GSIG LLC Rotating Header Image

Primary Mortgage Market Survey

Good News: South Florida Home Prices Inch Up in July

300px Cities of Palm Beach County.svg Good News: South Florida Home Prices Inch Up in July

Good news! According to the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index released Tuesday, South Florida home prices rose slightly in July compared with June and a year ago.

Prices in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties increased 0.7% from June to July and 0.4% from July 2009.

The S&P report is surprising, considering that most real estate observers say South Florida prices are falling, with a bottom not expected until sometime in 2011.

Still, analysts swear by the index. It measures prices of the same house over time, rather than recording median prices for homes sold in a month, as the Florida Realtors trade group does.

Florida Realtors data for August released last week showed that the median price in Broward fell 5% from a year ago, while Palm Beach County’s median was off 7% from last year.

South Florida was one of 12 of 20 metro areas in the index that posted an increase in July over June. Ten of the 20 areas posted year-over-year gains.

David M. Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor thinks the next few months likely will provide a true snapshot of the housing market. He concludes: “Housing starts, sales and inventory data reported for August do not show signs of a robust market, and foreclosures continue.”

 Good News: South Florida Home Prices Inch Up in July

Home Sales Decline in Palm Beach & Broward

2539334956 87cef7e457 m Home Sales Decline in Palm Beach & Broward

Sign Of The Times - Foreclosure

As predicted, South Florida home sales continue to slide following the expiration of the federal home buyer tax credits this past summer.

Today, according to Florida Realtors, Broward County posted 683 sales of existing homes in August, down 5% from July and 16% from a year ago. Palm Beach County had 793 homes trade hands last month, down slightly from July but up 5% from August 2009.

Nationally, existing home sales rose 7.6% in August to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.13 million units from 3.84 million in July. Still, sales remain 19% below a year ago.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, stated: “The housing market is trying to recover on its own power without the home buyer tax credit . Despite very attractive affordability conditions, a housing market recovery will likely be slow and gradual because of lingering economic uncertainty.”

According to leading analysts,  the tax incentives gone combined with the reeling job market has many potential home buyers hesitant to commit. Demand probably won’t improve for the rest of the year.

Slower sales likely will hurt prices. South Florida median prices are down compared with a year ago.

Broward’s median in August was $206,700, off 5% from August 2009. Palm Beach County’s median was $227,800, a 7% decline from a year ago.

 Home Sales Decline in Palm Beach & Broward

Why is GMAC is Halting the Foreclosure Process in South Florida?

56267666 Why is GMAC is Halting the Foreclosure Process in South Florida?

A GMAC Real Estate sign, attached to a sign advertising 0% down financing, is posted in the front yard of a home

GMAC Mortgage threw a new twist into the foreclosure process in Florida and 22 other states.

Hundreds of South Floridians facing foreclosure were sent into a new level of uncertainty this past  Monday when one of the nation’s largest mortgage-servicing companies told real-estate agents to stop evicting the residents and put on hold any sales of properties that had been taken back from homeowners.

GMAC has 865 pending foreclosure cases in Broward courts as of Monday. The company also filed 940 foreclosure cases in Palm Beach County since the start of 2009, according to records from clerks of court in each country. The records don’t indicate how many of the Palm Beach cases are still pending.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether that means GMAC borrowers who are facing foreclosure would get a temporary reprieve. But the report contained hints that the company may change its course. The company told real-estate agents and brokers that it might “need to take corrective action in connection with some foreclosures.”

A spokesperson for Ally Financial, the Detroit-based parent of GMAC Mortgage, confirmed the report which was first published by Bloomberg News based on an internal memorandum. The report stated that GMAC told real estate agents and brokers to stop evictions, cash-for-key transactions and lockouts.

Also, sales will be suspended for GMAC-owned properties, closing dates are to be extended 30 days and buyers can cancel purchase agreements and get their deposits refunded.

The spokesperson would not provide any other details and the company did not issue a statement. However, GMAC Mortgage did not say it was putting all foreclosures on hold.

The South Florida housing market is one of the nation’s hardest hit by foreclosures. To clear a backlog of tens of thousands of pending cases, the state’s courts last summer initiated streamlined procedures and started sending troubled borrowers to mediation with their lenders. But critics of the system have said that the so-called “rocket dockets” are not allowing homeowners or some mortgage holders to get a fair shake.

Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication said GMAC is the nation’s fifth-largest mortgage servicer, handling mortgages valued at a total of more than $349 billion as of June 30. Cecala said there are no state-specific numbers available but he estimates GMAC could account for 10 to 15 percent of the mortgage servicing in Florida. Cecala states: “Like most people I don’t have any inside information on exactly why GMAC is doing it. It’s clearly some legal problem or concern they have that somehow the foreclosures could be challenged.”

