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New Home Construction Falls To Lowest Level Since October

ALAN ZIBEL   07/20/10 10:24 PM ET   AP

Empty Homes

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration's effort to help those at risk of losing their homes is failing to aid many and could spur a rise in foreclosures that would further depress the housing industry.

More foreclosures would force down home prices and that would deter already-ailing homebuilders from starting new projects.

As a result, the economic rebound could suffer. Each new home built creates, on average, the equivalent of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in taxes paid to local and federal authorities, according to the National Association of Home Builders.

"Foreclosures hold down the pricing for everybody," said Marty Mitchell, vice chief executive officer of Mitchell & Best Home Builders in Rockville, Md. "As a builder, we have to be cognizant of foreclosures, if there are more coming along, because it affects pricing across the board."

Home construction plunged in June to the lowest level since October, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. Driving the decline was a more than 20 percent drop in condominium and apartment construction, a small but volatile portion of the housing market. Construction of single-family homes, the largest part of the market, was essentially flat.

Applications for building permits, a sign of future activity, were up slightly. But that was also the result of the volatile apartment market.

The home construction report was released one day after the National Association of Home Builders said its monthly reading of builders' sentiment about the housing market sank to the lowest level since March 2009.

"We're going to see very minimal new construction until the stream of foreclosures has ended," said Jack McCabe, a real estate consultant in Deerfield Beach, Fla.

The glut of homes being sold at foreclosure or as short sales – when a bank agrees to accept less than the total mortgage amount – could rise even faster in the months ahead.

More than 40 percent of the 1.3 million homeowners enrolled in the Obama administration's mortgage relief effort have fallen out of the program, the Treasury Department said Tuesday.

"The program really hasn't helped a lot of people, or at least not nearly as many had been hoped for," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics. He predicts that about 2 million homes are likely to be sold over the next 12 to 18 months as foreclosures or short sales.

Many borrowers have complained that banks often lose their documents and then claim borrowers did not send back the necessary paperwork.

The banking industry said borrowers weren't sending back the necessary paperwork. They also have accused the Obama administration of initially pressuring them to sign up borrowers without insisting first on proof of their income. When banks later moved to collect the information, many troubled homeowners were disqualified or dropped out.

Obama officials dispute that they pressured banks and they defend the program. Lenders are making more significant cuts to borrowers' monthly payments than before the program was launched. And eight of the largest mortgage companies in the program have offered alternative programs to 45 percent of those who fell out of the program.

The government's program "only reflects a portion of what's happening in the broader marketplace," said Raphael Bostic, an assistant secretary at the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

While developers have cut back on construction and the number of new homes on the market has fallen dramatically, they still must compete against foreclosed homes.

Builders are adjusting by adopting a new sales pitch. Many are emphasizing the simplicity of buying a new home, compared with the bureaucracy involved with purchasing a short sale or the expense of repairing a foreclosed property.

Yet even as they discourage buyers from looking at distressed properties, some builders see financial opportunity in that market. Luxury homebuilder Toll Brothers Inc. said this week it would form a new subsidiary that will invest in distressed real estate, buying up distressed loans or unfinished developments and possibly selling them to other builders.

Evan Cramer, development manager at Southeast Capital Management in Atlanta, said his company is pursuing a similar strategy. Through buying up bad real estate development loans at a discount and selling undeveloped lots to builders, his company figures it can turn a profit.

"If you can sell a home for under $200,000, there's still a good amount of demand," he said.

The rate of home building is still up about 15 percent from the bottom in April 2009, though it's down 76 percent from the last decade's peak in January 2006.

New home sales in May dropped 33 percent to the slowest pace in the 47 years records have been kept. The drop-off came immediately after the tax incentives to sign a contract on a home ended on April 30.

Builders may be turning their attention away from new projects to complete those already in progress. Housing completions rose 26.2 percent in June. Some economists said that could be a positive sign that the market may have reached the bottom.

But Mitchell said many are focusing on existing projects because they can't get financing for new ones.

"Banks just don't want to get involved with any new real estate deals whatsoever," he said. "Particularly for the private builders, the only choice you have is to build out the projects that you're in."

___

AP Real Estate Writer J.W. Elphinstone contributed in New York to this report.

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WASHINGTON — The Obama administration's effort to help those at risk of losing their homes is failing to aid many and could spur a rise in foreclosures that would further depress the housing ind...
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration's effort to help those at risk of losing their homes is failing to aid many and could spur a rise in foreclosures that would further depress the housing ind...
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08:02 PM on 08/16/2010
Buy a short sale and hire a carpenter. : ^) Save money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
11:24 AM on 07/21/2010
There are a lot of reasons to keep building even as a glut of foreclosures sits on the market. First, some people want to be in desirable, brand new developments with new amenities rather than existing developments where the amenities may not be so well-cared-for and the neighbors have mostly been in place for a long time.

