Monday, December 17, 2007

Aerotropolis: A city by itself

The first phase of the modernisation of Delhi International Airport by the GMR-led consortium, which will be completed by 2010 will see an investment of US$ 1.5 billion in commercial real estate development transforming Delhi airport into an airport city - an aerotropolis

According to the land concession agreement for the Delhi airport, of the 5,000-acres of land belonging to the airport only five per cent, or 250 acres can be used for commercial purposes. This will see high-density development of hotels, business centres, retail spaces, convention and exhibition centres, golf courses and entertainment centres. Says Mridul Upreti, head, Capital Markets, Jones Lang LaSalle Meghraj, "An aerotropolis, because of its high density and high quality development, strategic location and good connectivity would soon outdo even Connaught Place in economic activity and commercial rentals."

Ever since Dr John D Kasarda, director of the Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise, USA, first introduced the concept of an aerotropolis, the span of an airport has gone up exponentially. In the new model, airports, besides their core infrastructure and services, have created significant non-aeronautical commercial facilities, services and revenue streams. Consequently, they are extending their formal reach and impact with development along airport arteries up to 20 kms outwards.

In fact, Hong Kong International Airport already has a mini-city on a nearby island for its 45,000 workers, and soon the SkyCity, a complex of office towers, convention centres, and hotels is also being developed. China is spending US$ 12 billion for the Beijing Capital Airport City that will accommodate four lakh people. Dubai is also looking at developing the largest aerotropolis, Dubai World Central, a US$ 33 billion airport city capable of supporting a permanent population of 7.5 lakh.

But can such a development take place in India? According to Sanjay Dutt, deputy MD, Cushman and Wakefield, whenever there is large scale economic activity, the area around it becomes vibrant. Airports are the hub of very enormous economic activity including cargo, car rentals, hotels, retail, etc. Says Dutt, "Prices shoot up because people start calculating returns on property near the airport. In a developing economy like India, the value is expected to go up significantly. It can even go up by 100 per cent".

However, DTZ director Vivek Dahiya feels that as the cantonment area on three sides and Palam Village on the fourth surround Delhi airport, no major development can take place outside the airport area. "Moreover, the DDA master plan does not allow for commercial centres like hotels to come up near the airport. Only if DDA revisits the policy and allows commercial development can the real estate prices around the airport also go up."

Interestingly, many airports are now getting a bigger of their revenues from non-aeronautical sources than from aeronautical sources (landing fees, gate leases, passenger service charges). Globally, 70 per cent of an airport revenue is generated through non-aeronautical sources, while in India it is still a lowly 30 per cent.

Due to the significantly higher incomes of airline passengers (typically three to five times higher than national averages) and the huge volumes of passengers flowing through the terminals , it should not be surprising that terminal retail sales per square metre average three to four times greater than shopping malls and downtown shops. As a result, terminal commercial lease rates tend to be the highest in the metropolitan area.

Commenting on the high commercial rentals of airports in India, Dutt says, "The passenger is bound to shop, eat, etc, and has certain needs. Therefore, outlets at the airports design and put retail items accordingly. Moreover, the quality of experience is assured. Secondly, in India, the quality of retail space is very limited and so is organised retail. With lots of airports getting privatised and developed, we will witness a rush to occupy retail space."

The new US$ 4 billion Suvarnabhumi airport in Thailand, will see more than 100 million passengers a year passing through the airport, about as many as JFK, LaGuardia, and Newark airports combined. Within 30 years, a city of 3.3 million citizens - larger than Chicago now - will have emerged around Suvarnabhumi.

Delhi International Airport, has already invited expression of interest from Indian and international real estate investors to develop a complete range of hospitality services to build various categories of hotels and related facilities at the Delhi airport. But no other airport in India is looking at developing similar facilities. According to analysts, commercial development near the Mumbai airport would affect real estate prices. "Mumbai airport is in the heart of the city, unlike Delhi. If the slums get cleared, the real estate value of the area surrounding the airport will substantially increase," Dahiya said.

Amsterdam Schiphol, through its Schiphol Real Estate Group, has been working for over a decade on the cityside commercial development. Nearly 58,000 people are employed at Schiphol, which integrates multi-modal transportation, regional corporate headquarters, retail shopping, logistics and exhibition space to form a major economic growth pole for the Dutch economy. Others, though not quite on the scale of Amsterdam Schiphol or Seoul's Incheon, have given commercial development a high priority in their master planning (Brisbane, Vienna, Calgary, Zurich and Stockholm-Arlanda). Many of these have implemented the airport city concept in their strategic development.

There are different requirements that can stipulate the developing of an aerotropolis. For companies engaged in IT services it is very important to have good air connectivity. According to a report, high-tech professionals travel by air at least 60 per cent more frequently than others. Such firms are increasingly looking at setting up their offices near airports. The Washington-Dulles Airport access corridor in Northern Virginia and the expressways leading to Chicago's O'Hare International Airport are good examples.

When commercial centres start coming up around an airport, it also leads to a high rate of employment generation faster than other suburbs situated at similar distances from other city centres, which further leads to development of an aerotropolis.

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source: expresstravelworld.com

Junk mortgages under the microscope

(Fortune Magazine) -- It's getting hard to wrap your brain around subprime mortgages, Wall Street's fancy name for junk home loans. There's so much subprime stuff floating around - more than $1.5 trillion of loans, maybe $200 billion of losses, thousands of families facing foreclosure, umpteen politicians yapping - that it's like the federal budget: It's just too big to be understandable.

So let's reduce this macro story to human scale. Meet GSAMP Trust 2006-S3, a $494 million drop in the junk-mortgage bucket, part of the more than half-a-trillion dollars of mortgage-backed securities issued last year. We found this issue by asking mortgage mavens to pick the worst deal they knew of that had been floated by a top-tier firm - and this one's pretty bad.

It was sold by Goldman Sachs (Charts, Fortune 500) - GSAMP originally stood for Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products but now has become a name itself, like AT&T and 3M.

This issue, which is backed by ultra-risky second-mortgage loans, contains all the elements that facilitated the housing bubble and bust. It's got speculators searching for quick gains in hot housing markets; it's got loans that seem to have been made with little or no serious analysis by lenders; and finally, it's got Wall Street, which churned out mortgage "product" because buyers wanted it. As they say on the Street, "When the ducks quack, feed them."

Alas, almost everyone involved in this duck-feeding deal has had a foul experience. Less than 18 months after the issue was floated, a sixth of the borrowers had already defaulted on their loans. Investors who paid face value for these securities - they were looking for slightly more interest than they'd get on equivalent bonds - have suffered heavy losses.
Investors to Fed: Thanks for nothing

That's because their securities have either defaulted (for a 100% loss) or been downgraded by credit-rating agencies, which has depressed the securities' market prices. (Check out one of these jewels on a Bloomberg machine, and the price chart looks like something falling off a cliff.)

Even Goldman may have lost money on GSAMP - but being Goldman, the firm has more than covered its losses by betting successfully that the price of junk mortgages would drop. Of course, Goldman knew a lot about this market: GSAMP was just one of 83 mortgage-backed issues totaling $44.5 billion that Goldman sold last year.

Now let's take it from the top.

In the spring of 2006, Goldman assembled 8,274 second-mortgage loans originated by Fremont Investment & Loan, Long Beach Mortgage Co., and assorted other players. More than a third of the loans were in California, then a hot market. It was a run-of-the-mill deal, one of the 916 residential mortgage-backed issues totaling $592 billion that were sold last year.

The average equity that the second-mortgage borrowers had in their homes was 0.71%. (No, that's not a misprint - the average loan-to-value of the issue's borrowers was 99.29%.)

It gets even hinkier. Some 58% of the loans were no-documentation or low-documentation. This means that although 98% of the borrowers said they were occupying the homes they were borrowing on - "owner-occupied" loans are considered less risky than loans to speculators - no one knows if that was true. And no one knows whether borrowers' incomes or assets bore any serious relationship to what they told the mortgage lenders.

You can see why borrowers lined up for the loans, even though they carried high interest rates. If you took out one of these second mortgages and a typical 80% first mortgage, you got to buy a house with essentially none of your own money at risk. If house prices rose, you'd have a profit. If house prices fell and you couldn't make your mortgage payments, you'd get to walk away with nothing (or almost nothing) out of pocket. It was go-go finance, very 21st century.

Goldman acquired these second-mortgage loans and put them together as GSAMP Trust 2006-S3. To transform them into securities it could sell to investors, it divided them into tranches - which is French for "slices," in case you're interested.

There are trillions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities in the world for the same reason that Tyson Foods offers you chicken pieces rather than insisting you buy an entire bird. Tyson can slice a chicken into breasts, legs, thighs, giblets - and Lord knows what else - and get more for the pieces than it gets for a whole chicken. Customers are happy, because they get only the pieces they want.

Similarly, Wall Street carves mortgages into tranches because it can get more for the pieces than it would get for whole mortgages. Mortgages have maturities that are unpredictable, and they require all that messy maintenance like collecting the monthly payments, making sure real estate taxes are paid, chasing slow-pay and no-pay borrowers, and sending out annual statements of interest and taxes paid. Securities are simpler to deal with and can be customized.

Someone wants a safe, relatively low-interest, short-term security? Fine, we'll give him a nice AAA-rated slice that gets repaid quickly and is very unlikely to default. Someone wants a risky piece with a potentially very rich yield, an indefinite maturity, and no credit rating at all? One unrated X tranche coming right up. Interested in legs, thighs, giblets, the heart? The butcher - excuse us, the investment banker - gives customers what they want.

In this case, Goldman sliced the $494 million of second mortgages into 13 separate tranches. The $336 million of top tranches - named cleverly A-1, A-2, and A-3 - carried the lowest interest rates and the least risk. The $123 million of intermediate tranches - M (for mezzanine) 1 through 7 - are next in line to get paid and carry progressively higher interest rates.

Finally, Goldman sold two non-investment-grade tranches. The first, B-1 ($13 million), went to the Luxembourg-based UBS (Charts) Absolute Return fund, which is aimed at non-U.S. investors and thus spread GSAMP's problems beyond our borders. The second, B-2 ($8 million), went to the Morgan Keegan Select High Income fund. (Like most of this article, this information is based on our reading of various public filings; UBS and Morgan Keegan both declined to comment.)
Welcome to Bailout City!

Goldman wouldn't say, but it appears to have kept the 13th piece, the X tranche, which had a face value of $14 million (and would have been worth much more had things gone as projected), as its fee for putting the deal together. Goldman may have had money at risk in some of the other tranches, but there's no way to know without Goldman's cooperation, which wasn't forthcoming.

How is a buyer of securities like these supposed to know how safe they are? There are two options. The first is to do what we did: Read the 315-page prospectus, related documents, and other public records with a jaundiced eye and try to see how things can go wrong.

The second is to rely on the underwriter and the credit-rating agencies - Moody's and Standard & Poor's. That, of course, is what nearly everyone does.

In any event, it's impossible for investors to conduct an independent analysis of the borrowers' credit quality even if they choose to invest the time, money, and effort to do so. That's because Goldman, like other assemblers of mortgage-backed deals, doesn't tell investors who the borrowers are.

One Goldman filing lists more than 1,000 pages of individual loans - but they're by code number and zip code, not name and address.

Even though the individual loans in GSAMP looked like financial toxic waste, 68% of the issue, or $336 million, was rated AAA by both agencies - as secure as U.S. Treasury bonds. Another $123 million, 25% of the issue, was rated investment grade, at levels from AA to BBB--.

Thus, a total of 93% was rated investment grade. That's despite the fact that this issue is backed by second mortgages of dubious quality on homes in which the borrowers (most of whose income and financial assertions weren't vetted by anyone) had less than 1% equity and on which GSAMP couldn't effectively foreclose.
It's all in the math

How does toxic waste get distilled into spring water? Watch. It's all in the math - and the assumptions about how borrowers will behave.

These loans, which are fixed-rate, carried an average interest rate of 10.51%. After paying the people who collected the payments and handled all the other paperwork, the GSAMP Trust had ten percentage points left. However, the interest on the securities that GSAMP issued ran to only about 7%. (We say "about" because some of the tranches are floating-rate rather than fixed-rate.)

The difference between GSAMP's interest income and interest expense was projected at 2.85% a year. That spread was supposed to provide a cushion to offset defaults by borrowers. In addition, the aforementioned X piece didn't get fixed monthly payments and thus provided another bit of protection for the 12 tranches ranked above it.

Remember that we're dealing with securities, not actual loans. Thus losses aren't shared equally by all of GSAMP's investors. Any loan losses would first hit the X tranche. Then, if X were wiped out, the losses would work their way up the food chain tranche by tranche: B-2, B-1, M-7, and so on.

The $241 million A-1 tranche, 60% of which has already been repaid, was designed to be supersafe and quick-paying. It gets first dibs on principal paydowns from regular monthly payments, refinancings, and borrowers paying off their loans because they're selling their homes. Then, after A-1 is paid in full, it's the turn of A-2 and A-3, and so on down the line.

Moody's projected in a public analysis of the issue that less than 10% of the loans would ultimately default. S&P, which gave the securities the same ratings that Moody's did, almost certainly reached a similar conclusion but hasn't filed a public analysis and wouldn't share its numbers with us. As long as housing prices kept rising, it all looked copacetic.

Goldman peddled the securities in late April 2006. In a matter of months the mathematical models used to assemble and market this issue - and the models that Moody's and S&P used to rate it - proved to be horribly flawed. That's because the models were based on recent performances of junk-mortgage borrowers, who hadn't defaulted much until last year thanks to the housing bubble.
The fallout

Through the end of 2005, if you couldn't make your mortgage payments, you could generally get out from under by selling the house at a profit or refinancing it. But in 2006 we hit an inflection point. House prices began stagnating or falling in many markets. Instead of HPA - industry shorthand for house-price appreciation - we had HPD: house-price depreciation.

Interest rates on mortgages stopped falling. Way too late, as usual, regulators and lenders began imposing higher credit standards. If you had borrowed 99%-plus of the purchase price (as the average GSAMP borrower did) and couldn't make your payments, couldn't refinance, and couldn't sell at a profit, it was over. Lights out.

As a second-mortgage holder, GSAMP couldn't foreclose on deadbeats unless the first-mortgage holder also foreclosed. That's because to foreclose on a second mortgage, you have to repay the first mortgage in full, and there was no money set aside to do that. So if a borrower decided to keep on paying the first mortgage but not the second, the holder of the second would get bagged.

If the holder of the first mortgage foreclosed, there was likely to be little or nothing left for GSAMP, the second-mortgage holder. Indeed, the monthly reports issued by Deutsche Bank (Charts), the issue's trustee, indicate that GSAMP has recovered almost nothing on its foreclosed loans.

By February 2007, Moody's and S&P began downgrading the issue. Both agencies dropped the top-rated tranches all the way to BBB from their original AAA, depressing the securities' market price substantially.

In March, less than a year after the issue was sold, GSAMP began defaulting on its obligations. By the end of September, 18% of the loans had defaulted, according to Deutsche Bank.

As a result, the X tranche, both B tranches, and the four bottom M tranches have been wiped out, and M-3 is being chewed up like a frame house with termites. At this point, there's no way to know whether any of the A tranches will ultimately be impaired.

"[In hindsight,] I think we would not have rated it" had Moody's realized what was going on in the junk-mortgage market, says Nicolas Weill, the firm's chief credit officer for structured finance. Low credit scores and high loan-to-value ratios were taken into account in Moody's original analysis, of course, but the firm now thinks there were things it didn't know about.
Two small lessons from the market turmoil

Weill doesn't lay blame on any particular party, although in a Sept. 25 special report posted on Moody's website, he called for "additional third-party oversight that reviews the accuracy of the information provided by borrowers, appraisers, and brokers to originators" when it comes to junk issues. Or, as he calls them, "non-prime."

S&P, by contrast, says that it considers both its original rating and subsequent downward revisions correct. "We used the best information available at the time," says Vickie Tillman, S&P's chief rating officer.

