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Saturday, December 26, 2009

Freddie Mac economist: 6% Mortgage rates by end of 2010

by Calculated Risk on 12/26/2009 11:30:00 AM

From Dina ElBoghdady at the WaPo: Freddie sees mortgage rates hitting 6% in 2010

[T]he average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage rose to 5.05 percent this week and could climb to 6 percent by the end of 2010, if not sooner, according to giant mortgage financier Freddie Mac.
...
The key catalyst for interest rates going forward will be the end of a Federal Reserve program that buys a sizable chunk of mortgage-backed securities issued by firms such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. ... the Fed has committed to winding down the program by March.
...
Amy Crews Cutts, deputy chief economist at Freddie Mac, said interest rates are bound to rise to 6 percent by the end of 2010 because private buyers will demand a higher rate of return on the securities than the Fed did.
This is similar to the comments made by Mark Zandi of economy.com earlier in the week:
"If you told me by the end of 2010 a 30-year rate was at 6 percent, that sounds about right," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's. "I don't think there's any question rates are headed up."
Rates are definitely moving up, and they will move higher as the Fed winds down the MBS purchase program. Although 6% is possible, I'll take the under in 2010. The reason is I think the recovery will be sluggish and choppy - and that will keep rates down.

Note: Some people think 30 year mortgage rates will increase 100 bps or even 200 bps when the Fed stops buying MBS - so they expect 6% to 7% mortgage rates by April - but I think that estimate is too high.

Doubling Your Money while Earning 0.01 Percent

by Calculated Risk on 12/26/2009 07:49:00 AM

Something every saver knows ...

From Stephanie Strom at the NY Times: At Tiny Rates, Saving Money Costs Investors

The elderly and others on fixed incomes have been especially hard hit. Many have seen returns on savings, C.D.’s and government bonds drop to niggling amounts recently ...

" ... what’s going to happen now as C.D.’s mature is that retirees and the elderly are going to take anywhere from a half to three-quarters ... cut in their incomes,” said Joe Parks, a retired accountant in Houston ...

“What the average citizen doesn’t explicitly understand is that a significant part of the government’s plan to repair the financial system and the economy is to pay savers nothing and allow damaged financial institutions to earn a nice, guaranteed spread,” said [Bill Gross of PIMCO] ... Mr. Gross said he read his monthly portfolio statement twice because he could not believe that the line “Yield on cash” was 0.01 percent. At that rate, he said, it would take him 6,932 years to double his money.
That is what my statement says too - not exactly the best return. But in less than 7,000 years the money will double!

Friday, December 25, 2009

Unofficial Problem Bank List: 545 Banks

by Calculated Risk on 12/25/2009 10:06:00 PM

The FDIC is on holiday, but not surferdude808 (He says Merry Christmas!)

This is an unofficial list of Problem Banks compiled only from public sources.

Changes and comments from surferdude808:

Last week’s closures had a large impact on the Unofficial Problem Bank List. Seven institutions with $14.5 billion in assets were removed from last week’s list because of failure.

The failures included First Federal Bank of California ($6.1 billion), Imperial Capital Bank ($4.1 billion), Peoples First Community Bank ($1.8 billion), New South Federal Savings Bank ($1.5 billion), Independent Bankers' Bank ($584 million), and Rockbridge Commercial Bank ($294 million). Other removals include Manatee River Community Bank ($152 million), which merged with First America Bank, Osprey, FL; and Golden First Bank ($25 million), as the OTS terminated its formal action.

Regulators did deliver some not so good Christmas gifts this week as formal actions were issued to three institutions including Midwest Bank and Trust Company, Elmwood Park, IL ($3.5 billion); Centrue Bank, Streator, IL ($1.3 billion); and Bayside Savings Bank, Port Saint Joe, FL ($86 million).

With these changes, the Unofficial Problem Bank List includes 545 institutions with aggregate assets of $295.6 billion.
The list is compiled from regulator press releases or from public news sources (see Enforcement Action Type link for source). The FDIC data is released monthly with a delay, and the Fed and OTC data is more timely. The OCC data is a little lagged. Credit: surferdude808.

See description below table for Class and Cert (and a link to FDIC ID system).

For a full screen version of the table click here.

The table is wide - use scroll bars to see all information!

NOTE: Columns are sortable - click on column header (Assets, State, Bank Name, Date, etc.)




