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Community banks across the country continue to fold under the pressures of the nation’s economic crisis, as soured loans stack up and drain small institutions’ balance sheets.
The doors on three more regional banks – in Illinois, Minnesota, and Washington – were closed Friday by state and federal regulators, bringing the total numberof failed FDIC-insured institutions for the year to 92. That number was 25 for all of 2008, and just three in 2007. Since the infamous demise of Wall Street’s Lehman Brothers one year ago, 107 banks have gone belly up.
Corus Bank in Chicago was closed Friday by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The FDIC brokered a deal with MB Financial Bank, also in Chicago, to assume Corus Bank’s approximately $6.5 billion in non-brokered deposits and take over its 11 branches.
This marks MB Financial’s third FDIC-assisted bank takeover this year. According to Mitchell Feiger, MB’s president and CEO, Corus Bank’s “attractively situated” branches on the north side of Chicago will bolster MB’s presence in the city’s northern suburbs. Just one week earlier, MB Financial increased its footprint in Chicago’s Southside with the acquisition of InBank.
MB Financial also purchased approximately $3 billion of Corus Bank’s assets. MB said in a corporate statement that these newly acquired assets consisted of Corus’ investment grade securities, as well as local consumer and small business loans. MB was quick to point that it did not buy any of the failed bank’s commercial real estate loans or REOs related to Corus’ construction lending business. These loans have been retained by the FDIC, which plans to sell them in the next 30 days in a private placement transaction.
The FDIC estimates that Corus Bank’s failure will cost the agency $1.7 billion. Corus is the sixteenth institution to go under in Illinois this year.
Brickwell Community Bank in Woodbury, Minnesota, was shuttered by state regulators. CorTrust Bank of Mitchell, South Dakota agreed to reopen Brickwell’s solitary branch office, and purchase all of the failed bank’s $63 million in deposits and $72 million in total assets.
The FDIC and CorTrust entered into a loss-share transaction on approximately $65 million of Brickwell Community’s assets. The FDIC says Brickwell’s failure will cost its deposit insurance fund $22 million. Brickwell is the third Minnesota bank to fail so far this year.
Venture Bank in Lacy also became the third bank in Washington to go under in 2009, when it was shut down by state regulators on Friday. First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company of Raleigh, North Carolina, agreed to acquire Venture’s 18 branch locations.
First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company will also take over the failed institution’s $903 million in deposits and will purchase $874 million of Venture’s $970 million in assets. The FDIC and First-Citizens entered into a loss-share transaction on approximately $715 million of Venture Bank’s assets. The FDIC estimates that the Washington bank’s failure will cost its insurance fund $298 million.
Click to access the shared link: Senate Approves Extension of Tax Credit Closing Deadline http://www.dsnews.com/articles/senate-approves-extension-of-tax-credit-closing-deadline-2010-06-16
By BRIAN BECKLEY Bonney Lake-Sumner Courier-Herald Reporter Today, 5:09 PM
To paraphrase Shakespeare, would a road by any other name still ride as sweet?
It's a question Plateau drivers may have to consider if the Bonney Lake City Council follows through on discussions to try and rename the city's section of the Sumner-Buckley Highway to more accurately reflect Bonney lake's history.
The idea came up at the council's recent retreat, brought by members of Bonney Lake Historical Society and a veteran's group looking to honor veterans by renaming a section of the road.
Originally named before the city of Bonney Lake was founded in 1949 – and before state Route 410 was built – the Sumner-Buckley Highway, also known as Old Buckley Highway, was the main route between the two cities that make up its name.
But that was then, this is now.
"It was known as the Sumner-Buckley Highway because Bonney Lake was just a little blip," Bonney Lake City Administrator Don Morrison said.
"In the last 60 years, things have changed a lot," he added. "Now Bonney Lake is bigger than both Sumner and Buckley combined."
