Archive for October, 2007
Zillow Inches Closer to Revealing Mortgage Play
October 30th, 2007 Categories: Mortgage News
My friend Todd Carpenter is looking for some feedback about Zillow’s cryptic crawl into the mortgage arena over on Lenderama. Take a trip on over to Todd’s post and drop some knowledge!
I’ll coincidentally be in Seattle for the next few days, looking forward to rubbing elbows with some of the who’s who in this space…
Also See:
Who’s Behind The Wheel at Zillow…
Sphere: Related Content10 Cities that are Prime for Real Estate Investment
October 23rd, 2007 Categories: Investing, Mortgage News, Real Estate News
This months copy of Business 2.0 magazine features an article to help one navigate the real estate markets pending ‘bounce back’, identifying 10 cities primed for pumping (I’ll disclose them in a minute). What the core of the article is about, is a tried and true investing practice that I’ve mentioned here before, yet seems to escape the minds of the statu-quo reader out there:
If you want to make money on a commodity (like property) you must buy it lower than you sell it for, in short…Buy Low, Sell High. (Yes there are plenty of ways to make money when a commodities value goes south too…short selling, put options et.al., but thats not pertinent here.)
Markets across the nation are generally soft right now and getting softer. Why? Foreclosures and other ‘fire sales’ by individuals who bought real estate during the stooopid appreciation curve are starting to effect the current and immediate future value of property. There is an innate lag effect as these reduced sales prices are booked as sold, thus becoming viable comparables for new sales, thus driving down overall values going forward.
So, for once I’m going to agree with the NAR and say: ‘It is a great time to buy real estate.’ Property is on sale and it’s not uncommon to find deals 20%-40% off on the open market, not just via foreclosure or short selling.
According to Biz 2.0, the following cities are about prime for buying:
- Dallas/Ft Worth, TX
- Indianapolis, IN
- New Orleans, LA
- Atlanta, GA
- Montgomery AL
- Memphis, TN
- Mobile, AL
- Austin, TX
- Houston, TX
- St. Louis, MO
There are a few things about these cities that intrigue me…(I’ll bold out the reasons speculation for appreciation is high, so you can look for such trends in other markets).
First, none of these cities experienced the rapid appreciation curve that consumed many markets, so there is/was far less room to fall. They’re all in the South/South East, not areas of the country where ‘Housing Bubble’ crossed many pundits lips. Ominously absent are any cities in California…which is an economy in and of itself. It’s hard to tell where, when, what, or how this market will shake out…
Mobile, Montgomery, and New Orleans were ravished by Hurricane Katrina, thus making them prime rebuild areas. New construction will help raise values in a market, especially these…they really have no where to go but out of the ground and up.
St. Louis is the very definition of ‘average’. It’s in the middle of the country, average per capita income equals the national average ($36k), it’s pretty much an average city…The optimism comes from the fact that people are moving back to the urban core, where developers are converting old warehouses into swanky lofts, apartments, and condos. Urban sprawl steadily depreciated city real estate for years as the population moved to the suburbs, polarizing it from achieving any measurable appreciation during the refi boom.
Indianapolis is one of two state capitals on this list. State capitals mean government jobs, government jobs mean above average salaries and security, which equate to a solid economy. Plus the Colts won the Super Bowl…
Atlanta has the state of Georgia to partially thank for appearing on this list. The state is a pioneer of many anti-predatory mortgage laws that kept artificial housing appreciation from getting out of hand. Atlanta is also a hub of industry (Fortune 500 companies are also abundant in Hotlanta) making it a hot spot for young professionals just entering the job market. Hartsfield airport is an international hub and the worlds busiest. All of these factors make for a very active market, consistent turnover of housing inventory will spell an earlier relief for the center of the Dirty South…
Memphis was considered to be one the foreclosure capitals of the United States very early in the game, it was the early mover to bottom out, if you will. This is another ‘no where but up’ scenario…as a matter of fact Memphis is now considered one of the most undervalued cities in America.
