• http://bryanshaffer.com/slsinvestments/wp-content/uploads/slide/tech1overview1.png
  • http://bryanshaffer.com/slsinvestments/wp-content/uploads/slide/dd1overview1.png
  • http://bryanshaffer.com/slsinvestments/wp-content/uploads/slide/trans1overview1.png
  • http://bryanshaffer.com/slsinvestments/wp-content/uploads/slide/distressedadvisory11.png
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • .

financial

Another Day, Another Housing Program

October 25, 2011

The Obama Administration is taking another crack at addressing a core problem hindering the economic recovery: underwater homeowners (that is, borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth) and the ripple-effects of that financial hardship. The Federal Housing Finance Agency announced plans Monday to revamp the three-year-old Home Affordable Refinance Program [HARP] to allow more underwater borrowers to refinance. Ideally, qualified homeowners who have been consistently paying their mortgages would be able to refinance their loans at lower rates thereby staving off the threat of default and freeing up spending money for other purposes. Both outcomes would ostensibly help the economy, if the program works exactly as designed. But given HARP’s lackluster results in its first three years of existence, the new initiative has its share of skeptics. Anthony Sanders, a finance professor at George Mason University, said a “fundamental disconnect” exists between HARP’s goal of lowering monthly mortgage payments and the larger economic issues facing many Americans. “There’s no evidence that lowering a mortgage payment a few hundred dollars a month prevents defaults,” he said. “Giving $200 a month to people who already have a job doesn’t really make any sense.” Homeowners aren’t defaulting on their mortgages over a few hundred dollars, he said. They’re defaulting because they’ve lost their job and can’t find another one, or have suffered some other financial catastrophe. To open HARP up to more financially strapped homeowners, the FHFA has removed an earlier cap that disqualified borrowers whose mortgages were valued at 125% or more than the value of their homes. The program is open only to those borrowers whose loans are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac , the troubled quasi-government entities that provide financing for an estimated 80% of all U.S. mortgages. (The government seized control of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2008 as they teetered on the verge of collapse.) “This is an appropriate balancing of risk that’s being borne by Fannie and Freddie, and hence the American taxpayer,” FHFA’s acting director, Edward DeMarco, said Monday during a conference call with reporters. “This will make HARP more available.” The Obama Administration claimed the original HARP program would help 5 million borrowers. But the actual number has been less than 900,000. The FHFA predicted Monday that by easing the restrictions on the old program and reducing some refinancing fees and streamlining the process as many as one million underwater homeowners could get help by 2013. Critics say it still barely makes a dent. In August, Corelogic, a housing research firm, said 11 million mortgages, or nearly 25% of all residential home loans, are underwater. The FHFA also hopes the revamped HARP gives banks with substantial mortgage portfolios additional incentives to participate. To that end, FHFA altered the program so that lenders won’t be forced to buy back HARP loans if underwriting problems are later discovered. Under the previous, tougher restrictions, banks had little incentive to refinance mortgages, said Leif Thomsen, CEO of Mortgage Master, a large Massachusetts home lender. Default rates haven’t reached critical mass for the big commercial banks, Thomsen explained, consequently they saw no reason to renegotiate a loan made at 6% interest down to 4%. Banks are, after all, in the business of making money by lending money, he noted. Besides, given the federal guidelines that capped underwater loans at 125% of the value of the property, many struggling homeowners couldn’t refinance anyway.  But lifting the cap should create strong competition for refinancing underwater loans, Thomsen predicted, a factor that could spark the big banks to renegotiate and refinance on their own or see all that refinancing business move to independent firms like Thomsen’s. “It’s about time that this program came out,” Thomsen said. “I’ve been calling for something like this for three years.” JPMorganChase (NYSE:JPM) is already on board, issuing a statement Monday in praise of the new HARP and saying it could save consumers as much as $2,500 a year. But Sanders said the program – and its creators – are still missing the point. “I think they’re making the assumption that everyone who saves money on a refinanced mortgage will spend it on consumer durables. But they might put it away in their savings account or put it aside for their kid’s college education, like they should have in the first place,” he said. Sanders said the government is essentially wasting its time on housing programs that he described as chronically “too small in scope” and off the mark in terms of targeting what’s really ailing the  U.S. economy. “The government needs to step out of the way and let the housing market heal itself,” he said. “Lack of jobs is what causing the problem right now.” See the original post here: Another Day, Another Housing Program

Read the full article →

Goldman Treads Water in Real Estate

October 5, 2011

Goldman Sachs Group’s savvy in the financial markets may have eluded it as a landlord.

Read the full article →

Freddie Mac Multifamily Lending Accelerates

August 31, 2011

From WSJ.com… Freddie Mac is planning to accelerate its program to purchase multifamily housing loans even as the private commercial real-estate finance market has been hobbled by volatility in recent weeks. See the article here: Freddie Mac Multifamily Lending Accelerates Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net See original article: Freddie Mac Multifamily Lending Accelerates

Read the full article →

EU’s Office Market Gears for Slowdown

August 24, 2011

Europe’s commercial-property market, which for the past two years has been slowly recovering from the depths of the financial crisis, is starting to weaken again due to fears of a global recession.

Read the full article →

Proposal could shut many out of housing market

June 11, 2011

Proposed rules sparked by the financial industry meltdown could have the effect of shutting may lower-income buyers out of the mortgage market, critics say. Read this article: Proposal could shut many out of housing market

Read the full article →

Lehman Veteran Is Back in Game

May 31, 2011

As the financial crisis recedes, Ex-Lehman executive Mark Walsh is mounting a low-key comeback at a new real-estate firm by leaning on connections made before the real-estate bubble burst.

Read the full article →

PNC to Build New $400M Pittsburgh Headquarters

May 24, 2011

Costar… The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. announced this week that it plans to construct a 40-story headquarters building dubbed The Tower at PNC Plaza on the southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and Wood Street in Pittsburgh, PA. Once complete in 2015, the 800,000-square-foot, $400 million building at the same intersection where PNC has been headquartered for more than 150 years will serve as the company’s executive offices. Tentative plans call for… Continue reading here: PNC to Build New $400M Pittsburgh Headquarters Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

Read the full article →

More Transparency Coming to Hidden Costs of ‘Extend & Pretend’ Strategies

May 19, 2011

Costar… The number of loans that banks have to classify as troubled debt could increase dramatically in a few weeks as a result of new accounting rules issued last month. The new push to reclassify some loans is already hurting some lenders, and the reclassifications are expected to shine a spotlight on the commercial real estate lending practice that has come to be known as “extend and pretend.” New accounting standards issued by the Financial Accounting… Original post: More Transparency Coming to Hidden Costs of ‘Extend & Pretend’ Strategies Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

Read the full article →

Paris’s La Défense Goes on the Offensive

April 26, 2011

The renewal of the La Défense business district of Paris is awakening from its hibernation during the financial crisis and recession.

Read the full article →

Google Buys Dublin Office Building

February 17, 2011

Google is expanding its operations in Dublin by agreeing to pay $135.6 million for the city’s tallest office building, in one of Ireland’s largest property deals since the financial crisis.

Read the full article →