Mohave.net

Mohave.net
Discussing Mohave County Arizona Housing Market and other topics

Supervisors agree to raise zoning fees

September 11th, 2007

Suzanne Adams
Miner Staff Writer

Homeowners seeking to rezone their property will take a bigger hit in their pocketbook. The County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a significant increase in zoning and general or area plan amendment fees during its meeting on Tuesday. The fees will go into effect in mid-October.

The County Planning and Zoning Commission endorsed the increase in a 5-3 vote during its meeting last month.

Some of the fees increase by as much as 100 percent. According to material given to the Board by the P&Z Department, the zoning and plan amendment fees have not been increased since 2001.

Countrywide Once Again Needs a Bailout

September 11th, 2007

After announcing the layoffs of over 12,000 employees last week, there is more bad news in the pipeline for Countrywide, the nations largest lender.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/09112007/business/countryslide.htm

September 11, 2007 — Countrywide Financial Corp. is putting together another multi-billion dollar bailout plan as the nation’s largest home lender continues to struggle amid the global credit crunch and declines in the housing market, The Post has learned………

Countrywide, which handles one of every five new U.S. mortgages, has been hurt by falling home prices and record foreclosures. The company has billions in medium-term debt coming due in about 90 days and needs to cash to continue operating.

9/11

September 11th, 2007

Here is a very well done Youtube video commemorating the FDNY fire fighters who died on 9/11.

http://www.youtube.com/watch…

Las Vegas Housing Market Bits and Pieces

September 11th, 2007

Some bits and pieces on the Las Vegas housing market. A lot of these articles say the same things I’ve been saying regarding prices and speculation:

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http://www.lvrj.com/business/9660427.html

Southern Nevada’s economy, dragged down by the slumping housing industry, posted another month of modest performance.
New and existing home sales dropped 40 percent and new home permits are off by 45 percent, contributing to a 0.11 percent decline in the Southern Nevada Index of Leading Economic Indicators…….

“My contention is that the lack of white-collar jobs and relatively high housing costs would eventually slow down the migration, but without good data, it’s hard to know for sure. Affordable housing was one of the big draws and now that’s pretty much gone, for now.”

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http://www.lvrj.com/business/9638272.html

“What continues to drive the national numbers,” Duncan said, “is what is happening in the states of California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona. Were it not for the increases in foreclosure starts in those four states, we would have seen a nationwide drop in the rate of foreclosure filings.”

Duncan counted 34 states with declining rates of foreclosure.

The same four states have more than 19 percent of the nation’s subprime adjustable-rate mortgages.

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http://www.inbusinesslasvegas.com/2007/09/07/feature2.html

The high-rise and mid-rise condo markets continue to weaken as demand has softened and supply continues to increase – a problem that will worsen as more and more projects come on line in the next year, analysts said. Given the current pace of sales in the resale market, several years of inventory remain.

Those who already closed on their condos with the intention of flipping them aren’t finding the buyers they expected. The rental pool for the high-end units is shallow, and the rent owners can charge is limited. That could lead to defaults in the high-rise market.

“I think a lot of folks bought intending to sell. They never thought to live in it or buy it to rent,” Restrepo said.

“I hear from condo owners every single day. They bought it to flip it and they can’t sell it,” added Eric Smith, owner of Colorado-based Corporate Housing By Owner, which works with condo owners who lease their units for short-term corporate housing.

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http://www.inbusinesslasvegas.com/2007/09/07/realty.html

Las Vegas Realtor Eric Young prides himself on being a numbers guy, and when it when comes to the local housing market, the numbers paint an awful picture…

Young, who tracks average sales prices by square footage, reports homes of up to 1,250 square are 7.5 percent off their peak; homes of 1,250 to 1,499 square feet are off 8.5 percent; homes 1,500 to 1,749 are off 8.9 percent; homes 1,750 to 1,999 are off 9.6 percent; homes 2,000 to 2,249 are off 7.7 percent; and homes 2,250 to 2,449 are off 8.9 percent.

In the last six weeks, the average home prices are down 2.6 to 3.5 percent, Young said. The GLVAR is expected to release its statistics for August by Monday at the latest.

The price per square foot that many homes are selling for today is the same as it was in early 2004 when the market was still appreciating, he said.

“It is far worse than the numbers are showing,” said Young, echoing what a few others have been saying about statistics on the housing market. “If you start to dig into the numbers, the research shows the prices for the same home are declining greater than the averages are showing.”

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http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-sun_lasvegas0909sep09,0,1389227,full.story

“Houses were really cheap. Loans were really easy,” said Lewis, who moved from California. “These were investors who didn’t ever live here. Now, they’re totally walking away.”