Dallas/Ft. Worth. The Metroplexicalmegapolitan. I recently moved to Plano, TX (Northeast side of Dallas), and this area is freaking HUGE. It just goes and goes and goes…according to Business 2.0, this area will add 6.4 Million more people to it’s infrastructure in the next two decades. WTF, thats ridiculous. Moving from Greensboro NC, the 3rd largest city in the entire state, Plano has more people and it’s just a measly little suburb…Everything is big in Texas.
Houston. Hot, humid, and hot…did I say humid? All I remember about Houston, besides it being prohibitively hot and humid, is sitting in the most amazing traffic jams. Being the oil and gas hub of the USA is a plus for the economy and apparently the inner city is going through a housing revitalization…apparently other people really don’t care to sit in traffic when it’s 105 degrees with 95% humidity either.
Austin. Solid industry with big name tech companies like Dell and IBM, being the state capital (see Indianapolis), as well as home to the University of Texas makes Austin an uber-progressive city. The inner cities housing infrastructure is new and highly coveted. Austin retains many college grads where other college towns typically lose their graduates to other cities.
The three cities in Texas: Dallas/Ft Worth, Houston, and Austin.
While each city has their upsides as far as industry and the such, there is one main reason why three cities from Texas made this list that the article failed to identify.
There is a lending law in the Lone Star state that prohibits anyone from taking cash out of their home in excess on 80% of it’s appraised value. You can buy property at (up to) 100% of it’s purchase price, but you cannot cash-out anything above 80%. This law has effectively prevented consumers from using their house as an ATM, thus repressing the artificial appreciation that has stung places like California so hard.
You can get alot of house for your money in Texas, and land too.
This is a law that should be looked at real hard by other states in the Union. It’s a simple and effective measure to countering irrational personal finance decisions and keeps home values in relative check.
There are many other cities that should have made the list, but 10 was a good number. In any case, I don’t see cities like Montgomery, Mobile, Memphis, and St Louis as the next great places to live, though for investors looking to make some nice acquisitions and gains, all of the above markets seem ready to put the days of a housing recession behind them.
Sphere: Related ContentEstately Gets Mobetta and Uber-Blogging is Defined
October 12th, 2007 Categories: Domus Consulting, FoREM, Homescopes, Phoenix Real Estate Guy, Realivent, estately
Estately gets ‘Mobetta’ with local school information.
The Seattle area based Washington State property listing portal has long been my favorite mapping UI. Easy and intuitive to navigate, it’s just so fresh and so clean. Galen Ward announced on the company blog yesterday that the site would now include local school data, adding more value to an already solid array of information.
Joel at FoREM thinks someone should buy Estately to leverage spreading the love to other parts of the country. I think Joel needs to keep those comments to himself for a little while longer
Homescopes rolls the Uber-Blog.
Realivent and Domus Consulting Group have collaborated to create the Uber-Blog. From Pat Kitano’s Transparent Real Estate Blog:
Homescopes.com is a new website developed by a group of Coldwell Banker real estate agents in the San Francisco Bay Area and Sonoma County. Its mission is to draw in consumers who are interested in hyperlocal news - market conditions, neighborhood details - supplied by agent bloggers covering different regions around the Bay (and later Northern California).
Homescopes.com’s local “blog network” site architecture (code named “uber-blog” for those who have been working with us) was developed to bring immediate traffic to its individual bloggers. The layman metaphor is Homescopes acts as the “newspaper front page” to aggregate and distribute the published content of their blogging agent “editors”. As a content repository, Homescopes is positioned as a search engine magnet, and the resulting traffic flows through directly to the participating agents’ blogs. Think magnifying lens. Homescopes will initially receive greater traffic than the blogs due to its portal position, but in the long run, both the “uber blog” and the individual blogs will mutually benefit from the augmented traffic.
This looks like a solid strategy that can help overcome the biggest hurdle individual agents face when they decide to enter the strange world of blogging:
Professional, fresh, engaging, consistent, relevant Content.
