viewpoints can be found here (see links at bottom of that page for more).
At the bottom line is a comment I give frequently: work with a professional. It holds true in Real Estate and financial services as much as it does in medicine or auto repairs.
Posted by
john
at
9:03 AM
0
comments
Labels: Housing Marketplace
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
The Accidental Landlord
With the turn in the real estate cycle upon us, there is a whole new sector of realty animal, who find themeselves on the wrong side of the buy & flip fringe. Whether they bought yesterday, or 10 years ago, they intended to sell right now. But a few things needed to happen first: Entitlement changes, condo conversions, marital separations, graduating high schoolers, etc. And while they were waiting, the market changed.
And so by the time it became feasible to sell, these folks didn't like the conditions or the values, so they decided to keep the property and rent it out. And here they are, the 'Accidental Landlords'. According to this site, 1 in 5 landlords was an accidental case. Demographic details are also available at the site.
All the action happens at the margins. Watch these cases to see the emerging trends in the market. This is a potential flop in the supply/demand dynamics of rental and ownership housing. These are likely your first sellers when market conditions inch up.
If you are in the position of feeling forced to hold inventory, its imperative that your financing plan allows you the flexibility to withstand cashflow fluctuations. Don't let selling a home be a limiting factor if you want to move. Learn how you you can prioritize these goals with financing strategies by talking with a certified mortgage planner.
Posted by
john
at
3:24 PM
0
comments
Labels: Housing Marketplace, Personal Finance for the Homeowner
Rocker's House Sells At 37% BELOW Asking!!
Is this a sign of the times? Jack White, of The White Stripes, recently sold his home in Detroit for $590k, a full $340k below the original asking price of $930k. Wow!
I often talk about real estate values being a function of 'micro markets', where local trends may be different from larger national ones. And Detriot has had one of the slowest markets in the past several years. But this is an interesting case - 37% is a big discount!
The value of the home - or anything - is a function of the pool of willing buyers, and what they are willing to pay for it. I don't know how White could have been so far off with the original asking price. I wonder if he expected the fame tie-in to bring a premium to the sale price. But this is a guy who recently put out an album called "Get Behind Me Satan"; not necessarily a title that would be expected to have broad appeal to the folks in the top tax brackets... and the custom design clearly limited the appeal to average home buyers. You'ld have to be a major fan to want to buy the home with White's sense of style. So limiting the appeal to a pool of buyers who may not share his own socioeconomic profile seems to balance out as a 'net negative' in terms of being a high profile case.
No matter what the reason, his expectations were way off.
Posted by
john
at
8:20 AM
0
comments
Labels: Housing Marketplace
Home Monitoring Technology
The technology productivity paradox is a theory that says with increased technological development, our productivity advances at a slower rate. Rationalizations of this concept have a broad base of argument.
In a more sociological sense, it could also be considered that a paradoxical effect of technological prosperity is that we, armed with greater access to information, will become so burdened by it that we experience a deterioration in our quality of life. Its a slippery slope.
I saw an article today that summarized an assortment of home monitoring services that can be accessed (some very inexpensively!) from computers, cell phones and even blackberries. You can watch streaming video of your front porch, receive text messages if a door or window is opened, or get a daily email summary tracking movement of people in your home while you are away.
I can see the appeal of all of these, but I wonder what it must be like to go on vacation and be constantly aware of a device in your pocket that could go off at any time without warning to alert you that the gardener accidentally ran over a sprinkler head. Is it worth it?
We have alarms, and alarm servicing companies. The whole point is for them to filter the alerts and decide if its a problem worth interrupting your nap on the beach over. The neighbors are there to watch the dog, and pick up the mail. Do you really need to confirm that it gets done from across the country?
I see the value of 'piece of mind'. But I wonder what the point is of trying to get away if you are going to rely on the constant engagement of technology and to be plugged in all the time. Remember 10 years ago before everyone had a cell phone? Every time I fly somewhere, it cracks me up when the plane lands and half of the passengers start checking voice mail and making calls. What did they do before? Did they run to the pay phone by the baggage terminal, or did they just relax a bit and plug back in when they got home or to the office?