If you read documents that Goldman filed with the SEC in connection with this offering, you discover that they warn about pretty much everything we've discussed so far and some things we haven't: the impact of falling house prices, the difficulty of foreclosing, the possible changes in credit ratings, the fact that more than half the mortgages were in California, Florida, and New York, all of which were overheated markets.

It's all disclosed. In capital letters. So no buyer - and this is aimed at sophisticated investors - can say he wasn't warned.

Goldman said it made money in the third quarter by shorting an index of mortgage-backed securities. That prompted Fortune to ask the firm to explain to us how it had managed to come out ahead while so many of its mortgage-backed customers were getting stomped.

Goldman's profits came from hedging the mortgage securities it keeps in inventory in order to make trading markets. It said in a recent SEC filing, "Although we recognized significant losses on our non-prime mortgage loans and securities, those losses were more than offset by gains on short mortgage positions."

As we interpret this - the firm declined to elaborate - Goldman made more on its hedges than it lost on its inventory because junk mortgages fell even more sharply than Goldman thought they would.

What is there to take away from our course in Junk Mortgages 101? Two things. First, you have to pay at least some attention to all those "risk factors" that issuers forever warn you about - especially when you're dealing with a whole new thing like junk mortgages issued en masse instead of by specialists.

Second, when you rely on the underwriter and the rating agencies to do all your homework for you, you don't have safety. You have only the illusion of safety.

Reporter Associate Doris Burke contributed to this article. Top of page

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source: cnn.com

Developers cite Charlotte potential

Allen Heise and his wife, Maria, run the Heise Property Group, a Port Charlotte real estate development and brokerage team that advises hedge and equity funds on their publicly traded builder stock and residential real estate investments.

Last week, Allen Heise traded e-mails about his business and Charlotte County market conditions with staff writer Michael Braga.



QCan you explain your real estate development background in Naples and Palm Beach, and provide some examples of the kinds of projects you were involved in?



AI am originally from Chicago and I grew up in the real estate development business working for my father, Richard A. Heise Sr., who developed several major projects, including One Financial Place, the home of the Chicago Stock Exchange and the Chicago Board of Options Exchange.

I attended Northwestern University and Columbia University's graduate school. In the early '90s, I connected with Richard Primeau and formed PHD Holdings, which completed two very successful, high-end residential condominium developments -- Grand Bay and Coco Bay -- in the Pelican Bay area of Naples.

While living in Naples, I got a letter from one of my Columbia classmates asking me to locate a project to co-develop with the Guggenheim Brothers under the name Guggenheim–Heise Partners. I eventually located a 700-acre tract in North Palm Beach owned by the MacArthur Foundation. The final plans for the project included 36 holes of golf and more than 600 homes.

Unfortunately, the project was not meant to be. After a year of negotiations, the MacArthur Foundation became involved in financing the acquisition of Westinghouse Communities. Guggenheim-Heise worked with the foundation as an adviser, but the transaction ultimately blew the Guggenheim deal apart.

But plenty of good came from the Palm Beach deal. Jim Fazio was on board to develop the golf courses and partnered with me to establish a bar in Palm Beach a few blocks north of the Breakers Hotel. That bar --251 Club -- became one of the most popular nightspots in the area. And it was in Palm Beach where I met my wife, Maria, while playing golf.



QWhat attracted you to Charlotte County? When did you move there, and what sort of operation are you running?



AOur activity in Port Charlotte began in late 2001 with the purchase of waterfront residential lots in Charlotte County's Gulf Cove area. We acquired 22 lots ranging in price from $44,000 to $80,000. During the 2005 boom the lots were appraised at up to $400,000 each.

Planning to relocate full-time to the area, we purchased a home in Port Charlotte that was destroyed by Hurricane Charley just 18 hours after we closed on it.

In 2004-05, we sensed that the residential real estate market was going to change and began exiting the residential market and buying commercial waterfront property.



QCan you describe some of the projects you are involved in now?



AThe Heise Property Group is now focused on commercial developments in Port Charlotte, including three waterfront sites. These mixed-use, waterfront developments will include retail space and wet/dry storage facilities for more than 850 boats.

