Archive for November 23rd, 2009

AZ Central – State schedules auction of land eyed by Preserve

The Arizona State Land Department will offer 400 acres of state trust land northeast of DC Ranch at an auction Dec. 15.

Appraised at $6.5.million, the property is between the alignments of Deer Valley and Pinnacle Peak roads from 104th to 112th streets.

Scottsdale has targeted the land for the McDowell Sonoran Preserve for the past 15 years.

The Land Department also is auctioning 295 acres of state trust land on Dec. 15 that Phoenix wants for its Sonoran Preserve.

Shipper moves to NE Valley

Neptune Orient Lines

 , a global shipping company, has moved its logistics operation, APL Logistics, to the Northeast Valley.

APL Logistics will occupy 1½ floors of the six-story Max at Kierland building, 16220 N. Scottsdale Road.

APL’s regional headquarters had been in Oakland, Calif.

Up to 400 employees will work at APL.

Neptune Orient Lines is based in Singapore.

www.theholmgroupaz.com

Bloomberg News – Existing home sales rise 10.1 percent

Nov. 23, 2009 08:08 AM
Bloomberg News

Nov. 23 — Sales of existing U.S. homes increased more than forecast in October to the highest level since February 2007, spurred in part by a tax credit that lured first-time buyers.

Purchases rose 10.1 percent to a 6.1 million annual rate from a 5.54 million pace in September, the National Association of Realtors said today in Washington. The median sales price decreased 7.1 percent from October 2008, the smallest decline in more than a year.

Cheaper homes and stimulus such as the $8,000 incentive, extended and expanded by the Obama administration this month, have revived an ailing housing market that contributed to the worst economic slump since the Great Depression. Further improvement that would aid the economy’s recovery depends on an easing in unemployment and foreclosures.

We’ve turned the corner, John Herrmann, president of Herrmann Forecasting in Summit, New Jersey, said before the report. A pickup in sales is helping builders to burn through the inventory. It’ll still be a gradual recovery.

Existing home sales were forecast to rise to a 5.7 million annual rate, according to the median forecast of 66 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from 5.2 million to 6 million, after an initially reported 5.57 million rate in September.

Sales had reached a 4.49 million pace in January, their lowest level since comparable records began in 1999.

Purchases of existing homes rose 23.5 percent in October compared with a year earlier. The median price fell 7.1 percent from a year ago to $173,100.

Months Supply

The number of previously-owned unsold homes on the market fell 3.7 percent to 3.57 million. At the current sales pace, it would take 7 months to sell those houses compared with 8 months at the end of the prior month. The months supply is the lowest since February 2007.

The share of homes sold as foreclosures or otherwise distressed properties rose to 30 percent from 29 percent in September, NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said in a press conference today.

The report showed sales of existing single-family homes rose 9.7 percent to an annual rate of 5.33 million. Sales of condos and co-ops increased 13.2 percent to a 770,000 rate.

Purchases rose 11.6 percent in the Northeast, 14.4 percent in the Midwest, 12.7 percent in the South and 1.6 percent in the West.

Sales of previously owned homes, which make up more than 90 percent of the market, are compiled from contract closings and may reflect purchases agreed upon weeks or months earlier. Many economists consider new-home sales, recorded when a contract is signed, a more timely barometer.

New Home Sales

The Commerce Department may report on Nov. 25 that new home sales rebounded to a 405,000 annual percent in October, according to the Bloomberg survey.

Home construction seized up last month as builders waited to find out if the first-time homebuyer tax credit would end, a Commerce Department report showed last week. Builders in October broke ground on the fewest houses since April’s record low annual pace.

Sales and construction may get another boost after President Barack Obama on Nov. 6 extended the incentive until April 30. Earlier, buyers had to close the transaction by Nov. 30 to be eligible. The government also expanded the program to include some current owners.

Borrowing costs may remain low as the Federal Reserve has signaled it’ll keep the benchmark interest rate near zero for an extended period. The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage fell last week to 4.83 percent, the lowest since May, according to Freddie Mac.