I don't know. Love the concept and appreciate the technology, but tough to find the right balance here between 'peace of mind' and getting away to actually 'get away'...
Posted by
john
at
7:13 AM
0
comments
Friday, April 20, 2007
Are Real Estate Values A Roller Coaster Ride?
Robert Shiller is a Yale Economist who has enjoyed some fame for his book Irrational Exuberance, which was a timely publication that predicted the market correction on the heels of the tech bubble. He's also stayed in the news with an 'Exuberance' redux, where he has predicted the bubble in housing values - every year since the tech bubble. Today's post isn't meant to take away from his theories and predictions, so for now, lets just agree that 'even a broken clock is correct twice a day'... and we can get back into why I say that later on (if interested).
Shiller recently published an index of real estate values indexed for inflation. Before you look at it, we get a pretty fun visualization of of this chart from blogger Richard Hodge. Its worth taking the ride first. Shiller's data is plotted here.
Posted by
john
at
7:34 AM
0
comments
Friday, April 06, 2007
Too Many Jobs!
Non-Farm Payroll and Unemployment data were released today, and the US Economy is still chugging along... For those who feel Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will lower rates in the near future, this news serves as a little cold water splash in the face. Unemployment is too low. Plain and simple.
There were 180k new jobs last month, versus the expectation of 135k. Unemployment dipped to 4.4%, versus the expected 4.6%. This is going to keep wage-side inflation persistent, since employers will need to compete for skilled workers by raising pay. And Bernanke has made it clear that no rate cuts will come until the inflation cinders have ceased to smolder. He may even need to hike rates one more time to cap things off.
The Fed Funds Rate remains a moving target, and the timing for adjustment of this rate back down has extended beyond what analysts expected a year ago. Evidence of inflation beyond the Fed's comfort zone has persisted in these types of news reports, and we won't see a change in Bernanke's tone until inflation gets back under 2%.
The meltdown in subprime lending is not going to directly lead to a Fed cut as many have speculated. Even if the housing market languishes due to an increase in supply and decrease in buyers, this needs to trickle through to the data in reports like those given today before the Fed will respond. Perhaps with all the mortgage companies shutting down, we will see a counter-weight to this tight job market...
... I'll be careful what I wish for.
Posted by
john
at
7:52 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
The Contrarian Investor
Back in May of last year, I ran a post about the state of the housing market as indicated by the caliber of Investor I was coming across in my practice. So many of these speculative buyers were lacking the basic understanding about how to invest in real estate, and were exhibiting ideas and strategies evangelized by the late-night infomercial type of real estate guru. I predicted that this was a sign of a topping market, but only that it was a sign. I did not call for a crash in housing. I spent the following posts explaining how dynamic our economy was, and why it was so difficult to predict these things...
But back to my point. The market has been pretty flat in the last year, and this type of amateur investor has all but vanished from the marketplace. But any investment professional can tell you that opportunities exist when you think against the grain. It can be tough to do, but it often pays.
With the tightening credit availability in housing, a lot of would-be buyers are going to need to turn back to renting homes. This puts a squeeze on rental supply, and causes a trickle-up in rental costs. Keep this in mind as you look for return and cash-flow on your investment properties. The opportunities will be out there...
RealEstateJournal has another interesting article today about a particular niche in Real Estate Investing - the college campus play...
Posted by
john
at
12:21 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Where Analytic Capital Meets Experiential Capital
This is not your typical 'fork in the road'. RealEstateJournal has an interesting article today about a study performed by a bunch of economists to look at when in life people are most likely to make minimal mistakes managing their finances.
The results vary by type of financial device or account managed, but everything landed in the 'middle age', with 53.4 years being the ideal age to make wise decisions with one's money.