Penning 5 or so posts per week (a ‘Google Juice’ maximizer according to many SEO pundits) of interesting hyper-local (and other) material will usually tap a real estate professionals bank of knowledge within about < 3 months…not to mention the time it takes to make 5 posts per week is often prohibitive to a busy agent and/or a novice blogger.
On the flip side, if you have 5 agents contributing content to the tune of 2-3 posts per week, thats 10-15 pieces of fresh content, with a less likely burn-out factor.
The uber-blog approach could be deemed as a hybrid model to the increasingly popular Community Blogsites. See: Bloodhound, GeekEstate, Phoenix Real Estate Technology Blog, 3 Oceans, Rain City Guide…
The main difference between the two is method of aggregation of content/information and subsequent redistribution. Each individual agent has their own blog-site which feeds up to the uber-blog, a method that stands to benefit both individual and parent sites in a number of ways.
The Uber-Blog concept looks to be a scaleable and potent mash-up of of current RE web strategies: SEO friendly fresh content delivery plus social networking/community traits, as well as the hyper-local info that has become a prerequisite to successful agent web sites. This seems to only be a partial of what should be a growing list of potential benefits once other creative types wrap their brains around the concept.
Community blogsites offer a weighted benefit to the proprietor/host of the site while offering some, however diminished, value to the individual contributors. Community sites also usually require additional unique content from it’s members that is in line with what the sites theme/genre is…a barrier for many already busy Blogauthors.
Personally, I see room for both strategies as they each satisfy a need and offer unique marketing plays.
It’s interesting to watch how quickly new ideas, strategies, and models splinter and evolve in this space. Technology in relation to sharing information related to real estate has evolved more over the past 18 months than it has in the past 10 years…It’s moving at such a torrid pace with new products, services, and solutions popping up weekly, the challenge has become trying to keep up with it all…
Sphere: Related ContentAmortization The Payment till Death
October 10th, 2007 Categories: Mortgage News
Refinancing a house for a lower monthly payment and/or cash-out is almost as common as applying for a new credit card. Saving $100 per month on your mortgage payment seems like worthy reason to rewrite the debt on a home, penny saved, penny earned right? Not necessarily.
Traditional mortgages are written with payback terms applied against an amortization payment schedule, typically figured over a 30 year term.Even shorter fixed term, Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARM’s), use a 30 year amortization schedule to determine the monthly payment, i.e. a 5-Year ARM’s payment is still figured over a 30 year amortization schedule.
Recently 40 year and 50 year amortized loan products have made their way into the available product section at any of your favorite mortgage peddlers, stretching out the pay-back period and thus reducing required monthly payment amounts.
What doesn’t get disclosed are some of the following facts about amortized loans:
On a 30-Year amortization schedule with an 8% interest rate, the first payment is allocated with ~90% going towards interest and ~10% going towards principle.For every $1000 in payment, $900 towards interest and $100 towards paying off the debt. It’s worse for the 40-50 year loans.
This disparity only improves by .01% to 1% better per month (increasing as the loan ages) and it takes ~21 years before your monthly payment is equally allocated towards interest and principle, then tipping in favor of principle over interest. I don’t know anyone who keeps a mortgage for 21 years anymore…
The real financial transgression occurs when you refinance an amortized loan into another amortized loan, even if you are lowering the interest rate and monthly payment.
Below are abbreviated amortization schedules and loan terms that demonstrate how much one stands to pay for a home using a series of 4 refinances every 5 years that both lower interest rate and payments…
Assumptions:
- $100,000 is the original loan amount for simplicity.
- No cash-out transactions, i.e. only refinancing what is owed on the previous mortgage, (demonstrating a best case scenario).
- No pre-payment penalties are assumed.
- 30-Year Fixed Programs are the consistent term.
