Saturday, December 6, 2008

The Bankers are SHOCKED!



From the LA Times

A record 10% of the nation's mortgage-burdened homeowners fell behind on their loan payments or were in foreclosure during the third quarter, according to a survey released Friday by the Mortgage Bankers Assn., which said California and Florida were the biggest contributors to the worsening picture.

The percentage of loans at least a month overdue or in foreclosure was up from 9.2% in the second quarter and 7.3% a year earlier, the trade group said. In Florida, 7.3% of home loans were in foreclosure at the end of September. The figure was 3.9% in California and just under 3% for the nation.

In a grim report Friday, the government said U.S. employers cut 533,000 jobs in November, the weakest performance in 34 years, sending the jobless rate to a 15-year high of 6.7%. California unemployment is now well over 8% (about 10% in the IE, we are fast approaching the levels of the early 90's).

Combined with a 40% decline in California's median home price, the faltering economy is resulting in the highest rate on record of troubled home loans actually going into foreclosure, said Jay Brinkmann, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Assn.

California represents 13% of the loans in the country, Brinkmann said, but is recording 19% of all new foreclosures.

"California has lost more than 100,000 jobs over the past year, compared to Michigan, the usual poster child for unemployment, which only lost 70,000," Brinkmann said.

"Things are going to get worse before they get better," said Thomas Lawler, a housing economist based in Virginia. (DUH!)

At first glance, California's troubles seem little different from those anywhere else, because just under 7% of borrowers in both California and the nation are behind on payments. But Brinkmann said a clearer picture emerges when you compare the number of newly delinquent loans in one quarter with the number of loans entering the foreclosure process the following quarter.

That foreclosure "roll rate" was about 10% to 12% nationally in the 1990s and ran from 12% to 15% for most of this decade, Brinkmann said. The percentage is now 30% nationally but has reached 79% in California and 65% in Florida, he said.

"This is nothing like anything we've ever seen before," Brinkmann said. "We were shocked when we saw the California roll rates."

5 comments:

Terry said...

Damn, why did you have to use the picture of the ugly monkey? The one on top was cute, but that one on the bottom is hideous.

Unknown said...

I heard a caller to Patt Morrison on KPCC yesterday say that the were an unemployed mortgage broker from the IE (Temecula?). They said that the UE rate for the IE is actually much, much worse than 10%. They said that most of the out of work brokers/realtards/etc were 1099 employees, so were not showing up on the UE stats.

IE unemployed really 15%-20%?

FreedomCM

golfer_X said...

Unemployed construction workers don't show up nor do people who's benefits have run out. I doubt it's as high as 15 or 20% yet. If it hits 20% then we're screwed. That's great depression numbers (25% at the peak, nationally).

California Girl said...

Why did you use two different pics of W in this post?

golfer_X said...

actually the first pic is an old shot of me when the doctor told me my wife was pregnant with daughter number 3.......