But why wait until 53? and if you already saw 53, why let things slide now? The forces that cause people to miss a payment, make a late one, etc, are mostly related to improper cash flow management and inadequate liquidity. Learning to master these two aspects of financial planning is key to withstand strain presented by life's 'curve balls' and unexpected events.
Are your priorities stacked in the right order? You can accelerate the 'Experiential Capital' process by obtaining quality financial advice. If your mortgage is the biggest liability you have, or your home is your biggest asset, it makes sense to build your plan around real estate finance strategies. You certainly want your mortgage plan to be congruent with other financial objectives.
Posted by
john
at
9:42 AM
0
comments
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Young-With-Money Households
There is some interesting notes from a recent study by The Media Audit about incidence levels of 6-figure income earners out today... Here is a summary. For more information on The Media Audit, go here...
Thursday, March 1, 20076.2 Million Young-With-Money Households
According to a new report by The Media Audit, there are 23.2 million adults in the 87 metropolitan markets, regularly surveyed by The Media Audit, with annual household incomes of $100,000 or more, and 6.2 million are between the ages of 18 and 34.
Bob Jordan, president of International Demographics, producing The Media Audit, notes that "There are more, by both percent and actual number, adults with six figure incomes under the age of 35 than there are over the age of 54."
Among all those with six figure incomes:
26.6 percent, or 6.2 million, are under the age of 35
19 percent, or 4.4 million, are over the age of 54.
There are 43.8 million adults under age 35, and 39.8 million over age 54 in the markets measured
Eighteen percent of the "young with money" are age 18 - 20
18.9 percent are 21- 24
63.2 percent of the "young with money" are 25 - 34
Of the 6.2 million 18 - 34 year olds with six figure incomes, 60.9 percent are men and 39.1 are women.
Jordan says, "The gender differences ...are in spite of the fact that the women are more inclined to have a college degree. Fifty six percent of 18-34 year old women earning $100,000 or more have one or more degrees. Just 46 percent of men in the category have one or more college degrees."
In addition, 16.4 percent of men and 17.6 percent of women in the "young with money" group have advanced degrees. Men also get to the $100,000 income level quicker. Among women, 15.6 percent are 18 - 20 and 19.4 percent of men are in the same age group.
In spite of the gender differences, however, women buy more house. In the young with money group:
46.5 percent of women have homes valued at $300,000 or more
Among Men in the group, 42.2 percent have homes valued at $300,000 or more
80.7 percent of women in this group own their own home, compared with 74.3 percent of men
Approximately, says the report:
58.3 percent the "young with money" group are Caucasian
9.7 percent are African-American
15.3 percent are Hispanic
12.7 percent are Asian
For more information from The Media Audit, please visit here.
A lot of the young home buyers who contact us are driven to the idea of purchasing by being confronted with their Income Tax bill. Real Estate tax deductions get more appealing as your income gets higher. Roughly half of these people have exposure in housing beyond 300k. The key takeaway here is, the other 53.5-57.8% of young-with-money people are missing out on the opportunity. If you are in this category, its time to explore renting vs. buying, and how tax planning fits in with mortgage planning. If you are not already considering buying a home, or larger home, you may be interested in seeing what happens financially if you do.
Posted by
john
at
11:01 AM
0
comments
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
A "Well-Contained" Meltdown
Its always good to keep things in perspective. If you read my last post, it will help to read the text of a recent speech by San Francisco Federal Reserve, President Janet Yellen that was presented on February 21 to the Silicon Valley Leadership Group. She discusses the US Economy 'glide path', or what the media likes to refer to as the 'soft landing'.
She notes that the concern over default rates in the market for sub-prime mortgage backed securities (MBS) appears to be well-contained. Investors have isolated their souring mood to the sub-prime sector, and value of prime MBS are holding well. She suggests that tighter lending standards across the board might not hit with such an impact if the concern remains isolated to sub-prime.
She also discusses the relationship between this marketplace and the housing market, and potential for collapse, saying that "while not fully allayed have diminished".
It sounds like a very calm response to the news from sub-prime. I hope cool heads prevail while this market shakes itself out.