Labor Market

While low rates and government aid are making it easier to buy a home, the labor market remains a risk. The unemployment rate, which rose to a 26-year high of 10.2 percent last month, will stay above 10 percent through the first half of 2010, a Bloomberg survey showed.

 Foreclosure filings surpassed 300,000 for an eighth straight month in October as rising joblessness made it tougher for homeowners to pay bills, according to RealtyTrac Inc. data.

 Some companies see a potential for stronger demand. Hovnanian Enterprises Inc., New Jerseys largest homebuilder, has signed contracts or options to buy 4,000 land lots in preparation for a market recovery, said Chief Executive Officer Ara K. Hovnanian. The Red Bank, New Jersey-based builder had reduced its land holdings during the recession.

 Prices are ridiculously low in some markets, he said at a conference in New York on Nov. 17. That’s not going to stay.

www.theholmgroupaz.com

AZ Central – Illegal housing bidding on rise

by Catherine Reagor – Nov. 22, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

When foreclosure homes come up for public auction in Phoenix, a minimum opening bid is set and bidding is open to anyone.

At least that is the way it’s supposed to work.

But a Republic investigation into the daily public auctions held on the Maricopa County Courthouse steps and at some local law offices suggests a growing number of homes are sold for less than the posted opening bid.

Prices on some foreclosure homes are being dropped below the opening bid just hours or even minutes before the auction. Buyers aware of the “drop bids” scoop up the houses before other bidders know about the price drops.

Drop bids violate the state’s foreclosure-sale laws, say the state’s leading court-appointed foreclosure-trustee attorneys.

This illegal practice comes at a time when it’s normal for 4,000 Valley homes to be foreclosed on and put up for auction each month. Until a few months ago, most of the homes failed to sell at auction and went back to the lenders.

But last month, a record 1,000 foreclosure homes sold through public auctions, five times the number sold at auction in January.

Real estate market watchers and unsuccessful bidders at the auctions say drop bids are driving the record number of auction sales.

The minimum opening bid at foreclosure auctions traditionally was the amount owed on the home.

Then the housing-market crash drove home prices down dramatically – a 50 percent drop since 2007. Now, investors who bid on homes won’t pay prices based only on what a homeowner owes on a mortgage, a figure that can be higher than the home is worth. There would be no profit reselling it.

Lenders would rather cut prices than continue to carry the foreclosed homes on their books, observers say. Why lenders would drop prices at the last minute, instead of posting a lower opening bid the day before as required by law, is unclear.

Drop bids compromise what was intended to be a fair and transparent way for lenders to foreclose on homes and liquidate them, as well as a way for people to obtain homes at sometimes bargain prices. The practice of drop bids hurts a number of parties:
• People losing homes who are not offered the lower “drop bid” price. A buyer who lost a home owing $200,000 to the bank might then see it resold for $50,000 but would not have had the chance to bid on it at the lower prices.
• Bidders who do not receive information on drop-bid prices.
• Lenders with other homes to sell at auction who must compete with last-minute drop-bid deals.

Drop-bid purchases enable the few who know about the deals to buy homes and quickly resell them for hefty profits.

Foreclosure auctions are held every weekday in metropolitan Phoenix on the Maricopa County Courthouse steps and in the offices of attorneys acting as trustees for lenders.

In foreclosure proceedings, trustees are attorneys, real estate brokers or insurance agents licensed by the state to handle the sale of foreclosure properties. A trustee must make sure property owners are contacted and given all the legally required information about their foreclosure.

Lenders must hire trustees to handle their foreclosure property sales. No state or county agency monitors the auctions.

In this atmosphere of little oversight and record numbers of homes going to foreclosure auction, state laws are being ignored, and the foreclosure process has been compromised.

Lenders are required by Arizona law to hold foreclosure auctions when taking back a home. A home can’t be foreclosed on in Arizona without a “notice of trustee sale” and then a trustee sale.

Federal investigators said they have just begun their own investigation into the auctions in response to complaints about the bidding process.

“No one regulates those auctions,” said Diane Drain, a Phoenix attorney and trustee. “But there are laws that dictate what can and can’t be done.”

