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California First Time Home Buyer back to 2006 levels


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2014 May 1, 5:55am   18,827 views  46 comments

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California First Time Home Buyer back to 2006 levels

http://loganmohtashami.com/2014/03/05/first-time-home-buyer-whats-that/

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15   corntrollio   2014 May 1, 7:10am  

Logan Mohtashami says

They will do them but it's limited In fact out of 17 lenders only 1 does them like this now and another one is working on getting a loan like this

Interesting, that's 77.7/12.3/10. I've also heard that 85/15 is a common one while avoiding PMI, but maybe that's really 80/5/15, not sure.

16   _   2014 May 1, 7:11am  

corntrollio says

Interesting, that's 77.7/12.3/10. I've also heard that 85/15 is a common one while avoiding PMI.

78/90
No MI
but you have a 2nd in 10 year will become a PI payment

17   bubblesitter   2014 May 1, 7:36am  

Call it Crazy says

Or are financially unable... If they refied their house in the last two years and have a rate in the 3's... If they move now they will pay a higher rate and also pay the higher prices...

It means, They are one financial shock(e.g. job loss, health reason etc.) away from foreclosure.

18   bubblesitter   2014 May 1, 7:41am  

Logan Mohtashami says

Let me give you an example of a deal I am working on now

$805,000 Purchase Price

$625,500 first lien Max Agency loan limit

$99,000 2nd lien

10% down payment $80,5000

They will do them but it's limited In fact out of 17 lenders only 1 does them like this now and another one is working on getting a loan like this

Logan,

What's is the total income and debt in this case, if you don't mind sharing. Thanks.

19   _   2014 May 1, 7:51am  

bubblesitter says

Logan,

What's is the total income and debt in this case, if you don't mind sharing. Thanks.

Low 30's, with 12 months plus of reserves if need be

20   bubblesitter   2014 May 2, 12:53am  

Logan Mohtashami says

Low 30's, with 12 months plus of reserves if need be

Thanks. Seems like, one more recession and the thing will go in foreclosure...and then new players will get into market. Market right now is heading into dangerous territories.

21   _   2014 May 2, 12:59am  

bubblesitter says

Thanks. Seems like, one more recession and the thing will go in foreclosure...and then new players will get into market. Market right now is heading into dangerous territories.

majority of all home purchases DTI levels are in the 30's and for the most part 94% of them were fine even with the Great Recession.

It was the crazy loans that set up the massive failure

So lets say we get a recession in 2017. It won't even be close to what happened in the housing bubble because the people who are buying these homes all the capacity to own the debt.

This makes this cycle clean, so you go back to a normal housing cycle once a recession happens. This will a lot less distress homes in the cycle.

We still are working off 3,000,000 distress loans still from that cycle.

So it will look a lot different, because unless you lose your job you can stay in the home and since their is equity build up from 2010 buyers until fold and no equity out market a lot "lets assume" distress buyers can sell their home rather than be in a 100% loan at peak which we saw in 2004-2006

This is why I don't like using the term Housing Bubble freely with cycle because we never had a real true demand you would see in a housing cycle.

Now the home prices rising 15%-45% in this cycle is a massive disconnect from economic reality and as it should has already impacted demand enough to show YOY growth to be negative

22   _   2014 May 2, 1:14am  

On another note even with the headline jobs number today the internals weren't that hot.. hence why the 10 year is at 2.60%

23   Facebooksux   2014 May 2, 1:22am  

Of course not. How can you take any BLS stats seriously anyway?

24   _   2014 May 2, 1:45am  

25   bubblesitter   2014 May 2, 2:24am  

Logan Mohtashami says

t won't even be close to what happened in the housing bubble because the people who are buying these homes all the capacity to own the debt.

Are you saying, prices have gone up for good? and there will not be any correction even if there is a recession?

26   _   2014 May 2, 2:38am  

bubblesitter says

Are you saying, prices have gone up for good? and there will not be any correction even if there is a recession?

No, there is big difference gap between a traditional down turn in prices and a massive distress sales down turn.

So when prices fall it's not going to be led by a massive distress market unless we get a job loss recession and with this cycle on capacity paying debt.. you don't have a cycle where the loan itself creates the default even if 2 people are working

It goes to a more traditional down turn when you have higher inventory and job loss recession.

You won't have the crazy loan factor, very high default rate cycle like we did in the housing bubble.

27   Indiana Jones   2014 May 2, 5:33am  

Logan--You are saying a recession, and a mild one at that, in 2017. There is another current thread (look for a duck) with the concept that 2017 (+/-) is the economic end game and that there will be a huge crash, worse than 1929. How do you explain the difference in possible outcome? Where is the flaw in the catastrophe argument?

28   _   2014 May 2, 5:45am  

Indiana Jones says

Where is the flaw in the catastrophe argument?

To have a 1929 crash event you would need systemic risk. Which with this cycle means the 10 year note going to 6.5%-.9.5% and ZIRP policy Fed funds rate 4-5%. Also, you need that kind of action around the world

The reason the economy isn't booming is because there is no fake created demand bubble creating massive amounts of fake jobs. So, for this discipline you're risk is demand destruction.