Posted by
john
at
8:31 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace, Mortgage Marketplace
Sunday, February 18, 2007
The Liquidity Crack-Down
Often referred to in the industry as a 'liar's loan', stated income loans are facing serious scrutiny. I won't get into when and why these loans make sense and are fair and smart, but I can tell you when it looks suspicious. If an applicant has a job that typically pays a flat steady salary, but they want to 'state' their income rather than prove it, chances are they don't really have the income they are stating. "Stating" is for convenience or inability to prove income, not for concealing or misleading. Lenders historically charged higher rates to off-set the risk associated with not proving income, but as these guidelines have become more and more liberal, the 'stated income' premium has shrunk. Banks and Wall Street knew that the rising value of real estate served as a safety net against any possible default case, so the risks across the board were smaller. Stated? Who cares, the house is doing 12% a year!
But those times have changed. Underwriters know that some people fudge the numbers, and that some people lie. Wall Street, Congress, and Economists are all growing concerned that too much mortgage debt is floating around qualified on false pretenses. With values flat, or declining, borrowers who have over-stated their reach are feeling the heat. Foreclosure numbers are escalating, investors are getting burned, and congress is calling for tighter standards, more regulation, and less throwing money at people who don't qualify for it.
This trend is going to persist for a while. Lenders need to shake out their bad products, get back to basic risk management standards, and deliver quality paper to Wall Street. Risky loans can be great tools for borrowers with the apetite for risk and ample knowledge of how to manage that risk. Risky borrowers can still be homeowners with stable and conservative loan products. But when you mix risky borrowers with risky products, and put them in a flat or declining housing market, look out.
A lot of economists have seen this coming for some time. The excess global liquidity has created an environment where risk premiums have been condensed so far that nobody can evaluate risk adequately any more. Bill Gross talked about this almost a year ago, noting that junk bonds were getting A Paper prices, and concluding that investors were not being fairly compensated for the risk they were taking. In most cases, it was probably not clear how much risk there was. John Mauldin expects this to turn into a full blown scandal in the mortgage debt marketplace, as those who have been buying the subprime debt are paying A Paper prices for BBB- Paper, and have been possibly mislead by creative derivitave products.
Its complicated stuff. Markets ebb and flow. Sometimes the waves get big, and cause a little damage when they smack up against the shore. The longer it takes to correct these problems, the harder the correction hits, and the more it hurts. Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve have been working to clip liquidity to the tune of 17 0.25% rate hikes. The Bank of Japan recently came up to 0.50% from a long-time low of 0.00%. This makes it more expensive for banks to lend money, and for people to borrow.
If this hits with too big of a thud, there goes the 'soft landing'. Angelo Mozillo said he has never seen a soft landing, and you have to be careful when anybody tells you "this time it's different". Let's hope this all shakes out without a lot of turbulence.
Posted by
john
at
3:42 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace, Mortgage Marketplace
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Anatomy Of A Bubble
I'm not convinced that we have seen the bottom in housing. I'm not convinced that we have seen a successful soft landing either. Things definitely slowed down going into the end of 2006, and they are definitely picking up again in early 2007. But I don't see any reason to believe we will return to the hyperbolic growth we saw in previous years - or anything close to it. In fact, there still is some very real concern that we could see a more significant drop in house values.
The Federal Reserve is expected to keep rates flat all year. Some economists think we will see a rate cut late in the year, and some see a rate hike a possibility still. History tells us that the Fed usually starts cutting rates within 9-18 months of their last rate hike.
I have often said that with so many variables in the economy, and in the housing market specifically, all it can take is one environmental change to trigger a shift in consumer mentality, and thus consumer behavior. One of these variables that has re-entered the fold in the last few weeks is Wall Streets control over mortgage lending practices. With sub-prime lenders going out of business, Wall St. has raised concern with sub-prime mortgage backed securities. The lenders are responding by tightening their lending guidelines to uphold or improve their credit ratings.