How auctions work

When a homeowner falls behind on mortgage payments, the lender begins the foreclosure process by filing a notice of trustee sale with the Maricopa County Recorder’s Office. An auction date is set then, but the date can be moved or canceled depending on negotiations between the lender and borrower. Trustees set the opening minimum bid – the amount that traditionally was the amount owed on the home. But that was before the housing market crash.

Real-estate analysts say lenders now don’t mind making less money at auction because they still avoid taking the homes back and fixing them up to put on the market, which can cost them tens of thousands of dollars.

All Valley foreclosure auctions used to be held at the county courthouse. But as foreclosures have climbed, auctions have expanded to the offices of lenders’ trustees. Now, as many as five foreclosure auctions are held a day in metropolitan Phoenix. The main auction on the courthouse steps starts at noon. Auctions in the law offices begin at 9 a.m. None of the auctions overlap, so bidders can attend any auction in pursuit of any property. Arizona statute requires bidders to bring a $10,000 cashiers check to participate in an auction.

Trustees hire auctioneers to handle the bidding.

Valley foreclosure auctions are packed these days. Dozens of people show up at the courthouse for the auction, usually up to an hour before it starts. Most bidders wear tennis shoes so they can move quickly and hats and sunglasses to protect their faces from the Arizona sun. Auctioneers know the regulars by name, as do the hot-dog vendors set up in front of the courthouse steps.

Veteran bidders have seats with shade right next to the auctioneers and even meet with the auctioneers at the cafe adjacent to the courthouse steps before bidding starts. Novice bidders are conspicuous as they try to figure out the system and find a spot in the crowd around the auctioneer calling off property addresses and bids.

Potential buyers can hire people to represent them at auctions. These representatives tend to wear wireless cellphone earpieces so they can communicate with clients once the action starts. Some also carry walkie-talkies to communicate with other people on their team bidding at the auction.

“Foreclosure auctions on the courthouse steps are the last wild, wild west of Arizona real estate,” said Tom Farley, chief executive of the Arizona Realtors Association. “Those auctions aren’t for the timid.”

Foreclosure auctions held at Valley law firms don’t draw as many bidders and are more subdued. Most are held in corporate conference rooms. Bidders aren’t encouraged to linger before or after.

Arizona law requires opening bids on the foreclosure properties to be posted at 9 a.m. the day before the auctions. This is so all potential bidders, including the homeowner, have the information in time to research a property and line up money to bid.

This is where sources involved with auctions say things have gone wrong.

Drop bid

A few months ago, some lenders with foreclosure properties to sell began lowering opening bids on the day of the auction.

A drop bid is a tactic used to sell a property faster, especially when there are many houses to sell. While legal in some states, drop bids are illegal in Arizona, say some top trustees, including one who helped write the state law.

“It’s common knowledge (in the foreclosure market) that a certain California trustee has been lowering the minimum acceptable bid hours and sometimes minutes before the scheduled trustee’s sale,” said Tom Ruff, an analyst for the Arizona property-records research firm Information Market. “The amount by which these bids are dropped can be substantial.”

Ruff identified many drop-bid deals by checking the posted opening bid the day before the auction and then the actual sales price. Houses that sold for less, he identified as drop-bid sales.

Ruff said other trustees also have started to drop bids the day of auctions. The number of homes purchased through drop bids varies by day. They are difficult to track because while trustees must post opening bids as part of the foreclosure auction process, they don’t have to file a public document with the opening-bid asking price.

Most trustees list foreclosure-auction information on their Web sites. Some also have recorded telephone messages with the information.

The practice has become common enough that “drop bid” services have sprung up offering bidders last-minute updates on opening-bid prices on foreclosure properties for a fee.

Phoenix-based Sharp Equity opened for business in September. A press release from Sharp offered “drop-bid alerts” and quoted Kyle Brown, principal of Sharp Equity: “We have grown rapidly by being able to provide better data, faster to our clients. We’re looking at deals that only a handful of investors in Phoenix get the opportunity to see.”

In an e-mail advertisement, Sellwholesalehouses.com offered its services to potential buyers. Among them “a proprietary monitoring system for drop bids.” The e-mail listed more than a dozen Valley homes that lenders dropped the bid price on during the day they were to go to auction.

