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Archive for September, 2007

WILL IT NEVER END !

Friday, September 7th, 2007

Another week another real estate web site.  This week  www.propertytoretire.com.au advised that they are launching their website aimed at Baby Boomers.  The number of real estate sales and rental website portals is becoming confusing and dysfunctional.  Smaller specialist portals cannot be profitable as most do not have a viable business model.  Even the web 2.0 US sites such as Zillow.com do not know how they are going to make a profit.

The new LJ Hooker site was launched last week with a very neat property compare function although the rest is a bit clunky particularly the mapping.

Affordability and the current inadequate Government response.

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

One of the greatest fallacies perpetrated throughout the housing affordability debate is that the release of land, house/land packages and units should be aimed at first home buyers.  The release of land/houses/units is about balancing the supply demand imbalance holistically for everyone.  If we have balance between supply and demand then prices will stabilise and affordability will be a cyclical issue and not structural. continue reading »

AUSTRALIAN INTEREST RATE RISES SEEM ILLOGICAL

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

I am not an economist however understand the basics of our financial system.  The Reserve Bank is concerned about inflation and increased consumer spending and consumer debt.  By increasing interest rates, the bank has made it more difficult for those that have mortgages, particularly lower income earners and made it more difficult for new home buyers to enter the market. 

This has the effect of turning potential home buyers towards more consumer spending on cars and large goods such as LCD and plasma TV sets as the vision of home or property ownership fades into the distance.  This then has the effect of reducing savings and worsening inflation.  If the RBA use the same logic they will increase interest rates further because of the inflation that they have caused by their increases thereby worsening the cycle.

At some stage Government and the Reserve Bank need to review exactly what tools they have at their joint disposal and come up with sophisticated strategies that address all the issues and the fundamentals of our economy. Surely the RBA has other methods of controlling consumer debt other than using the old fashioned method of continually increasing interest rates.  Maybe they actually do have some persuasive powers that they could use with Government and the banking system instead of hitting everyone over the head with more costs.

US SUB-PRIME MARKET INSIGHT

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

The following article by Jack Guttenberg may give further insight into the American sub-prime lending market and the variety of products available. 

Should stated-income loans be banned?

Rising foreclosure rates warrant probe

Monday, August 20, 2007
Jack Guttenberg

 

A stated-income loan (SIL) qualifies a borrower using the income the borrower states, as opposed to the income the borrower can document. With an SIL, the lender agrees not to verify the income the borrower states on the application.As one might expect, SILs are priced higher than fully documented loans, and the foreclosure rate is also higher. With overall foreclosure rates reaching uncomfortably high levels, SILs have emerged as a possible weak point in the underwriting process. Regulators and legislators have been considering whether they should bar SILs or limit them in some way.Why SILs? Singling out SILs for special regulatory treatment is a little strange on the face of it, since they are only one of a spectrum of alternative forms of documentation that have developed in the marketplace. Ranked by restrictiveness, furthermore, SILs stand immediately below full documentation, and above all the others.While lenders don’t verify income on an SIL, they do verify assets and employment. On a “no ratio” loan, income is not reported at all; on a “stated income/stated assets” loan, both income and assets are stated; on a “no income/no assets” loan, neither income nor assets are reported; and on a “no doc” loan, nothing is reported, including employment.These alternative forms of documentation are priced even higher than SILs and have higher foreclosure rates, but have not attracted the same attention. No doubt, the reason is that SILs are the most common type of alternative documentation, and may account for as many loans as all the others put together. The Borrowers Protection Act of 2007, introduced in the Senate by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., declares that “A statement provided by the borrower of the income … of the borrower, without other documentation … is not sufficient verification for … assessing the ability of the consumer to pay.” This would leave lenders free to employ less restrictive forms of documentation, including no documentation requirements at all.

Restricting SILs would be costly. The SIL was itself a response to limitations of the underwriting system. Many prospective home buyers have the income to afford a mortgage, but can’t meet the standards of full documentation.

Full documentation generally requires that applicants show that the income they claim was actually earned in each of the two prior years. This is usually done by presenting W-2s or tax returns for two years. Self-employed borrowers usually have the most trouble meeting this requirement, and stated-income loans were originally designed to deal with them, but other legitimate cases quickly emerged.

Many applicants with incomes from salaries can’t meet full-doc requirements. They may not have held their position long enough, or their latest increase in salary may not be reflected in documents covering past income.

If a married couple pools their incomes and one has a much lower credit score than the other, the full-doc rule is that the lower score is the one used. Stated income allows the partner with the higher score to claim all the income, which appears reasonable in most situations, especially in community property states where husband and wife share legal right to each other’s incomes.

Full-documentation rules are backward-looking; forecasts of future changes in income are not accepted, no matter how well grounded they may be. This means, for example, that the low-paid medical resident who, barring a catastrophe, will triple her salary in three months, can declare only her current salary with full documentation. Using a SIL, however, the resident can declare her future income.

The Rap on SILs: The valid rap on SILs is that some borrowers, without any realistic basis for expecting a rise in income, lie about their current income and take loans they cannot afford. This irrational behavior of some borrowers may be encouraged by rational behavior on the part of rapacious loan officers or brokers, who get paid only if a loan closes and have no interest in what happens afterwards.

Because borrowers with high credit scores are much less likely to be irrational in their financial affairs, lenders place a lot more weight on credit scores of SIL borrowers than of full-doc borrowers. SILs will not be available to borrowers with very low credit scores, and if they are available, the price difference between good credit and poor credit is much larger on SILs than on full-doc loans.

The federal financial regulatory agencies looked at SILs in their analysis of problems in the subprime market and concluded that they “should be accepted only if there are mitigating factors that clearly minimize the need for verification of repayment capacity.” Since the rules governing SILs are part of the mosaic of underwriting rules in which everything depends on everything else, there are always mitigating factors. In effect, the agencies elected to go through the motions but not to do any harm. Hopefully, our legislators will elect to do the same.

The writer is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. 

 


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