A year ago, congress was advising the lending industry to do this, but lenders were actually relaxing guidelines in an effort to grab more of the shrinking volume of business. So with this pendulum swinging back the other way, you can expect the fringe of buyer access to be trimmed away, thereby reducing the pool of potential buyers, demand, housing liquidity, and ultimately prices. If lenders go too far too fast, either by their own proactive measures, or in response to Wall St. demand, we could see a shock to this system. And if the consumer perceives this to be significant, thats when the potential to freeze up and panic sets in.
Weakening prices slow what Paul Kasriel of Northern Trust refers to as 'household deficit spending', as homeowners cannot spend their home equity on other consumer purchases. If you don't think this is a big deal, take note of the fact that the US Savings rate is at its lowest since the GREAT DEPRESSION, at a negative 0.5%. People are using their homes like ATM's on a National level. Cutting off access to this slows spending, and the economy in general. Enough of this and the Fed is back into rate-cutting territory.
So while I hear agents advising their clients that "the bubble has not burst", and that offers without contingency and 10% above the asking price are required "if you really want this home", I don't like anybody being too anxious to lead with logic when transacting in real estate. It is competitive right now, yes. But I'd be concerned that the housing market is making a head-fake here.
Posted by
john
at
8:23 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace, Mortgage Marketplace
Monday, February 05, 2007
Real Estate and Tax - What's Important To Know
With tax season officially open for the 2006 filing year, its time to refresh the memory on some important tax issues related to real estate. I see a great deal of confusion and misinterpretation of tax rules when meeting with people in my mortgage planning practice. Realty Times has a good reminder on the homestead exepmtion that Bill Clinton gave us with the Tax Reform Act of 1997. Make sure you know the rules for this tax treatment on homes in the year they are sold - especially if you are thinking about renting the home out at any point. Its also important to know the difference between mortgage interest expense and investment interest expense when trying to write off those mortgage and HELOC dollars. I see the majority of people surprised when confronted with the rules for deduction of mortgage interest. The IRS is talking about taking a closer look at these deductions to make sure tax-payers are walking on the right side of this fine line...
You can find a lot of tax resourse on the IRS website, but you may want to consider letting a professional CPA handle your taxes for you. The more complicated your return, the more value a tax planner stands to offer. Let me know if you need help locating a good one.
Posted by
john
at
8:32 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Personal Finance for the Homeowner, Taxation
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Where Is Your Retirement Plan?
I am truly amazed at the number of folks I meet with who have either not started, or do not fully participate in a retirement plan. I am especially dismayed by those who fit this description and already have retirement in their cross-hairs. I understand its tough enough as it is to pay the bills, especially in the San Francisco Bay Area, and throughout most of California. Maybe it has been my saturation in the field of personal finance, but I feel like the cost/benefit evaluation of a qualified retirement plan should be as obvious today as the health risks associated with smoking.
OK, maybe I am guilty of hyperbolic analogy. But I'm here to help shed some light, and I want my point to be clear. YOU NEED to understand the time value of money, and the power of tax deferral. The United States government wants you to be capable of taking care of yourself financially when you retire, and so they have created some incentives to encourage you to save now, and not rely on social security. In case you haven't noticed, legislators believe we are critically under-prepared for taking care of the retiring baby-boomer generation; you DO NOT want to go through life relying on Social Security 100%. We call this 'whistling through the graveyard'.
If you work for a corporation, non-profit, are self-employed, or a contractor, there is a plan for you. 401(k), 403(b), IRA, Roth IRA, SEP, Simple, Solo 401(k), pension, etc. Don't get overwhelmed by the big picture here. Find your plan, and GO.
Small business folks have a great resource here. If your company offers a 401(k), here is some great resource as well. Did you know that your company now automatically enrolls you for a minimal contribution unless you opt-out? They're doing you a favor. Most companies match a portion of your contribution - depending on how its structured, thats a 50-100% return on your money in the bank! This is a no-brainer, folks.