The idea to rename the road originated with David Colbeth, chairman of the Veteran's Memorial Committee. Colbeth said he was inspired by Des Moines Memorial Way and thought renaming the highway would be a good way to honor veterans from the area and create more support for a memorial.
He and his group suggested "Bonney Lake Memorial Drive."
"The whole intent is to have recognition for our veterans and service people," Colbeth said Thursday. "We need to do something in this area."
Much of the council and members of the city administration favor renaming the road, or at least the section which runs through Bonney Lake, stretching from the intersection at SR410 to approximately Angeline Road. After that, Sumner-Buckley Highway is a county road.
Councilman Donn Lewis, a military veteran, supports the noting of giving the road a more "suitable name."
"I think it's a great idea to change it from what it is," he said. "People in Bonney Lake are looking to establish our own historical landmarks."
Councilman Jim Rackley agreed, calling the present name a "misnomer at this point."
"It has merit," Rackley said. "It's a mouthful anyhow."
But not everyone is receptive to the idea. Buckley mayor Pat Johnson, for example, is opposed to having her city's name removed from the road and said while Bonney Lake's 60-year history may not be reflected in the name, the history of the area and the Plateau most certainly is.
"That was the road from Buckley to Sumner," she said. "With the swipe of a pen...they're taking away the historical significance."
Johnson added that Bonney Lake is "a bunch of newcomers."
"Buckley and Sumner have been around 100 years," she said. "We're slowly whittling away the historical value of our area."
Johnson added, however, she respects the right of Bonney Lake to rename roads within the city.
And, of course, history is in the eye of the beholder.
"It may be historical, but not for us," Morrison said, adding that he did not expect Buckley to rename its portion of the road.
Streets in Bonney Lake are named by council action, but Morrison said he did not see the issue heading to the council soon. He said there is some momentum for renaming the portion in the city limits, but said it may make more sense to wait until the "thumb" of county land that divides Bonney Lake is eventually annexed into the city. He also said business owners would have to be consulted because of the changes to their addresses and the costs that may be associated with the move.
But to Morrison, the days of the Sumner Buckley Highway in Bonney Lake may be numbered.
"In my mind it will be renamed," Morrison said. "It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when."
Ninety-four percent of the short sale transactions that we take on require that we negotiate two (2) loans on the client's property. Both lenders must agree in order to allow a short sale to move forward. This can create some real challenges.
PRIMARY LENDER (NOT REALLY A LENDER AT ALL!!)
Most sellers really believe that the lender in first position actually owns the loan. In fact, in most instances, the company is merely "servicing" the loan on behalf of an investor/owner of the loan.
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac are large owners of loans who employ certain servicing agents to handle collection of monthly payment, foreclosures and the like. These companies are paid a percentage fee for returning a certain return on investment for the loan owner/investor.
So, when you (or we as your negotiator) are talking with the lender in first position, we are really dealing with an "agent" of the true lender. They generally do not make the decisions. They are tasked with getting all the information together so that a decision can be made by the true loan owner/investor.
No one anticipated that there would ever be a huge recession with short sales such a dominant part of the sales marketplace. It has created a huge backlog with lenders as we all are vividly aware.
Lenders in this position are collateral based. They will focus on the value of the property in a much more focused fashion than a second position lender. They will focus more on B.P.O. (Broker’s Price Opinion or Broker Option of Value) matters than the second position lender.
Our real problem with servicing companies is that they are scared to death that if they somehow make an inappropriate decision, the investor may require that they (the servicing company) buy back the loan. This is part of the reason why the negotiation process takes so long.
SECOND POSITION LENDERS
Second position lenders generally own the loan and are not servicing agents. Even if the same company appears to be both first and second position lenders, in reality they are generally not the same lender.
McFERRAN, BURNS & STOVALL, P.S.
Real Estate Attorneys
3906 South 74th Street
Tacoma, WA 98409
Telephone 253-284-3838
www.mbs-shortsales.com
David Colbeth Your Community REALTOR® 253-778-6423 phone/text / 206-264-5217 efax CDPE - Certified Distressed Property Expert - Oh, don't forget... I'm never too busy for your referrals!Please visit my websites: www.DavidColbeth.com ~ www.YourCommunityRealtor.com
The waiver is limited to those sales meeting the following general conditions:
All transactions must be arms-length, with no identity of interest between the buyer and seller or other parties participating in the sales transaction. In cases in which the sales price of the property is 20 percent or more above the seller's acquisition cost, the waiver will only apply if the lender meets specific conditions. The waiver is limited to forward mortgages, and does not apply to the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) for purchase program.
Click the following to access the shared link: IBM to Buy Wilshire from BoA, Jumping into Mortgage Servicing http://www.dsnews.com/articles/ibm-to-buy-wilshire-from-boa-jumping-into-mortgage-servicing-2009-10-05
Payment option adjustable rate mortgages are about to go through major resets, sending federal and state regulators scurrying to withstand a new wave of defaults and foreclosures.
The impending changes were a major topic of conversation when the state magistrates met with Obama administration officials to discuss strategies for combating mortgage fraud.
“Payment option ARMs are about to explode,” Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller told Reuters after that meeting.
The loans – which give borrowers the option of making small interest-only payments each month, leading to an increasing principal balance – have left many homeowners underwater in their mortgages. The problem is compounded when the loans reset, meaning monthly payments must rise to begin paying down the full balance. Introductory interest rates may also reset to higher levels.
All those factors can lead to a bevy of new troubled borrowers, experts say. In Arizona – one of the states hardest hit by the mortgage crisis – 128,000 option ARMs will reset in the next year, State Attorney General Terry Goddard told Reuters. The San Francisco-based mortgage consultant Loan Performance has estimated that 469,000 option ARMs were issued in the U.S. between 2000 and 2007, when most lenders halted the practice.
That means hundreds of thousands of borrowers will be on the hook for payments of 5 to 10 times more than the usual mortgage payment, obligations that will “threaten a much greater hit to the consumer than the subprimes,” Goddard said.
One researcher’s work shows how bad the option ARM effect could be on the economy. Joseph Mason, a banking professor at Louisiana State University, estimates that 75 percent of option ARM holders made minimum payments for as many as five years, failing to refinance or buy down principal balances.
“The only ones left in the product now are those who couldn’t afford something else when they got the loan,” Mr. Mason told the New York Times. “Now all they can likely afford is the minimum payment, so they’re just buying time in a dwelling until their reset date.”
Despite positive signs of a housing recovery – increasing home prices and sales in most markets nationwide – foreclosures have been continuing to rise, even before option ARMs became an area of concern. According to the data service RealtyTrac, one in every 357 homes in the U.S. had a foreclosure filing in August.
The option ARM “time bomb” threatens to deepen the foreclosure hole, adding to inventories of abandoned or unsold homes and squeezing the industry’s fragile valuation gains.
“It’s the other shoe,” Goddard said. “I can’t say it’s waiting to drop. It’s dropping now.”
Home prices and sales levels are rebounding. Mortgage rates are stabilizing. We’re in a housing recovery, right?
Not according to Wall Street’s prognosticating Queen of Darkness, banking analyst Meredith Whitney. The ubiquitous president and founder of Meredith Whitney Advisory Group LLC told CNBC Thursday that U.S. home prices would plummet again – as much as another 25 percent – as persistent unemployment problems deepen the foreclosure crisis.
“No bank underwrote a loan with 10 percent unemployment on the horizon,” Whitney said. “I think there is no doubt that home prices will go down dramatically from here, it’s just a question of when… If you look at the drivers for unemployment, I don’t see that reversing very soon.”
But analysts who specialize in housing say Whitney is more concerned with her dark reputation than the facts in this case. The next-most pessimistic predictor, Moody’s, only projects an average decline of 10 percent in home values before the economy’s recovery is complete.
