MBA Reduces 2010 Origination Outlook Again. Home Prices to Stabilize in Spring
It was only a month ago
that the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) projected that the industry would
complete about $1.5 trillion in mortgage originations in 2010 compared to $2.0
in new mortgages in 2009. This 25
percent decline was bad news at the time, but the MBA's Mortgage Finance Commentary released this morning paints an even grimmer
outlook.
The new figures call for a decline in mortgage originations to their lowest
level in a decade, a drop of 40 percent over the 2009 figure. The forecast is
now for a total of $1.3 trillion mortgage originations this year compared to an
updated estimate of $2.1 trillion in 2009.
In the original estimate released
on December 14, purchase originations during the year were estimated to
increase from $718 billion to $804 billion. The new report still anticipates an
increase in the origination of these mortgages, but only from an updated figure
of $742 billion in 2009 to $776 billion this year. This slight increase will be
overwhelmed by plummeting originations for refinancing, projected to fall from
$1.372 trillion to $502 billion this year. The original projection was for refinancing
totally from $1.246 trillion to $693 billion.
The report said that data
showing strong existing home sales in November reflected expectations that the
homebuyer tax credit was ending but that home sales are likely to continue to
adjust downward in upcoming months in spite of the fact that the tax credit was
extended.
The association
said that it is difficult to analyze data on current marketing conditions
because cyclical swings are obscuring seasonal movements. Because of this difficulty in untangling the
two competing factors, MBA is taking some of the recent improvements in housing
measures "with a grain of salt" as they may merely reflect seasonal
impacts. With that in mind, the forecast projected declines in home prices
through the winter but showing some signs of stabilization in the spring. Still, a return to more typical rates of
appreciation should not be expected until 2012.
The Federal
Reserve will meet their commitment to purchase $1.25 trillion in agency MBS
during the first quarter and will not be likely to raise interest rates this
year. The report projects that rates
will increase by about a percentage point over the year, ending at just 6.1
percent as a result of widening mortgage spreads and an increase in treasury
rates driven by federal budget deficits. Once the Fed stops buying MBS, yields
will have to increase before private investors come back into the market
Both single
family and multi-family housing starts increased during November. The former were up 2.1 percent to a
seasonally adjusted rate of 482,000 units. Multi-family starts rose 62.7
percent to 83,000 units, but this was coming off of a 40 year low of 51,000
starts in October. Permits for single
family construction were issued for 469,000 units on a seasonally adjusted
annual basis. This is a 4.5 percent
increase over October figures.
Seasonally
adjusted sales of existing single family homes increased to 6.54 million units
in November, 7.4 percent higher than October sales and 44.1 percent higher than
in November of 2008. While sales were
down on a non-adjusted basis by about 5 percent from October, the seasonally-adjusted
sales represented the fastest pace of existing home sales since February 2007. The
report cautioned against expecting that pace to continue. "For the full
year 2010 we are expecting about 5.4 million existing home sales.
Nevertheless, this was good news for the housing market."
Inventories of
existing home continue to decline, driven by an increase in sales and fewer
homes being listed. The current inventory declined from a 7 month supply to a
6.5 month backlog in November and the number of units available fell from 3.6
to 3.5 million.
New home sales
as reported by the Census Bureau declined 11.3 percent in November to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of 355,000 homes. New home inventories
also continued to fall to 235,000 in November from 240,000 in October which MBA
called "an extremely low number of new homes on the market relative to
historical trends." The slowing pace of sales, however, boosted the
absorption rate of that inventory from 7.2 months in October to 7.9 in
November. The report projected that new home sales will gradually increase from
these low levels through 2010, ending the year at around 412,000 in new home
sales.
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