You will often hear me say that 'the dollar you don't put in your 401(k) is likely the most expensive dollar you spend'. Others advise to 'pay yourself first'. It all starts here. I know the objections, and I understand them. Its time to get over it.
If you need some help figuring out how to make room for these contributions, contact me. Smart mortgage planning will make room for your financial priorities, and this should be one of your highest.
Posted by
john
at
12:20 PM
0
comments
Labels: Mortgage Planning
Mortgage Planners Going Too Far
I was reading an article about Reverse Mortgages the other day, and one tangent paragraph really caught my attention. It was discussing one of the problems with Reverse Mortgages being that it could put "a bundle of cash into a consumer's hands, marking an enticing target for financial product sellers to exploit." The fact that this is an inaccurate statement about Reverse Mortgages (Cash-out mortgages: yes; Reverse Mortgages: no) is obscured by the sentiment behind the statement - which is agreeably concerning. The article sites a California law that prevents mortgage brokers from selling annuities in the process of re-financing your debt. Yikes... Thank you Sacramento...
Any time you hire a professional to handle business for you - any sort of business - it is important that they know what they are doing. Too often we see people attempt to wear too many hats, and what happens as a result? They don't wear any of them well.
A Certified Mortgage Planner (CMPS) can help introduce you to concepts related to financial planning and how the mortgage relates to these interests (in fact, if they do not, you might be talking to the wrong one...). BUT, there is a fine line being crossed when this professional tries to do everything else for you. How can they possibly be an expert at mortgages, investments, insurance products, credit counseling, taxes, etc, all at once? Make sure your Certified Mortgage Planner (CMPS) is working with other professionals who focus on these areas, not trying to wear too many hats.
As a former financial advisor, I can testify that the Series 7 licensing and training involves quite a bit of focus on NASD rules and fiduciary responsibility in general. The licensing that allows a person to be a real estate salesperson, mortgage broker, etc has relatively none. CMPS has made some great strides to inject ethics and responsibility into the mortgage industry; make sure you are working with somebody who holds this important designation.
Posted by
john
at
9:19 AM
0
comments
Labels: Mortgage Planning
Thursday, January 18, 2007
SF Fed President Janet Yellen Speaks on Housing, Economy
I like the general sentiment in Janet Yellen's speech yesterday regarding the state of our economy. Since Economists are generally regarded as dry and boring, I don't expect you to want to read yourself - that's why I talk about it here. But if you're in the mood, feel free here. Lots of other stuff I am reading gets posted on this page as well.
I keep writing about the different vibes being given by credible sources on our economy, where we are headed, and what the implications are for the housing market. Yellen's speech yesterday gives some great insight into the mindset of the Fed right now, and what they are confident about and what they are uncertain about. The general idea is that we are seeing increasing evidence of the 'soft landing' scenario.
You get a great idea of how dynamic the economy is when reading this, as there are so many variables that play into the evaluation, and each one affects the others in direct and indirect ways. Along these lines, as many people are watching the economy to make predictions about housing, others are looking at housing to make predictions about where the economy will go. Sometimes its difficult to see which comes first.
We see analysis that suggest home equity borrowing has specifically contributed as much as 1% to the annual GDP growth. With a current rate of 2-3%, that's a significant portion! With the 17 consecutive rate hikes to the Fed Funds and Prime rates, consumer demand for dollars should drop, slowing spending, and slowing economic growth... Those cuts seem to be working....
A few months ago everybody thought that the Fed was impatient with their pace of rate hikes, and should wait longer to see the early part of the cycle make its way through to GDP figures (arguably a 9-24 month lag time). The fear was that they would slow us too aggressively and put is in recession. (Then we get rate cuts, go the other way to stimulate spending, etc... the so-called pendulum swinging back and forth...) But This side of the rate cycle is looking now to be one of the longest pauses at the top on record. This could change with a big miss either way in CPI, Jobs data, PCE, or other economic reports, but so far things are looking pretty healthy.
