About Me

My photo
Park Ridge, Illinois, United States
Gerard Scheffler has been very actively involved in the real estate profession for over seven years. In 2005, immediately after receiving his Broker’s License, he established his first Chicago based brokerage company. The company turned out to be very successful with hundreds of satisfied customers and millions of dollars in closed real estate transactions. Over the years, Gerard has developed a network of returning customers who always refer his services to their family and friends. He is presently a managing broker at Home Gallery Realty brokerage firm specializing in default and distressed property sales. Regardless of his professional development and success, Gerard is constantly looking for ways to improve his skills as well as build his company image and reputation. He is very hardworking and aggressive when it comes to representing his customers ‘ real estate needs and doing his job right. He will work with you to ensure that your property is sold for the highest price possible in the shortest amount of time with the least amount of inconvenience to you. Area of service includes Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake and Mchenry County in the State of Illinois.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Negative equity gap nears $4 trillion

 

The U.S. housing market contains a nearly $4 trillion-dollar negative equity hole, according to Williams Emmons, an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Emmons made that statement while speaking at HousingWire's 2012 REthink Symposium. 

The Fed Bank economist said it would take $3.7 trillion, much more than the $25 billion mortgage servicing settlement and other federal  housing initiatives, to get homeowners with mortgage debt back to preferred loan-to-value ratio levels.

Emmons' data estimates the average LTV for those with mortgage debt is currently 94.3%.

That compares to preferred LTV levels among mortgage debt holders of 58.4%, which was the average struck among mortgaged homeowners in the period stretching from 1970 to 2005. Emmons told the crowd there is no easy way to fill that gap, and the deep hole is hardly discussed among the media and policymakers.

"We are sort of stuck in this," he told the crowd. "It's a sweat box we're in, and we can't get out. We are not talking about this very much … it's just too ugly."

He added, "It is like the debt that is outstanding is crushing the equity that is there."

Emmons said the only viable option to narrow the gap is letting home prices fall until they eventually reach levels that entice buyers, bringing private capital back in. A home-price boom or a government bailout would help, of course, but both those scenarios are unlikely. 

At this point, home price appreciation would need to rise 62% to narrow the gap to the ideal LTV level, Emmons said. Significant government intervention also is unlikely given the fact it would take a $3.7 trillion bailout, or 24% of GDP, to narrow the gap, according to Emmons' data. 

He says that amount makes other federal initiatives launched to band-aid the housing market so far look like "peanuts" in comparison.

With that in mind, the only alternative is that we have "millions of weak homeowners exit, replaced by new private owners with equity to recapitalize the housing sector."

Emmons said that option will still be painful since he believes another reduction in home prices is needed to attract new buyers.

"The asset class is not priced attractively yet," Emmons said. "You need to get the value down to where it looks like a screaming buy."

Emmons in his report said with the assumption that another 20% decline in national home prices is required to bring in new buyers, the amount of mortgage debt that must be eliminated then is $4.97 trillion, or 50% of current face value. 

Source HousingWire by By Kerri Panchuk