Class: from FDIC
The FDIC assigns classification codes indicating an institution's charter type (commercial bank, savings bank, or savings association), its chartering agent (state or federal government), its Federal Reserve membership status (member or nonmember), and its primary federal regulator (state-chartered institutions are subject to both federal and state supervision). These codes are:
  • N National chartered commercial bank supervised by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
  • SM State charter Fed member commercial bank supervised by the Federal Reserve
  • NM State charter Fed nonmember commercial bank supervised by the FDIC
  • SA State or federal charter savings association supervised by the Office of Thrift Supervision
  • SB State charter savings bank supervised by the FDIC
  • Cert: This is the certificate number assigned by the FDIC used to identify institutions and for the issuance of insurance certificates. Click on the number and the Institution Directory (ID) system "will provide the last demographic and financial data filed by the selected institution".

    Happy Holidays

    by Calculated Risk on 12/25/2009 05:00:00 PM

    A holiday tradition - from Tanta's 2007 Post: A Very Nerdy Christmas (see her post for an explanation of the origins of the Mortgage Pig™)

    With the new rules for Fannie and Fredde, maybe it should be "Is that a Pig? No, it's Fannie Mae!"

    Mortgage Pig™
    Click on Pig for larger image in new window.


    Happy Holidays to all! CR

    Happy Holidays

    by Calculated Risk on 12/25/2009 11:59:00 AM

    A few economic posts from this week:

  • Commentary and housing overview: Residential Investment: Moving Sideways

  • Treasury Uncaps Fannie and Freddie: TREASURY ISSUES UPDATE ON STATUS OF SUPPORT FOR HOUSING PROGRAMS

  • From Bloomberg: U.S. Commercial Real Estate Index Falls 1.5%

  • Existing Home Sales up Sharply in November

  • New Home Sales Decrease Sharply in November

  • November PCE and Saving Rate

    From the Yosemite Association, a live web cam view of Half Dome in Yosemite. Happy Holidays to all!

  • Some Holiday Music

    by Calculated Risk on 12/25/2009 08:59:00 AM

    Peter Cetera (formerly of the band "Chicago") and his daughter Claire perform Blue Christmas in 2008 with Sasha.

    Sasha hasn't competed since the World Championships in March 2006, but she will be making a comeback at the U.S. Championships on Jan 21st (short) and Jan 23rd (long) in Spokane.

    Thursday, December 24, 2009

    Hotel RevPAR Off only 5.6%

    by Calculated Risk on 12/24/2009 10:10:00 PM

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR reports US performance for week ending 19 December

    In year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy declined 0.5 percent to end the week at 42.6 percent. Average daily rate dropped 5.2 percent to finish the week at US$87.98. Revenue per available room for the week decreased 5.6 percent to finish the period at US$37.47. The 0.5-percent occupancy decrease was the best full-week performance of the year for that metric. The 5.2-percent ADR drop was the third best full-week performance of the year behind two consecutive weeks in January. The 5.6-percent fall in RevPAR was the best full-week performance of the year.

    A major snow storm on the East Coast and easier year-over-year comparisons helped buoy the numbers.
    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the occupancy rate by week for each of the last four years (2006 through 2009 labeled by start of month).

    Note: Some of the holidays don't line up - especially at the end of the year.

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com (Note: They have a free daily email too for hotel news)

    As I've been mentioning, there is now growing evidence that the hotel industry has stabilized at this low occupancy rate, although room rates will still be under pressure because this is the lowest occupancy rate (annual) since the Great Depression.

    The end of the year can be a little confusing because of the holidays, and the next key week will be mid-to-late January to see if business travel is picking up in 2010.

    Ny Fed: The Homeownership Gap

    by Calculated Risk on 12/24/2009 06:52:00 PM

    From NY Fed economists Andrew Haughwout, Richard Peach, and Joseph Tracy: The Homeownership Gap

    The authors argue that the official homeownership rate from the Census Bureau is overstated in the sense that owners with significant negative equity act more like renters. The authors further argue that the official homeownership rate will probably follow the homeownership gap to lower levels.

    Homeownership Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    The homeownership rate was 67.6% in Q3 2009, about the same level as Q2 2000.

    Note: graph starts at 60% to better show the change.

    The second graph shows the author's calculations of the homeownership gap (closer to 63%). This is a rough estimate, but does suggest the homeownership rate might fall significantly.