Look at this quote from Yellen's speech: "...it looks as if the economy is pretty close to the 'glide path' I mentioned before - growth has slowed to a bit below most estimates of the economy's long-run potential, while the risk of an outright downturn has receded." So much for the pendulum getting ready to swing the other way... its on a nice slow drift into place.
We still expect to see corrections in the yield curve, but the threat of inflation needs to be fully contained first. Still a glimmer left... As I like to say, there are a lot of moving targets out there. The sentiment can change quickly. But for now, it looks as though the big picture is in a fair amount of control.
Posted by
john
at
2:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Sunday, January 14, 2007
Are We Going To See A Soft Landing?
The news media has covered the real estate market in the last few years with close attention. As prices have soared to historic highs, some economists have speculated that the value growth has been unsustainable, and that we are headed for a painful value correction. Fear of what the implications of this scenario would look like has fueled the media coverage - remember, they love to keep you on your toes.
Going a little beyond the scope of the nightly news, you might be able to get a more credible view on where we are headed. After all, there's a million Economists out there getting paid a million dollars to research, digest data, and speculate as to where we are headed, but they are often not as 'exciting' as your 11 o'clock news anchor... Because of the immensely dynamic national and world economy, these Economists are all over the board with their predictions. And when the consensus gets scattered, we get that feeling of uncertainty that might make the American consumer take pause (for what it means to the economy when the American consumer takes pause, consult your local Economist... I told you: dynamic!!). There are a lot of contradictory opinions floating around out there - I know, because I read the boring Economist stuff. As a Mortgage Planner I keep a pulse on these things and make recommendations that respect your financial objectives within the context of the mortgage landscape and the economic environment at the time - and going forward.
You can get an idea of what these pundits are looking at to make their assessments of our economy, and register their opinions. It may not be exciting stuff to everybody, but it helps to know where they are coming from. Here are a few items that they are watching to see if we are in fact headed for a "soft landing". In general, inflation concerns bring higher rates, and make housing less affordable.
RETAIL SALES Report: This comes out monthly and shows the mood of the American consumer. Strong sales indicate that businesses are making profits, and that the economy should keep cooking. Too strong a report suggests too much money floating around, and an environment where inflation can run too high - that can lead to higher interest rates. Sharp declines in this report suggest that the opposite. A precursor to a "hard landing" might be a sharp downturn in this report.
TRANSPORTATION COMPANIES: When companies like FedEx and UPS lower their outlooks or speak of declines in activity, it suggests the American consumer is slowing spending.
DURABLE GOODS Report and BUSINESS CAPITAL EXPENDITURES (CapEx): : Shows when businesses are spending (and growing or looking to grow) and expand capacity for production. The report gives an indication of upcoming manufacturing activity, and when this slows there can be inflationary pressure.
ISM INDEX: Manufacturing index of industrial companies that signals expansion and contraction in this sector.
MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE Rates: When these pick up, it suggests lending guidelines will tighten and shrink the pool of buyers. This lowers demand, and can accelerate a decline in housing activity.
AUTO SALES: A recession predictor, the economy often flows in the same direction as Auto Sales.
Hey, wake up! If you made it through all of that, you might want to consider a career as an Economist - we could use some help figuring out if we are in fact headed for a "soft landing" or not.
Posted by
john
at
2:24 PM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace
Friday, January 12, 2007
When does an Alternative Mortgage Make Sense?
The recent rise in short term interest rates has brought financial strain to misguided and mismanaged mortgage consumers. The media has of course spotlighted this issue and used it to fuel the negative sentiment toward and resentment of Mortgage Brokers. Don't get me wrong - those who know me well already know I agree with much of the critique of my own industry - but I also think the media likes to make examples in extreme cases.
