Delinquent Mortgages Equal to Three Times the Balanced For-Sale Inventory [View article]
Common sense tells me that a high percentage of those homes listed for sale have delinquent mortgages. There is also consideration that a percentage of mortgages are always delinquent but do not always end in default. There lots of assumptions in that chart and it results in figures that look much worse than reality.
Property Values Set to Fall 43% from Current Depressed Levels [View article]
Two invalid assumptions. One is that Case Shiller's index accurately measures a market like the current market where such a high percentage of sales are foreclosure activity. Clue: It does not. Two is that the second chart shows an increase in government lending acitivity. Lending funded by private securitization has virtually disappeared but the total lending has significantly declined also. Granted the percentages have shifted dramatically towards government backed programs but it would be interesting to see this correlated to a total lending volume by agency chart. I think the biggest shift you would find is the increase in FHA is coming from a decrease at Fannie / Freddie and not from the private securitization arena. Credit policy changes have eliminated the market that was served primarily by private securitizations.
Delinquent Mortgages Equal to Three Times the Balanced For-Sale Inventory [View article]
Property Values Set to Fall 43% from Current Depressed Levels [View article]
Property Values Set to Fall 43% from Current Depressed Levels [View article]
One is that Case Shiller's index accurately measures a market like the current market where such a high percentage of sales are foreclosure activity. Clue: It does not.
Two is that the second chart shows an increase in government lending acitivity. Lending funded by private securitization has virtually disappeared but the total lending has significantly declined also. Granted the percentages have shifted dramatically towards government backed programs but it would be interesting to see this correlated to a total lending volume by agency chart. I think the biggest shift you would find is the increase in FHA is coming from a decrease at Fannie / Freddie and not from the private securitization arena. Credit policy changes have eliminated the market that was served primarily by private securitizations.