    Homeownership Gap From the conclusions:

    The current severe house price cycle, combined with borrowers who had little or no equity at origination of their mortgages, has led to a dramatic rise in homeowners with negative equity and, therefore, a large gap between the measured and effective homeownership rates. In some of the worst hit metropolitan areas, effective homeownership rates are 25 to 45 percentage points below the measured rate. This situation is likely to put downward pressure on future homeownership rates, and has potentially important implications for the maintenance of the housing stock, the stability of neighborhoods, and future household saving behavior.
    A significant increase in the saving rate will hold down the growth of household consumption. And a falling homeownership rate has significant implications for homebuilders and construction employment.

    From a post I wrote a few months ago: The Impact of the Declining Homeownership Rate
    [The] increase in the homeownership rate, from 1995 through 2005, meant the homebuilders had the wind to their backs. Instead of 800K of new owner demand per year (plus replacement of demolished units, and second home buying), the homebuilders saw an additional 500K of new owner demand during the period 1995 to 2005. This doesn't include the extra demand from speculative buying. Some of this demand was satisfied by condo conversions and owner built units, but the builders definitely benefited from the increase in homeownership rate.

    Looking ahead, if the homeownership rate stays steady, the demand for net additional homeowner occupied units would fall back to 800K or so per year (assuming steady population growth and persons per household). However the homeownership rate is declining, and this is now a headwind for the builders.

    It appears the rate is declining at about 0.5% per year. This means the net demand for owner occupied units would be 833K minus about 500K per year or about 333K per year - about 25% of the net demand for owner occupied units for the period 1995 to 2005. (Not including replacing demolished units and 2nd home buying).

    Although we can't compare this number directly to new home sales (because of 2nd home buying, replacement of demolished units, and other factors) this does suggest new home sales will probably remain at a low level until the homeownership rate stops declining.
    If the Fed economists are correct, this has significant implications for construction employment and household construction, in addition to public policy.

    Note: the authors provide some estimates of the "homeownership gap" for a few key cities: Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Phoenix and Miami.

    Treasury: More Support for Fannie and Freddie

    by Calculated Risk on 12/24/2009 03:14:00 PM

    From the WSJ: U.S. Uncaps Support for Fannie, Freddie

    The Treasury said it would provide capital as needed to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over the next three years, in a move aimed at soothing investors' concerns about the government's continued support of the mortgage giants.

    Treasury also will suspend its purchases of the companies' mortgage-backed securities ...

    Under the new terms announced Thursday, the cap on Treasury's support would increase according to how much each firm loses in a quarter, beginning the first quarter of next year and through 2012. The cap in place at the end of 2012 would apply thereafter.
    A press release before the holiday ... I was wondering what would come out today.

    Update: Here is the press release: TREASURY ISSUES UPDATE ON STATUS OF SUPPORT FOR HOUSING PROGRAMS (ht Steelhead)

    Credit Card Anger

    by Calculated Risk on 12/24/2009 01:15:00 PM

    Here is an interesting story in the Denver Post by Bill Johnson: Credit-card squeeze stirs elderly couple's anger

    Lawrence Rickman ... is 81 now, seven years his wife's senior. They have had a Bank of America credit card for 20 years. They never once in all that time ... missed a payment.

    Rickman slides his December bill across the table, with instructions to read it. ... Look at the interest rate, he says.

    Sixteen-point-nine percent, it reads.

    "I was paying 5.9 percent, which is what I have paid for years," he says. "I always paid them $500 a month without complaint. Now, they want $1,074 this month. I can't pay it. I won't pay it."
    ...
    "When I got this month's bill," Lawrence Rickman recalls, "I got on the line and told them they were getting out of hand on this interest rate, that I wanted to negotiate."

    The conversation, he says, went something like this:

    "Lower my rate, or I'll file bankruptcy," he told them.

    "But sir, if you do, it will destroy your credit rating."

    "So what? I'm almost 82 years old ..."
    The interest rate increase is outrageous, but also notice that Mr. Rickman was apparently not paying off his credit card balance every month. I suspect he has been running a fairly large balance compared to his income (only Social Security at this time according to the article), and just making the minimum payment on his credit card. Although the 5.9% interest rate was somewhat reasonable, it is still far more than Rickman could earn on any conservative investment.

    Credit cards are great if the holder pays off the balance every month - or if the holder infrequently needs to spread an unexpected bill over a few months. But routinely running large credit card balances is hazardous to the holder's financial health. IMO there is something inherently wrong with a business that encourages customers to make bad financial decisions. (I'll get off my soapbox ...)