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Housing Market About To Take Its Biggest Hit



Aug 5, 2009 8 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

obamas-foreclosure-prevention-plan

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The percentage of U.S. homeowners who owe more than their house is worth will nearly double to 48 percent in 2011 from 26 percent at the end of March, portending another blow to the housing market, Deutsche Bank said on Wednesday.

Home price declines will have their biggest impact on prime “conforming” loans that meet underwriting and size guidelines of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the bank said in a report. Prime conforming loans make up two-thirds of mortgages, and are typically less risky because of stringent requirements.

“We project the next phase of the housing decline will have a far greater impact on prime borrowers,” Deutsche analysts Karen Weaver and Ying Shen said in the report.
Of prime conforming loans, 41 percent will be “underwater” by the first quarter of 2011, up from 16 percent at the end of the first quarter 2009, it said. Forty-six percent of prime jumbo loans will be larger than their properties’ value, up from 29 percent, it said.
“The impact of this is significant given that these markets have the largest share of the total mortgage market outstanding,” the analysts said. Prime jumbo loans make up 13 percent of the total market.

Deutsche’s dire assessment comes amid a bolt of evidence in recent months that point to stabilization in the U.S. housing market after three years of price drops. This week, the National Association of Realtors said pending home sales rose for a fifth straight month in June. A widely watched index released in July showed home prices in May rose for the first time since 2006.

Covering 100 U.S. metropolitan areas, Deutsche Bank in June forecast home prices would fall 14 percent through the first quarter of 2011, for a total drop of 41.7 percent.

The drop in home prices is fueling a vicious cycle of foreclosures as it eliminates homeowner equity and gives borrowers an incentive to walk away from their mortgages. The more severe the negative equity, the more likely are defaults, since many borrowers believe prices will not recover enough.

Homeowners with the riskiest mortgages taken out during the housing boom have seen the greatest erosion in equity, in part because they were “affordability products” originated at the housing peak, Deutsche said. They include subprime loans, of which 69 percent will be underwater in 2011, up from 50 percent in March, Deutsche said,

Of option adjustable-rate mortgages — which cut payments by allowing principal balances to rise — 89 percent will be underwater in 2011, up from 77 percent, the report said.

Regions suffering the worst negative equity are areas in California, Florida, Arizona, Nevada, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Massachusetts and West Virginia. Las Vegas and parts of Florida and California will see 90 percent or more of their loans underwater by 2011, it added.

“For many, the home has morphed from piggy bank to albatross,” the analysts said.


  • George

    Home prices will see a total drop of 41.7 percent?
    I don’t buy it. I’m pessimistic on the economy but these numbers seem far fetched beyond reality. Something was lost in the translation on this report.

    • JCD

      I think it’s due to the fact that these prime loan values were all quite highly inflated to begin with, much more than the 100-200k houses, but are now loans that stand to lose the most, and also will be the hardest to re-sell. Couple that with imploding commercial real estate that is only now beginning to roll over…. the 41.7% seems all too possible to me. :shock:

  • http://www.Dissent-From-Day-One.com DissentFromDayOneDOTcom

    Buy gold and silver.

  • Sully

    I believe it. They are probably being charitable.
    A continuing increase in the number of people UNABLE TO PAY their mortgages is a disaster of the proportion Deutsche predicts.
    Bernanke won’t predict how bad unemployment might get but he does say the earliest it will start turning the corner is late 2010.
    If unemployment goes up 50% between now and then … well it likely gets worse than the article predicts.

  • GRIZZ

    Nobody has produced a number of how many loans that went into default were to illegals….a shit load

  • Joe Mudd

    Tell me this thing wasn’t engineered!
    Power grab, money grab, nation grab.
    I used to think all that Illuminati crap was
    conspiracy theory but now I’m not so sure.
    What if we declared our old money null and void and started fresh, I mean right now money is just a bunch of numbers in separate accounts stuck in a bunch of computers and we send some of those numbers here and there everyday to pay our bills.
    Wouldn’t it be nice to shaft the “powers” by not believing in the value of what they’ve stolen from us any longer and change the currency like a light switch to the new currency and leave them penny less. WOOPS brain fart.

    • Gaige Mosher

      It wasn’t engineered.

      No honestly, I don’t think this was engineered. I think it’s being encouraged and exploited, but it wasn’t engineered. This crash is entirely fundamentals-driven, and was a foregone conclusion the day America became both a debtor and consumer nation, as opposed to a creditor and producer nation.

  • Mark Gibbons

    Be on alert posters-The spelling czar has just checked in.