After wrestling "forever" with government agencies to obtain necessary commercial dredge and dock permits, we are now putting together plans and meeting with potential investors and tenants for the three sites. Marine Bank, the largest bank in the Florida Keys, with new branches in Charlotte County, is on board.

With Charlotte County having over 20,000 registered boat owners and 290,000 platted single-family lots, we see "in-town" boating facilities as filling a logical future need for the area.

In Naples, it was all about the beach. In Palm Beach, it was all about the social scene, and in Charlotte County, it's all about world-class boating and fishing.

Life in Port Charlotte reminds us of the Florida Keys and Naples 10 years ago.

Although the commercial market is more favorable at this point in time, we have no doubt that residential market will once again strengthen, and we are actively researching residential investment opportunities in the area.



QWhat is your view of the commercial real estate market? How has it changed since the boom and what are your predictions going forward?



AIn 2003-05, the crazy mortgage products, appraisals and fraud, rampant in the residential real estate markets, were comparatively limited in commercial real estate.

This helped keep commercial property values and commercial overbuilding in check. Moderate inflation, combined with low interest rates and a weak U.S. dollar, should continue to support commercial real estate markets.

Smaller Florida real estate markets, heavily tied to the home building business, are experiencing some commercial real estate contractions from two primary sources.

Businesses with heavy ties to the home building industry are consolidating operations and reducing their commercial space needs. Also, home builders facing liquidity issues are selling their commercial properties in order to raise cash. These commercial real estate contractions should rebalance in 2008.

This area has unique elements which are favorable for the local commercial real estate market:

General Development Corp. master planning errors: When platting Port Charlotte in the '50s, GDC seriously underestimated the need for commercial property. For unknown reasons, GDC also mistakenly carved up the prime commercial area in Charlotte County into 50-foot-wide lots. In December 2005, Charlotte County adopted a "Commercial Overlay District" along a section of U.S. 41 in order to address the county's commercial property needs.

Hurricane Charley and mold issues: In terms of employer workplace liability, mold will become the next asbestos. Most commercial buildings in Port Charlotte were severely damaged by Hurricane Charley. Energy-efficient, hurricane-strength, mold-free commercial buildings are in demand. New commercial buildings require doors and windows that do not need hurricane shutters.

Bonefish Grill/Saks Fifth Avenue problem: As my wife constantly reminds me, these types of retailers and restaurants are 60 minutes in either direction from Port Charlotte. There are too many residents and too much growth for businesses like these to ignore in Charlotte County for too much longer.

Inadequate north-south traffic "arteries": Consider all of the major north/south roadways (besides U.S. 41 and I-75) that exist in cities like Sarasota and Naples.

In Port Charlotte, U.S. 41 and I-75 stand alone as the major roadways to handle the county's north-south vehicle traffic. This drives an enormous amount of traffic onto the "five-mile strip" area of U.S. 41 in Port Charlotte, between Edgewater Drive and Veterans Boulevard.

Commercial buyers/tenants are looking for frontage along the five-mile strip on U.S. 41, where traffic counts are the highest in Charlotte County.

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source: heraldtribune.com

Builders' confidence at all-time low

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The nation's home builders' confidence in the battered market for new homes fell further in October, and a measure of their outlook remained at a record low level, according to the latest industry survey.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index showed the overall confidence measure sank to 18, the worst reading on record for the 23-year old monthly survey.

The trade group's statement said the problems included decreased availability of subprime mortgages, a glut of new homes available for sale and reports about declining home values.

The builders' expectations for the market six months from now came in with a reading of 26, matching the lowest reading on record that was set in September. And their view of current buyers' traffic fell to a record low reading of 15.

"Builders in the field are reporting that, while their special sales incentives are attracting interest among consumers, many potential buyers are either holding out for even better deals or hesitating due to concerns about negative and confusing media reports on home values," said NAHB President Brian Catalde.

The overall confidence reading reflects the eighth straight month in which that measure has declined. It has fallen sharply, and is down from a very strong reading of 74 only two years ago. A reading of 50 in any of the three measures indicates the number of positive responses from builders is equal to the number of negative responses.

Still, the builders' trade group says that its members hope that they are at or near the bottom of the market.