The company has recently come under fire in courts in Florida. In April, St. Petersburg-based Circuit Judge Anthony Rondolino threw out a GMAC foreclosure after he found that legal papers from GMAC’s law firm were filed by someone who had no knowledge of the mortgage’s status. In June, American Residential Equities, a Miami-based real-estate company, filed a federal lawsuit against GMAC alleging neglect of thousands of mortgage loans and properties since 2004.

American Residential Equities’ President and CEO Jeffrey Kirsch charged the company with not following instructions, failing to report results, bungling the servicing process and jeopardizing the value of the mortgages. In addition, the lawsuit accuses GMAC of failing to maintain its properties and protect them against weather damage, vandalism and fines from governments. He stated in a press release: “GMAC has systemically mismanaged hundreds of loans and properties in our portfolio.”

Advocates for troubled borrowers were buzzing about the possibilities that there would be a foreclosure moratorium at GMAC and the possibility that other lenders might follow suit. Ally Financial who is formerly known as GMAC Inc. has the  federal government as its majority owner, following a $17 billion taxpayer bailout.

Terri Schmitz, senior underwriter and president of Amerifirst Funding in Fort Lauderdale, concluded: “The good news is that for some foreclosures the process was not handled properly but the playing field is being leveled.”

 Why is GMAC is Halting the Foreclosure Process in South Florida?

July Sales Down 12.4% From Last Month

300px US DeptOfCommerce Seal.svg July Sales Down 12.4% From Last Month
Image via Wikipedia

Sales of new homes unexpectedly sank 12.4% in July from the prior month, showing continued weakness in the housing market absent government stimulus.

Yesterday, the Commerce Department said that sales of new, single-family houses in July were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 276,000 units. That is 32.4% below the July 2009 estimate.

The government report claims that sales of previously owned homes dove in July, falling 27.2% over the prior month and igniting fresh concerns over the economic recovery.

The new-home sales numbers — registered when a consumer signs a purchase contract on a home, as opposed to existing sales numbers that are measured when a deal closes escrow — give the most current snapshot of buyer interest in the market absent the popular $8,000 federal tax credit for shoppers.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected some modest improvement after new-home sales plunged in May and then bounced back in June.

Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist for New York brokerage Miller Tabak + Co., wrote in a research note:

“The fallout from the first-time home-buyers credit continues, but in a perverse way, this is a good thing. Investors are getting their first ‘organic’ look at the housing market in nearly one year.”

The median sales price of new houses sold in July 2010 was $204,000 while the seasonally adjusted estimate of new-home inventory at the end of July was 210,000, representing a supply of 9.1 months worth of supply at the current pace.

30-Year Fixed Mortgage Rates Hit New Record Low

interest dice 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Rates Hit New Record LowAccording to the weekly mortgage rate reports released yesterday by Freddie Mac and Bankrate, the average rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages hit a new record low.

According to Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey, 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 4.57% with an average 0.7 point for the week ending July 8, 2010, inching down from last week’s average of 4.58%. Freddie Mac said this rate marked yet another all-time low in its 39-year survey.

Bankrate also reported a decline in 30-year fixed-rate mortgages. According to its weekly mortgage survey, rates averaged 4.74% with an average 0.39 point this week, falling from last week when 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 4.75%.

The story was different for 15-year fixed-rate mortgages, though. Freddie Mac stated 15-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 4.07% with an average 0.7 point this week, edging up from 4.04% one week earlier. And Bankrate said 15-year fixed-rate mortgages came in at 4.22% with an average 0.36 point, a minor uptick from last week’s average of 4.2%.

Despite the slight increase in 15-year fixed-rate mortgages, both Fannie Mae and Bankrate noted that on an overall basis, mortgage rates continued to linger near ultra-low levels, a benefit to homebuyers and refinancers alike.

Freddie Mac VP and Chief Economist, Frank Nothaft, concluded:

“With mortgage rates falling to historic lows, refinance activity has been strong over the past three months. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that the effective mortgage rate of all loans outstanding was just below 6% in the first quarter of 2010, the lowest since the series began in 1977. Since the start of the second quarter, two out of three mortgage applications on average were for refinancing, according the Mortgage Bankers Association.”
 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Rates Hit New Record Low
Rss Feed Tweeter button Facebook button Technorati button Reddit button Myspace button Linkedin button Delicious button Digg button Stumbleupon button Newsvine button Youtube button
SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline