Low Rates + High Home Values = Perfect Time To Refi

Its no secret…home values are skyrocketing everywhere!  Sacramento Home Prices are up 31% in just the last year!  Besides leading to increased home sale opportunities for those looking to move-up, this trend has also led to more and more refinances.  In fact, most of my current refinance clients could not have refinanced just 6 months ago due to low or no equity.  But now, they’re experiencing the benefits that come with thier fast-rising home value.  If you’ve previously written off the possibility of refinancing, then its time to reconsider your options.  Even with only 5% equity, homeowners with credit scores over 740 have options to refi to 30-year fixed rates around 4% with no mortgage insurance.  And you don’t even need to be eligible for HARP to do it.

Speaking of HARP, the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) has been extended through 2015.  HARP offers refinance opportunities for homeowners with no equity (see if you’re eligible).  It was set to expire at the end of this year but the government, in one of its rare recent occasions to agree on something, approved its continuance for two more years.

To make these opportunities even sweeter, mortgage rates remain super low.  I’ve been finding 30-year fixed rates around 3.5% and 15-year rates under 3% for clients with 20%+ equity.*

Bottom line…now’s the time to consider refinancing.  If you contact me this month to determine your refinance options, I will waive the initial credit report fee cost ($25 value).  As I’m writing this post, I have several specific clients that come to mind that should take advantage of these low rates and rising home values.  If I don’t hear from you, maybe you’ll hear from me in the coming days! 🙂  This is the perfect time to refi; I don’t want you to miss it.

*Rates shown are only meant as rough illustrations.  For full rate and APR details, please contact me. I assure you; rates like these are currently available for qualified borrowers

Award Winning Professional Matt Sundermier Gives His 2013 Real Estate Market Forecast

My real estate market forecasts are the most widely read articles on MattsMemos.com.  Their popularity is certainly not due to profound accuracy; in fact, I’m probably wrong more than I’m right.  Nevertheless, it’s been fun for me to take my best-guess and, as it turns out, it’s been fun for my followers to read.  You can read prior year’s forecasts here, here, and here.  But, you’ll get more from reading the one below which also includes home refinancing, buying, and selling tips.  If you like it, share it!  If you disagree with my projections, make a comment…I’d love to hear your thoughts on our CRAZY real estate market.

Refinancing

Everyone (including me) predicted mortgage rates would rise slightly through 2012 as the economy slowly recovered and as the presidential election brought some clarity to the fiscal and political direction of our country.  We were all wrong.  2012 saw lower rates than ever before, largely due to The Fed’s decision to buy mortgages.  When the Fed’s announced they’d steadily purchase billions worth of mortgages until the unemployment rate hits 6.5% (its currently at 7.8%), mortgage rates fell dramatically.  Presently, The Fed is buying $3.7 billion in mortgages every day, yet the industry only originates $2.5 billion daily, essentially meaning mortgages are “selling-out.” Simple economics dictate that regardless of if its a mortgage investment or a bunch of bananas, when a product sells out due to high demand, prices rise (just think of skyrocketing prices in New England right now as there isn’t enough supply to meet the demand of frantic buyers preparing for the blizzard!).  When the prices of mortgages to investors rise, the rates to borrowers fall.  As long as The Fed stays the course on buying every mortgage off the shelf, we will see these low rates remain throughout this year.  Currently, 30-year fixed rates are around 3.75%.  However, economic conditions around the globe are improving, and with brightening economic forecasts both at home (our real estate rebound will do wonders for America’s economic health) and abroad (many believe the worst of Europe’s fiscal woes are behind them), rates should increase from the record lows we saw last year.

More importantly, accessible programs (like the Home Affordable Refinance Program – HARP)  and rising home values (much more on this below) are allowing more folks to refinance as we march through 2013.  According to statisticians much smarter than me, 4 million more Americans are eligible to refinance today compared to last year simply because their home is worth more now.  If you’ve tried to refinance in the past but hit hurdles due to your home’s value, be sure to check back again.

Read these tips if you’re hoping to refinance this year

Home Buying

After 6 years of having the negotiating advantage, home buyers last year suddenly found themselves competing over a short-supply of homes for sale.  I foresee this feeding-frenzy dynamic to continue well into 2013…possibly beyond.

The Red Line shows how Sacramento home prices have steadily and dramatically increased
The Red Line shows how Sacramento home prices have steadily and dramatically increased

Sacramento County home prices rose 20% in 2012, so many sellers are less inclined to put their homes up for sale if they believe their home will continue to be worth more in the near future.  Furthermore, there’s much pent-up demand from home buyers, including ones who are now eligible to purchase after a short-sale or foreclosure.  Real estate investors also make up a big portion of the home buyer pool as they see big profits in real estate from both a strong rental market and swiftly rising home prices.  In conclusion, the imbalance between strong demand and weak supply should continue this year, leading to further steady price increases for sellers and challenging times for buyers.

If you expect to be a buyer in 2013, here are a few tips:

Home Selling

Home sellers are finally back in the driver’s seat, and likely will remain there through 2013.  Due to rising home values, many once upside-down homeowners are discovering they can now sell and break-even.  “Traditional” sales by sellers with equity now comprise over 60% of home sales, compared to only 34% from just two years ago.  Furthermore, bank-owned sales are down nearly 90% from 2010, thus showing signs banks are foreclosing on and, more importantly, re-selling significantly fewer homes.

These figures show the number of bank-owned REO homes that have hit the market in Sacramento county.
These figures show the number of bank-owned REO homes that have hit the market in Sacramento county.

In my opinion, the fear of banks’ “shadow inventory” is grossly exaggerated as many banks are trending to renting out their foreclosed homes or selling homes in bulk to investors who also turn many of the homes to rental properties (this recent Bloomberg article discusses this trend in detail).  Bottom line, 2013 will afford many home owners to sell after years of riding out the market, and to command higher prices than the last neighborhood home sale before them.

Here are a few tips for Home Sellers in 2013

To wrap up, 2013 will see rising home prices, stingy levels of inventory, and slightly elevated interest rates.  It should be a very healthy year for real estate, and likely be the catalyst for economic growth in many other sectors.  The Blue Waters Group is honored to stand alongside you in your home buying, selling, and refinance transactions in the year ahead and beyond.

Final Postcardlong

As always, thank you for reading.

-Matt Sundermier, Mortgage Broker & Real Estate Agent
Owner/Broker of The Blue Waters Group
Two-Year Winner of Five-Star Awards as featured in Sacramento Magazine

Tips for 2013 Refi-ers

Get Tuned in to HARP – The Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) allows underwater home owners to refinance.  This wildly popular and successful program is set to expire at the end of 2013.  Despite current efforts from a few senators to extend and expand the program, our strong real estate market (combined the dysfunctional nature of politics) will make it likely 2013 will be the end of HARP.  Find out ASAP if you qualify.  Either give me a call or fill out the short questionnaire at my web site www.UnderwaterRefiCA.com

Find Out Your Home’s Value – For those that don’t qualify for HARP, a refinance loan will require you have at least some equity in your home.  With home prices rising so dramatically last year, many homeowners will now find the opportunity to refinance.  As a combined mortgage broker and real estate agent, I have the added knowledge and insight to estimate your home’s appraised value prior to pursuing a refinance (and paying $450 for an appraisal!!).  Give me a call or select Home Value Request on our web site and I can research your home’s possible value.

A Penny Saved is a Penny Earned – As our population ages (Baby Boomers, I’m talking to you), more and more homeowners are looking to move their investments to safer alternatives than the stock market. If this sounds like you, consider refinancing and paying down your mortgage at the same time.  Doing so will dramatically lower your mortgage payment, thus providing you with lower housing expenses in retirement.  Furthermore, your lump sum investment towards paying down the mortgage essentially gives you a guaranteed rate of return equal to the interest rate on the mortgage.  Try earning a guaranteed 4% rate of return on a CD or other form of safe investment.  Remember, a penny saved is a penny earned!

The Blue Waters Group is Expanding & Expecting!

Since opening our doors in early April, The Blue Waters Group has met some major milestones!  Thank you for all of your support, business and referrals that have quickly propelled us from a new start-up to thriving firm.
Our group is expanding, with the newest addition to our group, Donna Adams.  We are elated to have her on board.  Check out our latest video to meet her, as well as get info on my “expecting” news (what could I mean by that?), as well as details about an extra charity drive that we’re kicking off on Halloween (costumes included).
Thanks as always for your support!

http://youtu.be/Nx9qzVQQ2Vo

Announcing THE BLUE WATERS WORKSHOP

The Blue Waters Group is hosting a special & unique event on Wednesday July 25th, 2012.  Check out the video for full details, but in short we’re going to give you great insight on real estate investing in today’s market and afterwards we’re heading out for an afternoon on the water!  Should be a fantastic time.

BIG NEWS!! I’ve Started My Own Company


It is with tremendous excitement I share with you the launch of my own mortgage and real estate firm, Blue Waters Mortgage and Real Estate Group. After 10 wonderful years at Bentley, it is now time to serve you from my own company. I will miss my colleagues at Bentley, and am grateful for their support, dedication, and friendship over the last decade.

Our new firm, as the name implies, will take a “Group” approach in helping you through your home buying, selling, and refinancing transactions. Lisa Parks Ferro, my business partner and fellow mortgage consultant, will support me during absences and also help set the vision for The Blue Waters Group.  Sara Davis, our talented systems manager and loan processor, will be an invaluable asset to our team’s efficient work flow.  Together we have nearly 40 years of industry experience, so you are in good hands.  I’ll do a video blog post soon so you can get to know them a bit, see our new office (we’re in Folsom), and get a better sense of us as a team.

The Blue Waters Group

The opening of our new business comes at an opportune time as the mortgage and real estate markets are healthier than they’ve been in years. Low home prices and low interest rates are fueling a frenzy of investment property and home purchases. New refinance programs (such as the Home Affordable Refinance Program) are opening the door for millions of underwater homeowners to refinance and slash their monthly mortgage payments (see if you qualify by clicking here). And many folks who lost their homes to foreclosure or short-sale in recent years are becoming eligible to purchase homes again (call or email me to learn about the credit requirements of buying another home after losing one). The future looks bright for those looking to buy or refi…better wear your shades!


Throughout my entire career, my clients have fueled my business growth through their referrals and repeat business, for which I am eternally grateful. I am confident your advocacy and loyalty will be even greater towards my new business. I thank you for your support that has enabled me to reach this point in my career, and look forward to see how far you can propel The Blue Waters Group in the very near future.

Could 30 Year Rates go to 3% or 3.5%?

I read this article this morning on Bloomberg. There are some officials that support further action from The Fed to push mortgage rates even lower. How low can they go? Enjoy the read!

(Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke can’t go it alone when it comes to reviving the U.S.housing market.

Fed policy makers, who start a two-day meeting today, are considering buying mortgage-backed securities to push down borrowing costs and help homeowners refinance their debt. That would reduce monthly payments, freeing up cash for other purchases that could spur the economy and reduce unemployment, Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo said Oct. 20.

Such an effort would save homeowners $60 billion to $80 billion a year, or about 0.5 percent of gross domestic product, so long as the Obama administration succeeds in helping homeowners through a stepped-up refinancing aid plan, said Joseph Gagnon, a former Fed economist. Should the program fail, Fed asset-buying would probably provide homeowners less than half its potential savings, said Gagnon, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics inWashington.

“The Achilles’ heel of the Fed’s efforts so far has been that the monetary-policy transmission has not worked as they would like because of, in large part, the inability of consumers to get loans” for homes and other purchases, said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies & Co. in New York.

Refinancing Program

(The Federal Housing Finance Agency said Oct. 24 it will let qualified homeowners refinance mortgages regardless of how much their houses have dropped in value, expanding terms of the 2009 Home Affordable Refinance Program, which has fallen 80 percent short of the goal of reaching 5 million borrowers. The FHFA estimates the changes will help generate about 900,000 refinanced loans by the end of 2013. If the alterations to the so-called HARP plan don’t spur refinancing, any Fed purchases of mortgage bonds would bring limited benefits, said McCarthy, a former Fed researcher.

(The Federal Open Market Committee, which has kept its benchmark interest rate near zero since December 2008, plans tomorrow to release a statement and economic projections from governors and regional Fed presidents. Bernanke is scheduled to hold a press conference at 2:15 p.m., his first since June and third since the Fed started the briefings in April.

(Central bank officials may not be ready this week to pull the trigger on more bond-buying because of an increase this year in core inflation, which excludes food and fuel costs, Gagnon said. Once policy makers see slowing price gains for another month or two, “they will then feel empowered, indeed driven,” to restart asset purchases, he said.

‘Top of the List’

(Tarullo, in a speech in New York last month, said additional mortgage-securities purchases should “move back up toward the top of the list of options” because “the aggregate -demand effect should be felt not just in new-home purchases, but also in the added purchasing power of existing homeowners who are able to refinance.” Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen said Oct. 21 that a third round of asset purchases “might become appropriate” if the economy’s state warranted additional stimulus.

(“I don’t know how you could embark on a program of buying agency mortgages thinking you’re going to stimulate more refinancing,” said Bryan Whalen, co-head of mortgage bonds at Los Angeles-based TCW Group Inc., which oversees $120 billion in assets. “It’s not a rate issue, it’s a qualification issue.”

(The average rate on a typical 30-year fixed mortgage fell to a record low 3.94 percent in October, from this year’s high of 5.05 percent, before climbing to 4.10 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac survey data. In September, the FOMC voted to reinvest proceeds from maturing housing debt into mortgage-backed securities, switching from Treasuries.

Record Easing

(New York Fed President William C. Dudley said Oct. 24 that removing “impediments” to the transmission of monetary stimulus would make the central bank’s record easing more effective. The FHFA’s plan to make it easier for borrowers with high loan-to-value ratios to refinance is “a step in the right direction,” he said, adding he hoped additional measures would follow.

(Bernanke said in congressional testimony last month that the Fed needs help from other branches of government to aid the economy. “Monetary policy can be a powerful tool, but it is not a panacea for the problems currently faced by theU.S.economy,” he told the Joint Economic Committee Oct. 4.

(Gagnon urged the central bank to target a 30-year mortgage rate of 3 percent to 3.5 percent by buying as much as $2 trillion of mortgage-backed securities. While boosting stocks and supporting property prices, Fed asset purchases may help create at least 3 million jobs, he said in an Oct. 24 blog titled “The Last Bullet.”

Out of Reach

(“The Fed could do stuff, and it would help, but there would be a lot of people who without HARP couldn’t take advantage of it,” Gagnon said in a telephone interview.

(Reduced home prices and tightened lending standards have slowed the pace of replacement home loans. The Mortgage Bankers Association forecast on Oct. 11 that refinancing this year would total $783 billion, down from $1.1 trillion last year, even amid lower interest rates. Refinancing peaked at a record $2.5 trillion in 2003.

(Stanford University Professor John Taylor, best known for the Taylor Rule formula that suggests how the Fed should set its benchmark interest rate, said more Fed purchases of mortgage bonds are unlikely to reduce loan rates.

(Another round of purchases wouldn’t cut rates “appreciably, and not really in any predictable way,” Taylor, an economic adviser to House Republican lawmakers, said in a phone interview.

‘Difficult to Detect’

(Taylor and one of his graduate students, Johannes Stroebel, wrote a paper arguing that “it is difficult to detect a significant effect” from Fed purchases of mortgage bonds totaling $1.25 trillion from January 2009 to March 2010.

(Gagnon, co-author of a Fed study that found the bond buying lowered borrowing costs and helped the economy, disputed Stroebel andTaylor’s findings, saying they focused on the impact of the actual purchases, rather than the announcement.

(A May 2011 Bank of Canada review of research into central bank bond-buying said the Fed’s MBS purchases “appear to have eased mortgage-market conditions.” At the same time, the Fed’s $600 billion, second round of bond purchases, undertaken from November 2010 through June of this year, probably had a “more modest” effect because of fewer “distortions” in financial markets and the economy at the time, the Canadian central bank’s researchers said.

(Without the administration program sparking more refinancing, Fed asset purchases won’t be of much help to the housing market, says Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC inStamford,Connecticut, who opposes further bond-buying.

(“If the pipeline is stuck, then it doesn’t matter if mortgage rates are 4 percent, 3.5 percent or zero,” said Stanley, a former Richmond Fed researcher.

Do You Need a (Real Estate) Savior or Sherpa?

Buying, selling, or financing a home today can be quite an intimidating process to many.  From short-sales to appraisals to volatile home prices, more and more elements are beyond predictability.  I have watched some real estate professionals market themselves as real estate saviors, promising the world in order to falsely take the fear out of the process for consumers.  In my opinion, however, nothing is scarier in real estate than an over-promising sales person guaranteeing things they simply have no control over.

As a real estate agent and mortgage broker, I cannot be a savior.  Rather, I see myself as your real estate “Sherpa.”  Sherpas, as you may know, are an ethnic group in Nepal who are famous as highly skilled and capable mountaineering guides in the Himalayas.  Unable to make the trek alone, summit-seeking climbers hire Sherpas to manage and navigate the dangerous trek up Mount Everest.  And while Sherpas make most Everest ascents possible, the chance of reaching the summit is ultimately out of their hands.

 

Buying, selling, or financing a home can seem like climbing a mountain.  It seems scary, danger exists if you make a wrong turn, and there are plenty of nay-sayers claiming you can’t do it.  To overcome the obstacles, you need a partner who is experienced, resilient, and calm under pressure.  But, be wary of the guide who guarantees you a trip to the summit; who are they to control the weather in such extreme conditions? 

I cannot guarantee you the perfect house at the lowest price with the fastest close.  I cannot guarantee you an underwriter will approve your loan.  And I cannot guarantee your home will sell in 2 weeks for full asking price.  There are too many variables to a transaction to pretend like I wield the real estate cosmos in my hands.  Again, I am not a savior.  I am, however, your real estate Sherpa, determined to use my experience, skills, and knowledge to help you make the best decisions possible during your next unpredictable real estate expedition.

2011 Real Estate Market Forecast

Happy Valentine’s Day!  Now, I know today is a day devoted to love, but I figure it can’t hurt to sprinkle in some real estate chat too.  The two topics just might have more in common than you think.

Like love, our housing market can be impossible to understand, but that doesn’t stop us from trying to figure it out.  I think the mystic of the market (& love) captivates us to know what others think about it.  That’s probably why my annual market forecasts are the most widely read posts on this blog (read last year’s here).

So here it goes…my attempt to figure it out…Matt’s 2011 Market Forecast.  No love talk here, though; just economics.  As usual, my forecast focuses on three categories in the Sacramento real estate market: housing supply, housing demand, and mortgage interest rates.  I will recap 2010 and give you my best guess for what lies ahead in 2011!

Supply
’10 Projection: Inventory will be higher in 2010 (than 2009) as banks release more homes for sale and more short-sale listings are successfully sold.

’10 Result: Nearly 60% more homes are currently for sale compared to the end of 2009 (see chart above).  These increases were largely due to more homeowners looking to short-sale their properties and more banks releasing homes for sale.  Unfortunately, this increase in supply was not met by an increase in demand (more on that in a minute), and the amount of homes sitting on the market (known as inventory) is currently at an uncomfortably high 3.6 months.
’11 Projection: Short-sales and bank-owned properties will remain the primary sale types in Sacramento.  Additionally, an emerging sale type, the government-owned home, will become more prevalent this year.  The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has been forced to foreclose on an increasing number of FHA-held loans originated in recent years.  While the Making Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative (HAFA) program was mostly unsuccessful in 2010, I am optimistic that improvements will be made this year that enable more short-sale listings to successfully close.

Demand
’10 Projection: Demand will still be high as buyers confidently (and rightfully) believe the bottom of the cycle is here.
’10 Result:  The bottom certainly seems to be here with respect to Sacramento county’s median home price.  In fact, it has increased 1.6% over the last two years.  First-time home buyers and real estate investors continue to make up the majority of current home buyers.  The overall pace of sales last year declined remarkably after the federal 1st-time home buyer tax credit expired in June 2010, indicating the market was propped up with artificial measures more than originally thought.
’11 Projection: Total home sales will be lower this year compared to 2010.  Although the bottom has arrived, it may be here to stay for some time.  Some potential home buyers may be reluctant to commit to a home purchase with looming job and other economic concerns and the absence of alluring tax credits.  Real estate investors, however, will be looking to purchase in abundance as rental rates are on the rise…11.6% nationally! (read this article for more details about these rising rental prices).

Interest Rates
’10 Projection: Despite wide-spread concern of drastically rising rates, I believe rates will stay well below 6%.
’10 Result: What a wild ride for mortgage rates in 2010!  While many worried of rates rising in April after The Fed stopped purchasing mortgages, rates actually plummeted for the first six months after the Feds exit from the market.  Towards end of the year, rates steadily climbed out of record-low territory.  In September I coined the 4th quarter as “Crunch Time” (read September’s blog post here) and encouraged clients and readers to consider refinancing before rates rose.  Thankfully, many heard that message as I helped more folks refinance in the 4th quarter of 2010 compared to any other 3-month period in my career.  30-year fixed rates rounded out the year hovering just below 5%, which was close to where they started the year.
’11 Projection: Mortgage rates will continue to be influened by politics more than economics, but in a very different way.  While I predict the Feds will stop trying to manipulate the mortgage and bond rate markets at some point this year, legislation from Congress will drastically impact mortgage rates.  MASSIVE financial reform regulations are scheduled to start in April 2011 that change how borrower’s closing costs are disclosed and paid for.  While unintended, these reform changes will increase the cost of obtaining a loan.  Furthermore, Congress is currently considering largely downsizing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s participation in the mortgage market.  If this is done, mortgage rates will likely increase as banks must shoulder the risk of holding more mortgage loans rather than selling them to Fannie or Freddie.

In summary, 2011 will not be a rebound year from recent market challenges, but rather a continuation on our road to recovery.  American job creation & stability, mortgage financing availability & affordabiliity, and unpredictable legislative action will direct the market this year.  A healthy real estate market is within our sights, but we likely have another 18 months before we see a balance between home supply and buyer demand.  Until then, it will remain a buyers market largely comprised of 1st-time home buyers and real estate investors.

Do you have different thoughts and forecasts for 2011 housing?  I’d love for you to share them here.  Please leave a comment with your opinions, and let the chatter begin.

Want to Play Monopoly?

Ever since I have been old enough to count, I have loved the board game Monopoly™.  Whenever my buddies and I played I wanted to be both the banker and the property card-keeper; an ironic foreshadowing of my career as a combined mortgage broker and REALTOR.  As it turns out, I’ve been playing banker and property card-keeper my entire life!

To this day I still adore the game.  I’m currently biding my time for my girls to be old enough to play (recent attempts just led to slobbery battleship pieces, crumpled bills, and unfinished games).

In the meantime, I am enjoying working with more folks than ever before playing real-life Monopoly buying and financing investment properties.  Due to low prices, low interest rates, rising rental demand, and favorable tax benefits, “playing” Monopoly has become a very wise financial move.

Those with means and foresight should be running to buy homes right now

Consider these recent examples of clients I’ve helped:
1.) Mr & Mrs K. purchased a rental property for $158,000 in Fair Oaks.  They are renting it to their daughter who is covering the mortgage payment, which is actually lower than the rent she was paying at her previous apartment.  Talk about a win-win!

2.) Mr. G is purchasing a $200,000 4-bedroom home that already has tenants.  After making a 25% down payment, his TOTAL monthly payment is $1028.  The tenants want to remain in the home, and continue to pay their $1475/month rent…positive cash-flow of $5400/year (annual rate of return of 10.8%).

Examples like these are fairly common in today’s market.  It’s not about finding the “diamond-in-the-rough”; it’s about simple supply and demand.  The supply of houses at decade-low prices is up.  At the same time, the demand of renters is up as every homeowner that has lost their home to foreclosure or short-sale is now looking for a home to rent.  Tremendous investment opportunities are readily available for folks with great credit, document-able income, and at least a 25% down payment.

Ironically, the Monopoly™ board game became a popular game in the mid 1930s, in the midst of The Great Depression.  I can’t help but guess folks of the time became fascinated with a game aimed at buying property when their real life finances were so dire.  This time around, in what many are calling The Great Recession, I hope that instead of playing a board game you consider your real-life opportunities to attain financial health through real estate investing.  My experience can help you find the right loan and best property for your investment preferences.  As I said earlier, I’ve been practicing for this my whole life :-).