- Closing costs factored into the equation = $4000
- Payments rounded to the nearest $1.00
Purchase Loan
- Amount Financed = $100,000
- Interest Rate = 8%
- Payment = $734
60 Months later:
- Total Interest Paid = $39,096
- Total Principle Paid = $4930
- Principle Balance to be refinanced = $95,070
Refinance 1
- Amount Financed = $99,070 (Principle balance + closing costs)
- Interest Rate = 7.5%
- Payment = $692.71
60 Months later:
- Total Interest Paid = $36,230
- Total Principle Paid = $5332
- Principle Balance to be refinanced = $93,737
Refinance 2
- Amount Financed = $97,737 (Principle balance + closing costs)
- Interest Rate = 7.0%
- Payment = $650
60 Months later:
- Total Interest Paid = $33,279
- Total Principle Paid = $5736
- Principle Balance to be refinanced = $92,001
Refinance 3
- Amount Financed = $96,001 (Principle balance + closing costs)
- Interest Rate = 6.5%
- Payment = $607
60 Months later:
- Total Interest Paid = $30,274
- Total Principle Paid = $6133
- Principle Balance to be refinanced = $89,868
Refinance 4
- Amount Financed = $93,868 (Principle balance + closing costs)
- Interest Rate = 6.0%
- Payment = $563
60 Months later:
- Total Interest Paid = $27,247
- Total Principle Paid = $6520
- Principle Balance remaining = $87,347
Recap…
25 years and 4 refinances later.
- Your payment has gone down $171/Month (Yay!)
- Total Monies Paid (Interest + Principle + Closing Costs) = $214,777
- Total Remaining Payments @ 6% = $168,396
Assuming the mortgage was then taken to term:
The $100,000 original loan amount would equate to $383,173 in total expense.
Consider that if the original loan was never refinanced, the total expense would be ~$265,000 and paid off 20 years sooner.
What no Truth in Lending Act will tell you…
In effect you are leasing the home from the bank.
Refinancing an amortized loan with another amortized loan will cost you (under this scenario) 383% of the original mortgage amount.
Assuming your home doesn’t double in value and you sell or you don’t hit the lottery, you will never pay your mortgage off.
The mortgage news waves have been understandably saturated with stories of fraud, predatory lending, the sub-prime fallout, and a slew of other tragic tales about an industry that has molested consumers in the wrongest of ways. It seems like only yesterday that I was being challenged as an ignorant blow-hard who ‘slandered’ the mortgage industry without discretion.
Now it’s the rage.
It’s great to see more mortgage pundits pick up the lens of transparency and challenge the status-quo…
Blown Mortgage
The Mortgage Porter
Americas Most Opinionated Mortgage Broker
Mortgages Undressed
LendingClarity
The Mortgage Reports
Mortgage Fraud Blog
The Mortgage Lender Implode-o-Meter
Patrick.re
…all blog-sites populated by fine authors who are less concerned with being politically correct and more in tune with exposing truth.
Put Identity Thieves on Ice by Freezing Your Credit
October 9th, 2007 Categories: Random
Credit Freezing looks to be a very simple, yet very effective counter-measure to identity thieves. Freezing effectively denies any permission to access to a consumers credit report, new lines of credit cannot be opened and existing information is placed behind a firewall. When a consumer decides they want to apply for new credit a ‘thaw period’ may be requested and access to their bureaus is restored.
Freezing your credit will not prevent further damage if an identity theft is in progress nor would it prevent someone from fraudulently using existing credit cards and the such.
Watchdog groups are making a heavy push toward mandating the three credit repositories, Experian, Trans Union, and Equifax offer consumers an easy, timely, and inexpensive ability to ‘Freeze’ access their credit profiles. Apparently the process is less than fluid, so a little massaging seems in order.
A less than perfect process to freeze and thaw makes sense, from the credit repository side of the equation. They make a whole bunch of cash by selling their ‘credit monitoring’ services. No need to monitor what no one can access. At between $5 and $12 per freeze or thaw, depending on what state you live in, it’s inexcusably cheap considering that the monthly cost of monitoring ones credit costs north of $20 per month, and does little more than notify you of fraudulent activities quicker…alas the damage has already been done.
This strategy makes a great deal of sense, the ability to turn on and off access to your credit file is a stout preventative measure that should be seriously considered by everyone…especially husbands with a wife who sees the 10% discount on an overpriced something-or-other, just for opening a store credit card, as a sound personal financial decision…
Sphere: Related Content