Under pressure to respond, lawmakers are struggling to fashion relief for strapped homeowners while avoiding an undeserved bailout for quick-buck artists caught in the same squeeze. Even as President Bush in a Rose Garden ceremony Aug. 31 proposed aid for those threatened with losing their homes, he promised the government’s role will be “limited.”

Yet, if Las Vegas is any indication, sorting out the sympathetic hardship cases from those who gambled and lost could prove impossible. While the term “investor” brings to mind Warren Buffett, Vanguard or Fidelity, most of the real estate sharpies here were small-timers. The typical speculator bought “one-sies and two-sies,” before finally “getting caught with their pants down,” said Frank Nason, president of Las Vegas real estate firm Residential Resources.

Those who failed to cash out ahead of the bust have left owner-occupants such as Lewis stranded in a lonely landscape. Almost half of the 30,000 homes listed for sale in the Las Vegas metropolitan area stand vacant, said Nason, making it that much tougher to sell the rest.

“It’s kind of a downward spiral,” he said. “In the next year or two, it could get a heckuva lot worse.”………

The Mortgage Bankers Association, reporting last week on the rise in delinquencies and foreclosures, cited the higher risk of so-called investor loans made to buyers with no plans to live in the properties they purchased.

Nevada had more of those loans than any other state, and almost one-third of them were at least 90 days past due as of June 30, compared with 13 percent nationwide.

U.S. mortgage companies face sharp job cuts

September 11th, 2007

Bloomberg News
Published: September 10, 2007

NEW YORK: The worst U.S. housing slump in 16 years may lead mortgage companies to eliminate almost 100,000 jobs this year, more than double the number already cut since January.

As many as 20 percent of U.S. real estate loan officers and mortgage brokers will be fired, according to Josh Rosner, a managing director at Graham Fisher & Co., an investment research firm in New York.

That is in addition to the 10 percent reduction from December to July that thinned their ranks to 450,000, as many investors stopped buying mortgages and lenders curtailed financing to avoid rising subprime defaults.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/09/10/business/prime.php

Weyerhaeuser may close plants

September 11th, 2007

Mon Sep 10, 2007 10:55AM EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Weyerhaeuser Co (WY.N: Quote, Profile, Research), one of the world’s largest paper and lumber companies, said on Monday that weak market conditions would probably force it to close plants and trim operations at its wood products business, which serves the housing and construction industries.
Weyerhaeuser said in a U.S. regulatory filing that the market for wood products had not improved in the third quarter and would probably result in closures, curtailments and restricted operations at its wood products facilities.

http://www.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idUSWEN086820070910

Housing Cartoon

September 10th, 2007

Cute housing cartoon:

http://www.salon.com/comics/tomo/2007/09/10/tomo/

U.S. housing woes go south — to Baja

September 9th, 2007

‘Flippers’ from California who invested in the construction boom on the northern Mexican coast are now finding it difficult to unload their condos.

By Marla Dickerson, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 8, 2007

PLAYAS DE ROSARITO, MEXICO — – The ripples of the U.S. real estate boom began washing up on the shores of this beach town a few years ago. Californians, feeling flush from the steep run-up in housing values stateside, pulled equity from their primary homes and snapped up vacation properties in northern Baja California as if they were buying $10 lobster dinners…………………………..

……………”The ones who bought multiple units are going to be in real deep doo-doo,” said real estate agent Roberta Giesea, owner of Baja4U Properties. “The market has slowed way down.”

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-bajabust8sep08,0,420904.story?coll=la-home-center

The Financial Big One Hit

September 9th, 2007

This is one of the best explanations of why lowering the interest rate would be extremely bad for the United States. There are lots of technical articles, but this one is easily understood.

http://www.oftwominds.com/blog.html

The Big One Just Hit
September 8, 2007

Here in California we refer to the next catastrophic earthquake as The Big One–not a modest little 7.0 temblor like Loma Prieta in 1989, but a massive 8.0+ quake like the 1906 event which devastated San Francisco.

The financial Big One hit today. Though the markets are still standing, the apparently modest damage is illusory–deep inside, the supports have broken. Over the next few weeks, we will witness a seemingly sound structure start collapsing under its own weight–the global house of structured debt. Though to the naked eye it seemed to have survived today’s modest financial quake, reverberating shock waves will soon bring it down.

Let’s start with a chart of the U.S. dollar index. The mainstream media is full of stories about the Federal Reserve cutting rates, but the bigger story–the fall of the dollar below the multi-decade support level of 80–was barely mentioned.

Subprime: Let the finger-pointing begin!

September 7th, 2007

The crisis brought on by worries about shaky subprime mortgages continues to rattle Wall Street. Even as the storm rages, the blame game has begun.
By Peter Eavis, Fortune writer

http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2007/fortune/0709/gallery.subprime_blame.fortune//index.html?cnn=yes

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