Tim Mudd of Sellwholesalehouses.com has read the Arizona statute regulating opening bids on foreclosure sales and believes, based on his understanding of the statute, that lenders can legally drop bids the day of an auction.

Mudd counts on drop bids. “We have a computer programs that checks all the lenders and trustees Web sites for drop bids the day of the auction,” he said. “We are offering clients the most up-to-date information on bids.”

However, not all bidders receive the new foreclosure pricing information.

“Only a small group of insiders are hearing about drop bids,” Ruff said. “I know the usual suspects on the courthouse steps love this tactic. Of course, they love anything which gives them an advantage and increases their bottom line.”

Elusive profits

Valley foreclosure auctions have been a lucrative niche business for a small group of investors and lawyers for many years.

Before the recent housing-market crash, Valley foreclosure auctions always drew bidders who were mainly investors. Individual investors and well-financed investment groups followed foreclosure listings closely, checked out the homes and bid based on the properties they could fix up and flip for a fast profit. The big groups could buy a home at a foreclosure auction and within an hour have an employee knock on the door to tell the former homeowners they had to move.

The Valley’s steady increase in home values worked for investors who could buy foreclosure houses and then flip or rent them for a profit. Foreclosure auctions slowed during boom years because struggling homeowners could sell or refinance their homes. Now, with homes sales and values both down, turning foreclosure homes at a profit is harder.

But buyers who get a house at auction in a drop-bid may still turn a big profit.

One west Phoenix foreclosure home was recently sold by an out-of-state trustee for $48,000. The opening bid on the property was posted on the trustee’s Web site at $122,000 the afternoon before the auction. The lower minimum opening bid for the home was posted on its Web site an hour before the auction. The investor, who purchased the home for $48,000 at the auction, resold it for $120,000 three days later.

Trustees, who represent lenders, are required by law to make all information on a foreclosure sale available to the public. Some people who attend auctions say drop bids are not being shared with all potential bidders.

“I know people are getting inside information that I am not getting,” said Mark Hosch, who was at a foreclosure auction on the courthouse steps in early October. “I have been doing research, and homes are selling for prices that aren’t being posted.”

A few bidders are now videotaping the auctions to track the bids and process.

“It’s highly improper and legally questionable for a trustee to drop the bid on a foreclosure the day of an auction. Both borrowers and bidders can be hurt,” said Michael Bosco, trustee attorney for Tiffany & Bosco, which handles more foreclosures than any other Arizona firm. “I don’t like the auction mess going on the courthouse steps. Any trustees playing games with last-minute changes in bids down there need to stop now.”

All of Tiffany & Bosco’s auctions are held in one of its office’s boardrooms.

Oversight

The foreclosure process is mandated by Arizona state statutes, but with little oversight.

“There’s no regulating body overseeing trustee-sale auctions in Arizona,” said Beth Jo Zeitzer, a former trustee attorney who now owns the real-estate brokerage R.O.I. Properties, which specializes in foreclosures. “If there’s a violation of one of the state’s foreclosure statutes, a suit can be brought against the trustee. Sales could be declared invalid and canceled.”

Some trustees and lenders might not realize that dropping the opening bid on a home the day of the auction violates state statues. Buyers purchasing the foreclosure properties also may not be aware it’s illegal.

Drain, the Phoenix attorney and court-appointed trustee, was among the group of Arizona attorneys who wrote the law. She said drop bids are clearly illegal. “The trustee has an obligation to provide that credit bid to anyone who asks no later than 9 a.m. the day before the sale,” she said. “Failure to provide the credit bid within that period will require that the trustee’s sale be postponed.”

Drain said foreclosure sales tied to illegal drop bids could be determined “invalid” by a court.

“What we have with drop bids is the potential for a class-action lawsuit over illegally conducted trustee sales,” Drain said.

The Arizona mortgage-fraud task force, made up of state and federal regulators and law-enforcement agencies, recently began looking into complaints about drop bids. Regulators have been monitoring auctions on the courthouse steps. The U.S. Department of Justice is adding real-estate and mortgage fraud investigators in Arizona.

www.theholmgroupaz.com


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