29   _   2014 May 2, 6:21am  

Also we are talking about 17% unemployment rate net real GDP -30% at one point I believe 1930 was like negative 8.5% if I remember right
Domestic growth was around 100 Billion in 1929 then 90 billion in 1930 and 75 billion in 1931 then in the mid 50's 1932 to 1933

My numbers could be off by a little not exact just off the top of head

30   clambo   2014 May 2, 7:16am  

Maybe some guys are smartening up even if they're not making megabucks.

1. marrying in CA is a bad economic decision (for guys)
2. if the guy is married, she will insist on buying somewhere.

1929 was a situation where banks took depositors money and used high margin to buy stocks which is a credit fueled asset bubble.

The bubble popped and the banks lost their money and the depositors money with it.

Margin rates are now regulated (lower) and banks can't lose depositors money, bank deposits now are insured by FDIC.

Bubble stocks exist but the popping of netflix or amazon etc. won't cause a depression.

31   Reality   2014 May 2, 7:29am  

Agree. Good chart, Logan. We are due for a recession between now and 2017. 2017 will be at the bottom and starting back up, like in 1982: Morning Again in America, perhaps right after much gnashing of teeth.

32   bubblesitter   2014 May 2, 7:32am  

clambo says

Margin rates are now regulated (lower) and banks can't lose depositors money, bank deposits now are insured by FDIC.

Replace banks with government now. All risks are now socialized. That will prevent the repeat of great depression but will make America a third world country. Think of drastic reduction in all the services that government provides.

33   _   2014 May 2, 7:38am  

bubblesitter says

Replace banks with government now

90% of all residential loans go through the government already and I believe 41% of student loans as well. The government lending is already here, private sector loan growth has been awful in this cycle

34   _   2014 May 2, 7:46am  

NAR: 60% first-time buyers made down payments of 6% or less in March, down from 74% in 2009 http://economistsoutlook.blogs.realtor.org/2014/05/01/60-percent-of-first-time-buyers-put-down-6-or-less/#sf2793485 …

35   Reality   2014 May 2, 7:54am  

You are missing these key facts:

1. The article is old and citing even older data. There have been massive wage increases since then in response to critics.

2. housing, food and clothing are provided by the factory in those facilities; as is healthcare and commute transportation (walking from the factory dorm). The pay is essentially net savings that the worker can have.

3. Overtime is what the workers want, and is the norm. Why? Just like young Americans working in Alaska and in North Dakota oil fields, they go there to earn money for a stint, then go home in another part of the country to enjoy the fruit of their labor.

36   Reality   2014 May 2, 7:56am  

BTW, recessions take place not because consumers don't have enough income, but because too much of that income is taken up by debt service.

37   clambo   2014 May 2, 8:17am  

Bank failures and collapse of the money supply from a credit fueled asset bubble (stocks) popping led to the depression.

25,000 banks in 29 became fewer than 15,000 in 33.

Depositors lost their savings in failed banks.

The banking collapse led to a collapse in the money supply.

These things were on Bernake's mind recently, he was afraid of a repeat of this situation.

38   _   2014 May 2, 8:18am  

FDIC promise on 250K and FASB 157 was big when things were ugly, working in finance at that type was a truly epic experience

39   _   2014 May 2, 1:43pm  

And people wonder why new home sales took a hit once rates rose. This sector has left the first time home behind

40   _   2014 May 3, 12:46am  

toothfairy says

.I guess you could say there's a bond market bubble? That may be something to look at.

At this point lets see if the bond market can break above 3.04%. That 2.47% -3.04% has been staying put.

I look for 2.4%-2.9% growth for Q2 Q3 Q4 but 2017 is really about if we get 35 plus wage inflation which will bring CPI over 2.5% since rent inflation itself will get to 2% soon.

So for a crash to happen at 2017 that means the 14 million plus jobs that we created since the bottom at 2009 couldn't sustain higher yields on the short and long end.

So for me a crash would require a massive and I mean a massive rise in yields

I just can't see that happening in 2017. As always follow the monthly data point they will give you the truth

41   _   2014 May 3, 4:17am  

The one difference with this cycle is this

2000

10 year was 6.2% No ZIRP

2007

10 year was at 4.7% No ZIRP

2017....

Have to see where the 10 year and ZIRP

42   indigenous   2014 May 3, 5:34am  

I have read about bond yields being prescient, you guys are saying that 2017 will be good, I have read others who say that 2017 will be bad. They use bonds, demographics and trends in the graphs to predict. They make their living off these projections.

They are also predicting that the second half of this year there will be a mild recession.

http://itreconomics.com/

There has been a mild rise in 10yr bond rates which would seem to indicate a slow down in the latter part of this year.

43   _   2014 May 3, 8:09am  

Maybe it's just me, but wouldn't a economy based on debt be at the risk of Federal Reserve action who have a primary impact on short term rates.

The cost of money rises when they make that decision up or down. A direct impact to many consumers which will impact DTI levels

44   indigenous   2014 May 3, 8:17am  

Logan Mohtashami says

Maybe it's just me, but wouldn't a economy based on debt be at the risk of Federal Reserve action who have a primary impact on short term rates.

The cost of money rises when they make that decision up or down. A direct impact to many consumers which will impact DTI levels

Tru Dat

45   mell   2014 May 3, 12:15pm  

Logan Mohtashami says

Also, it's not just buying the treasuries as well, it's also purchases of MBS.

Yep.

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