Morning Roundup (12/06/2021)– Omicron Fears, Zillow Recovery

Good Morning! Today is Monday, December 6. Former Senate Majority Leader and Republican Presidential Nominee Bob Dole died yesterday. He was 98 years old. Bitcoin recovered from a weekend crash that brought its value below $50,000. Omicron may have been spreading at a New York anime convention before cases were officially confirmed in the US. And in mortgage and housing news… Market-Crash Flashback?: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have raised their loan limits to nearly $1 million in some communities. Does that mean lenders are repeating the same mistakes which led to the 2008 crash? Analysts React To Omicron: How will Omicron impact the housing market? Analysts are optimistic it won’t cause significant damage. Zillow Bouncing Back: Zillow is recovering…

Zillow Is Rebounding With Home Sales And Stock Buyback

Zillow announced it has sold about half of its backlog of homes and will begin buying back stocks after shuttering its home-flipping arm, Zillow Offers. In a statement, the company said it had already sold or agreed to sell more than half of its properties, hitting a much faster pace than expected. “We are pleased with the progress of our wind-down efforts and recognize that no longer operating Zillow Offers will allow us to have a more capital-efficient balance sheet and business moving forward,” Chief Executive Officer Rich Barton said in the statement. “We see today as an opportune time to announce a share repurchase program.” Zillow had initially announced it would not buy more homes in 2021, and instead…

Analysts Are Cautiously Optimistic Omicron Won’t Damage Housing Market

Investors and economic analysts are closely monitoring Omicron, the Covid-19 variant taking the news cycle by storm, as the country enters the busy holiday season. The question on mortgage professionals’ minds is: how will Omicron affect the housing market? Analysts’ answers are mixed, but the overall trend is cautious optimism. “Right now, we are looking at pretty severe reactions to the omicron news in the stock market,” Tomas Jandik, a finance professor at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, told Realtor.com. “The residential market may be more immune to COVID because of what we have already seen in the past waves of the virus.” “It is unlikely that rates will move down any further due to the new Omicron variant,”…

Are Million-Dollar Conforming Loan Limits A Market-Crash Flashback?

By KIMBERLEY HAAS Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have raised their limits on government-backed loans to $647,200 in most of the country and nearly $1 million in some high-cost American communities.  Does that mean lenders are repeating the same mistakes which led to the 2008 crash? This 18% hike in the size of conforming loans is the highest single jump since at least 1970, outpacing the 15.9% increase seen in 2006. Two years later, on Dec. 30, 2008, the Case-Shiller home price index reported its largest drop in history. The credit crisis and housing bubble burst that followed led in part to the Great Recession in the United States. Now some observers fear U.S. markets are moving back to…

Morning Roundup (12/03/2021)– Interest Rates Flat, Mortgage Lending Declined In Q2, Q3

Good Morning! Today is Friday, December 3. Congress averted a shutdown by passing a bill funding the government through February. The FTC is suing to stop a $40 billion merger between Nvidia and Arm. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis proposed a civilian military force overseen by him rather than the Pentagon. And in mortgage and housing news… Rates Flat: Mortgage rates remained basically the same over the last week, averaging 3.11%, Freddie Mac reported Thursday. “The Drop-Off Is Significant”: Mortgage lending declined at an unusually fast pace during Q3 2021, falling during peak buying season for the first time since 2000, ATTOM reported. Construction Still “Hobbled”: A new Zillow report found that despite construction companies’ best efforts, the completion of new…

Lending Fell In Q2, Q3 For The First Time Since 2000

Mortgage lending declined in both Q2 and Q3 2021, the first consecutive decline in two years and the first time since 2000 that lending fell in Q2 and Q3, according to ATTOM’s Q3 2021 U.S. Residential Property Mortgage Origination Report. The report showed that 3.59 million mortgages secured by residential property originated in Q3, up 3% YOY but down 8% from Q2. It is the largest quarterly drop in more than a year, and a surprise considering the second and third quarters are usually peak buying season. Lenders overall issued $1.15 trillion in mortgages in Q3, up 11% YOY but down 6% from Q2, the first quarterly drop since early 2020. Both refinance and purchase lending fell, with refinancing taking…

Freddie Mac: Little Change In Interest Rates

Mortgage rates remained basically the same over the last week, averaging 3.11%, Freddie Mac reported Thursday. Freddie’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS) found that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 3.11%, up only a smidge from last week’s 3.10%. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 2.71% “Mortgage rates continue to remain stable notwithstanding volatility in the financial markets,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s Chief Economist.  “The consistency of rates in the face of changes in the economy is primarily due to the evolution of the pandemic, which lingers and continues to pose uncertainty. This low mortgage rate environment offers favorable conditions for refinancing.” The emerging Omicron variant of Covid-19 has dampened hopes of normalcy returning, and…

Morning Roundup (12/02/2021)– Ex-MBA President Sentenced, American Wealth Gains

Good Morning! Today is Thursday, December 2. The first US case of Omicron has been identified in California. Senate Republicans are threatening a government shutdown over the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate. Major league baseball is in a work stoppage after failing to reach a collective bargaining agreement. And in mortgage and housing news… Ex-Prez Sentenced: Ronald McCord, founder of First Mortgage Company and former MBA president, will pay $51.8 million in restitution for mortgage fraud and spend 8.5 years in jail. American Wealth Gains: The median net worth of American households rose 17.6% between 2016 and 2019, according to a new report from MBA’s RIHA. Better Layoffs: After a $750 million cash infusion ahead of a merger and plan to…

RIHA: Americans’ Net Worth Rose 17.6% From 2016 To 2019

The median net worth of American households rose 17.6% between 2016 and 2019, according to a new report from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Research Institute for Housing America (RIHA). The report, titled The Distribution of Wealth in America Since 2016, found that median net worth increased from $103,000 in 2016 to $127,000 in 2019, the highest amount since 2007.  “The increase in homeownership, and the steady rise in home values and the stock market drove the increase in middle-class wealth. The median net worth of every racial and ethnic category also increased, with the largest increases coming from Black and Hispanic households,”  said Dr. John C. Weicher, author of the report and Director for the Center for Housing and…

Morning Roundup (12/01/2021)– A New Gold Rush For Lenders, Mortgage Apps Drop

Good Morning! Today is Wednesday, December 1. At least three students were killed in a high school shooting in Oxford, Michigan. The CDC is planning to require international travelers to show a negative test that is less than 24 hours old. The TV host Dr. Oz will run for Senate in Pennsylvania as a Republican. And in mortgage and housing news… A New Gold Rush For Lenders?: As the pandemic continues and workers reevaluate their commitment to metropolitan life, lenders in smaller cities stand to benefit from what is being termed the “Great Resignation.” Mortgage Applications Drop: Mortgage loan application volume fell 7.2% last week, with refis down 15% due to rising interest rates, according to the MBA. Insurance Hikes…