"Builders believe they are taking the right steps to reduce inventories and position themselves for the market recovery that lies ahead," said David Seiders, the group's chief economist. "Indeed, NAHB's housing forecast indicates that home sales should stabilize within the next six months and show significant improvement during the second half of next year."
Paulson: Subprime help, not bailout, needed

Still Seiders concedes that there will be tough months ahead, as problems with subprime mortgages and uncertainty about the housing market keeps potential buyers stay on the sidelines.

"Consumers are still trying to sort out market realities and get the best deals they can," said Seiders. "Many prospective buyers may very well have unrealistic expectations regarding new-home prices as well as how much they can expect to receive for their existing homes. When the market is in proper balance, people can recognize a good deal when it comes along; at this point, they view a good deal as a moving target."

The report is just the latest reading to show the home building and new home sales markets to be in serious trouble. In remarks Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said that the housing decline is still unfolding and he termed it the most significant current risk to our economy.

"The longer housing prices remain stagnant or fall, the greater the penalty to our future economic growth," he warned in prepared remarks.

Earlier Tuesday, lender Wells Fargo (Charts, Fortune 500), one of the nation's first banks to report problems from rising defaults in subprime mortgages, took another $490 million charge for mortgages that have lost value. It also increased reserves to cover bad loans. In addition, leading home builder D.R. Horton (Charts, Fortune 500) reported that its fiscal fourth-quarter orders fell 39 percent, while the value of those orders plunged 48 percent.
Subprime meltdown hammers new home sales

Last month Lennar (Charts, Fortune 500), the nation's No. 1 builder in terms of revenue, posted a much bigger than expected loss, and KB Home (Charts, Fortune 500) also reported a steep loss as it warned problems would continue into 2008. Last week credit rating agency Moody's downgraded Lennar, Centex (Charts, Fortune 500) and Pulte Homes (Charts, Fortune 500) debt into junk bond status.

The survey comes the day before the government's monthly report on housing starts and building permits. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com forecast that the pace of starts fell to an annual rate of 1.29 million in September from 1.33 million in August. That would mark a 12-year low for starts.

Permits, which are also taken as a sign of builders' confidence, are forecast to fall to an annual rate of 1.3 million in September from 1.32 million in August. That would also mark a 12-year low. Top of page

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source: cnn.com

Real estate: More price drops, more layoffs

BOSTON (CNNMoney.com) -- For those in the real estate industry and for those looking to buy or sell a home, it could take until 2009 to catch a break.

That's the forecast from Doug Duncan, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), who will present his outlook to an auditorium full of real estate professionals on Wednesday morning.

Duncan expects national median home prices to fall between 2 percent and 4 percent both this year and next. Prices will be held back by an oversupply of homes for sale, an increase in foreclosures and continued uncertainty among mortgage investors,

Duncan said that some markets will hold their own, but he singled out seven likely to be hit the hardest. They are: California, Texas, Arizona and Nevada, which drew a lot of investor speculation during the housing boom; and Ohio, Michigan and Illinois, where the economies have been hit hard by job loss.

For this year, Duncan is predicting a 22 percent drop in new home sales and a 12 percent drop in existing home sales, followed by a 10 percent drop in each next year. As home sales fall, Duncan also expects a drop of 15 percent in mortgage loan originations to $1.18 trillion this year, plus another 18 percent drop in 2008 to $1 trillion.

Come 2009, Duncan expects original loan volume to increase 5 percent.

"But given the oversupply of homes in a number of markets any significant increase in homebuilding is probably years off," Duncan said in a statement.

The continued weakness will push those in the mortgage industry to further cut their workforce. On top of the 60,000 to 70,000 mortgage-related layoffs that have already occurred, Duncan expects to see another 30,000 to 40,000 by early 2008.

What? No good news?

There's one group of home buyers, home sellers and loan originators who will have an easier time of it than everyone else: those dealing with "anything that's conventional and conforming," Duncan said. In other words, 30-year fixed rate mortgages for borrowers with good credit under the "jumbo" cutoff of $417,000.

His forecast for long-term mortgage rates: an increase from 6.4 percent currently to 6.6 percent by early 2008. Top of page

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source: money.cnn.com