Second, sometimes the permitting process has been done in such a way that a development might be considered "abandoned" if a certain amount of construction doesn't continue, and that "abandonment" would cause problems re-starting the build-out if the city or county were to declare it. So they keep the build-out moving at a minimal pace.
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moose and squirrel
Very soon we would both be completely twisted...
06:09 PM on 07/20/2010
nice pic hopo! those look like affordable housing from the 1950's
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Lorianne
ama vitam
05:11 PM on 07/20/2010
I guess the NAR and the NAHB are pleased with themselves for squeezing a few extra billion out of taxpayers under the 'stimulus' scams ... and now are wondering where then next gravy train is going to come from.
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04:13 PM on 07/20/2010
this is actually a good thing so the inventory outstanding clears and the prices stabilizes. This is a market force working as expected. In the long run it will improve the market but today it hurts.
01:54 PM on 07/20/2010
We live in a little town on coast of San Diego, Ocean Beach 92107. I pass by Seaworld everyday and it looks full everyday. Most of our tourist attractions are full. OUr beaches are packed. We get lot of tourists from Arizona. The Comic Convention this week was sold out last September. If money keeps circulating maybe we can recover from this deep hole Bush Economics put us in. I see that National Parks and state parks are at capacity for camping, so maybe we are climbing slowly out of it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
01:02 PM on 07/20/2010
Well it's about time they stopped building.

The banks can pay them to renovate and maintain their foreclosed properties.

Stop laughing so hard... it could happen.
02:08 PM on 07/20/2010
We are a small civil engineering business in San Diego. We are receiving requests to update septic systems for foreclosed homes. The people buying the homes are requesting updated things like that. The Banks are willing to pay anything to get it done and get the properties sold. Its still sad to do this, you can see on some homes how the property was loved for years by the ex -owners. I am guessing the banks are also hurting because they need new housing developments also, so they are getting rid of the foreclosed properties as fast as possible.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
02:54 PM on 07/20/2010
You and your business are fulfilling a need that is a normal part of the overall cycle. Jobs are being maintained and money is circulating in the local economy.

It is different to hear that some people left their homes with dignity and did not strip them down and vandalize them. Karma will take care of them down the road I'm sure for displaying such class in a difficult time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
01:00 PM on 07/20/2010
With the abundance of inventory on the market is there a need to keep building? I guess they have not taken away enough green space yet. It's important to keep building until we run out of planet. Or until every citizen can view an empty home from their window or tent city.
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drbob601
Soylent Green is People
12:07 PM on 07/20/2010
This si the best thing that could happen to the housing market. We need to take a break from building new houses.

"Between 2002 and 2006, US homebuilders went on a construction binge, building 12 million new homes while the number of households went up by just 7 million. The painful legacy is a massive oversupply of houses relative to the number of households."

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/07/the-4-trillion-dollar-question-2/
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Downrivers
Siskiyou Mountains
12:05 PM on 07/20/2010
U.S. housing starts were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 549,000 units in June, down 5.0% from the revised May estimate and 5.8% below the June 2009 rate, according to the Census Bureau. June housing starts were at their lowest level since last October. The expiration of the home buyers' tax credit in late April was cited for causing builders to cut back. Single-family starts in June were at a SAAR of 454,000 units, 0.7% below the revised May figure. Permits were at a SAAR of 586,000 units, 2.1% above the May rate

RANDOM LENGTHS

release in it's entirety:
http://www.census.gov/const/newresconst.pdf
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ImmanuelGoldstein
Founder of the "Brotherhood"
12:03 PM on 07/20/2010
With 19 million vacant housing units and with and estimated window of 8 YEARS (!!!) t clear existing inventory at present rates of sale, who needs to build more houses.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mensch99
11:45 AM on 07/20/2010
The super-rich still have money. They will need to spend some to turn their homes into fortresses while the rest of us slide into the 3rd world.
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
11:40 AM on 07/20/2010
We are the country on earth where someone making money on Wall Street is used as an indicator of the country's health. Will Obama see the warning signs too late? Well, when the White House starts to outsource its employees, it will be all over.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dadzilla
Breathing radioactive fire for admusement
11:13 AM on 07/20/2010
I realize that when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail, but unless it's a custom build you would have to be nuts to build now. In a down market you want to sell home remodeling, not new units.
10:48 AM on 07/20/2010
They should be plunging!
Why are all these companies building more homes when there are millions on the market sitting empty? Apparently, they are unaware we are in the depths of a recession with millions out of work.
I think they are continuing to look for a bailout, even though they share responsibilty for the housing fiasco.
If you had 200,000 unsold Nashes in your lot you wouldn't keep building more, would you?
EdinFL
It is what it is.
11:16 AM on 07/20/2010
There is an explanation. A building company today can buy an available lot cheap, can get labor cheap and can turn a profit by underselling thousands of properties that were built using more expensive lots, more expensive labors and more expensive expectations. Those guys don't want to sell at a great loss, because that would fix their loss, wiping out wealth, forcing them them into bankruptcy or into the hands of the original lien holders. So many of them are still holding out waiting for the market to come back.
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01:54 PM on 07/20/2010
Also, big banks don't want to do small loans.
You might find a foreclosed property offered at $50k, but there's just not enough profit in that loan for the big banks.
02:23 PM on 07/20/2010
I can tell you that we have a few towns in the county of San Diego that depend on new housing for the updating of public utilities and scholl district funds. When a new development is planned they have to pay for water meters, School improvements, road improvements, utilities updating. So the towns need new developments to pay for bonds they have on books. To hook up just one water metor in one of those towns is 10,000 dollars. The water board members run on not raising water rates, but instead they have high water metor rates for new housing.
The School district there also charges for each child on the bus to use it. They need more riders Etc.....
So you can see where some small towns depend on new housing developments.