The case for the traditional 30 year fixed (FRM) has always been safety from interest rate risk exposure. In other words, lock in now for 30 years, and you never have to worry if rates go up. You can refinance if rates go down. But even Alan Greenspan thinks this strategy can be wasteful for some consumers. What if you know you will move in a shorter period of time? Or at least think the odds are good? How about if you expect major changes to your income in the next few years? Have near-term financial goals outside of the home, like funding a college education or retirement plan? Statistics tell us that getting to the mid-way point in a 30 year mortgage is highly unlikely. Average loan duration is around 5.1 years.
Mortgage Planning explores alternative types of mortgage financing so that you can adjust the structure of your largest liability to make room for other goals. This may mean lower payments now, and higher payments later. It may mean less certainty in the future, or greater interest rate risk. It may also mean the difference between living 'house-poor' and achieving more of your financial goals. When weighing these risks, you need to also explore the probability that they would even matter. And what do you risk by being too safe?
For a more sterile example of why alternative mortgage products might make sense, see this short essay by the San Francisco Federal Reserve, especially the section titled: "Some motives for choosing alternative mortgages".
Everybody is different. Make sure you have proper guidance so you can fit your mortgage plan within your financial plan - and your life plan.
Posted by
john
at
10:26 AM
0
comments
Labels: Mortgage Marketplace, Mortgage Planning
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Interest to Remain Moving Target in 07
The rolling economic data is keeping Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve on their toes. And in return, the Fed is keeping the investment community on their toes. As recently as 3 months ago, the futures market had a probable interest rate cut predicted as soon as December 06. By the time December rolled around, those odds had faded, and now, nothing is expected until the third or fourth quarter - if at all.
The Fed is still eyeing inflation as their greatest concern. They have continued to suggest that the "extent and timing of additional firming" will depend on this incoming rolling data. The bias is in fact on a tightening as the next move, but its a pretty modest one at this point.
Through the eyes of Real Estate Finance and Mortgage Planning, this has rates continuing to stay in a narrow range, and they are expected to do so through much of the year.
Posted by
john
at
9:22 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
What Happens when Everybody is Talking About Housing?
"Housing Decline" was the most talked about news item of the year in 2006, according to a recent AP article. This probably comes as a surprise to nobody. But to what extent does consumer sentiment about housing have an impact on the underlying values? Or is it just a good way to get a barometric reading on the financial aspects of the market?
Back in 1999 when I was working as a financial advisor, I remember reading several articles that discussed the relationship between news reporting frequency of key terms and the financial performance of the related commodity. Back then, all the talk was about the stock market, and mutual funds, which had become so prolific that they outnumbered the number of individual stocks listed in the US Market. Inexperienced investors were being drawn to the stock markets in droves, and prices were flying with the influx of new money. On occasion, even hip-hop music - historically boastful about financial prowess - made mention of mutual funds amidst its more commonly urban references.
The significance of this was that the more there was mention of a sentiment in the news media and pop culture, the more likely it was that momentum was being driven to an unsustainable level. We saw it come in 2000, when the stock market hit a major correction. The worst of the decline was felt in the NASDAQ, where most of the new investors had been drawn to the recent fast-paced technology company returns.
We saw it again last year in housing, when everybody seemed to be talking about buying houses, with 'no money down' and making 'positive cash-flow' from the start. All of these infomercial testimonials with the 'average couple' sitting by a pool at a resort in Orlando, discussing how much passive income they received in the previous month... it was a sign that the market was over-heated.
Charles Kindleberger notes in his famous anatomy of a crash Manias, Panics and Crashes that "when the world is mad, we must imitate...", capturing the essence of the fuel that is the consumer in pursuit of ROI. Even when we know something is too good to be true, there can be an urge to get involved. If you don't, you risk getting left behind. To this end, the American consumer has the ability to self-fulfill its own prophecy, but it typically leads to excesses, and the last guy in gets left holding the bag. So far the 'housing decline' seems to be moderate in most markets - but not all. Its going to be easy to see in retrospect where the market got overheated. I've discussed it here before, and I will continue to as we cycle through this market.
---
Heres a link to some economist sentiment for 2007
Posted by
john
at
9:27 AM
0
comments
Labels: Economics, Housing Marketplace