Homeowners Should Be Taking Defensive Measures IMMEDIATELY!
For those homeowners who still can, now is the time to take defensive measures. Home values are dropping at historic rates, lenders are tightening up underwriting requirements for the minority of mortgage products still left in the market place. Unemployment is rising. The stock market is falling.
Now is the time, before witnessing further deterioration, to make household budgets as affordable as possible to weather the coming perfect storm of financial woe.
Adjustable rate mortgages should be refinanced to the current low fixed rates. First and second mortgages could be consolidated. Consumer credit, credit cards and installment loans, should be looked at for consolidations. Overall, the household budget should be scrutinized and made as manageable as possible.
Why this needs to be done now
The United States economy is entering what is shaping up to be the worst recession of my lifetime. To offer perspective, I entered the work force under the Carter Administration. This recession is firming up to be worse than any economic downturn including and since the stagflation era under Carter.
Here are some tell tale signs of the severity of the coming recession.
- The largest residential lender in the country, Countrywide is number 214 on the lender implode list. They were bailed out via a buy out, courtesy of Bank of America for a total of six billion dollars.
- Citigroup, the nation’s largest bank is reeling. Citi cut it’s dividend by 41% after losing $9.83 billion dollars and were forced to write down 18 billion dollars in bad debt. I’ve seen estimates Citi’s exposure to bad debt to be as high as 100 billion dollars. The quarter was so bad for them that they had to sell a 6.81 billion dollar stake of the company to an investment consortium consisting of primarily foreign investors.
- Lenders are refusing to lend. Even to each other.
- Foreclosures are running at a historical pace. The pace is expected to pick up in 2008. No doubt this is putting downward pressure on all home values.
- The supply of real estate is historically high and the demand is historically low. There is very little money available to fuel real estate purchases. An entire segment of the market, those with little or no down payments and dinged credit is no more.
- It is estimated that real estate prices need to fall 30% for the market to reach an equilibrium necessary for the market to recover. At best, recovery is estimated to be a year and a half to two years away.
- The consumer, which accounts for 70% of gross domestic product (GDP) is completely tapped out. They can’t spend from savings because they don’t have any to speak of and their credit cards are maxing out. There is no cash out refinance available to release the credit card pressure on budgets.
- As consumers stop spending, layoffs will increase.
- The credit markets are broken. No one is buying mortgage securities and consequently, lenders aren’t lending. There is evidence that the mortgage credit squeeze is spreading to credit cards and installment loans. Without credit, households and business won’t/can’t spend money to fuel the economy.
- The Federal Reserve and the government is responding to the crisis with liquidity and lowering interest rates. However, with lenders refusing to lend, these actions will prove to be ineffective. Without lenders lending, there is no way for the cheap money to get into the hands of those who need and want it.
- The Fed itself is taking aggressive measures to avoid a recession that is unavoidable. When cheerleaders get scared, you should be too.
- Don’t expect the global economy to save us as they are experiencing the same debacle as we are.
The reasons for taking action right now are numerous. The case for an economic tsunami is real and frightening. But now is not the time to be the proverbial “deer in the headlights”. Negative developments are coming at us at break neck speed. Like a linebacker, homeowners need to read the play and react to it immediately.
Fairfield County, in Connecticut, is already on FreddieMac’s official “Declining Markets List“. That means prices in Fairfield county are declining measurably. Which also means homeowners in this county have already seen their ability to refinance impacted in a very negative way.
We have seen firsthand, clients and friends who have been negatively impacted by the rapidly evolving negative state of the lending industry. We had one client who is currently months down on their mortgage payments, see several approvals go into the trash can due to lenders going out of business or taking programs off the table.
I cannot stress strongly enough that time is of the essence. Prices are falling and loans are harder to qualify for by the hour.
Thirty year fixed rates are hovering around a very sensible 5.25%. Don’t wait for rates to go lower. Even though they may go lower, falling home values and tighter qualification requirements can sabotage your ability to refinance, either making it more costly or perhaps impossible.
If you have visited the links in this article, you can plainly see we are in for the roughest economic environment since the Great Depression of the 1930’s. In light of this, it’s time for homeowners to become as defensive as possible. Meaning homeowners should shrink and fix their housing costs and perhaps, overall budgets.
The perfect storm is here. Are you prepared to weather it?