“A 25% decline from here sounds very steep,” David Blitzer, chairman of the Standard & Poors/Case-Shiller housing-price index, told the Wall Street Journal. “To say that we’re only halfway through this sounds pessimistic.”
Whitney, who currently has only one “buy” recommendation out on a bank (Goldman Sachs), has made her reputation on pessimistic forecasts. In 2007, at the beginning of the downturn, she accurately predicted that Citigroup Inc. would have to cut its dividend to stay solid. It did, Citigroup’s CEO resigned, and Whitney cultivated a reputation as Wall Street’s fearless oracle.
Two weeks ago in a phone interview with Bloomberg Television, she predicted that the number of U.S. bank failures would jump 400 percent before the fallout of bad loans was finished. “There will be over 300 bank closures,” she said. “The small-business owner on Main Street continues to see liquidity come away.”
The Journal Thursday speculated that Whitney’s housing forecast might actually help bring about the opposite effect: “It might be welcome news for potential buyers looking for a bargain,” the paper said. If so, those bargain hunters could further stimulate new-purchase levels, restoring a pricing bottom and spurring growth.
That’s why, according to another Journal columnist, “Investors should take heed as the media trumpet Ms. Whitney’s latest proclamation.”
http://www.dsnews.com/articles/lps-report-foreclosure-pipeline-remains-clogged-2009-09-07
Lender Processing Services, Inc. (LPS), recently announced the release of its August 2009 LPS Mortgage Monitor. The LPS Mortgage Monitor is a report of mortgage industry performance indicators based on data collected through July 2009.
LPS’ analysis of the nation’s loan inventories shows mixed results. Though total delinquencies remained unchangedfrom 8.6 percent as of June 2009, the figure represents a 40 percent year-over-year increase and is the highest loan delinquency level recorded by the company.
Continuing their climb to record highs, foreclosure inventories showed a month-over-month increase of 4.2 percent and a year-over-year increase of 89.6 percent. Jumbo prime, option adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and non-agency conforming prime loans continue to
experience the highest deterioration rates. Jumbo prime foreclosure rates are up 634 percent from January 2008.
LPS also reported that the national rate for total non-current loans increased slightly over June to 11.6 percent, representing a 50 percent year-over-year increase. Foreclosure starts increased 7.1 percent, to their second highest level on record, and the nation’s loan deterioration ratio – the number of loans deteriorating versus improving – is approximately 2.2 to 1. Deterioration rates are highest in the western and northeastern regions of the country.
Ninety-day or greater delinquent loans rolling towards foreclosure status have decreased from 2007 and 2008 levels. However, those loans not referred into foreclosure continue to roll to the next stage of delinquency showing that the volume of at-risk loans is worsening. Meanwhile, the absolute volume and percentage of foreclosure starts relative to the total number of active loans continues to increase as well.
LPS did report one bit of positive news. The re-default rates for loan modifications in the first and second quarter of 2009 are outperforming those initiated during 2008 in the initial months post modification. In spite of this, the report noted that while loan performance is improving, the mortgage market’s problems will remain until the nation’s sizable foreclosure pipeline is cleared through refinances, loss mitigations, or REO sales.
To understand this information better, please visit this link:
Buyer's Market or Seller's Market, and what difference does the amount of inventory make?
- MARKET UPDATE -
100% Financing Available through USDA!
Good news for home buyers! The U.S Department of Agriculture increased its maximum income requirements to qualify for the Rural Development Guaranteed Home Loan Program.
Previously, the income requirements were structured on a "per member" household. Now the income limits will be transformed into a two-tier system.
For borrowers that are looking to purchase a primary residence, the requirement for a household of 1-4 will equal the current 4 person limit for property's county.
King County= $92,000 Pierce County= $78,350
For borrowers with a household of 5-8, the income limit will equal the requirement for an 8 person household for the corresponding county.
King County= $121,450 Pierce County= $103,400